Summary
holding that a trial court's accurate statement of law in response to a jury question was not grounds for reversal
Summary of this case from Lucio v. StateOpinion
No. 06-07-00081-CR
Date Submitted: November 1, 2007.
Date Decided: November 21, 2007. DO NOT PUBLISH
On Appeal from the 276th Judicial District Court Titus County, Texas, Trial Court No. CR15,114.
Before MORRISS, C.J., CARTER and MOSELEY, JJ.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
After drinking heavily all day July 4, 2006, Timothy Wayne Ryan stabbed his father, leaving him bleeding and on the kitchen floor. Ryan also ran over his mother with his father's pick-up truck, killing her. Ryan said he could not remember attacking his parents, nor could he explain his actions other than to say a couple weeks earlier his mother had said something that hurt him. Ryan pled guilty to murdering his mother — trial court case number 15,114 and this appeal — and aggravated assault on his father with a deadly weapon — trial court case number 15,115 and the companion appeal, our cause number 06-07-00082-CR — then asked the Titus County jury to place him on community supervision in each case. Instead, the jury assessed ninety-nine years' imprisonment and a fine of $10,000.00 in each case. We affirm the judgment of the trial court in this case, after determining the trial court committed no error in orally explaining to the jury how to fill out the verdict form. Ryan complains about the trial court's statements to the jury shortly before they returned their verdict. Late in jury deliberations, the presiding juror told the trial court, in open court, that the jury had reached verdicts in each of the two cases. The trial judge said he had been "advised that you had indicated you were having some difficulty being able to —"; and the presiding juror finished his sentence, "[f]ill in the paperwork." Ryan claims that the trial court's subsequent oral statements comprised a "supplemental instruction [which] essentially tells the jury to ignore those elements of the written charge that define and discuss probation. The instruction amounts to a comment on the weight of the evidence and conveys to the jury the trial court's feelings on punishment." We disagree, and affirm the trial court's judgment. During, but near the end of jury deliberations, the jury appeared before the trial court, and the above-quoted exchange occurred. The record is silent as to what or who "advised" the trial court that the jury was having some trouble "[f]ill[ing] in the paperwork." Though the presiding juror told the trial court the jury had reached verdicts on both cases, the trial court asked if they were still having difficulty with the "paperwork," and the presiding juror answered, "Yes." At this point, the trial court addressed the presiding juror in very explicit, and from our reading, clear statements. The court advised the juror not to speak to the court unless asked; to answer the court in only "yes or no" answers; and that whatever the judge said, he was "not trying to indicate any personal thought or opinions about what your verdict ought to be in one direction or the other." The trial court explained that each "certificate of verdict" had "two forms," where the "upper form is to be used if the jury does not wish to recommend probation." Conversely, should the jury wish to recommend community supervision, the trial court said the jury would use "the bottom blank. And that blank, under the instructions of the Court, would have to be filled in for the confinement at any number of five or ten or any number in between. If it's over ten, you cannot recommend probation." The court then sent the jury back to make sure their verdicts accurately stated what the jury wished to recommend. We fail to see how any of this amounts to a comment on the weight of the evidence as Ryan asserts. It is true that, when a trial court responds substantively to a jury question during deliberations, that communication essentially amounts to an additional or supplemental jury instruction. Daniell v. State, 848 S.W.2d 145, 147 (Tex.Crim.App. 1993); Villarreal v. State, 205 S.W.3d 103, 106 (Tex.App.-Texarkana 2006, pet. dism'd, untimely filed). In this case however, the trial court's statements reflect accurate statements of the law, were clearly directed at helping the jury fill out the forms consistent with whatever verdict it had reached, and were carefully measured to disavow any intent to color the jury's thinking on those verdicts. Reviewing the totality of the record, we find no error in the trial court's statements to the jury. As there was no error in the trial court's explanation of the verdict forms, we do not reach the egregious harm analysis of Almanza v. State, 686 S.W.2d 157, 171 (Tex.Crim.App. 1985) (op. on reh'g). See Mann v. State, 964 S.W.2d 639, 641 (Tex.Crim.App. 1998); Duke v. State, 950 S.W.2d 424, 426 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 1997, pet. ref'd). We affirm the trial court's judgment.
The trial court often used the commonly used term "probation" in lieu of the current, statutory "community supervision." We use the two terms interchangeably in this opinion.
And after the jury had sent two notes, both answered by the trial court without objection from the State or Ryan; these notes are not the subject of the instant appeal.
In a separate opinion issued contemporaneously with this opinion, we also affirm the companion appeal, our cause number 06-07-00082-CR.