Please E-mail suggested additions, comments and/or corrections to Kent@MoreLaw.Com.

Help support the publication of case reports on MoreLaw

Date: 09-26-2020

Case Style:

Christy Michelle Pruitt v. The State of Texas

Case Number: 02-18-00453-CR

Judge: Bonnie Sudderth

Court: Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth

Plaintiff's Attorney: Gregory P. Lowery
David Alan Singleton

Defendant's Attorney:


Free National Lawyer Directory


OR


Just Call 855-853-4800 for Free Help Finding a Lawyer Help You.



Description: Jacksboro, Texas - Criminal Defense Attorney, Delivery of a Controlled Substance

MoreLaw Marketing
Cost Effective Internet Marketing for Legal Professionals
Info@MoreLaw.com - 855-853-4800







Seventeen-year-old M.T.P. died on January 16, 2017, from an overdose of
morphine and alprazolam, the active ingredient in Xanax. The morphine tablets had
been prescribed to his step-grandfather while in hospice care. After his stepgrandfather’s death, M.T.P.’s aunt Jennifer, who had inherited the step-grandfather’s
house, hid the bottle of tablets in a utility closet. On the night before he died, M.T.P.
went to the house, told Jennifer that he was looking for a bag belonging to his 14-
year-old sister J.R.P., and took the morphine from the closet.
Before stopping by Jennifer’s house, M.T.P.spoke to Appellant on the phone
and, soon after, received the text from her that said, “Don’t let your Aunt Jennifer
know what u r there for,” followed by the second text, “Take 1 now then in an hour
and half u can take another one,” sent 20 minutes later. M.T.P. had taken Xanax
before going to Jennifer’s house, and when he returned home, he took the nine
morphine tablets. According to the medical examiner’s report, M.T.P. died the next
day “from the toxic effects of morphine and alprazolam.”
Appellant filed a motion to change the trial’s venue from Jack County to Wise
County. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 31.03. Appellant did not request a
hearing on the motion, and the trial court did not rule on it.
1Because Appellant’s first issue contests the sufficiency of the evidence to
support her conviction, we save a more detailed recitation of the facts for our
discussion of that issue.
4
Discussion
I. Sufficiency of the evidence as to guilt
In her first issue, Appellant argues that the evidence was insufficient to support
a guilty finding.
A. Standard of review
In our evidentiary-sufficiency review, we view all the evidence in the light most
favorable to the verdict to determine whether any rational factfinder could have found
the crime’s essential elements beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S.
307, 319, 99 S. Ct. 2781, 2789 (1979); Queeman v. State, 520 S.W.3d 616, 622 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2017). The standard of review is the same for direct and circumstantial
evidence cases; circumstantial evidence is as probative as direct evidence in
establishing guilt. Jenkins v. State, 493 S.W.3d 583, 599 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016).
To determine whether the State has met its Jackson burden to prove a
defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, we compare the crime’s elements as
defined by the hypothetically correct jury charge to the evidence adduced at trial. See
id.; see also Febus v. State, 542 S.W.3d 568, 572 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018) (“The essential
elements of an offense are determined by state law.”). Such a charge is one that
accurately sets out the law, is authorized by the indictment, does not unnecessarily
increase the State’s burden of proof or restrict the State’s theories of liability, and
adequately describes the particular offense for which the defendant was tried. Jenkins,
493 S.W.3d at 599. The “law as authorized by the indictment” means the statutory
5
elements of the charged offense as modified by the factual details and legal theories
contained in the charging instrument. See id.; see also Rabb v. State, 434 S.W.3d 613, 616
(Tex. Crim. App. 2014) (“When the State pleads a specific element of a penal offense
that has statutory alternatives for that element, the sufficiency of the evidence will be
measured by the element that was actually pleaded, and not any alternative statutory
elements.”).
B. Proving delivery of a controlled substance
Appellant’s indictment alleged that she had knowingly delivered, by actual or
constructive transfer, morphine, a controlled substance, to M.T.P., who was younger
than 18. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. §§ 481.002(8), .102(3)(A), .122. “[O]ne
method of constructive transfer is for the transferor to instruct the recipient on the
location of the contraband. If the contraband is already in place, the constructive
