If an Article 11.07 or 11.071 application has been forwarded to this Court, and a party wishes this Court to consider evidence not filed in the trial court, then the party must comply with the following procedures or the evidence will not be considered.
(a) If the Court of Criminal Appeals has received an Article 11.07 or 11.071 application from the district clerk of the county of conviction and has filed and set the application for submission, a party has two options:(1) The party may file the evidence directly in the Court of Criminal Appeals with a motion for the Court of Criminal Appeals to consider the evidence. In this motion, the party should describe the evidence, explain its evidentiary value, and state why compelling and extraordinary circumstances exist for the Court of Criminal Appeals to consider the evidence directly. The moving party must immediately serve copies of the motion and the evidence the party seeks to file on the other party or parties in the case. If the Court of Criminal Appeals grants this motion, the Court will consider the evidence in its review of the application. The Court of Criminal Appeals will grant such a motion only if the Court concludes the circumstances are truly exceptional. (2) The party may file in the Court of Criminal Appeals a motion to supplement the record in the trial court. In this motion, the party should describe the evidence the party intends to file, explain its evidentiary value, and state why the evidence could not have been filed in the trial court before the Court of Criminal Appeals filed and set the application for submission. The moving party must immediately serve copies of the motion and the evidence the party seeks to file on the other party or parties in the case. If the Court of Criminal Appeals grants the motion, the party may file the evidence with the district clerk of the county of conviction, and should attach a copy of the motion to supplement and the Court of Criminal Appeals' order granting said motion. The district clerk shall immediately send a copy of the filed materials to the trial judge assigned to the habeas case and to the other party or parties in the case, and otherwise comply with the procedures set out in Rule 73.4(b) of these rules. (b) If the Court of Criminal Appeals has received an Article 11.07 or 11.071 application from the district clerk of the county of conviction, but the Court has not yet filed and set the application for submission, the party must file in the Court of Criminal Appeals a motion to stay the proceedings pending the filing of the evidence in the trial court. In this motion, the party should describe the evidence the party intends to file and explain its evidentiary value. The moving party must immediately serve copies of the motion and the evidence the party seeks to file on the other party or parties in the case. If the Court of Criminal Appeals grants the motion, the Court will specify a designated time frame for the party to file the evidence with the district clerk of the county of conviction. The party should attach a copy of the motion to stay proceedings and the Court of Criminal Appeals' order granting said motion to the evidentiary filing. The district clerk of the county of conviction shall immediately send a copy of the filed materials to the trial judge assigned to the habeas case and to the other party or parties in the case, and otherwise comply with the procedures set out in Rule 73.4(b) of these rules. Notes and Comments
Comment to 1997 change: This is former Rule 4 of the Appendix for Criminal Cases. The rule is amended without substantive change.
Comment to 2000 change: Rules 73.1 and 73.2 are added, and a form is added in an appendix.
Comment to 2018 change: Rules 73.1 and 73.4 are amended in conjunction with amendments to the form for applications filed under Article 11.07 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (Appendix E to these rules) and the Clerk's Summary Sheet (Appendix F to these rules). The amendments clarify terminology and procedures for filing Article 11.07 writ applications and update the Article 11.07 writ application form to incorporate current technologies and filing procedures. The application form will be made available on the internet through the Court of Criminal Appeals' website. In addition, the amendments bring the application and filing procedures into conformity with Civil Practice and Remedies Code chapter 132, which permits both inmates and non-inmates to file unsworn declarations in lieu of notarized oaths. Further, the rules amendments and changes to the clerk's summary sheet clarify the information that district clerks must provide to the Court of Criminal Appeals and add a new requirement that clerks certify that they have complied with all the requirements of Rule 73.4, including the requirement to serve on all parties in the case all objections, motions, affidavits, exhibits, proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, findings of fact and conclusions of law, and any other orders entered or pleadings filed in the habeas case. The phrase "all parties in the case" as used in Rule 73.4 includes: the attorney representing the State; the applicant (including pro se and inmate applicants); and, if the applicant is represented by counsel, applicant's attorney.