OPINION
delivered the opinion of a unanimous Court.
A jury convicted appellant of murder and sentenced him to five years confinement.
See
Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02 (Vernon 1994). The First Court of Appeals reversed appellant’s conviction and remanded the case for a new trial, holding that the lower court erroneously denied appellant’s request for a jury instruction on the voluntariness of his conduct.
Payne v. State,
On the day of the shooting, appellant and appellant’s fianceé, Joanna Williams (‘Williams”), got into an argument with the victim. The victim threatened Williams and tried to kiss her. Appellant then pulled out a gun and held it to the victim’s neck. The victim attempted to slap the gun away and the gun discharged twice — the first bullet fatally striking the victim in the neck and the second bullet hitting Williams in the hip. Both Williams and a janitor who witnessed the incident testified that the gun went off when the victim hit appellant’s hand.
At trial, appellant requested and was denied a jury instruction on the voluntariness of his conduct. In the Court of Ap
*232
peals, appellant argued,
inter alia,
that the trial court’s failure to give the requested instruction was error. The appellate court opined that there was evidence in the record raising the issue of voluntariness and that appellant was entitled to the requested instruction.
Payne,
We granted review on the limited question of whether “the trial court’s error in failing to instruct the jury on voluntariness of conduct [is] subject to a harm analysis.” We conclude that it is and that the appellate court erred in reversing the conviction without first applying the factors set forth in
Almanza v. State,
Appellant acknowledges the ruling in
Cain.
Nevertheless, he points out that three months after this Court handed down its decision in
Cain,
we held, without conducting a harm analysis, that the appellate court properly reversed a conviction where the evidence at trial warranted a voluntariness instruction and the trial court failed to give that instruction.
See Brown v. State,
We cannot agree that
Brown
spawned any sort of
per se
rule requiring reversal wherever a voluntariness instruction is improperly denied.
2
As the
Cain
Court stated: “[I]t may be true that some kinds of errors ... will never be harmless ... and that some other kinds of errors will rarely be harmless. But, appellate courts should not automatically foreclose the application of the harmless error test to certain categories of error.”
Cain,
The Court of Appeals erred in failing to conduct a harm analysis. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore vacated, and the case remanded for additional proceedings consistent with Almanza.
Notes
. Specifically, the Brown Court held as follows:
We hold that if the admitted evidence raises the issue of the conduct of the actor not being voluntary, then the jury shall be charged, when requested, on the issue of voluntariness. The trial court did not grant appellant’s request and the court of appeals correctly reversed the trial court.
id. at 280.
. In
Brown,
we granted the State’s petition on the limited issue of whether the trial court's refusal to give a requested voluntariness instruction was error.
See Brown,
