State v. C.J.F.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 29, 2005
Docket01-04-00257-CV
StatusPublished

This text of State v. C.J.F. (State v. C.J.F.) 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
State v. C.J.F., (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-04-00257-CV





THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellant


V.


C.J.F., Appellee





On Appeal from the 315th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2004-00332J





OPINION ON REHEARING

          The State of Texas has filed a motion for rehearing of our opinion issued on August 25, 2005. After due consideration, we deny the State’s motion for rehearing, but withdraw our opinion and judgment of August 25, 2005, and issue the following opinion and judgment in their stead.

          The State of Texas appeals from dismissal of charges filed against appellee, a juvenile, for engaging in delinquent conduct by committing the felony offense of manslaughter. The trial court dismissed appellee’s charges with prejudice on the grounds that the State’s petition violated appellee’s rights against double jeopardy. The State contends that the trial court’s dismissal was erroneous for four reasons.

          First, the State asserts that appellee failed her burden to produce evidence that the facts of the offense were barred by double jeopardy. Second, the State asserts that its nonsuits of the third and fourth amended petitions in cause number 2002-07732J, the pleadings that preceded this cause, did not constitute a dismissal of the prosecution for purposes of appellee’s right against double jeopardy because the nonsuits were timely taken before any evidence was heard in the case. Third, the State asserts that jeopardy could not have attached from the third and fourth amended petitions in cause number 2002-07732J because the third amended petition was superseded by the fourth amended petition and was therefore no longer a live pleading, and because the trial court had no jurisdiction over the fourth amended pleading due to lack of service of that petition on appellee. Fourth, as a matter of first impression in Texas, the State contends that, unlike other criminal proceedings, in which jeopardy attaches when the jury is sworn, jeopardy does not attach in a juvenile proceeding until the trier of fact begins to hear evidence or when the first witness is sworn. We affirm the trial court’s dismissal.

Background and Procedural History

          On April 18, 2002, appellee, a 15-year-old juvenile, was involved in an automobile collision that resulted in the death of Kathryn Sanchez. On September 20, 2002, the State filed its original petition in cause number 2002-07732J, which asserted that appellee intentionally, knowingly, and recklessly caused Sanchez’s death. The State filed its first amended petition on October 9, 2002, and filed a second amended petition on January 31, 2003.

          On May 1, 2003, the grand jury returned the State’s third amended petition, which, like the original petition, alleged that appellee intentionally, knowingly, and recklessly caused Sanchez’s death, but, in addition, authorized a determinate sentence. In response to the State’s motion to abandon the words “intentionally” and “knowingly” from the third amended petition, the trial court struck those words from that petition. Believing that the grand jury might have authorized a determinate sentence based on the higher culpable mental states for conduct that was “intentionally” and “knowingly” performed, as compared to “recklessly” performed, the trial court quashed the determinate sentence portion of the petition. After the trial court deleted the higher culpable mental states and quashed the authorization for determinate sentencing, the third amended petition charged only reckless manslaughter against a juvenile, with no authorization for a determinate sentence. On October 16, 2003, the grand jury returned the State’s fourth amended petition, which was identical to the third amended petition’s remaining charge of reckless manslaughter, but, in addition, authorized a determinate sentence.

          On January 5, 2004, appellee was admonished concerning the range of punishment for the reckless manslaughter charge in the fourth amended petition, which included authorization for a determinate sentence. During the trial court’s voir dire of the jury, which followed, the trial court informed the jurors that appellee was charged with reckless manslaughter and that the punishment range included the possibility of 20 years in prison as a determinate sentence if appellee were transferred to adult prison when she turned 21 years of age. A jury was then empaneled and sworn. Immediately after the jury was released for the day, appellee’s attorney informed the trial court, for the first time, that appellee had not been properly served with the fourth amended petition and that the trial court therefore lacked jurisdiction to rule on the allegations in the State’s fourth amended petition, for which the jury had already been empaneled. Appellee’s attorney also stated that, although the trial court lacked jurisdiction over appellee’s fourth amended petition, appellee was ready to proceed on the allegations in the third amended petition, which authorized appellee to be sentenced as a juvenile for reckless manslaughter, but did not authorize determinate sentencing. After the State’s attorney requested a hearing to determine whether appellee had been properly served, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on the issue.

          Following the hearing and after the trial court questioned whether appellee had been served with the fourth amended petition, appellee and the State’s attorney each represented to the trial court that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over the fourth amended petition because it had not been served on appellee. Appellee and the State’s attorney disputed, however, whether the third amended petition remained a live pleading in the trial court.

          The State argued that the third amended petition had been superseded by the fourth amended petition and that it was therefore no longer a live pleading. Appellee’s attorney restated his readiness to proceed on the third amended petition, which did not include the possibility of a determinate sentence, argued that jeopardy had attached on the third amended petition because a jury had been selected and sworn, and objected to dismissal of the jury or declaration of a mistrial.

          In the State’s arguments to the trial court concerning its impending ruling on whether to dismiss the empaneled jury, the prosecutor

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