OPINION
This is аn appeal from the conviction of Linda Sue Durst, appellant, for felony possession of marijuana. Although arrested in February 1992, she was not indicted until February 1993. During that interim period, appellant alleges that she entered into a plea bargain agreement with the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) whereby she would not be prosecuted if she cooperated fully with DEA officers in matters relating to the ultimate arrest and conviction of her allegеd co-conspirators. DEA officials, on the other hand, claim that there was no agreement not to prosecute; they further allege that Ms. Durst became uncooperative and even tipped off her alleged co-conspirators. State officials, specifically the Angelina County District Attorney, acknowledge their offer of a plea bargain in which the State agreed to recommend that adjudication of guilt be deferred and that appellant be placed on ten years probation in exchange for her plea of guilty and her full cooperation with local law enforcement officers. The State alleges that appellant failed to fully cooperate with local law enforcement officers with the result that the State withdrew the offer of ten years deferred adjudication.
In February 1993, approximately one year after her arrest, appellant was indicted. Subsequent to her indictment, she was offered another plea bargain of ten years confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division (TDCJID). On October 18,1993, appellant entered a plea of guilty in the 217th District Court of Angelina County pursuant to the plea agreement of ten years confinement. At the time of the entry of the guilty plea, appellant executed a waiver of jury trial, consented to stipulated evidence, and executed a written admonishment of rights. Said documents were received into evidence. The court recessed the case until November 1993, when punishment would be assessed.
On November 3, 1993, based upon her guilty plea, appellant was sentenced to ten years confinement in the TDCJID. Immediately following the announcement of her sentence, appellant informed the court that she was under the imprеssion that she would only be required to serve a limited amount of time on her sentence, i.e., one month for each of the ten years. After a discussion at the bench, the court asked her if she wished to withdraw her guilty plea to which she responded in the affirmative. The court granted appellant’s request, her guilty plea was withdrawn, and the parties proceeded to trial. On November 15, 1993, the day of trial, appellant entered a plea of guilty in the presence of the jury, and requested that the jury, rather than the court, assess punishment. Before her guilty plea was accepted by the court, she was admonished by the court as to range of punishment. The jury returned a sentence of 99 years and a fine of $50,000. On appeal, appellant has submitted three points of error.
In point of error one, appellant alleges that the trial court erred in allowing her, after sentencing had taken place, to withdraw her plea of guilty without the necessity of filing a motion for new trial or motion in arrest of judgment. In regards to the withdrawal of a guilty plea and its effect on the case, a liberal practice prevails in this state.
McWherter v. State,
Appellant correctly states that once sentence has been imposed, a defendant may return to her pre-sentence status in one of the following three ways: (a) motion for new trial; (b) motion to arrest the judgment; or (c) appeal. According to the State, appellant’s action in withdrawing her plea had the same effect as a motion for new trial and, therefore, satisfied the requirements of Tex. R.App.P. 30. On that basis, the State alleges that the court was correct in granting the motion and in returning the case to its pre-sentence status.
In contrast to the State’s position, appellant contends that the motion to withdraw - plea cannot be a valid motion for new trial, because it is not in writing. Apрellant further contends that her motion to withdraw plea should not be construed as a motion in arrest of judgment. This Court is in agreement that there is no motion in arrest of judgment in this case.
The Court of Criminal Appeals has held that a motion to withdraw plea serves as the functional equivalent of a motion for new trial.
State v. Evans,
In order to serve as the functional equivalent of a motion for new trial, however, appellant contends that the motion to withdraw plea, like a motion for new trial, must be in writing and filed within thirty days of the judgment. That contention, however, is incorrect. Even though the effect of a court’s granting of a motion to withdraw plea of guilty is the same as that of a court’s granting a motion for new trial, it does not automatically follow that a motion to withdraw plea must be in writing. Neither Texas rules nor Texas case law requires that the motion to withdraw guilty plea be in writing.
Using a similar line of reasoning, the court in
State v. Garza,
A “new trial” is defined by Tex. R.App.P.. 30 as “the rehearing of a criminal action after a finding or verdict of guilt has been set aside upon motion of an accused.” In this instance, the withdrawal of the plea of guilty operates as a motion for new trial, since the effect of it is to bring about the rehearing of the criminal action. Indeed, any post-verdict ruling which returns the case to the posture which it had been in before trial is functionally indistinguishable from an order granting a new trial.
