Edward CHIARINI, Appellant, v. The STATE of Texas.
No. PD-1323-13.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
Sept. 17, 2014.
442 S.W.3d 318
KELLER, P.J.
Joseph Brian Dear, Addison, TX, for Appellant.
Larissa T. Roeder, Assistant District Attorney, Dallas, TX, Lisa C. McMinn, State‘s Attorney, Austin, for the State.
KELLER, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which MEYERS, PRICE, WOMACK, KEASLER, HERVEY, COCHRAN and ALCALA, JJ., joined.
Appellant, the owner of a condominium unit, carried a handgun in the
I. BACKGROUND
On January 28, 2011, Dallas police officers responded to a drug-house call at a condominium complex. When they arrived, appellant and the president of the homeowners’ association walked out to meet them in the courtyard of the complex. Appellant had a handgun in a holster on his leg. When asked why he had the handgun, appellant replied that he does “walk-thrus” at the complex.
Appellant was the owner of one of the units in the complex. The condominium declaration defined ownership in relevant part as follows:
3.1 OWNERSHIP. A Condominium Unit will be a fee simple estate and may be held and owned by any persons, firm, corporation or other entity singularly, as joint tenants, as tenants in common, or in any real property tenancy rеlationship recognized under the law of the state of Texas.
3.2 PARTITION. The Common Elements (both General and Limited) shall be owned in common by all of the Owners of the Condominium Units and shall remain undivided....
3.3 EXCLUSIVENESS OF OWNERSHIP. Each Owner shall be entitled to exclusive ownership and possession of his Unit. Each Owner may use the Common Elements in accordance with the purpose for which they are intended, without hindering or encroaching upon the lawful rights of the other Owners.2
The complex had 180 units, and the president of the homeowners’ association testified that appellant owned a 1/180th undivided interest in the common area. Appellant was convicted of unlawfully carrying a weapon under
On appeal, appellant challenged the legal sufficiency of the evidence. He contended that he did not violate the statute because the common area of the condominium complex qualified as his “own premises.” The court of appeals agreed and rendered a judgment of acquittal.3
II. ANALYSIS
A. The Statute and Rules of Construction
The UCW statute,
A person commits an offense if the person intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly carries on or about his or her person a handgun ... if the person is not ... on the person‘s own premises or premises under the person‘s control.... For the purpose of this section, “premises” includes real property and a recreational vehicle that is being used as living quarters, regardless of whether that use is temporary or permanent.4
In construing a statute, we give effect to its literal text unless the meaning of the statute is ambiguous or the plain meaning leads to absurd results that the legislature could not have possibly intended.5 If the statute is ambiguous or leads to absurd results, then we may consult extratextual factors, such as the legislative history.6 In addition to legislative history, extratextual factors include, but are not limited to, the object sought to bе obtained, common law or former statutory provisions, and the consequences of a particular construction.7
B. “Premises”
Traditionally, the word “premises” in the UCW statute has been broadly construed to include both residential and business property.8 Any type of real property can qualify as premises, so long as it is the person‘s own property or under the person‘s control. The UCW statute allows a person to carry a handgun on any real property that is his own property or that he controls, whether it be a residence, a business, or even a vacant lot.
C. “Own”
1. Plain Meaning
The word “own” is used here as an adjective, and, as such, it can be defined as “belonging to oneself.”9 Property can be said to “belong” to one if that person has an ownership interest in it. Property, especially real property, can easily have multiple оwners, so it would be odd to interpret the adjective “own” with respect to property as referring to exclusive ownership. Two sisters might own and live at a house together, and each would legitimately say that the house is her own premises. Or two partners could own a business and
While the present case involves 180 owners rather than two, that numerical difference cannot be a principled basis for distinguishing the present case from the hypotheticals given above. On whаt basis, for example, would we say that a person may carry a gun on the premises if he is one of five owners but not if he is one of a hundred?
The condominium declaration in this case states that the common elements of the condominium complex are “owned in common” by all of the condominium unit owners. This phrase conforms to the requirements of the Condominium Act, which provides, “An owner of an apartment in a condominium regime shares ownership of the regime‘s common elements with the other apartment owners.”10 The owner of a condominium unit is liable for his pro rata share of expenses for maintaining the common areas11 and a pro rata share of any tort liability arising from the common areas.12 The Texas Supreme Court has explained that, “[i]n enacting the Condominium Act,” the legislature “intended to create ‘a new method of property ownership,‘” consisting of “the fee simple ownership of an apartment or unit in a condominium project and a tenancy in common with other co-owners in the common elements.”13 “Tenancy in common” is a legal phrase that describes the most prevalent form of concurrent ownership of real estate other than by spouses.14 The plain meaning of the phrase “the person‘s own premises” would, therefore, seem to encompass appellant‘s undivided ownership interest of the common area of the condominium complex.
