delivered the opinion of the Court.
The “harmless error” rule, Rule 4 4.1(a) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, states in part that “[n]o judgment may be reversed on appeal on the ground that the trial court made an error of law unless the court of appeals concludes thаt the error complained of ... probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment....” In the case now before us, a divided court of appeals, en banc, held that to apply this rule to a judgment terminating a parent-child relationship when the trial court erred by keeping the defendant, a prison inmate on release, handcuffed during the trial in sight of the jury would violate the due process guaranty of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Edgar Hеctor Rodriguez and Maria Theresa Velazquez lived together for about a year before they married in July 1994. Their daughter, K .R., was born a month later. Rodriguez physically abused Velazquez many times while she was pregnant, and continued to do sо after KR. was born. Once in December 1994, Rodriguez beat Velazquez so severely that she fled with her children to a shelter and stayed there four days. Rodriguez was arrested, jailed for two days, and then released when Velazquez did not press сharges.
Velazquez had a son from a prior relationship, Christopher, born in March 1992, and she occasionally left him and K.R. with Rodriguez when she was at work or running errands. Mid-morning on February 12, 1995, Velazquez left home for about thirty minutes to go to the store, lеaving the children with Rodriguez. While she was gone, Christopher, who was not quite three, wet his pants, and Rodriguez became extremely angry. Acting in his words “like a fool, like a crazy man”, he whipped Christopher on his bottom with a belt and struck him hard in the stomach. Six-month-old K.R. was in another room of the house at the time. When Velazquez returned, Rodriguez did not tell her what had happened. Later in the day Velazquez became concerned that Christopher was vomiting, and that evening, she and Rоdriguez took him to the hospital. There they were interviewed by a caseworker for the Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services, who concluded that Christopher had been abused. The next day the Depаrtment obtained a court order giving it temporary custody of Christopher and K.R. A day later, Christopher died from his injuries — lacerations to his small intestine and internal hemorrhaging caused by a blunt trauma to his abdomen.
In August 1995, Rodriguez was convicted of reckless injury to a child
At the outset of the trial, the court ordered that Rodriguez be kept in handcuffs while in the courtroom. The court overruled objections by Rodriguez, the Department, and KR.’s attorney ad litem that handcuffing Rodriguez in sight of the jury would prejudice his case. The court gave no explanation for its ruling, and the record reveals none, other than the fact that Rodriguez was still serving his prison sentence. During voir dire, counsel inquired of the venire whether, if they heard evidence that Rodriguez hаd been convicted for Christopher’s death and was serving a prison sentence, they would be unable to consider any other evidence and would automatically find that Rodriguez’s or Velazquez’s parental rights should be terminated, but the venire was not asked how they would be affected by seeing Rodriguez in the courtroom in handcuffs. After the jury was impaneled and opening statements were made, the trial court instructed the jury without objection as follows:
Ladies and Gentlemеn: You’re going to know that Mr. Rodriguez will be handcuffed to his chair at counsel table or to the chair in the witness stand throughout these proceedings. You understand that that’s because he has been convicted of a crime, the result of which he’s incarcerated at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice — I believe they call it now. So, you’re not to infer anything from the fact that he’s handcuffed, other than the fact that he’s been convicted of a crime which causes his incarceration.
No other instruction on the subject was requested, and none was given.
Rodriguez appealed. The court of appeals, en banc, unanimously concluded that the evidence for termination of Rоdriguez’s parental rights was clear and convincing, and that while the trial court erred in keeping Rodriguez handcuffed before the jury, that error did not cause the rendition of an improper judgment and therefore, under Rule 44.1(a), was not a grоund for reversal.
The Department appealed, raising a single issue: whether the Fourteenth Amendment requires a new trial in this case when Rule 44.1(a) does not. Neither the Deрartment nor Rodriguez has cited us to any case in any jurisdiction holding that a trial court’s erroneous shackling of a defendant at trial requires reversal if the judgment was unaffected. The court of appeals cited several federal court decisions that have warned against shackling a party or witness during civil trials,
The issue of shackling a party during trial naturally arises more often in criminal cаses. The United States Supreme Court has admonished that a criminal defendant should not be shackled in the sight of the jury except as “a last resort,”
As a general matter, few exceptions to the “harmless error” rule have been recognized. In criminal cases, the United States Supreme Court, in its words,
has been faithful to the belief that the harmless-error doctrine is essential to preserve the “principle that the central purpose of a criminal trial is to decide the0 factual question of the defendant’s guilt or innocence, and promotes public respect for the criminal process by focusing on the underlying fairness of the trial rather than on the virtually inevitable presence of immaterial error .”12
The Supreme Court has refused to hold that аll constitutional errors in criminal trials require reversal,
From what the Supreme Court has said, we conclude that an error in shackling a criminal defеndant during trial is not a structural defect in the trial mechanism defying “harmless error” analysis. As we have noted, while the Supreme Court has warned against shackling a criminal defendant in sight of the jury, it has never held such error to require reversal irrespective of its effect on the judgment. If the Fourteenth Amendment does not prevent the application of the “harmless error” rule to shackling in criminal cases, then we do not see how it can be held to do so in civil cases, evеn those involving matters as important as the parent-child relationship. The error is not one that “defiles] analysis by ‘harmless error’ standards”, as the present case illustrates. While we agree with the court of appeals that judgments tеrminating the parent-child relationship must be carefully scrutinized because of the importance of that relationship,
We have no difficulty in concluding, as the court of appeals unanimously did, that shackling Rodriguez did not affect the jury’s decision. We agree with the court of appeals that the evidence supporting termination was cleаr and convincing. The members of the jury indicated during voir dire that they would consider all of the evidence and not reach a finding based solely on Rodriguez’s conviction and sentence. If the jury could do this, we must assume, absent any evidence to the contrary, that they could also follow the trial court’s instruction and draw no improper conclusions from 'seeing Rodriguez sitting
Accordingly, the Court grants the Department’s petition for review, and without hearing argument, reverses the judgment of the court of appeals and renders judgment for the Department. Tex.R.App. P. 59.1.
Notes
.
. See Tex. Penal Code § 22.04.
.
. Id. at 94.
. Id. at 94 n. 7.
. Id. at 95.
. Id. at 94-95.
. Id. at 94.
. See, e.g., Duckett v. Godinez,
. Illinois v. Allen,
. Long v. State,
. Arizona v. Fulminante,
. Chapman v. California,
. Id.
. Fulminante,
. Id. at 310,
. Id.
. Id. at 306-307,
. Cain v. State,
. M.L.B. v. S.L.J.,
. See Turner, Collie & Braden, Inc. v. Brookhollow, Inc.,