transfer is complete [when] the transferor gives the instruction.” Sims v. State, 117
S.W.3d 267, 277–78 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003). Actual transfer occurs when the
recipient then retrieves the contraband. Id. at 278.
C. Relevant evidence
Appellant’s and her sister Jennifer’s stepfather had died at home in hospice care
in May 2015. At the time of his death, their stepfather had had a prescription for 30
milligram morphine tablets. When he died, Appellant’s mother told Jennifer, who
lived with her, to hide the bottle containing the remaining morphine tablets until they
could dispose of it. Jennifer put the bottle in a basket in a utility closet and put a large
6
metal bowl over the basket. This closet also had a refrigerator where drinks and
snacks were kept, and it was accessible to anyone at the house. After their mother
died suddenly in July 2015 after a stroke, Jennifer inherited her parents’ house, and in
late 2016, Jennifer allowed Appellant to move in with her. In January 2017, Appellant
was still living with Jennifer.
Appellant had two children with her ex-husband David Pruitt—M.T.P. and
J.R.P. After their 2014 divorce, David became managing conservator of the children.
In 2017, David, a welder, was working on a project about 400 miles away from home
and would typically be gone for five days at a time, leaving J.R.P. in M.T.P.’s care. On
the evening of January 15, 2017, the children were with David at his house until he
left for work around 8:00 p.m. After that, the children were home without adult
supervision. Appellant was also out of town, in Midland.
After his dad left, M.T.P. took some Xanax and gave some to his sister.
2 Then
around 9:00 p.m., M.T.P. stopped by Jennifer’s house and, after telling her that he was
there to pick up J.R.P.’s bag, he took the bottle of morphine pills from the utility
closet.
After returning home, M.T.P. took nine tablets, and J.R.P. took five. He also
gave seven tablets to his friend G.T., who had come to the house. The next morning,
J.R.P. threw up and did not go to school. Instead, after speaking to her brother, she
2No evidence at trial explained the source of the Xanax.
7
went back to bed. Later that afternoon, M.T.P.’s best friend Z.H. came to the house
and found M.T.P. dead in his bed. The medical examiner concluded that neither the
morphine nor the Xanax would have been fatal on its own, but the synergistic effect
of the two depressed M.T.P.’srespiratory system and caused his death.3
Appellant does not dispute that M.T.P. retrieved the morphine from Jennifer’s
house or that he took some upon returning home, but she argues that the evidence is
insufficient to prove that he did so at her direction. To argue sufficiency of the
evidence, the State relies primarily on three lines of evidence: (1) phone records for
Appellant and M.T.P. (2) J.R.P.’s testimony about a phone conversation about the
morphine that she overheard between M.T.P. and a woman who she thought was her
mother, and (3) J.R.P.’s testimony that Appellant had instructed her to delete
incriminating text messages from M.T.P.’s phone.
The phone record evidence included reports of call logs and texts extracted
from M.T.P.’s and Appellant’s phones. These reports showed that M.T.P. called
Appellant at 8:18 p.m. on the night of January 15 and spoke to Appellant for about
three minutes. He called her again at 8:45 p.m.; this call lasted only 28 seconds. One
minute after that phone call, Appellant sent M.T.P the text instructing him not to tell
3While the medical examiner attributed M.T.P.’s death to a synergistic effect of
morphine and alprazolam and testified that the morphine level in M.T.P.’s system was
not considered a fatal amount, she also testified that she had no knowledge of
M.T.P.’s tolerance level to morphine and if he had low tolerance, the nine tablets
might have been a lethal dose.
8
his aunt about the purpose of his visit. At 8:47 p.m., M.T.P. called Appellant again;
this call lasted 4 minutes and 36 seconds. He made a 50-second call to Appellant at
9:02 p.m., and two minutes later, Appellant texted M.T.P. to “[t]ake 1 now” and wait
an hour and half before taking another. To that, M.T.P. responded, “Ok.”
J.R.P., who was 16 at the time of trial, reluctantly testified about the events
leading up to M.T.P.’s death. She explained that after her fatherleft for work on the
night of January 15, she took a Xanax that her brother gave her. M.T.P., who had
also taken Xanax, then left the house with his friend G.T. and returned with the
morphine. She stated that it was her brother’s idea to get the morphine and that he
“called someone about that.” That someone was a woman who sounded like her
mother, “but [she didn’t] know for sure.”
4

