OPINION
Appellant Jimmie Lee Cudjo appeals his conviction for felony aggravated assault. The jury found him guilty and, after a punishment hearing, found the enhancement allegation in the indictment true, and assessed punishment at 60 years’ incarceration in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and a $10,000 fine. In three issues, appellant contends that the trial court (1) violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel be
Procedural Background
Four days before the trial setting of March 9, 2009, appellant, who had been represented by court-appointed counsel since July 8, 2008, informed the trial court that he wished to represent himself because he and the prosecutor could not agree on a plea bargain: appellant wanted a six-year deal, and the prosecutor would agree only to seven. 1 The trial court informed appellant,
Just because the State doesn’t want to give you what you want doesn’t mean your attorney’s got anything to do with that. It’s not her decision as to what’s being offered to you, it’s the State. And she can’t do anything for you other than tell you and communicate with you what the State’s offered you. And if the State won’t offer you anything but that, she can’t do anything about it.
The trial court admonished appellant that
• appellant “must comply with all of the technical rules of evidence and appellate procedure as an attorney would be required to do so”;
• he was charged with “aggravated assault with a deadly weapon on a family member”;
• he had the right to court-appointed counsel;
• he would not be able to claim that he had received ineffective assistance of counsel later because he was defending himself;
• he would “not be granted any special consideration because of [his] lack of formal legal training”;
• “anybody that gets up here can say whatever they want to say about you and you don’t really know how to stop them”; and
• “[y]ou really have no idea of what to talk to [the jury] about.”
Appellant acknowledged each of these statements and confirmed that, despite his lack of legal training, he wanted to discharge his court-appointed attorney and represent himself.
The trial court also confirmed that appellant could read and write English, did not have any learning disabilities or “communication handicaps,” graduated high school and attended one year of college, had no prior legal experience, and was not familiar with the Code of Criminal Procedure, the Texas Penal Code, or the Rules of Appellate Procedure. The following colloquy ensued:
THE COURT: Have you ever been declared insane or treated for a mental illness?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes, I’ve been treated for ‘em, never been declared insane.
THE COURT: How long ago were you treated for mental illness?
THE DEFENDANT: I’m in, like, a C.B.T. program right now in the jail. It’s for — but, I mean, I’m not insane or anything like that. It’s a cognitive behavior therapy program in the Mental Health Unit.
THE COURT: Have you ever been hospitalized because of emotional and mental disorder?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: And how long ago was that?
THE DEFENDANT: It was about 2002 or '3, something like that.
THE COURT: What was the particular disorder, please?
THE DEFENDANT: I’ve been diagnosed with bipolar mix—
THE COURT: Okay.
THE DEFENDANT: which is a mixture of Bipolar and major depression.
Appellant complained that trial was only four days away and he had not received any discovery or otherwise been able to view the evidence. He asked for a one-week continuance. The trial court denied appellant’s request for a continuance, 2 granted his request to represent himself, and appointed his former counsel to standby and advise appellant as needed. The trial court informed appellant that he could ask his attorney to take over his defense at any time during the trial.
The trial court further admonished appellant before granting his request to represent himself:
THE DEFENDANT: Well, I just know that I’m going to fight as hard as I can — •
THE COURT: No, you’re not.... No, you’re not. Not if you’re going to represent yourself, you’re not going to fight as hard as you can, sir. You’re not going to fight at all. It’s like going to see the doctor. And the doctor says, you need to have open heart surgery. And you say, I need to do that myself.
THE DEFENDANT: With all due respect, sir, it’s — to them, to Madam Prosecutor and [my appointed counsel], it’s just a case, probably out of hundred cases.
THE COURT: No, not really the case. That’s not true. There is a real competition in courtrooms. There as real competition that is to your benefit.... So, yeah, she’s not going to go to jail if you do. And she’s probably not going to have any financial burden, whatever happens to you. But her representation is at stake. And, so, she is going to fight as hard as she can for you because it also helps her reputation and her skill levels. And you make a real big mistake if you want to try this case yourself. And I just tell you, you know, you’re just making a big mistake and you’re going to flat lose because you’ll have no idea what to say, what to object to, what’s admissible, what’s not admissible. And the jury’s going to, basically, think you’re a fool.
[THE COURT:] If the jury gives you 40 or 50 years, you don’t have to worry anymore, you’re never coming out of the penitentiary.... Whereas, the offer that was made to you, you’d be coming out.
During trial, the State’s prosecutor twice commented on the fact that appellant was representing himself. The prosecutor asked appellant during his cross-examination, “And you actually, in fact, have to be in control so much that you are representing yourself in court today; right?” And in closing argument, she commented: “How many victims out there ever think for one moment that when they have to come to court and be victimized again by an attorney questioning them, that it might just so happen, the rare occasion the actual perpetrator is questioning them?”