The State argues that the common area does not constitute appellant‘s own premises because he does not control the area and because he would not be jointly and severally liable on tort claims arising from such an areа. As explained above, the UCW statute exempts from its reach a “person‘s own premises or premises under the person‘s control.” If the legislature had wished to limit the exemption to premises that a person had legal control over, it could have omitted the phrase “person‘s own premises” entirely. Moreover, appel- lant
And though it is true that condominium owners are not jointly and sevеrally liable in the tort context for injuries arising out of the common area, the imposition of joint and several liability is merely a “judicially created vehicle [] for enforcing remedies for wrongs committed” and is “[j]ustified on policy grounds.”17 The Texas Supreme Court‘s policy decision not to use such a vehicle in this context18 does not detract from the fact that the condominium-unit owner is a co-owner of the common area.
The State also relies upon cases that involve the possession of a handgun in the common area of an apartment complex, or of a condominium complex where the defendant was a renter.19 The court of appeals in the present case found those cases to be distinguishable because none involved an owner of a condominium unit with an undivided legal interest in the common areas of the complex.20 We agree with the court of appeals. All four cases cited by the State involve people who were renters, not owners. The cases are inapplicable.21 We conclude that, because appellant was a co-owner of the common area, the common area was his “own”
2. Absurd Results/Extratextual Factors
The State contends that the language in § 46.02 produces absurd results when read together with § 46.035, the provision that applies to persons who are licensed to carry concealed handguns. The State points to the fact that the concealed-handgun statute prohibits persons holding licenses from displaying a handgun “in plain view of another person in a public place.”22 The State argues that a construction of § 46.02 that allows a person to carry a handgun on any proрerty in which he has an ownership interest would in effect give unlicensed individuals the right to openly carry a handgun in some public places where a licensed individual could not.
We point out that the State‘s complaint is not that the literal text of § 46.02 produces absurd results by itself. The State‘s absurd-result complaint is based on reading § 46.02 in conjunction with § 46.035. But a comparison of the statutes makes us wary of any effort to interpret § 46.02 to cоnform to § 46.035. In 2011, when appellant was arrested for carrying a handgun, § 46.035(a) did not contain the “public place” language that it contains today; rather, that provision simply made it an offense if a person licensed to carry a concealed handgun “intentionally fail[ed] to conceal the handgun.”23 That language could be read to prohibit a license holder from openly carrying a handgun inside his own house; but no one would contend that § 46.02 would prohibit such conduct for an unlicensed handgun owner. And even under the present version of § 46.035, possession by a license holder of a handgun in a correctional facility would be a higher degree offense than possession would be for an unlicensed person under § 46.02.24 Moreover, § 46.035 applies only to handguns, but § 46.02(a), under which appellant was charged, applies to a “handgun, illegal knife, or club.”25
Further, the State assumes that any absurd result produced by reading the statutes together must be remedied by adjusting the interpretation of § 46.02. But it could just as easily be argued that it is the interpretation of § 46.035 that should be adjusted.26
Even assuming that a reading of the two statutes together produces an absurd result that authorizes us to look at legislative history, the State‘s legislative history argument is unpersuasive. The State contends that the legislative history to the 2007 amendments to § 46.02 makes clear that the legislature intended to afford protection from prosecution for motorists lawfully carrying weapons. While that ap- pears to have been one of the purposes of
The State also contends that the court of appeals‘s position “fails to consider the facts of this case,” and the State concludes, “It is unreasonable to beliеve that the Legislature envisioned and intentionally authorized individuals in Respondent‘s position to openly brandish weapons on any piece of property in which they had a partial ownership interest, but no actual control.” The State points to the facts that it believes the court of appeals failed to consider as, “Respondent patrolled the common areas of the condominium cоmplex openly carrying a .40 caliber handgun in a thigh rig that resembled something worn in ‘Battlestar Galactica.‘” If the State‘s contention is that the court of appeals failed to consider the potentially disruptive aspects of appellant‘s conduct, the State errs in that regard. The court of appeals pointed to the disorderly conduct statute as possibly applying to the situation.29 If the State‘s cоntention is that it is self-evident that the legislature intended to punish under § 46.02 the act presented here, we must disagree.
The State also contends that upholding the lower court‘s interpretation would mean that “persons openly carrying handguns on ‘real property’ would no longer be subject to arrest for unlawfully carrying a weapon, unless the police officer had dispositive information that the individual did not own or contrоl the premises.” It is true that a police officer would need probable cause to arrest someone for violating the statute, but it is possible that an officer could stop someone and conduct an investigative detention on reasonable suspicion and develop probable cause during that detention.30 The State argues that officers would have a difficult time articulating reasonable suspicion to stop and probable cause to arrest, but “reasonable suspicion” is a relatively low level of suspicion that involves articulable facts showing “some activity out of the ordinary has occurred, some suggestion to connect the detainee to the unusual activity, and some indication that the unusual activity is related to crime.”31 And even if the officer did not yet possess facts giving rise to reasonablе suspicion, he could attempt to initiate a consensual encounter by approaching the individual in question and asking whether he had an ownership interest in the property.32 The individual‘s response might
We do not agree with the State that the plain language of the statute leads to absurd results, and in any event, we do not agree that extratextual factors support the State‘s interpretation of § 46.02. We conclude that appellant‘s undivided ownership interest in the common area of the сondominium complex made the common area appellant‘s “own premises” under the UCW statute. Because appellant was carrying a handgun on his own premises, he did not violate § 46.02.
We affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
JOHNSON, J., concurred.