After she, M.T.P., and G.T. took some of the morphine, M.T.P. and G.T. went
to M.T.P.’s room to smoke marijuana. G.T. left the next morning. J.R.P. spoke to
her brother then, and although he “just laid in bed,” she said that he seemed like his
normal self. Because J.R.P. did not feel well, she went back to sleep. M.T.P.’s best
friend Z.H., who became concerned when M.T.P. was not at school that day, went to
the house in the afternoon. When he could not awaken M.T.P., he woke up J.R.P.
4
J.R.P. acknowledged that in two previous statements—one given to an
investigator with the Jack and Wise Counties District Attorney’s Office and the other
given to an investigator with the Department of Family and Protective Services, Child
Protective Services—she had identified that person as Appellant. But at trial she
claimed that when she had given those two statements,she was angry and looking for
someone to blame for M.T.P.’s death.
9
and told her about M.T.P. Z.H.’s father called,5
and Z.H. told him that he could not
wake M.T.P. Z.H.’s dad went to the house, tried to revive M.T.P. by using CPR, and
called 911.
In the meantime, either Z.H. or J.R.P. called Appellant to tell her what was
happening, and J.R.P. informed her mother that M.T.P. was not waking up.
6
J.R.P.
testified that in the phone conversation, Appellant told her to get M.T.P.’s phone
“because [Appellant] could get in trouble” and asked her to delete the texts she had
sent to M.T.P. J.R.P. retrieved the phone from M.T.P.’s room, but she could not
delete the texts because the phone battery was dead, so she put it on the top shelf of
her closet. The phone was later found in a shoebox in the closet by her father.
7

