State v. Garza

143 S.W.3d 144, 2004 WL 1195709
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 17, 2004
Docket04-03-00488-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 S.W.3d 144 (State v. Garza) 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. Garza, 143 S.W.3d 144, 2004 WL 1195709 (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by:

SARAH B. DUNCAN, Justice.

The State appeals the trial court’s order granting Richard Lee Garza’s motion for a new trial because Garza’s counsel failed to challenge for cause or peremptorily strike Keith Adams, a juror who became the jury foreman. Because the court did not abuse its discretion, we affirm.

Factual and ProceduRal Background

Richard Lee Garza, a criminal defense attorney, was charged with three counts of aggravated sexual assault of his five-year-old niece. During voir dire, after explaining the nature of the charged offense, the trial judge inquired “whether anyone is already of the opinion that he or she because of the nature of the offense could not fairly sit in such a case?” One of the prospective jurors to respond affirmatively was Keith Adams. When asked about his response, Adams stated that “[a]n allegation was made against another man in which my daughter-in-law was involved in it. He left. They never got to complete the investigation so — .... We turned it in and by the time they went to interview him he was gone. He left the state. Nobody knows where he went or anything. That was 14 years ago.” When asked by the State’s attorney whether that incident “might affect [his] ability to sit on this case,” Adams replied “Oh, yeah.”

When asked by Garza’s attorney, Scott Donaho, whether any prospective juror was “in law enforcement or have family members who are associated with law enforcement,” Adams again responded affirmatively — “Ex T.D.C., ex-law enforcement and also the county judge downstairs.” When Donaho followed up by asking whether that would influence Adams in sitting on a case like this, Adams stated “[tjhere’s other reasons I don’t want to sit on this case.” This response did not elicit a follow-up question from Donaho. When Donaho asked the panel members if they “can give no more weight to [a police officer’s] testimony than [they] would to Richard Lee Garza’s testimony because simply they’re a police officer,” only Adams shook his head to indicate “no.”

Adams also gave answers that could be viewed as favorable to the defense. For instance, in response to Donaho’s questions, Adams indicated that he believed a child might “say something that’s untrue and yet believe that it is true,” because the “child could be confused and improperly influence[d] by what we call good touch, bad touch, shows, books, films, mother and daddy talking to them”; a child’s story that is not true “can be reinforced over and over and over again by the way the child is spoken to and questioned”; he believed that “a child can be influenced about sex by what they see in their home with their own parents, even at 60 months of age”; “a child will do unusual and extraordinary things to get attention”; and *147 “a child at five years, 60 months old can deceive an adult.”

At the conclusion of voir dire, Adams was seated as a juror; Donaho did not challenge Adams for cause or use a peremptory strike against him. After the jury was sworn-in and Garza had pleaded not guilty, Adams spontaneously asked the court: “I’ve got a question for you. What about if I know all the officers in the Sheriffs Department, would that be a problem?” The trial court responded: “No, sir, I think you made it plain that you knew some of those folks.” Adams ultimately became the jury foreman.

Garza was convicted and sentenced to twenty years in prison on each count. In his subsequent motion for a new trial, Garza alleged he received ineffective assistance of counsel because Donaho failed to conduct a complete voir dire, failed to conduct individual voir dire, and failed to strike Adams. At the onset of the hearing on Garza’s motion, the trial judge stated:

I disclosed to the counsel that I had a conversation with Mr. Donaho during the course of the trial ... in which I inquired how it came to be that the foreman — the man that turned out to be the foreman — had been left on the jury. Mr. Donaho had told me at that time that in essence that he thought the man was of such a personality that it would be impossible for all of the jurors to agree with him and that it would be basis for a hung jury in the case....

When Donaho testified, he explained that he was distracted during voir dire by news that his wife, who had assisted him in selecting juries for the previous twenty years, had been diagnosed with cancer:

Q And can you please tell the court about what was going on in your life during the trial?
A My wife and I have been married for 54 years, and on the day we were to set the jury we received notice that there were some malignant cells that were being found in some fluid that had been taken as a sample from my wife’s lung. She has helped me select juries for 20 years as a trial lawyer and she was absent from the courtroom with this information being known to me that day.

Donaho concluded that he failed in his responsibility by failing to conduct individual voir dire. Donaho also testified that, had he not been so distracted, he would have challenged Adams for cause or used a peremptory strike against him:

Q And let’s talk specifically about someone who ended up being on the panel, Mr. Keith Adams.
A That gentleman had very clearly indicated his propensity to be leaning towards the State. He was an officer, a peace officer or had been a peace officer, is [sic] a peace officer would have normally been routinely challenged for cause, and I have no doubt that it would have been granted had I asked for it. I simply didn’t ask[ ] for it.
Q What did he say to you to indicate to you that he was biased against the defendant?
A I don’t remember all the individual words that he used but he was very clear that he would not be in favor of my client....
Q And so had those instances not been going on in your personal life, you would have asked for challenge for cause.
A I don’t have any doubt that if I had had my wits about me I would have not have failed to do that.
Q And it’s your opinion that the Judge would have granted that challenge.
*148 A That’s my opinion, yes, based on what he had — what the Judge had heard in the courtroom.
Q And then in your experience, had the Judge not granted the challenge for cause, you would have then tried to strike him peremptorily]?
A No question it would’ve been a peremptory strike.

Thus, when Donaho saw Adams “get up and walk to the jury box, [Donaho] was absolutely shocked that [Adams] was still there.” It was at that point that he “got [his] wits back together.” Donaho also confirmed that, while the jury was out, he told the trial judge that, after the mistake was made, they “hope[d] that [Adams] would be so controversial in the jury room that he would at least hang the jury.” He then confirmed that leaving Adams on the jury was not his intent but a mistake:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 S.W.3d 144, 2004 WL 1195709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-garza-texapp-2004.