Garza,
Circumstances surrounding a motion to withdraw plea are often such that the
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motion arises during the trial itself, during sentencing hearing, after the court’s taking of the case under advisement, or after the court’s pronouncement of judgment.
Wilson v. State,
In point of error two, appellant argues that the trial court erred by failing to admonish the appellant concerning the consequences of her plea of guilty, as required by Tex.Code CrimPROCANN. art. 26.13(a)(4) (Vernon 1989). Article 26.13, which governs the admonishments to be given a defendant before her plea of guilty, provides in section (a)(4) that the court shall admonish the defendant of, among other things, the following:
(4) the fact that if the defendant is not a citizen of the United States of America, a plea of guilty or nolo contendere for the offense charged may result in deportation, the exclusion from admission to this country, or the denial of naturalization under federal law.
Article 26.13(c) further provides that the required admonishments will be sufficient if the trial judge substantially complies with the admonishments required by article 26.13(a).
The record in the instant case reveals that the trial court did not give appellant the admonishment required by article 26.13(a)(4) at the Novembеr 15, 1993, hearing during which appellant announced that she desired to plead guilty before the jury. Although the court admonished appellant as to the range of punishment for the offense and also advised her “that the jury might or might not give her probation,” the trial judge gave no admonishment concerning .the possibility of deportation, should appellant not be a United States citizen.
Citing
Morales v. State,
In
Dominguez v. State,
Both the Austin and El Paso Courts of Appeals have determined that the admonishment in article 26.13(a)(4) is either not material to citizens of the United States
(Dominguez,
An example of the immateriality of an admonishment has been found in the circumstance where the court fails to give an admonishment on the non-binding effect of prosecutorial punishment recommendations when no prosecutorial recommendations have been made, as required by article 26.13(a)(2). Thus, in those situations where the prоsecu
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tor makes no punishment recommendation, article 26.13(a)(2) does not apply, and the trial court need not admonish the defendant of the non-binding nature of such a recommendation.
McCravy v. State,
The same analysis applies to the deportation admonishment in article 26.13(a)(4). Where the record affirmatively shows that the defendant is a United States citizen, the deportation admonishment is immaterial to appellant’s guilty plea. Ms. Durst affirmatively stated in the record that she was “born in the Adirondack Mountains of New York; raised on Long Island.” Consequently, we hold that there was substantial compliance with article 26.13(a)(4), since the record affirmatively shows Ms. Durst’s United States citizenship. We agree with the Austin and El Paso Courts of Appeals and overrule point of error two.
In point of error three, appellant claims that she was denied effective assistance of counsel, as required by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and Article I, section 10 of the Texas Constitution. The ineffective assistance allegedly occurred in the following areas:
(1) failure to assure that appellant received an adequate exchange for her alleged cooperation with the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA);
(2) failure to raise issue of appellant’s incompetency beforе the court;
(3) failure to call character witnesses during the punishment phase of trial;
(4) failure to keep out evidence of six unadjudieated, extraneous offenses — all having to do with appellant’s transporting of marijuana.
The proper standard for determining claims of ineffective assistance of counsel under the Sixth Amendment is the standard adopted by the United States Supreme Court in
Strickland v. Washington,
In
Strickland,
the Supreme Court set out a two-pronged analysis for claims of ineffective assistance. Under the first prong, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient, to the extent that counsel failed to function as the “counsel” guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment.
Strickland,
It must be remembered, of course, that the right to effective assistance of counsel merely insures the right to reasonably effective assistance.
Ingham v. State,
Appellant alleges that her trial counsel was ineffective because he failed to' raise the issue of competency before the judge in the trial below. The record, howev *141 er, demonstrates otherwise. Trial counsel filed a “Motion For Mental Examination and Pre-Trial Hearing on Defendant’s Competency To Stand Trial and Notice of Intention To Raise Evidence of Insanity Defense.” In that motion, trial counsel alleged that Ms. Durst was incompetent to stand trial, that she did not have sufficient ability to consult with her attorney with a reasonable degree of rational understanding, and that she did not have a rational or factual understanding of the proceedings against her. Trial counsel requested that the court appoint a qualified expert to conduct a mental examination of Ms. Durst and to submit a report of his findings. The order granting the motion and appointing an expert is not in the record. However, the report of Dr. Kartye was admitted into evidence at the hearing on the motion for new trial and is, apparently, the report of the court-appointed expert; at the beginning of his report, Dr. Kartye states that “[t]his was a court ordered evaluation to determine if Ms. Durst is competent to stand trial and was sane/insane at the time the offense was committed.”