On cross-examination,J.R.P. testified that her fatherwanted to see her mother
convicted and that he had told her that if her testimony at trial did not match her
5
In his testimony, Z.H. did not explain why his father called.
6The trial testimony was contradictory about whetherit was Z.H. or J.R.P. who
called Appellant. Z.H. denied calling her on his phone but testified that he may have
told J.R.P. to call her. He could not remember whether he spoke to Appellant to tell
her that M.T.P. would not wake up. J.R.P. stated that she called her mother.
Appellant testified that Z.H. called her from J.R.P.’s phone but the call was
disconnected, so she called her daughter back. In any event, the testimony was
consistent that J.R.P. and Appellant spoke on the phone soon after Z.H. found
M.T.P.
7
In a line of questions about whether someone else had moved the phone to
the shoebox, J.R.P. did not give a definite answer, stating that “[m]aybe” she had put
it in the shoebox; “[p]robably” someone else could have put it there; she did not
know who moved it, if it had been moved; and, “[i]t might have been moved, but
[she] put it on the top shelf in [her] closet.”
10
previous statements to investigators, she could “wind up in juvy.”
8
According to
J.R.P. she also needed to make her testimony match her previous statements because
the State had granted her immunity for a charge of tampering with evidence, the
immunity would be revoked if she lied in her trial testimony, and it was the State who
would decide whether her testimony was truthful.
9
She also admitted that her halfbrother, Appellant’s son, had texted her to ask her if she wanted Appellant to go to
prison for the rest of her life and told her that “[i]f there’s anything that we need to
change,we need to do it now,” to which she responded, “Tell me what to say because
I don’t know what to do.”
Appellant testified in her own defense to contradict J.R.P.’s testimony and to
provide an explanation for her texts to M.T.P. She agreed that she had asked J.R.P. to
get M.T.P.’s phone, but she claimed that it was so that she could look through the
phone to figure out what had happened. She stated that J.R.P. was mistaken about
Appellant’s having asked her to delete text messages.
As for the phone calls and text messages, Appellant testified that M.T.P. had
called first just to have a general conversation and that he called back later asking if he
could go to Jennifer’s house to “pick up his weed pipe that was at [her] house.” She
acknowledged that she had allowed M.T.P. to smoke marijuana at Jennifer’s house,
8David’s version of this conversation is that he told her, “if you get on the
stand and you—you lie, you could possibly go to TYC.”
9But on re-direct, she stated that she had not lied in her testimony.
11
explaining that she did so because she knew that he would use marijuana anyway, and
she thought that he was safer doing it in her house than out on the streets. But
because she knew that Jennifer “would not have been okay with him going there to
pick up his weed pipe,” she texted him to not tell Jennifer the purpose of his visit.
According to Appellant, in the next call from M.T.P., he “sounded funny,” so
she asked if he was high, and he said no. She further testified that he called back a
few minutes later to tell her that he did not feel well, so she told him to take some
Advil and lie down. Appellant claimed that her text telling M.T.P. to “[t]ake 1 now”
and “another one” later was about the Advil.
Appellant was en route from Midland the next day when J.R.P. and Z.H. called
her to tell her about M.T.P., and she went straight to David’s house. When she
arrived, David and J.R.P. were there along with paramedics and a sheriff’s deputy.
She denied telling J.R.P. to hide M.T.P.’s phone or knowing where J.R.P. put it,
testifying that “when [she] arrived home that day and [she] was told [her] son died,
[she] never thought anything about [the phone] again.”
C. Analysis
The factfinder alone judges the evidence’s weight and credibility. See Tex. Code
Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.04;Queeman, 520 S.W.3d at 622. We may not re-evaluate the
evidence’s weight and credibility and substitute our judgment for the factfinder’s.
Queeman, 520 S.W.3d at 622. Instead, we determine whether the necessary inferences
are reasonable based on the evidence’s cumulative force when viewed in the light
12
most favorable to the verdict. Murray v. State, 457 S.W.3d 446, 448 (Tex. Crim. App.
2015); see Villa v. State, 514 S.W.3d 227, 232 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017) (“The court
conducting a sufficiency review must not engage in a ‘divide and conquer’strategy but
must consider the cumulative force of all the evidence.”). We must presume that the
factfinder resolved any conflicting inferences in favor of the verdict, and we must
defer to that resolution. Murray, 457 S.W.3d at 448–49. But a jury is not permitted to
come to conclusions based on “mere speculation or factually unsupported inferences
