Tri M. Pham v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 2010
Docket14-09-00484-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Tri M. Pham v. State (Tri M. Pham 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.

Bluebook
Tri M. Pham v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed October 14, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-09-00484-CR

Tri M. Pham, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 337th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1170125

O P I N I O N

Appellant, Tri M. Pham, appeals from his felony conviction for delivery of a controlled substance, namely methamphetamine.  In three related issues, appellant contends that the trial court violated his constitutional and statutory rights under the federal and state constitutions and article 38.23 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure by admitting evidence seized from a co-defendant’s vehicle.  We affirm the trial court’s judgment. 

I.  BACKGROUND

On the afternoon of June 7, 2008, a number of officers from the Houston Police Department were conducting undercover surveillance in an area of southwest Houston where officers had previously made numerous narcotics arrests.  Officer Larry Vaughn observed Nguyen Thai Ho park his vehicle in a parking lot in the area under surveillance.  Appellant arrived in the same parking lot and parked his vehicle close to Ho’s.  Ho then exited his vehicle (empty handed), entered appellant’s vehicle, and closed the car door.  Officer Vaughn observed the two men talking to one another; the men’s attention seemed to be concentrated on the center console area inside the vehicle.  Minutes later, Ho exited the vehicle, now carrying a “big plastic shopping bag.”  Officer Vaughn believed that the bag’s contents were heavy because the plastic was quite “stretched.”  The bag was white and opaque, and newspaper was protruding from the top, concealing the bag’s contents.  Holding the shopping bag, Ho returned to his vehicle and drove away.  Appellant also left the parking lot in his vehicle, driving in a separate direction. 

Believing that a narcotics transaction had occurred between appellant and Ho, Officer Vaughn radioed surrounding undercover officers to assist in monitoring both vehicles.  Officer Vaughn followed appellant’s vehicle in an unmarked unit; Sergeant Kerry Richards followed Ho’s vehicle.  While following appellant, Officer Vaughn observed appellant commit three changing-lanes-without-signaling violations, all arrestable traffic offenses.  Officer Vaughn instructed Officer Kenneth Cockrill, a uniformed officer in a nearby marked vehicle, to stop appellant for the traffic violations Officer Vaughn had observed.  Officer Cockrill stopped and arrested appellant for the traffic violations and seized appellant’s vehicle.  A subsequent search of appellant’s vehicle revealed $1,730 in cash.

While following Ho, Sergeant Richards observed Ho commit two traffic violations: failure to maintain a single lane of traffic and changing lanes without signaling.  Sergeant Richards then instructed Officers Lombardo and Sanchez, uniformed officers in a nearby marked unit, to stop Ho for the traffic violations, also arrestable offenses.  Officers Lombardo and Sanchez stopped Ho, and as Officer Lombardo approached the vehicle, he observed Ho throw the white shopping bag to the backseat of the vehicle.  The officers ultimately detained Ho and seized and searched the shopping bag, which contained approximately 2,946 methamphetamine pills, more commonly known as Ecstasy.  Ho was arrested and charged with possession of the methamphetamine discovered in the shopping bag.  Appellant was subsequently charged with delivery of the methamphetamine. 

Appellant pleaded not guilty to the delivery charge.  Ho, however, pleaded guilty to the possession charge and testified against appellant at his trial.  According to Ho, he had first experimented with Ecstasy at appellant’s encouragement just two months prior to the June 2008 arrests.  Ho began abusing the narcotic and regularly purchased pills from appellant.  Over a two-month period, Ho accrued a $450 debt and was unable to pay appellant.  Appellant then offered to forgive the debt in return for a favor:  Ho needed to deliver a bag to a third party.  Appellant instructed Ho to meet him in the southwest Houston parking lot.  When Ho met appellant in the parking lot, he entered appellant’s vehicle, and appellant gave Ho the white shopping bag with delivery instructions.  Appellant told Ho to deliver the bag to a man named Johnny, described as an Asian male with long hair in a white tank top.  Appellant instructed Ho to deliver the bag to Johnny at a particular food market in southwest Houston.  Appellant also instructed Ho to call him once the delivery had been completed.  Ho then returned to his vehicle with the bag and proceeded to his meeting with Johnny.  But Ho was stopped by police for the aforementioned traffic violations on his way to deliver the bag.  Fearful that the bag contained narcotics, Ho threw the bag to the back of his vehicle when he was stopped by officers.  The officers later seized the bag and its contents and arrested Ho. 

After Ho’s testimony, appellant sought to suppress the fruits of his arrest and evidence obtained from the search of Ho’s vehicle.  With respect to appellant’s arrest, he contended that the arrest was unlawful under chapter 14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure; thus, the fruits of the arrest—$1,730 in cash—should have been suppressed.  As to Ho’s traffic stop, appellant argued that the search of Ho’s vehicle was illegal and, therefore, the results of the search—the bag and its contents—should have been suppressed.  In response, the State argued that appellant’s arrest was lawful and disputed appellant’s standing to challenge the search of the shopping bag.  Specifically, the State claimed that appellant had abandoned the bag by giving it to Ho and instructing Ho to give the bag to a third party.  According to the State, because appellant relinquished possession of the bag to Ho and never intended to repossess it, appellant abandoned any privacy interest in the bag.  The trial court rejected the State’s standing argument, ruling as follows:

            [T]he Court finds that the defendant  . . . had constructive possession of the white plastic  . . . shopping bag and the contents therein since he had made an actual delivery of same to . . . Ho for an intended subsequent downstream delivery of the contraband.  Accordingly, the Court concludes that [appellant] has standing to contest the stop of Mr. Ho’s vehicle and the resulting search and seizure of the white grocery, or shopping bag, containing the contraband. 

            However, the Court holds and finds that . . . Ho was stopped and arrested for . . .  [a] traffic offense . . . which . . . was committed in the presence and view of [an officer].

.      .      .

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Tri M. Pham v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-m-pham-v-state-texapp-2010.