Waiver of Counsel
In his first issue, appellant complains that the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel because his waiver of counsel was not effective based on the following grounds: (1) the waiver was not voluntary because appellant faced a “Hobson’s choice” between having ineffective counsel or representing himself; (2) appellant was not competent to waive his right to counsel because, as he informed the trial court, he suffered from bipolar disorder and depression; and (3) the waiver was not made knowingly and intelligently because the trial court did not confirm that appointed counsel had represented appellant effectively. Appellant asserts that these purported errors are not subject to harmless error analysis, but we need not reach that issue as we find no error by the trial court.
In all criminal prosecutions in which an accused may be punished by imprisonment, the accused has the right to assistance of counsel for his defense. U.S. Const, amends. VI, XIV; Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 1.05 (Vernon 2005); see
Faretta v. California,
1. Knowing, Intelligent, and Voluntary Waiver
We address appellant’s first and third arguments together regarding whether appellant’s waiver was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. Appellant argues that his decision to represent himself was rendered involuntary because his attorney was ineffective — thus putting him to a “Hobson’s choice”
3
between representing himself and relying on ineffective counsel. Appellant further complains that “appointed counsel’s failure to review the discovery and the evidence with him render the waiver involuntary because it was not done knowingly and intelligently” in light of the fact that the trial court did not confirm whether appointed counsel had
A decision to waive counsel and proceed pro se is made “knowingly and intelligently” if it is made with a full understanding of the right to counsel, which is being abandoned, as well as the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation.
Moore,
Appellant’s choice of self-representation, moreover, was not rendered involuntary merely because it was motivated by his unwillingness to proceed with the specific attorney appointed to represent him. The Court of Criminal Appeals, in a similar case, wrote:
[G]iven the option to proceed with unwanted counsel or to represent himself, and adequately admonished as to the dangers and disadvantages, [the defendant] persisted in his assertion of his right to self-representation. Implicit in that assertion is a valid waiver of the right to counsel. We perceive nothing unfair in putting an accused to this choice, so long as the trial court is satisfied he is competent to make it, and that he does so informedly and with eyes open.
Burgess,
Appellant voluntarily chose to forego representation by his appointed counsel and repeatedly asserted his right to self-representation after being fully informed of its dangers and disadvantages. The trial court thus had no choice, under these circumstances, but to allow appellant to represent himself, despite the court’s numerous attempts beforehand to dissuade him from that course of action.
See Burgess,
2. Competent Waiver
Appellant complains that he was not competent to waive his right to an attorney because he had previously been hospitalized for bipolar disorder and depression and, at the time of trial, was in a cognitive behavioral therapy program in the mental health unit in jail.
The competence that is required of a defendant seeking to waive his right to counsel is the competence to waive the right, not the competence to represent himself.
Indiana v. Edwards,
With these foundational principles in mind, we observe that “the trial judge is in the best position to make the decision of whether a mentally ill defendant is competent to proceed pro se.” Id. We, accordingly, review the trial judge’s ruling for an abuse of discretion. Id. Mental competency to represent one’s self is a mixed question of law and fact that turns on an evaluation of credibility and demeanor, so we must give almost total deference to the trial court’s ruling on this issue. Id. We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling and will imply any findings of fact supported by the evidence and necessary to support the trial judge’s ruling when the judge failed to make explicit findings. Id.
The trial court, in allowing appellant to represent himself, did not explicitly find that appellant was competent to waive counsel. But the following evidence supports an implied finding that appellant’s mental illness was not severe enough to render appellant incompetent to represent himself. See id. at 562. Appellant, in the past, had been treated for bipolar disorder and depression and, at the time of trial, was being held in the cognitive behavioral therapy program in the mental health unit in jail. Despite this, appellant showed an ability to communicate clearly and conduct himself appropriately in court. Appellant was respectful to the trial court, the prosecutors, the witnesses, for the most part, and the jury; he proceeded in an orderly fashion as guided by the trial court; he asked coherent questions, for the most part, when he cross examined the State’s witnesses and presented himself as a witness 6 ; he objected to several questions and comments by the prosecutors; and he clearly presented and articulated defenses of self defense and lack of motive. 7
For the preceding reasons, we overrule appellant’s first issue.
Discovery
In his second issue, appellant complains that the trial court violated his rights to self-representation and due process by not ordering the State to produce discovery, not giving appellant time to review the discovery through a trial continuance, and requiring appellant to rely on standby counsel to inform him of any evidence counsel deemed relevant.
Appellant was admonished correctly that he would be required to follow “all of the technical rules of evidence and appellate procedure as an attorney would be required to do so.”