or presumptions.” Braughton v. State, 569 S.W.3d 592, 608 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018)
(quoting Hooper v. State, 214 S.W.3d 9, 15–6 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007)).
The jury had to resolve the conflict in Appellant’s and J.R.P.’s testimony about
whether Appellant had talked to M.T.P. about the morphine and whether Appellant
had asked J.R.P. to delete her text messages. The jury could and apparently did find
J.R.P. credible and Appellant not credible. The jury could have believed J.R.P.’s
testimony that on the evening of January 15, M.T.P. had a phone conversation about
the morphine with a woman who sounded like Appellant. And because M.T.P.’s
phone records show that he spoke to his mother near the time that he went to his
aunt’s house for the morphine, and Appellant acknowledged that she had spoken to
him around that time, the jury could have reasonably inferred that Appellant was the
woman with whom he had spoken about the morphine. The jury could also have
rejected Appellant’s explanations for her text messages, believing instead J.R.P.’s
testimony that Appellant told her to find M.T.P.’s phone and delete the texts. Having
13
reasonably inferred that Appellant had a conversation with M.T.P. about the
morphine, the jury could have further reasonably inferred from the evidence that the
text regarding the dosage amount was also related to the morphine. Between the
phone calls and the text messages indicating that Appellant gave M.T.P. instructions
on retrieving the morphine and how much of the morphine to take, the evidence at
trial was sufficient to establish that Appellant either told 17-year-old M.T.P. where to
find the morphine or gave him permission to take it. And it is undisputed that he
found the morphine and took it home with him. Thus, the evidence was sufficient to
support the jury’s finding that Appellant constructively or actually transferred a
controlled substance to a minor. We overrule Appellant’s first issue.
II. Sufficiency of the evidence as to deadly weapon finding
In her second issue, Appellant argues that the evidence was insufficient to
support the jury’s affirmative finding that she used or exhibited a deadly weapon.
Specifically, she arguesthat the evidence was insufficient to establish that she used the
morphine in a manner capable of causing death or serious bodily injury. She further
argues that the rule of lenity requires this court to set aside the deadly weapon finding.
A. Proving up a deadly weapon
We will sustain a deadly-weapon finding if the evidence shows that (1) the
object meets the definition of a deadly weapon; (2) the object was used or exhibited
during the transaction on which the felony conviction was based; and (3) other people
were put in actual danger. Brister v. State, 449 S.W.3d 490, 494 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014).
14
A “deadly weapon” includes “anything that in the manner of its use or intended use is
capable of causing death or serious bodily injury.” Tex. PenalCode Ann. § 1.07(17);
see also Prichard v. State, 533 S.W.3d 315, 320–21 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017) (noting that
that “a ‘deadly weapon’may be ‘anything,’ and there is no limitation as to what type of
thing may be considered a deadly weapon”). “Serious bodily injury” is “bodily injury
that creates a substantial risk of death or that causes death, serious permanent
disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any bodily member
or organ.” Tex. PenalCode Ann. § 1.07(46).
The sufficiency of the evidence supporting a deadly weapon finding depends
on the specific testimony in the record about its manner of use. See Yon v. State, 440
S.W.3d 828, 831–33 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2013, no pet.). “Use” can mean any
employment of the object alleged to be a deadly weapon. Coleman v. State, 145 S.W.3d
649, 652 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) (quoting Patterson v. State, 769 S.W.2d 938, 941 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1989).
B. Evidence of a deadly weapon
The medical examiner testified about the results of the autopsy she had
conducted on M.T.P. First, she explained her toxicology findings. The level of
morphine in M.T.P.’s body at the time of the autopsy was 0.115 milligrams per liter.
A therapeutic level—what she would normally see in a patient prescribed morphine—
is 0.02 milligrams per liter. The level of Xanax in M.T.P.’s body was 0.017 milligrams
per liter, which is within the therapeutic range for that drug.
15
The medical examiner next explained to the jury the effects of opiates like
morphine and benzodiazepineslike Xanax. She testified that opiates can have a toxic
effect because they “cause respiratory depression,” acting “specifically on the brain
stem to slow down your breathing. And once your breathing slows, that’s when you
get the buildup of fluid in the lungs. It makes it harder for you to get oxygen to the
rest of your body.” She explained that benzodiazepines have “basically the same
