William Bruce Gleason v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 9, 2021
Docket02-19-00429-CR
StatusPublished

This text of William Bruce Gleason v. the State of Texas (William Bruce Gleason 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
William Bruce Gleason v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-19-00429-CR ___________________________

WILLIAM BRUCE GLEASON, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from the 271st District Court Jack County, Texas Trial Court No. 4815

Before Bassel and Womack, JJ.; Lee Ann Dauphinot (Senior Justice, Retired, Sitting by Assignment). Memorandum Opinion by Justice Dauphinot MEMORANDUM OPINION

The trial court convicted Appellant William Bruce Gleason of felony driving

while intoxicated (DWI), enhanced by a prior felony DWI conviction, and sentenced

him to seven years’ confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas

Department of Criminal Justice. Appellant brings a single point on appeal, arguing

that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion to suppress evidence

seized from his illegal traffic stop. He does not challenge the sufficiency of the

evidence to support his conviction. Because the trial court committed no reversible

error in denying Appellant’s motion to suppress the evidence complained of, we

affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Brief Facts

Tracie Pippin, the Jack County District Clerk, grew up in Jack County and

personally knew Appellant. On June 30, 2017, Pippin saw Appellant at a local funeral

home visitation. She spoke to Appellant there and noticed the smell of alcohol that

she thought came from his breath. Appellant was also unsteady. Out of concern, she

asked Appellant to step outside, where she offered to give him a ride home. He

declined the offer.

At the same time, Jack County Sheriff Tom Spurlock was also in the lobby of

the funeral home to provide security during a visitation. He testified that he noticed

Appellant in the lobby and became suspicious that Appellant might be intoxicated

because he was unsteady on his feet, he stumbled, and his voice was loud and slurred.

2 Sheriff Spurlock also testified that Appellant appeared to avoid him, walking further

down the hallway and “peeking around the corner” at him. One of the family

members at the funeral home expressed concern to Sheriff Spurlock that Appellant

was intoxicated.

Jack County Deputy Jack Randall Hunter arrived at the funeral home to issue a

criminal-trespass warning unrelated to this case. Sheriff Spurlock told Deputy Hunter

to “keep an eye” on Appellant. According to Sheriff Spurlock, he also told Deputy

Hunter “what [Appellant’s] actions had been like since [Sheriff Spurlock] had seen

him come in.” But Deputy Hunter testified that Sheriff Spurlock told him only that

he thought Appellant appeared to be intoxicated.

While Sheriff Spurlock and Deputy Hunter were occupied with the person

receiving the criminal-trespass warning, Appellant got into his pickup and started to

back out. Deputy Hunter did not see Appellant getting in his truck, but he did see the

truck leaving the funeral-home parking lot. He followed Appellant until Appellant

stopped in the parking lot at the VFW.

Deputy Hunter described the route Appellant took, referencing street names

and landmarks in detail, but he did not say how long it took for him to follow

Appellant to the VFW. Deputy Hunter testified that he did not see any instances of

impaired driving by Appellant while he was following him. Indeed, although Deputy

Hunter’s unit was equipped with a functioning dash camera, he did not activate the

3 camera until after both he and Appellant had already pulled into the parking lot and

stopped.

Deputy Hunter testified that he stopped behind Appellant and then walked up

to the driver’s side of Appellant’s truck. When asked what Appellant did then,

Deputy Hunter said, “Well, I announced -- told him who I was and what was going

on. He seemed a little confused, a little -- I don’t know what the word -- maybe a

little incoherent about who I was and where we were and what was going on.”

According to Deputy Hunter, when the truck’s door opened, he “could smell the

odor of alcoholic beverage from inside there.”

Deputy Hunter testified further that Appellant’s eyes were “a little red at the

time from looking -- when I looked at him there.” Deputy Hunter asked Appellant to

“step out of the truck and come to the back of his vehicle to visit with [him].” He

described Appellant’s exiting the truck as follows:

After several times of asking him and kind of coaching him come on back here in the back, he did. He did make his way to the back of the truck.

....

His balance seemed off. He was -- he was having a difficult time walking back. He actually used the bed rail of the truck to hold on to as he was walking, and he stopped a little bit. And I asked him to come back here to the back of the truck with me, and he finally made it there but he did -- didn’t have his balance with him at all there that day.

Deputy Hunter then testified he performed the horizontal gaze nystagmus

(HGN) field sobriety test on Appellant and that he observed lack of smooth tracking

4 on both eyes and nystagmus onset prior to 45 degrees. After the HGN test, Deputy

Hunter asked Appellant to perform the one-leg-stand. Deputy Hunter testified that

Appellant did not attempt that test; he told Deputy Hunter he could not perform it

because of a prior knee surgery and nerve damage in his feet. Deputy Hunter testified

that on the walk-and-turn test, Appellant started early before Deputy Hunter had

completed the instructions and also stepped off the line a few times. Deputy Hunter

concluded it was “unsafe” for Appellant to continue performing the test. Deputy

Hunter testified that he also had Appellant perform two additional, nonstandardized

sobriety tests and that after his interaction with Appellant, he believed Appellant was

intoxicated by the introduction of alcohol into his body.

Instead of performing the tests within view of the patrol car’s dash camera,

Deputy Hunter asked Appellant “to [go] out [to] the roadway that was a little more

smooth and more level . . . to perform . . . testing.” According to Deputy Hunter, he

did not think to move the dash camera at the time.

Although we cannot see Appellant’s performance on the field sobriety tests, we

can hear what was said on the video. We have only a narrative of Deputy Hunter’s

commentary on what he contends is Appellant’s performance. Deputy Hunter does

explain on the video, however, that Appellant claimed he was recovering from knee

surgery, had nerve damage in his feet, and could not perform the one-leg stand.

After Appellant had been taken into custody, and the officers were no longer

outside their vehicles, the dash camera was shifted to record the area where the field

5 sobriety tests had been conducted. No one contends the camera was incapable of

recording the field sobriety tests.

Trevor Wilson Topper, a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper and

certified intoxilyzer operator, was requested to obtain a breath sample from Appellant.

But when Trooper Topper arrived at the jail, Appellant declined to provide a breath

sample to be tested.

Appellant was later charged with felony DWI. The indictment alleged, in

pertinent part, that Appellant did

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