Opinion
No. PD-1314-05
Delivered: September 20, 2006. DO NOT PUBLISH.
On State's Petition for Discretionary Review from the Tenth Court of Appeals, McLennan County.
OPINION
A jury convicted seventy-year-old H.F. Westerman, Jr., the elected Constable of Precinct 3 in Falls County, of indecent exposure for masturbating in his truck in an H.E.B. parking lot. Appellant filed a motion for new trial, claiming that his attorney had provided ineffective assistance of counsel because he failed to interview or call a corroborating witness or character witnesses. The trial judge denied appellant's motion after a hearing in which appellant's counsel testified and explained his strategy for not calling the witnesses. A majority of the Waco Court of Appeals held that the trial judge abused his discretion in denying appellant's claim. The State asks whether the court of appeals applied Strickland v. Washington correctly in analyzing appellant's ineffective assistance claim. We find that it did not, and we therefore reverse the court of appeals.
Westerman v. State, No. 10-04-00292-CR, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 4842 (Tex.App.-Waco 2005).
466 U.S. 668 (1984).
The State asks: "Did the court of appeals fail to follow established law when it found counsel ineffective under both prongs of Strickland for failing to call one particular witness without regard to counsel's trial strategy or the totality of the circumstances?"
I.
Heather Reyna, a Waco resident and owner of a real estate company, testified that she went grocery shopping at H.E.B on June 26, 2003, at about 5:00 p.m. She parked right up front. An "older, beat up" camper truck was parked face-to-face with her Jaguar. She noticed a man, later identified as appellant, sitting in the passenger seat. Ms. Reyna did her shopping and then walked back to her car with her bags about twenty minutes later. She noticed that appellant was still sitting in the passenger seat of the truck. She had to step up onto the curb to get to her car. She said, "As I walked up the curb, I noticed that [appellant] had his underwear pulled down with one hand and was masturbating with his other hand." Ms. Reyna said he was looking out his window to where "there was some kids and a lady walking." She said that she had "[n]o doubt at all" that appellant was masturbating. Ms. Reyna quickly got in her car and decided to call 911 "because this is not the right place." She backed out, drove to the edge of the parking lot, and called 911. The operator asked her for a description of the truck and its license plate number. Ms. Reyna, still watching the truck, noticed that appellant "crawled out of the passenger seat, and crawled into the driver's seat, put on his hat, put on his seat belt, and he backed up." Ms. Reyna, trying to get the license plate number, followed as appellant drove across the street to the Target parking lot. According to Ms. Reyna, when appellant noticed her following him, he drove out of the Target lot. She followed. When appellant came to a red light, he saw that she was still behind him, so he ran the light. Ms. Reyna followed, also running the red light and still on the phone to 911. When the police pulled appellant over, Ms. Reyna stopped as well and gave the responding officer a written statement. She testified that she called 911 because "to be parking out on the front row, in the very front row, doing that kind of stuff, I just feel like [that] should be something that you do elsewhere besides in public." Officer Andy O'Neill testified that he was dispatched to find Ms. Reyna who was following appellant's truck. He testified that he "pulled in between the silver Jag and the truck to pull the vehicle over, and the silver Jaguar pulled in the parking lot behind us." According to Officer O'Neill, appellant was completely dressed and also had on a badge, a pistol in a leather holster, and a cowboy hat. When Officer O'Neill told him why he had been pulled over, appellant just said it "hadn't happened." Appellant did not say anything about having had an upset stomach, and Officer O'Neill did not see any Pepto-Bismol bottle. Officer O'Neill saw nothing out of the ordinary — no tell-tale evidence of recent masturbation, no "napkins in the floorboard, in the seat, . . . any kind of pornographic material, magazines, anything like that, clothes being undone, belts being unbuckled, things like that." He let appellant go, and he took a statement from Ms. Reyna. Then she, too, went on her way. The State rested its case. Appellant testified that he drove to Waco to meet his friend, Peggy Hendrix, to play bingo. They were to meet at Target. When he got to Waco, he went to the Target first, but he didn't see Ms. Hendrix's van. He then went to the H.E.B. because he