mechanism of action” as opiates “where they will cause respiratory depression,” and
the combination of benzodiazepines and opiates has potentially harmful
consequences. “[I]nstead of having an additive effect where if you take one and you
take the other, it’s two times, it’s more of an exponential effect. So it might be four
times as—as depressing to the respiratory system.”
Finally, she opined that M.T.P. died from the toxic effects of the combination
of morphine and Xanax, that she had seen no other cause for his death other than the
effects of the controlled substancesin his system, and that, based on M.T.P.’s health
at the time, she had no reason to believe that he would have died then had he not
taken the morphine. She further stated that in her opinion, the morphine that M.T.P.
ingested was a deadly weapon.
On cross examination, the medical examiner acknowledged that neither the
amount of Xanax in M.T.P.’s body nor the morphine, standing alone, was at a level
16
that is considered fatal.10
Rather, it was the combined effect of the drugs that led to
his death. She was not asked to give her opinion on whether two morphine tablets
would have been fatal, but it would be reasonable to infer that if she did not consider
nine tablets to be a fatal dose, two tablets would not have been, either.
C. Analysis
As Appellant notes in her brief, to constitute a deadly weapon in this case, the
morphine had to be capable of causing serious injury or death by its use or intended
use. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 1.07(a)(17)(B). It is the defendant’s use that matters
for this determination. See Rodriguez v. State, 31 S.W.3d 772, 778–79 (Tex. App.—
Austin 2000) (relying, for purposes of reviewing deadly weapon finding, on the
defendant’s use of cocaine rather than the use of the cocaine by the person who
ultimately ingested it), aff’d, 104 S.W.3d 87 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).
Appellant’sfirst argument under this issue focuses on the fact that the medical
examiner agreed that neither theXanax nor the morphine would have been fatal on
its own. She argues that “[m]orphine was the only substance for which [she] could
arguably be held responsible” because there is no evidence that Appellant provided
10The State asked the medical examiner on re-direct if it was “fair to say that
somebody who has never used opiates is going to have a lower tolerance to somebody
who uses opiates frequently” and whether that could “have had some impact with
regards to [M.T.P.],” and “[t]hat might have been a lethal amount” for him. She
responded that she “d[id]n’t know anything . . . of his drug history,” “but if he were
naïve to it, then yes.” There was no evidence of M.T.P.’s prior history with opiates,
and the medical opinion that she offered as to his cause of death was that he died
from the toxic effects of both drugs.
17
M.T.P. with Xanax and that the particular facts of this case do not support a finding
that she intended to cause serious bodily injury or death or that she knew that the
morphine would be combined with another substance.
Appellant is correct that the State produced no evidence that she knew that
M.T.P. would be taking the morphine tablets after having taken Xanax. But Appellant
“used” the morphine by transferring possession of it to her teenage son with express
permission to take some while he was home without adult supervision. The medical
examiner testified about the toxic effects that opiates can have on the body. Giving
an underaged child unfettered access to and express permission to take a potentially
deadly drug—not only without any adult supervision whatsoever but also while in the
presence of other underage children—was sufficient evidence to support a finding
that the manner of Appellant’s use of the morphine was capable of causing death or
serious bodily injury. Contra id. (holding that defendant did not use cocaine as a
deadly weapon when he prepped a small amount for his teenage daughter to use and
watched while she ingested it).
Appellant makes two more arguments under this issue. First, citing In re M.S.,
No. 02-11-00041-CV, 2012 WL 335864, at *3 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Feb. 2, 2012,
no pet.) (mem. op.), Appellant asserts the rule of lenity should apply and argues that
“the ambiguity in whether M.T.P.’s ingestion of morphine—without the Xanax
delivered by an unknown person other than the Appellant—would have caused his
death, should be resolved in favor of lenity.”
18
The rule of lenity applies “when a criminal statute is ambiguous and the intent
of the legislature cannot be determined by employing statutory construction
can[]ons.” Id. at *3. Under those circumstances, the rule requires that the ambiguity
be resolved in favor of lenity. Id. But here, while Appellant arguesthat the evidence is
ambiguous, she fails to articulate how any applicable statute is. To the extent that
Appellant intended to argue that the statutory definition for “deadly weapon” is
ambiguous, we disagree. While the evidence in a particular case might make it
