Schrader v. State

753 S.W.2d 733, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 1953, 1988 WL 82210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1988
Docket3-87-034-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 753 S.W.2d 733 (Schrader v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schrader v. State, 753 S.W.2d 733, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 1953, 1988 WL 82210 (Tex. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

Over a plea of not guilty, the trial court sitting without a jury found and adjudged Michael John Schrader guilty of resisting arrest. Tex.Pen.Code Ann. § 38.03 (1974). The court assessed punishment at three days imprisonment and a fine of $200.00. We will affirm the judgment.

Schrader brings to this Court a single point of error: the evidence was insufficient to permit a rational inference that he was guilty, beyond a reasonable doubt, of the offense charged in the complaint and information. He contends specifically that the finding of guilty was irrational because the undisputed evidence showed that he was already under arrest at the time he first used force against a peace officer in the episode described below, and while his use of force might have constituted an assault on the peace officer or an attempt to escape from custody, under other parts of the penal code, these were not the offenses alleged against him. We disagree with Schrader’s theory for the reasons set out below.

SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE

Buoyed by alcohol, Schrader created a disturbance in a restaurant by his profanity and his otherwise offensive behavior. A peace officer, summoned by the proprietor, asked Schrader to place his unfinished drink on a table and leave the restaurant. (The restaurant’s license permitted only on-premise consumption of alcoholic beverages.) Schrader complied with the order to leave, but took his drink. As Schrader passed through the restaurant, a second peace officer asked that he leave the drink behind. Schrader brushed the officer aside. The officer declined to force the issue at that point.

The two peace officers followed Schrader into the restaurant parking lot where they stopped him. The officers were in substantial agreement, in their testimony, that Schrader was not free to leave the parking lot because the officers would have arrest *734 ed him, without a warrant, for public intoxication.

One officer ordered Schrader to accompany the two officers back to a point near the restaurant. He did so without resistance. Schrader stood at the designated location, with one of the officers, while the other called to determine whether any outstanding warrant required Schrader’s arrest. On learning that such a warrant existed, one of the officers informed Schrader that he was under arrest pursuant to the warrant (issued in connection with an alleged traffic offense). Thereupon, the officers attempted to handcuff Schrader. He resisted by kicking, hitting, and biting one of the officers in a brief struggle.

About five minutes elapsed between the time the officers stopped Schrader in the parking lot and the moment the struggle occurred.

DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS

The ultimate issue is one of statutory construction. It is, specifically, the meaning of the expression “effecting an arrest” as it is used in Tex.Pen.Code Ann. § 38.03(a), setting forth the offense charged against Schrader:

A person commits an offense if he intentionally prevents or obstructs ... a peace officer ... from effecting an arrest ... of the actor ... by using force against the peace officer.

Id. (emphasis added). Depending upon the meaning assigned the expression “effecting an arrest,” the evidence is or is not sufficient to support the finding of guilty in Schrader’s case.

Schrader argues that the meaning of the expression, “effecting an arrest,” is coextensive with the meaning assigned the word “arrest” in certain judicial decisions applying the constitutional prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures, whether of persons, houses, papers, or effects — a prohibition designed to protect the privacy interest. U.S. Const. Ann. Amend. IV; Tex. Const. Ann. art. 1, § 9 (1984); Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 88 S.Ct. 507, 19 L.Ed.2d 576 (1967); Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct. 1868, 20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968). For example, the Legislature has defined when an “arrest” occurs:

A person is arrested when he has been actually placed under restraint or taken into custody by an officer.

Tex.Code Cr.P.Ann. art. 15.22 (1977). In construing this statute, the Court of Criminal Appeals stated as follows in a decision determining the validity of an arrest, and hence the validity of a search of the person incident to that arrest:

It is not the physical taking into custody that will constitute an arrest. An arrest is complete whenever a person’s liberty of movement is restricted or restrained.

Hardinge v. State, 500 S.W.2d 870, 873 (Tex.Cr.App.1973) (emphasis added and citations omitted). In apparent reference to the word “complete,” Schrader then reasons that an “arrest” occurs once and for all at the instant a person’s freedom of movement is surrendered in response to a show of official force and authority. Consequently, he concludes, his “arrest” was “complete” in the parking lot when he obediently followed the peace officers back to a point near the restaurant where he subsequently assaulted one of the officers; while the assault may have constituted an attempt to escape from custody or an assault on a peace officer, as prohibited by other provisions of the penal code, the assault could not have amounted to Schrader’s forcible interference with an “arrest” that was “complete” when made in the parking lot some five minutes earlier. We reject Schrader’s theory.

We have then to assign the proper meaning to the statutory language in § 38.03(a) where the Legislature made it an offense forcibly to prevent or obstruct “a peace officer ... from effecting an arrest.” In so doing, the Legislature obviously acted to protect the police function encompassed in a peace officer’s “effecting an arrest.” This purpose is plainly evident in the fact that an offense under § 38.03(a) consists in a forcible interference with the actor’s arrest or the arrest of another. Section 38.-03(a) has the additional important purpose of discouraging dangerous confrontations *735 at the scene concerning the lawfulness of any particular “arrest.” Even if a particular “arrest” is arbitrary under the constitution or otherwise unlawful, § 38.03(a) discourages a unilateral, subjective determination of that issue and a resort to force, at the point of “arrest,” in favor of an objective determination in the courts held open for that purpose. This legislative objective is implicit in the fact that “[i]t is no defense to prosecution ... that the arrest ... was unlawful,” as stated in subsection (b) of § 38.03. The meaning of the expression “effecting an arrest” must therefore accommodate each of these important legislative purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
753 S.W.2d 733, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 1953, 1988 WL 82210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schrader-v-state-texapp-1988.