needed to use the restroom. After using the restroom, he pulled out of his parking spot and started to exit the lot, but then "the urge hit" him again. He had "diarrhea something fierce that day." He re-parked, this time right up front and went back in the H.E.B. He testified that he bought a bottle of Pepto-Bismol and got in on the passenger side: "What I had done when I got back in the pickup, I loosened my belt, undone it, and I took my weapon off." He said he then sat in his truck for 15 to 20 minutes, "sitting there, staring off in space most of the time," waiting for his upset stomach to settle down. When asked whether he ever had his penis in his hand appellant replied, "No, Sir. I had that bottle of Pepto-Bismol between my legs, and I was shaking it up and down like that, for maybe two or three seconds." He also denied that his clothes were ever loose enough that Ms. Reyna could have seen his underwear. He added that "as big as my stomach is, I don't think she could have seen me." After he started feeling better, he "crawled over, just like she said" to the driver's side, started up his truck, and left. He then returned to the Target to look for his friend's van, which wasn't there. He started towards the bingo hall because the backup plan was to meet there at 5:00. Appellant said that, before he reached the bingo hall, "I looked behind me, and it looked like the whole city of Waco was lit up with police cars." Appellant described the stop as being very short, and, after Officer O'Neill let him go, he went to the Dairy Queen to get a milk shake. Then he waited in his truck at the bingo hall for his friend Peggy, who arrived a few minutes later. Appellant testified unequivocally that he never noticed Ms. Reyna at the H.E.B., never noticed that she was following him in her Jaguar, did not run a red light (it might have been yellow), and never exposed himself in the H.E.B. parking lot. On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked whether Peggy, appellant's friend, was "here today to confirm this story." Appellant said no. When asked why he didn't say anything about not feeling well to Officer O'Neill, appellant said he didn't have much of a chance to say anything because, after Officer O'Neill brought his identification back, he told him he was free to go, "so I took it at that." Asked whether he told Peggy about the whole incident, he said, "Sure did. Yes, ma'am." The prosecutor then asked a rhetorical question: "Okay. And she's not here today?" On re-cross-examination, the State again asked about Peggy: "She wasn't there at that time this happened, right Mr. Westerman? . . . But she — she certainly could say that y'all had decided to meet at Target two days before. Right?" In closing, the prosecutor argued that appellant's story was "absolutely unbelievable and unreasonable." The defense attorney reminded the jury that "sometimes what people see isn't necessarily the case." He also reminded the jury that Officer O'Neill did not arrest appellant because he did not see anything out of the ordinary when he pulled appellant over. Nevertheless, the jury found appellant guilty of indecent exposure. The trial court sentenced him to 120 days' confinement, probated for eighteen months, and a $2,000 fine, with $1,800 probated for eighteen months. Appellant filed a motion for new trial, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel, but, after an evidentiary hearing, the trial judge denied that motion. The court of appeals found that trial counsel's failure to interview or call Peggy Hendrix prejudiced appellant. First, the court found deficient performance: "Westerman testified that [Ms. Hendrix] was available for trial, and [Ms. Hendrix]'s statement indicates her testimony would have been helpful. Therefore, we find that trial counsel was deficient in failing to conduct a proper investigation of the trial and interview potential witnesses." Second, the court found prejudice:Three people testified at Westerman's trial: Reyna, a police officer, and Westerman. The officer could neither confirm nor deny the indecent exposure, therefore the outcome of the trial balanced upon the credibility of Reyna and Westerman. The State noted more than once that [Ms. Hendrix] had not been called to testify for Westerman.According to her statement, [Ms. Hendrix] would have corroborated significant parts of Westerman's version of the events. Given that the trial hinged on credibility, and that the State emphasized that no one was there to corroborate Westerman's testimony, we cannot say that had [Hendrix] been interviewed and called to testify at trial the outcome of the trial would not have been different. The court of appeals reversed appellant's conviction and remanded the case for a new trial.
II.
