Lead Opinion
OPINION
A jury convicted applicant of two counts of attempted capital murder, Tex.Penal Code
I.
Applicant was convicted of two separate counts of attempted capital murder. A single indictment alleged each count in a separate paragraph and further alleged the offenses were committed as part of the same criminal transaction. A plurality of this Court held it was error to allege both offenses in a single indictment regardless of whether the offenses arose out of the same or different criminal transactions. Drake,
In Ex parte Siller,
In Fortune v. State,
II.
The threshold question in the instant case is whether this issue is cognizable under an art. 11.07 post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus. In Ex parte Pena,
Habeas corpus is an extraordinary remedy and, consequently, is available only when there is no other adequate remedy at law. Ex parte Groves,
The State contends consideration of this issue is precluded by our decision in Drake, supra. Although habeas corpus should generally not be used to re-litigate matters which were addressed on appeal, Ex parte Schuessler,
In Ex parte Schuessler, we granted habeas relief because Sehuessler’s original conviction was subsequently held to be void. Following his conviction for murder, the Court of Appeals reversed Schuessler’s conviction and remanded for a new trial on the ground that the jury’s rejection of Schuessler’s insanity defense was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. Schuessler v. State,
Schuessler subsequently sought to reinstate the judgment of the Court of Appeals through a post-conviction writ of habeas corpus. Ex parte Schuessler,
Similarly, we have also granted habeas relief after rejecting similar claims on discretionary review and collateral attack. In Ex parte Stuart,
Thus, it is readily apparent in light of Schuessler and Stuart, that previous litigation of an issue does not necessarily bar its reconsideration on habeas corpus. In Fortune, we made clear that the State had no authority to allege more than one offense in a single indictment and, therefore, the trial judge was without the legal power to enter judgments and impose sentence on more than one offense in a single indictment. Fortune, 745 S.W.2d at 370. See also, Johnson,
III.
Accordingly, applicant is entitled to a dismissal of one of the offenses for which he was convicted. In Ex parte Pena,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. As opposed to the misjoinder of offenses arising from different criminal transactions, which required an objection or the error was waived, a complaint concerning misjoined offenses arising from the same criminal transaction could not be waived by failing to object. Drake,
. Judge Teague initially noted the inconsistency between Drake and Sitter and suggested Drake be overruled. Sitter,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
The State argues that applicant is not entitled to relief in this cause because the claim he raises was raised and rejected already on direct appeal. See Drake v. State,
Twice in recent memory the Court has invoked the law of the case doctrine in the context of post-conviction habeas corpus. See Ex parte Schuessler,
Today the Court simply chooses to ignore its recent holdings in Schuessler and Purtell, and does not even attempt to find an exception to its recently embraced doctrine of law of the case in post-conviction habeas corpus.
Over the past five years I have begun to develop a kind of uniform theory of cogniza-bility of matters in post-conviction habeas corpus. I have suggested that cognizability ought to be limited to those matters, constitutional or statutory, that we would characterize, or, in our perception, the Legislature has characterized, as “so fundamental to the fair operation of the system as to be 1) immune from procedural default, 2) not subject to a harm analysis, and 3) fully retroactive in application.” Ex parte Sadberry,
In Fortune v. State,
Because that is basically what the Court does today, I concur in the result.
. Both Schuessler and Purtell cite Ex parte Calvin,
. The majority does liken this case to Schuessler and suggests that, because law of the case did not control there, it also does not control here. That is wrong. In Schuessler we held that law of the case did not come into play because this Court had lacked jurisdiction in the first instance to overturn the lower appellate court on petition for discretionary review. Surely a purported
.“I would also adopt a doctrine of excuses, entertaining any federal constitutional claim recognized as of the time of trial but for which a record could not have been made, despite due diligence of the accused, in time to preserve the error for direct appeal.” Id. By definition, a claim brought on habeas corpus under this doctrine of excuses would not involve retroactive application of changes or new rules of law of a non-fundamental nature.
. On the flipside, any claimed defect less than “fundamental” in this sense is insufficient to defeat the State's finality interest, and is not, therefore, cognizable in post-conviction habeas corpus — unless it can be brought under the limited doctrine of excuses. See n. 3, ante.
. In the case of a statutory requirement, belated recognition of its "absolute” or "fundamental" nature, see Ex parte Sadberry, supra, at 545, would be retroactive to its effective date.
. It is unclear whether this holding emanates from the Court’s interpretation of Article 21.24, V.A.C.C.P., or from "the old common law doctrine of one conviction per indictment.”
. That is to say, whether our re-interpretation of Article 21.24, supra, if that is what Fortune proceeds upon, see n. 6, ante, would be applied to all cases tried after the effective date of that provision, including Drake’s. See n. 5, ante.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent for the reasons set out in Judge Campbell's dissenting opinion in Fortune v. State,