See Williams v. State,
Appellant’s remaining complaint is that he was deprived of due process when the trial court required him to rely on discovery that had been provided to his appointed counsel. We disagree. Appel
We overrule appellant’s second issue.
Comments on Self-Representation
In his third issue, Appellant contends that the trial court erred in permitting the State to comment on appellant’s asserting his right to self-representation during the State’s cross-examination of appellant and during the State’s closing argument.
To preserve error, a defendant must make a timely and specific objection. Tex.R.App. P. 33.1(a);
Ganther v. State,
Appellant did not object to the State’s question during his cross-examination, “And you actually, in fact, have to be in control so much that you are here representing yourself in court today; right?” Appellant did object to the State’s rhetorical question during closing argument, “How many victims out there ever think for one moment that when they have to come to court and be victimized again by
Even if appellant had preserved error, it was harmless error. From the record it is evident that the jury was well aware that appellant was exercising his right to represent himself. This was discussed with the jurors by the judge, appellant, and the State during voir dire, when the jury was empaneled, and during trial. The jurors were aware that the trial was not going to operate as it normally would if appellant was represented by counsel. Notably, appellant also commented during his closing argument, “I chose to represent myself. So no one made me represent myself. I chose to do this, so I’m not trying to say it’s their fault.” Even if appellant had preserved his complaint about the prosecutor’s comments for our review and they were error, their effect was dissipated, did not interfere with the functioning of jury in determining the facts, and did not contribute to the verdict.
See id.
Thus, the error created by the State’s comments, if any, was harmless. The State, moreover, did not ridicule or impugn appellant’s choice of self-representation, and the State’s comments did not rise to such a level as to bear on the presumption of innocence or vitiate the impartiality of the jury.
See Ganther,
We overrule appellant’s third issue.
Conclusion
Having determined that the trial court did not commit error, we overrule appellant’s issues on appeal. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. The trial court asked appellant, "And are you going to defend yourself and be subject to all the rules of law as any attorney would be?” to which appellant replied,
I mean, I’m not gonna mix words with you, sir, I’m scared. I’m sufficiently scared and afraid because I know I'm not a lawyer. But, I mean, that’s — I don't know what else to do except I know that only — what separates me and Ms. — Ms. Prosecutor, which she's been very gracious, I’m not saying she hasn't, is 1 year.
Appellant later told the jury that "a very good attorney” had been appointed to him but he had nonetheless opted to represent himself.
. The trial court later explained that he denied the continuance because appellant waited until a few days before trial to decide to represent himself and he had had an opportunity to review the discovery for a number of months prior through his appointed attorney.
See Burgess v. State,
. A "Hobson’s choice” is ”[a]n apparently free choice that offers no real alternative. [After Thomas Hobson (1544-1631), English liveryman, from his requirement that customers take either the horse nearest the stable door or none.]” The American Heritage Dictionary 615 (2d Ed. 1991) (alterations in original).
. We and the First Court of Appeals have both held, moreover, that admonishments to a defendant about the perils of self-representation are not required (though preferable) when, as in this case, standby counsel has been appointed.
See Robertson v. State,
. Appellant’s brief also states, "Mr. Cudjo stated that appointed counsel had not prepared for trial or met with him prior to trial.” There is no cite to this statement in the record, and the record reflects otherwise: appellant told the trial court, "But as of six months into this case ..., I asked my attorney what was going on with the investigation.... She came up here to see me. And she sent someone else from her company up here to see me.” Appointed counsel, moreover, explained to the trial court that her investigator had spoken with appellant many times regarding the status of the investigation and information regarding potential witnesses. Appellant did tell the trial court that he had not had an opportunity to obtain discovery, look at his attorney’s notes, or "look at any of the evidence." But appellant has not shown how this amounts to ineffective assistance by his appointed counsel, especially when appellant waited until virtually the eve of trial to waive his right to counsel.
See Robles v. State,
. The trial court required appellant to present his testimony in question-and-answer format so that the State would have an opportunity to object as needed.
. Appellant admitted that he stabbed the complainant, Ochenna Okeke, but claimed that she attacked him first and that he stabbed her in self defense. He further attempted to show that he had no motive to attack Okeke.
. In holding the appellant’s choice of self-representation was not rendered involuntary because it was motivated by the appellant’s unwillingness to proceed with his appointed attorney, the Third Court of Appeals noted:
Appellant’s unhappiness with the attorneys who were appointed to represent him stemmed from his unwillingness to trust them to prepare for trial. Appellant filed a pro se motion for discovery and demanded that he personally be given all the material listed in the motion. Appellant was not willing to accept counsels’ assurances that they had seen the prosecutor’s file and otherwise been provided appropriate discovery.
Id.