The record reflects that appellant’s trial counsel did pursue the incompetency/insanity issues by filing the appropriate motions under Tex.Code CRIM.Proc.ANN. art. 46.03 (Vernon Supp.1995). The expert conducted his mental examination of appellant and found that, although Ms. Durst suffers from a severe emotional problem (paranoia schizophrenia), she, nonetheless, was competent to stand trial and, moreover, was competent at the time of the offense.
Although appellant stated at one point that she had been in a mental hospital for fifteen days in February 1993, that fact is not dis-positive of incompetency to stand trial in October 1993. The record does not reflect that evidence of the defendant’s incompetency was brought to the attention of the court from any source such that a bona fide doubt was raised regarding appellant’s competency. Indeed, the evidence in the form of Dr. Kar-tye’s report concludes that Ms. Durst was competent to stand trial and sane at the time of the offense. Appellant’s counsel relied upon the expert’s report, and reasonably so. Merely because the results of the expert’s report are not to appellant’s liking does not mean that counsel’s efforts to pursue the incompetency/insanity issues constitute ineffective assistance or a deficient performance. On the contrary, trial counsel’s performance on thе incompetency/insanity issues met the requirements of Strickland.
Counsel for appellant on appeal has also alleged ineffective assistance at the punishment stage of the trial. Specifically, Ms. Durst points to trial counsel’s questioning of appellant on direct examination during which he elicited testimony from her concerning unadjudicated extraneous offenses — namely six other marijuana hauling trips by appellant. During the punishment stage of the trial, appellant’s trial counsel asked Ms. Durst:
Q. Do you remember when your first trip was?
A. My first trip was February of ’90 — no, it was March of ’91.
Q. Okay. When was — what number was the trip that Eddie Horton stopped you and arrested you?
A. Six.
Q. So between March ’91 and February ’92 you had six?
A. Correct.
Q. And one subsequent trip?
A. Correct.
Evidence regarding these six other marijuana hauling trips would have been inadmissible, had not appellant’s counsel placed it into evidence.
Pursuant to case law and the statute in effect at the time of appellant’s offense, if the State is prosecuting a defеndant in a non-capital case for an offense committed prior to September 1, 1993, the State may not offer evidence of a defendant’s unadjudicated extraneous offense or an act of misconduct during the punishment stage of the trial. Tex.Code Crim.PROcAnn. art. 37.07, § 3(a) (Vernon Supp.1993);
Grunsfeld v. State,
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The test for effective assistance of counsel at the punishment stage of a trial is the “reasonably effective assistance” standard of
Ex parte Duffy,
(1) whether counsel was reasonably likely to render effective assistance; and
(2) whether counsel reasonably rendered effective assistance.
Ex parte Cruz,
Evidence of the occurrence of the six additional marijuana hauling trips, one of which took place after arrest, but prior to trial, was put before the jury during the punishment phase of the trial. Consequently, when the jury assessed appellant’s punishment, they possessed information that, in addition to the felony possession of marijuana charge to which she had pled guilty, she was also responsible for at least six additional marijuana offenses, as detailed in her own testimony. None of these extraneous offenses would have been admissible had it not been for the deficient performance of appellant’s attorney in eliciting the testimony from her. There is no reasonable strategy that would allow the jury to consider the additional drug offenses in addition to the one for which she is already charged. Such testimony, which made her apрear to be a professional drug runner, undoubtedly influenced the jury in giving Ms. Durst a 99 year sentence.
In the instant case, because of trial counsel’s own solicitation of evidence from appellant regarding six unadjudicated marijuana hauling trips, all of which are inadmissible under Grunsfeld, we find that trial counsel’s performance did not meet the Duffy standard of “reasonably effective” representation. 1 Accordingly, we sustain point of error three.
For the reasons stated herein, we reverse that portion of the trial court’s judgment which imposes punishment and remand the cause to the trial court for a punishment hearing оnly. Tex.Code CRIM.ProC.Ann. art. 44.29(b) (Vernon 1994).
REVERSED AND REMANDED for punishment hearing only.
Notes
. It is to be noted that counsel's representation was also ineffective under the standard in Strickland. Trial counsel's failure to understand the law to be applied to the unadjudicated, extraneous offenses, as well as his own eliciting of information from appellant about those offenses was unreasonable under prevailing professional norms. Furthermore, there is a reasonable probability that the outcome would have been different but for the introduction of the unadjudicated extraneous offenses by appellant's own counsel.