An appellate court reviews a trial court's denial of a motion for new trial under the "abuse of discretion" standard. In reviewing the trial court's ruling, an appellate court "must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court's ruling and presume that all reasonable factual findings that could have been made against the losing party were made against that losing party." As the factfinder, the trial judge has "the right to accept or reject any part of" a witness's testimony. Thus, a trial court abuses its discretion in denying a motion for new trial only when no reasonable view of the record could support its ruling. The legal principles that govern claims of ineffective assistance of counsel were set out by the Supreme Court in Strickland v. Washington: "An ineffective assistance claim has two components: A petitioner must show that counsel's performance was deficient, and that the deficiency prejudiced the defense." To establish deficient performance, the defendant must demonstrate that his attorney's representation "fell below an objective standard of reasonableness." The Supreme Court "declined to articulate specific guidelines for appropriate attorney conduct and instead [has] emphasized that 'the proper measure of attorney performance remains simply reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.'" When addressing the specific question of counsel's duty to investigate the facts and interview or call potential witnesses, the Supreme Court has stated that courts must "conduct an objective review of [counsel's] performance, measured for 'reasonableness under prevailing professional norms,' which includes a context-dependent consideration of the challenged conduct as seen 'from counsel's perspective at the time.'" That is, the reasonableness of an attorney's pretrial investigation into possible exculpatory evidence and witnesses depends upon the facts known by or available to counsel at the time he made the decision whether to conduct further investigation, interview potential witnesses, or call them to testify. Reviewing courts cannot indulge in Monday-morning quarterbacking or second-guessing informed by hindsight or later developments.III.
In this case, appellant's claim of ineffective assistance stems from counsel's decision to limit the scope of his investigation by failing to contact Peggy Hendrix, who could have corroborated parts of his trial version of events, and by failing to present character witnesses. A counsel's failure to call witnesses is irrelevant absent a showing that such witnesses were available and that appellant would benefit from their testimony. At the hearing on the motion for new trial, appellant testified that before trial, both he and his trial counsel understood that the case was going to boil down to which witness the jury would believe — Ms. Reyna or appellant. Appellant said that he told his attorney that Ms. Hendrix, the woman he was to meet and did meet the night of the alleged offense, was available and willing to testify on his behalf. His attorney told him that "it wouldn't help." He also told his attorney of "at least 12 or 15 people" who would have been willing to testify on his behalf at punishment. Again, his attorney said that he "didn't think it would help." Appellant repeatedly testified that he "never discussed the case" with his attorney. He did not discuss possible defenses with his attorney, and they never talked about strategy. He said that he had not told his attorney different stories about what had happened: "I never had told him nothing that had happened except what I was charged with. That was the only thing that he ever discussed with me, what the charge was." Appellant said he told his attorney about the character witnesses "sitting in here before the trial," but his attorney said, "The less people we have, the better off we'll be." At the new trial hearing, appellant offered Defendant's Exhibit 1 — twelve character reference letters, including one from Sheriff Kirk — and Defendant's Exhibit 2 — a post-trial statement from Peggy Hendrix that corroborated portions of appellant's trial testimony. She stated that she and appellant were friends and bingo partners, and that on June 26th, she had arranged to meet appellant before bingo at either the Target, Dollar Store, or H.E.B. parking lot. She said that she was late and ended up meeting him instead at the bingo hall. She stated, He came in and he looked really sick. We usually play Bingo several days during the week and this day he felt worse than he ever did. He told me that he went back to his car and shook the bottle up before drinking half the bottle. He showed me the bottle and I told him that he probably didn't need to drink anymore. He told me that he got pulled over in the Bingo parking lot by a policeman. He went on saying that the policeman told him told him there was a complaint made by a woman that saw him in the parking lot of HEB expos[ing] himself. I couldn't believe what he was saying because it didn't sound like anything he would have done. I know that he was very sick that night because while we were at the Bingo place he had to go to the bathroom throughout the night. I ended up having to play his Bingo cards for him. Appellant's trial attorney then testified and explained that the first time he talked to appellant about the charge, appellant "was laughing and said that he was eating a hot dog, that maybe she saw the wiener." Later, he learned from the prosecutor that appellant