State v. Rhinehart

333 S.W.3d 154, 2011 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 327, 2011 WL 798650
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 9, 2011
DocketPD-0002-10
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 333 S.W.3d 154 (State v. Rhinehart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal 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. Rhinehart, 333 S.W.3d 154, 2011 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 327, 2011 WL 798650 (Tex. 2011).

Opinions

OPINION

HERVEY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

in which MEYERS, JOHNSON, KEASLER and COCHRAN, JJ„ joined.

We granted discretionary review in this case to address, among other things, whether a criminal district court may set aside a juvenile court’s order waiving its jurisdiction and transferring the case to the criminal district court under Section 54.02 of the Family Code (ground three of appellee’s discretionary-review petition). However, with the criminal district court not having set aside the juvenile court’s transfer order, we decide that this issue is not presented in this case, and we, therefore, decline to address it. We do find it necessary to sustain another ground for review (ground one) in appellee’s discretionary-review petition, thus requiring this Court to reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.

Appellee was born on April 13, 1989. He was charged in juvenile court with an aggravated robbery that was committed on February 28, 2006, forty-four days before appellee’s seventeenth birthday. On April 16, 2007, three days after appellee’s eighteenth birthday, the State filed a petition in the juvenile court to transfer appellee’s case to a criminal district court where appellee would be tried as an adult. Ap-pellee claimed at an April 30, 2007 transfer hearing that the juvenile court should deny this petition because the State did not use [156]*156due diligence in proceeding with his case in juvenile court before appellee’s eighteenth birthday.1 The State claimed at this hearing that it had used due diligence. On May 2, 2007, the juvenile court signed an order waiving its jurisdiction and transferring appellee to criminal district court, after which appellee was indicted for aggravated robbery.2

Appellee raised the due-diligence issue again in the criminal district court in a motion that he labeled a “MOTION TO QUASH INDICTMENT.” Attached to this motion was a proposed order indicating that the motion was either “Granted” or “Denied.” The criminal district court held a hearing on this motion, during which the parties relitigated the due-diligence issue that had been litigated in the juvenile court. The State’s only argument at the hearing in the criminal district court was that it had used due diligence. Appel-lee relied on six exhibits that covered matters that were covered at the transfer hearing in the juvenile court. One of these exhibits (Defendant’s Exhibit 5) is the reporter’s record of the transfer hearing in the juvenile court. The criminal district court “Granted” appellee’s “MOTION TO QUASH INDICTMENT.”

The State appealed to the court of appeals, claiming for the first time on appeal that: (1) the criminal court was without jurisdiction to review “the evidence underlying the juvenile court’s decision to transfer this case” because appellee “had no statutory right to appeal the sufficiency of the evidence in the juvenile court’s transfer proceedings prior to being finally convicted in the criminal district court”3 (emphasis supplied), and (2) the criminal district court erred to grant appellee’s motion to quash the indictment on a ground not authorized by law because the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a juvenile court’s order to transfer a case to criminal district court is not a valid ground for granting a motion to quash an indictment as a matter of statutory law. [157]*157Appellee responded by arguing, among other things, that the State had waived these issues by failing to raise them in the criminal district court4 and that he did not “appeal” but only “challenged” the juvenile court’s transfer order (as opposed to the indictment) in the criminal district court.

The court of appeals sustained the State’s second issue, found it unnecessary to address its first issue, reversed the criminal district court’s order quashing the indictment, and remanded the case to the criminal district court for further proceedings consistent with its opinion.5 The court of appeals further stated that “issues relating to the [juvenile-court] transfer proceedings are properly raised in an appeal from a conviction after transfer.” See Rhinehart, slip op. at 4. It also stated:

Appellee acknowledges that a party may only appeal a transfer order in conjunction with a conviction or an order of deferred adjudication. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. Art. 44.47(b) (Vernon 2006). Nonetheless, appellee contends that an “appeal” differs from a “challenge,” and insists the statute does not restrict a defendant’s rights to challenge a transfer order. Although we note that the construction appellee seeks to advance would effectively allow a defendant two bites at the proverbial apple, we need not decide the issue here. Ap-pellee’s motion did not seek to set aside the transfer order; it sought to quash the indictment. Moreover, even if the statute afforded different treatment for a “challenge” than an “appeal,” the distinction is without a difference in the present case. Appellee’s motion concerned the sufficiency of the evidence in the transfer proceeding. And in the absence of a conviction or other order of deferred adjudication, we have no jurisdiction to determine the propriety of a transfer. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. Art. 44.47(b) (Vernon 2006).

See Rhinehart, slip op. at 5.

We granted appellee’s discretionary-review petition to review the court of appeals’s decision. The grounds upon which we granted review are:

1. The court of appeals erred in failing to address the “waiver” issue.
2. The court of appeals erred in re-framing the issue and failing to address the true issue at hand, namely: whether the Criminal District Court had the authority to set aside the transfer order.
3. The [court of appeals] erred in implicitly ruling that the trial court lacked [158]*158the authority to set aside the transfer order.

(Emphasis in original).

Appellee asserts that the criminal district court “set aside the transfer order because the State failed to proceed in the juvenile court with due diligence before Rhinehart’s eighteenth birthday” and that the “issue in this case is whether the [criminal district] court had the judicial authority to set aside a transfer order.” And, in support of his second ground for review, appellee argues, “Some of the confusion in this case apparently has resulted from the fact that Rhinehart mislabeled the motion as being a ‘Motion to Quash Indictment.’ The motion was, in fact, a motion challenging the validity of the transfer order. A review of the contents of the motion itself and the arguments made during the pre-trial hearing clearly established that fact.”

Though the record does reflect that the basis of appellee’s “MOTION TO QUASH INDICTMENT” was the validity of the juvenile court’s transfer order, we must disagree with appellee that the effect of the criminal district court granting this motion to quash was to set aside the transfer order. Appellee’s motion requested that the indictment be quashed, not that the transfer order be set aside.6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
333 S.W.3d 154, 2011 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 327, 2011 WL 798650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rhinehart-texcrimapp-2011.