difficult to determine if an object is a deadly weapon under the facts of that case, the
statute itself is clear and unambiguous. See Moore v. State, 520 S.W.3d 906, 908 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2017) (noting the provision’s plain language). And here, the evidence was
not ambiguous. The medical examiner clearly testified that the amount of morphine
in M.T.P.’s body, though not fatal on its own, had in combination with the Xanax
caused M.T.P.’s death. It is irrelevant whether Appellant’s giving the morphine to
M.T.P. would not have led to his death if he had not also taken Xanax because
Appellant’s giving M.T.P. morphine on a day when he had taken Xanax—the manner
in which the morphinewas actually used in this case—was deadly.
Second, Appellant argues in one sentence that “in this case, Appellant’s
conduct was punished twice in the finding that she delivered morphine to a minor
resulting in his serious bodily injury or death, and, the finding that morphine was a
deadly weapon in the manner of its use.” Construing this sentence as arguing that the
application of both enhancements was impermissible, we disagree. A finding under
19
Texas Health and Safety Code Section 481.141 raises the level of an offense so that a
higher maximum sentence may be imposed, while a deadly weapon finding affects a
defendant’s eligibility for community supervision and parole. See Tex. Code Crim.
Proc. Ann. art. 42A.054(b); Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 508.145(d). This is not a
situation in which a defendant faces two separate punishments after a conviction for
two separate offenses covering the same conduct. See, e.g., Villanueva v. State, 227
S.W.3d 744, 747–49 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (discussing the Fifth Amendment’s
protection against double jeopardy). The two special issues affect different aspects of
punishment and did not result in Appellant’s being punished twice for the same
conduct.
Because the evidence was sufficient to support the deadly weapon finding, we
overrule Appellant’s second issue.
III. Venue challenge
In her third issue, Appellant arguesthat she was entitled to a venue change as a
matter of law because the State did not controvert her motion to change venue and
that the trial court therefore erred by failing to move the case to Wise County.
UnderCode of Criminal Procedure Article 31.03, a defendant may move for a
change of venue upon the trial court’s determination “[t]hat there exists in the county
where the prosecution is commenced so great a prejudice against him that he cannot
obtain a fair and impartial trial” or [t]hat there is a dangerous combination against him
instigated by influential persons, by reason of which he cannot expect a fair trial.”
20
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 31.03(a). A defendant’s filing of a motion for change
of venue, supported by affidavits, raises a fact issue for the trial court to resolve.
McManus v. State, 591 S.W.2d 505, 516 (Tex. Crim. App. 1979), overruled on other grounds
by Reed v. State, 744 S.W.2d 112 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988). But if the State does not file a
controverting affidavit, there is no fact issue to be resolved, and the defendant is
therefore entitled to a change of venue as a matter of law. Id.
Although “a question of a change of venue is a question of constitutional
dimensions,” Foster v. State, 779 S.W.2d 845, 852 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989), a defendant
may waive any right she has to a venue change. McManus, 591 S.W.2d at 516 (holding
that defendant waived right to change of venue as a matter of law by proceeding to a
hearing on the motion without objecting that he was entitled to the change as a matter
of law, thereby allowing the trial court to hear the merits of the issue); cf. Gutierrez v.
State, 979 S.W.2d 659, 663 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998) (holding that the appellant waived
his controverted motion for change of venue “when he ceased to advocate or advance
his position that he wanted a hearing to establish his right to a change of venue as a
matter of fact”).
Nothing in the record indicatesthat Appellant sought a hearing on her venue
motion. The trial court did not rule on it. And the case proceeded to trial and then to
judgment without any order addressing the venue question.
11
Because the record
11In a pretrial hearing, Appellant’s attorney told the trial court, in the context of
explaining that Appellant had elected to have the jury assess punishment, “we’re not
21
contains no indication that Appellant ever requested a hearing on her motion or
asserted her right to a venue change as a matter of law, we hold that Appellant waived
her right to a change of venue. Accordingly, we overrule her third issue.

Outcome: Having overruled Appellant’sthree issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Plaintiff's Experts:

Defendant's Experts:

Comments:



Find a Lawyer

Subject:
City:
State:
 

Find a Case

Subject:
County:
State: