Lead Opinion
dissenting.
Appellant was convicted of aggravated sexual assault and sentenced to fifty years confinement. On appeal he alleged that the trial court erred in allowing the State, over objection, to amend an enhancement paragraph of the indictment under Article 28.10, Y.A.C.C.P., to substitute a 1967 final felony conviction for the 1964 felony conviction that was originally pled. Article 28.10(c) provides that:
“An indictment or information may not be amended over the defendant’s objection as to form or substance if the amended indictment or information charges the defendant with an additional or different offense or if the substantial rights of the defendant are prejudiced.”
The Thirteenth Court of Appeals affirmed. Batiste v. State,
The court of appeals may very well be correct in this cause, but it is an important issue of state constitutional law which this Court should address. See Tex.R.App.Pro., Rule 200(c)(2). It is discouraging that this Court exercises its power of discretionary review so often to revisit well settled principles of law on the remote chance a court of appeals erred in application, but when a truly new and important question of law emerges, as here, the Court abjures. I would grant appellant’s petition for discretionary review in this cause. Because the Court does not, I dissent.
We simply observed in Patterson that enhancement paragraphs must be pled somewhere, 740 S.W.2d at 776, and, as the court of appeals points out,
Lead Opinion
Petition for Discretionary Review Refused.
Dissenting Opinion
Appellant was convicted of aggravated sexual assault and sentenced to fifty years confinement. On appeal he alleged that the trial court erred in allowing the State, over objection, to amend an enhancement paragraph of the indictment under Article
"An indictment or information may not be amended over the defendant's objection as to form or substance if the amended indictment or information charges the defendant with an additional or different offense or if the substantial rights of the defendant are prejudiced."
The Thirteenth Court of Appeals affirmed. Batiste v.State,
The court of appeals may very well be correct in this cause, but it is an important issue of state constitutional law which this Court should address. See Tex.R.App.Pro., Rule 200(c)(2). It is discouraging that this Court exercises its power of discretionary review so often to revisit well settled principles of law on the remote chance a court of appeals erred in application, but when a truly new and important question of law emerges, as here, the Court abjures. I would grant appellant's petition for discretionary review in this cause. Because the Court does not, I dissent.
