State v. Wright

830 S.W.2d 309, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1189, 1992 WL 99344
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1992
Docket12-91-00023-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 830 S.W.2d 309 (State v. Wright) 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. Wright, 830 S.W.2d 309, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1189, 1992 WL 99344 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

COLLEY, Justice.

The State appeals under Tex.Code CRiM. PROC. art. 44.01(a)(5) (Vernon Supp.1992), 1 from the trial court’s order excluding the testimony of Lorene Choice, Don Choice, and Lesa Fay Black. 2 We will vacate the order as to Lorene Choice and affirm it as to the other witnesses.

Defendant/Appellee, Charlene Wright was first indicted in October 1989, for the capital murder of Mose Flowers. That indictment was later dismissed and Appellee was, on the 14th day of June, 1990, indicted for the murder of said victim.

During the pendency of the capital murder case, on December 18, 1989, the court entered a pre-trial order granting Appel-lee’s discovery motion for the disclosure of the names of the State’s witnesses and all statements made by Appellee material to the prosecution. The order required compliance therewith by the State on or before January 10, 1990. After the murder indictment was returned, the court, with notice in open court to all parties, ordered all pretrial motions, and rulings thereon to be transferred from the capital murder case to the murder case.

On August 27, 1990, the State filed a “Discovery Compliance Form” containing the names of 33 prospective State witnesses, not including Lorene Choice, Don Choice, and Lesa Fay Black, certain physical evidence, an autopsy report, and various other documents not in issue here, as well as all oral statements allegedly made by Appellee to seven of the 33 listed witnesses.

The case was set for trial to a jury on Monday, January 28, 1991, after having been continued from several earlier settings on the motions of Appellee and the State.

At 3:15 p.m. on Friday, January 25, 1991, the State, for the first time, disclosed to Appellee’s counsel that Lorene Choice, Don Choice, and Lesa Fay Black would possibly appear as witnesses for the State; and that Lorene Choice would testify that Appellee, “early [one] morning ... had come to her *311 house and asked her for a cigarette ... [Appellee] told her that she had just killed a man.” Monday, January 28, 1991, Appel-lee filed a motion to exclude the testimony of these three witnesses on the grounds that “late disclosure is in violation of the Court’s discovery order and that this disclosure is not sufficiently far enough in advance of trial to allow the [Appellee] an ample opportunity to investigate these matters.” Appellee, in the alternative, “[requested] a continuance to allow her sufficient opportunity to properly investigate these matters.” Appellee also alleged that the motion was “not sought for the purpose of delay, but so that justice may be done and so that constitutional guarantees of the U.S. and Texas Constitutions will be safeguarded.”

The trial court immediately conducted a pre-trial hearing on Appellee’s motion. At that hearing, two witnesses testified for the State, viz. Charlotte Turner, a former Tyler Police Detective, 3 and assistant district attorney, Kevin Henry, the designated prosecutor in this case. Appellee presented no witnesses, but requested that the court take judicial notice of the dates of trial of a case styled, State v. Henry Joe Pettigrew, cause number 4-89-230, on the court’s docket. The trial judge granted the request and recited into the record that pre-trial proceedings were held in Petti-grew on October 22, 1990, that “jury selection began on ... October 23, 1990. The case [went] to trial on the 24th ... [but] was recessed ... until the 29th, 1990.” The judge further stated into the record that the Pettigrew case again came to trial on October 29, and ended on November 8, 1990. Turner’s testimony is that she returned to Tyler to testify in the Pettigrew case and this case sometime during that time frame. Turner recalled that at that time, “there was a phone call to the District Attorney’s Office from [Tyler] Detective Russworm that he had received information from a confidential informant that someone named [Lorene] Choice might have information about this case.” Turner said she did not take the call and did not know who did. She said she learned of the call from written notes which had been placed with the file in this case on a desk in an unoccupied office used for storing the State’s file in this case. Turner testified these notes recording Russworm’s message were called to her attention by Kevin Henry, an assistant district attorney recently assigned to the case. Turner said that she was the lead investigator in the Wright case before she resigned and went into missionary training. She said that she had personally interviewed Lorene Choice shortly after the murder in 1989; but that Choice “[did not] give [her] any information about having talked to [Appellee].... ” Turner later explained on cross-examination, that she “had no reason ... to believe that [Lorene Choice] had any information about the homicide whatsoever.” Essentially, Turner said in 1989 she only questioned Lorene Choice about Appellee’s place of residence, activities, and “where [she] might find her.” Turner specifically said that during the initial interview, Lorene Choice did not tell her that Appellee had told her that “[she] just killed a man....” Turner said that in 1990, after she and the prosecution became aware of Russworm’s telephone message, neither she nor any other person “contact[ed] Ms. Choice.”

The record shows that Turner returned to Tyler on Thursday, January 24, 1991, and on the morning of January 25, met with the prosecution team “to [begin discussing] this case” and “rediscovered [Russworm’s message] in the case file.” From that point, the undisputed facts show that Turner, assistant district attorney David Dobbs, and investigator Max Scott requestioned Lorene Choice, who in response to specific questions, said “early [one] morning the [Appellee] had come to her house and asked ... for a cigarette ... [and] told her that she had just killed a man.” On cross-examination, Turner candidly admitted that if Choice had been *312 questioned in October or November 1990 about Appellee’s statement to her that she “would have answered our questions if we had directed them to her.”

The testimony of Kevin Henry establishes that he was assigned to prosecute the case on January 24, 1991. He said on Friday morning, January 25, at about 11:00 a.m. or 12:00 noon, the statement from Lorene Choice was taken and that he disclosed the information to Appellee’s counsel at about 3:15 p.m. Friday afternoon at a meeting previously arranged by the parties. Henry testified that because Russ-worm’s message came from an unknown person, he believed the subject of the message needed to be verified before it was turned over to Appellee’s counsel. On cross-examination, Henry affirmed Turner’s testimony as correct and said that Russworm’s message was first “check[ed] ... out” on Friday, January 25, 1991.

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Bluebook (online)
830 S.W.2d 309, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1189, 1992 WL 99344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wright-texapp-1992.