had told Sheriff Kirk that he had taken a "nature pee" in a bottle, because he could not get to the restroom in time. Then, shortly before trial began, appellant told counsel that he had had an upset stomach and that maybe Ms. Reyna had seen him shaking the Pepto-Bismol bottle. Appellant's attorney explained that he did not call appellant's character witnesses "because that would have been suicide." Specifically, he did not call Sheriff Kirk because the sheriff had expressed concern about the disparity between the allegations and the "nature pee" story that appellant had told him. Counsel did not want Sheriff Kirk or any other witness on the stand "because I didn't know what all [appellant] had told them or what the sheriff had told people . . . I felt that Mr. Westerman, he looks credible to me, and I felt that — that would be suicide to call someone, not knowing what they are going to say." Appellant's attorney likewise explained that he did not want to call Peggy Hendrix because "all she could testify to was that he was supposed to meet her, and that when he finally saw her after he had been stopped, that he had an upset stomach." He thought her testimony would not be relevant (because it corroborated only events before and after the alleged offense) or admissible (because what appellant told her about the events in the H.E.B. parking lot was hearsay). Most important, counsel stated that his strategy was based on appellant's second version of facts: he had "a nature pee." Thus, the defense would assume that appellant had possibly exposed himself and that Ms. Reyna had seen this exposure. But the exposure was done not for sexual gratification — it was simply to relieve himself and his upset stomach. Appellant was the only witness needed. The fact that Ms. Reyna did see his penis could be conceded, but the defense would clarify that there was nothing sexual about the exposure. There would be no "He said, she said" credibility battle. Ms. Reyna saw what she said she saw, but the defense had a plausible explanation for what she saw. Then appellant surprised his own counsel with his unexpected testimony that he never pulled down his underwear and never exposed his privates:I felt that the element that was going to be in issue was if a person exposes himself, if it's for a sick stomach or something like, it's not criminal; but if it's for sexual gratification, it's criminal. And the way I understood it from talking to Mr. Westerman was that if she saw his penis, it's because he had a sick stomach, you know, he was taking care of himself; and if she saw his hand shaking, it was because he was probably shaking a bottle of Pepto-Bismol. But when he took the stand and [the prosecutor] cross-examined him, he committed himself, that there's no possible way that Ms. Reyna saw his penis, that his pants were pulled up, it wasn't a question of did she see it because of sexual gratification versus he had as sick stomach; it's a question of did she see his penis at all. It changed the whole complexion of it.Here, counsel justified his limited investigation into Ms. Hendrix and the character witnesses as both strategic and tactical judgments. He would not call Ms. Hendrix because she could testify only to collateral matters — that they were supposed to meet, they did meet, and he had a sick stomach. She could not testify to what appellant had told her because that was inadmissible hearsay. As counsel believed that the only contested issue would be appellant's intent and Ms. Hendrix's testimony was irrelevant to that issue, her testimony could only detract from that defense by creating possible testimonial conflicts about collateral issues — where they were to meet, when, appellant's appearance at the bingo hall, the Pepto-Bismol bottle, etc. He did not call the character witnesses because he himself had been told three different stories about what had happened, and he knew that at least one of the character witnesses had been also. He did not want to open a Pandora's box for the State's cross-examination; he wanted to focus on the viable defensive strategy of innocent intent that he thought appellant's second version of facts established. In light of the legal standards set out in both Strickland and Wiggins, our principal concern in deciding whether counsel exercised "reasonable professional judgment," is not whether, in light of appellant's actual trial testimony, he should have called Ms. Hendrix or the character witnesses. Rather, we focus on whether the investigation supporting counsel's decision not to interview or call them was itself reasonable at the time he made that decision. That is, "'Every effort [must] be made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight.'" The record at the motion-for-new-trial hearing supports the trial court's ruling that counsel's decision not to interview or call Ms. Hendrix was within the range of reasonable professional judgment. According to counsel, appellant had already told him what Ms. Hendrix could corroborate, so interviewing her would not have uncovered any new information — a fact borne out by her affidavit, and one not contested by appellant. Counsel set out the defense when he previewed appellant's expected testimony in his opening statement:
He needed to use the rest room. His stomach, I think he's going to testify, was somewhat upset. . . . I think he's going to testify that his pants were undone, and that he went ahead and brought them down lower so it wouldn't cramp his stomach that much more. And he would drink the Pepto-Bismol, and he looked out the window, trying to get over what he had — or at least where he wouldn't have bouts of diarrhea. . . . I think he's going to testify that if the lady saw his private part, it wasn't because he was trying to expose himself for sexual gratification. If she did see it, it's because he was trying to keep himself from having diarrhea. . . .Because the jury would not be faced with any dilemma of deciding who was "lying," counsel rationally decided that a witness who could corroborate only collateral matters was not helpful and, in fact, might contradict other anticipated testimony. But appellant's stance on the stand turned the trial into a "he said, she said" affair. Counsel could not have predicted this. As the State notes, "Appellant himself took away the defense that he and counsel intended to present and after-the-fact he wants to complain that counsel was not prepared to corroborate the defense he created on the stand." On appeal, appellant wants counsel's decision reviewed with the distorting effects of hindsight based upon what counsel testified was appellant's unexpected trial testimony. This is exactly the kind of Monday-morning quarterbacking that the Supreme Court denounced in Strickland. Nor was counsel's failure to interview or call the character witnesses unreasonable. First, it appears that appellant did not tell counsel of any potential character witnesses until the morning of trial. Second, because of appellant's various stories about what had happened, and the fact that the defense was to focus on intent rather than credibility, counsel's decision to let his client — an elected law enforcement official — stand on his own reflected "reasonable professional judgment." An elected constable comes cloaked with the credibility of the electorate; counsel need not assume that his client's testimony would necessarily place his character for truthfulness into question. And third, as the trial court noted, their testimony would not have been admissible at the guilt stage because none of them explicitly attested to appellant's character for truthfulness. We must view the facts in the light most favorable to the trial judge's ruling. He was in a much better position to judge the credibility of the witnesses at the new trial hearing and to gauge the potential impact of any additional defense witnesses who might have been called during the trial. At the motion-for-new-trial hearing, the judge was required to assess the different versions given by appellant and his counsel. The court of appeals failed to give credence to counsel's explanations, but the trial judge may have made a different assessment. He was entitled to do so. Reviewing courts must defer to those credibility assessments. Further, the trial court was not required to accept Ms. Hendrix's post-trial statement uncritically. Although the court of appeals aptly noted that, during her closing argument, the prosecutor made much of the fact that appellant failed to call Ms. Hendrix to corroborate his story, this became an issue only because appellant unexpectedly turned the trial into a credibility contest. The court of appeals cited several cases for the proposition that an "attorney has a duty to make an independent investigation of the facts supporting a defense," and to "present all available testimony in support of the client's defense." In those cases, unlike the present one, the failure to investigate was central to the presentation of a known and viable defense. In three cases cited by the court of appeals, for example, the available witnesses that were not called had information that went to the very heart of the case. This case, however, is more like Hale v. State, in which "appellant's trial counsel failed to interview potential witnesses who could have testified favorably for appellant during the trial" but [n]one of appellant's potential witnesses had any personal information concerning the accusations made by the two victims. None of appellant's proposed witnesses could provide an alibi or an eyewitness account of what occurred between appellant and the victims. At best, some of the witnesses could offer testimony on their personal observations of appellant interacting with the victims on other occasions and statements to the effect that nothing inappropriate occurred while the witnesses were present. In this case, as in Hale, none of appellant's potential witnesses had any personal information concerning Ms. Reyna's accusations. None could provide any account of what occurred at the H.E.B. At best, Ms. Hendrix could have testified that she and appellant had arranged to meet, they did meet, and she made personal observations of appellant later that same day. Although Ms. Hendrix could have corroborated appellant's testimony on some collateral matters, the trial judge knew from reading her post-trial statement that Ms. Hendrix's testimony would have been inconsistent with appellant's testimony on some of these collateral matters also. Ms. Hendrix's absence at trial did not, at any rate, rob appellant of a viable defense. The prosecutor repeatedly commented on Ms. Hendrix's absence. The trial judge, however, may have concluded that, had Mr. Hendrix testified, the prosecutor would have commented on the inconsistencies between appellant's trial testimony and Ms. Hendrix's factual statements (and might have developed additional inconsistencies, just as defense counsel feared).