Thurman, Kentrell Deshay v. State
This text of Thurman, Kentrell Deshay v. State (Thurman, Kentrell Deshay 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.
Opinion
Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed February 27, 2003.
In The
Fourteenth Court of Appeals
____________
NO. 14-02-00319-CR
KENTRELL DESHAY THURMAN, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
__________________________________________
On Appeal from the 177th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 892,736
M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N
Appellant Kentrell Deshay Thurman was convicted by a jury of aggravated robbery and sentenced to forty-two years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, enhanced with one prior felony conviction. On appeal, he claims that his sentence as a repeat offender was improperly enhanced with the prior conviction, because it was a state jail felony conviction. We affirm.
Facts
On January 24, 2001, complainant Diana Schmidt drove to her workplace and parked her car in the parking area at about 8:20 a.m. As she waited in her car for her workplace to open for business, appellant approached her and robbed her at gunpoint. Appellant ran away, but police later determined his identity after someone attempted to use Schmidt’s credit card and some of Schmidt’s property was found in a pawn shop. Schmidt and others who witnessed the robbery in the parking lot identified appellant at trial as the robber.
Appellant was found guilty of aggravated robbery, a first-degree felony. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 29.03. The enhancement paragraph of the indictment read as follows:
Before the commission of the offense alleged above on March 16, 1999, in Petition No. 1999-015891, in the 313th District Court of Harris County, Texas, the Defendant was adjudicated for the felony of Possession of a Controlled Substance.
Appellant pleaded “not true” to the enhancement paragraph.
The trial court instructed the jury that if it found the allegations of the enhancement paragraph true beyond a reasonable doubt, to sentence appellant to a period of confinement consistent with the range of punishment found in Penal Code section 12.42(c)(1), which provides as follows:
if it is shown on the trial of a first-degree felony that the defendant has been once before convicted of a felony, on conviction the punishment range is imprisonment in the institutional division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for life, or for any term of not more than 99 years or less than 15 years.
Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 12.42(c)(1). The jury found the enhancement paragraph true, and assessed punishment at 42 years’ imprisonment.
Issues on Appeal
On appeal, appellant raises three issues. In the first two, he contends the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the enhancement allegation. In the third, he contends that the trial judge committed error in charging the jury on the punishment range as enhanced. Because we overrule appellant’s first two issues, we do not reach the third.
The Prior Conviction
Appellant argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to find the enhancement allegation “true” and to sentence appellant as a repeat offender under Texas Penal Code section 12.42(c)(1) because the prior conviction was a state jail felony conviction. Under Penal Code section 12.42(e), “[a] previous conviction for a state jail felony punished under Section 12.35(a) may not be used for enhancement purposes under Subsection (b), (c), or (d).” Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 12.42(e); see also Campbell v. State, 49 S.W.3d 874, 877 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) (holding that unaggravated state jail felony could not be used to enhance punishment for first-degree felony).
At the punishment stage of the proceeding, the State supported its enhancement allegation with State’s Exhibit 14, a judgment reciting that, on March 16, 1999, appellant was adjudicated[1] for the offense of possession of a controlled substance, namely cocaine. Below the adjudication a box indicating “Felony 3rd” was checked. The judgment was supported by appellant’s stipulation of evidence as follows:
On the 20th day of FEBRUARY, 1999, in Harris County and State of Texas, I did then and there unlawfully, intentionally and knowingly possess a controlled substance, namely, COCAINE, weighing less than 1 gram by aggregate weight, including any adulterants and dilutants.
Additionally, a police officer testified that appellant was charged with the offense because a small plastic bag containing cocaine residue was found in a pocket of his clothing after he was arrested for another offense.
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