Victor Monique Goyens v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 4, 2023
Docket09-22-00213-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Victor Monique Goyens v. the State of Texas (Victor Monique Goyens v. the State of Texas) 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
Victor Monique Goyens v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________ NO. 09-22-00213-CR ________________

VICTOR MONIQUE GOYENS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 221st District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 20-08-09631-CR ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant was convicted of possession of a controlled substance and

sentenced to twenty-five years in the institutional division of the Texas Department

of Criminal Justice. Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.113(d). Goyens was a

passenger in a vehicle that was stopped by a State Trooper, who explained to the

car’s occupants that he stopped the car for an improperly placed license plate because

the car’s front license plate was on the dashboard rather than the front bumper of the

1 car. The Trooper approached the car, smelled marijuana coming from inside, and

when he subsequently searched the vehicle, the trooper discovered weapons and

drugs.

After his arrest and indictment, Goyens filed a motion to suppress a statement

that he made to the Trooper during the traffic stop and to suppress the evidence that

drugs belonging to Goyens were discovered following Goyens’ arrest. After the trial

court denied Goyens’ motion to suppress, he pleaded “guilty” subject to his right to

appeal from the trial court’s adverse ruling on his motion to suppress. In one issue

on appeal, Goyens argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress. We

overrule his sole issue and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. Background

Goyens was the sole passenger in a vehicle that was stopped by State Trooper

Royce Brown for a traffic stop. Upon approaching the vehicle on the passenger side

window, the Trooper asked the driver for his driver’s license and insurance. The

Trooper told the driver that his license plate could not be on his front windshield but

that he would only receive a warning for the violation. He then noticed the odor of

marijuana coming from inside the passenger’s side of the vehicle. After obtaining

the driver’s license from the driver, Trooper Brown asked the passenger, Goyens,

for his driver’s license. Brown asked the driver to exit the car and he questioned the

driver outside the car. The Trooper then asked Goyens, who was traveling in the

2 right front seat of the car, to exit the car. In the hearing, Trooper Brown explained

he asked the occupants to step out of the car separately “for officer safety[,]

because you "[d]on’t want multiple subjects on the side of the road that can easily

take advantage of you. And to separate them in order to get -- so they don’t

collaborate their story.”

The Trooper proceeded with routine questions about where the driver was

going and where was he coming from. The driver and the Trooper then engaged in

a conversation on the grassy area behind the driver’s vehicle about the best way to

move a trailer the driver received as a gift. The driver stated the passenger was his

neighbor, and they were originally from Little Rock, Arkansas, but were living in

Humble when they were stopped.

When the Trooper asked the driver whether the car was his, the driver said it

was. Then Trooper Brown told the driver that he smelled marijuana when he had

approached the car and he asked the driver how recently he had smoked marijuana

and whether there was any marijuana still in the vehicle. The driver admitted the

driver and passenger had smoked marijuana and there was only a little bit in his

ashtray. The Trooper asked the driver if he had any paraphernalia or any weapons in

the vehicle. The driver responded there was no drug paraphernalia in the car, but that

he had a gun in the car by his seat. The Trooper patted the driver down and asked

that he wait there in the grassy area.

3 Then, the Trooper approached Goyens and asked him to step out into the

grassy area near the front of the car. The Trooper confirmed with Goyens that

Goyens and the driver were neighbors, and they were traveling to look at a trailer

the driver had recently acquired. He then told Goyens that the driver said they had

marijuana and they had recently smoked it. Goyens admitted they had just smoked

marijuana. Trooper Brown asked Goyens whether Goyens had any other personal

property in the vehicle and, in response, Goyens told the trooper he had nothing other

than his wallet in the car. When Trooper Brown asked Goyens whether he’d ever

been in trouble, Goyens told him that he had been in trouble for “agg. assault” about

20 years ago. Goyens denied that he had anything illegal on his person.

After questioning the driver and passenger, Trooper Brown searched the

driver’s side of the car. He found two weapons on that side of the vehicle, and he

found marijuana in the car’s center console. Trooper Brown then searched the

passenger side of the car and found a pistol under the front passenger seat. The

Trooper returned to his patrol car, asked dispatch to run a criminal history on the

driver and Goyens, and had the serial numbers on the pistols he found in the car

checked against the records that police use to see if the weapons were stolen. The

Trooper also verified that the car was registered to the driver—not Goyens. The

dispatcher reported that the pistol under the passenger seat had been reported as

stolen.

4 The Trooper went back to the driver, who admitted the marijuana in the center

console and the two guns on the driver’s side were his. After questioning the driver,

Trooper Brown approached Goyens and asked him whether the gun under the

passenger seat was his. Goyens responded that it was, explaining that he had

purchased the gun for his safety from a friend in Houston. The Trooper then returned

to the driver and placed the driver under arrest for possession of marijuana and for

unlawfully carrying a weapon. Trooper Brown checked with dispatch and the

District Attorney’s Office and learned that Goyens had a felony criminal conviction

within the last five years. Trooper Brown arrested Goyens and charged him with

being a felon who had unlawful possession of a firearm. 1

Trooper Brown took Goyens and the driver to jail. When the Trooper got there

with the men handcuffed in his patrol car, he asked both men whether they had

anything illegal with them. In response, Goyens disclosed that he had drugs in his

underwear. Jail personnel conducted a search at the jail and discovered

methylenedioxy methamphetamine (MDMA), a controlled substance, in Goyens’

underwear. Goyens was indicted for knowingly possessing with intent to deliver a

controlled substance, namely, Methamphetamine, in an amount of four grams or

1 Goyens has previous felony convictions for possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance in 2005 and a prior conviction for murder in 1993. Goyens was on probation for a 2019 felony conviction for possession of a forged instrument. 5 more but less than 400 grams, by aggregate weight, including adulterants and/or

dilutants.

Goyens moved to suppress his statement acknowledging that the gun found

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