Jeffery Lynn PRUETT, Appellant v. The STATE of Texas
NO. PD-0251-16
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
Delivered: January 25, 2017
510 S.W.3d 925
The fourth Wright factor, the extent to which the individual is a danger to herself or others, should be afforded little weight when it is not applicable to the unique facts of a particular case. Gonzales, 369 S.W.3d at 856-857. Indeed, it does not seem to apply here. Appellant‘s passenger‘s situation appeared precarious because of alcohol she had apparently consumed and because of Appellant‘s behavior, not because of any particular activity she was engaged in when Figueroa noticed her. The fact that she was not actively endangering herself or others—or moving at all, for that matter—does not alleviate the distress she was exhibiting. Her distress was not a result of her capacity to cause danger, but rather her incapacity. We therefore afford this factor little weight.
Considering the totality of the circumstances surrounding Appellant‘s passenger at the time Figueroa initiated the traffic stop, a reasonable person would believe she was in need of help. Her incapacitated state, her location in the passenger seat of an unconcerned driver‘s vehicle in the middle of a bar district on the Fourth of July, and the driver‘s behavior comprised circumstances in which we would expect a caring police officer to intervene. Figueroa‘s decision to initiate a traffic stop was reasonable.
duties seriously. Figueroa saw a woman in a precarious situation, and acted reasonably to help her by first asking whether she was okay, and then conducting a traffic stop when his question went unheeded. This is the sort of “sound, commonsense police work that reason commends, rather than condemns.” United States v. Prescott, 599 F.2d 103, 106 (5th Cir. 1979). Because the traffic stop was a reasonable seizure, the trial court correctly overruled Appellant‘s motion to suppress. We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and reinstate the judgment of the trial court.
CONCLUSION
Our communities depend on local police officers taking their community-caretaking vates the distress of the individual the officer acts to help.
John W. Stickels, Stickels & Associates, P.C., Arlington, TX, for Jeffery Lynn Pruett.
OPINION
Keller, P.J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.
Appellant was convicted of arson, and the jury made a deadly-weapon finding. The question before us is whether the fire started by appellant was a deadly weapon when the fire was started with an accelerant in a residential neighborhood, was left unattended and uncontrolled by appellant, and was ultimately extinguished through the efforts of appellant‘s neighbors and the Fort Worth Fire Department. Because the record supports a finding that the fire was capable of causing death or serious bodily injury, we hold that the deadly-weapon finding was proper. Consequently, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Case
Appellant owned a house as a tenant-in-common with his brother and sister on Osbun Street in Fort Worth. Appellant inherited his interest in the house after his parents died, and the property created tension amongst the siblings. On December 19, 2012, a neighbor saw appellant arrive at the house, walk around to the back yard, quickly return to his vehicle carrying an unidentified object, and speed away in his van. Seconds later, smoke started billowing from the back of the house.1
The State‘s expert, Brad Sims,2 testified that the Osbun Street fire was intentionally set at the back of the house and that a flammable liquid material was used to start the fire.3 Sims testified that the fire
When the fire department arrived on the scene, a neighbor had already put out part of the fire with a garden hose and the remaining fire was apparently subsiding.5 Battalion Chief Justin Scrivner stated that “if the fire had not been extinguished, it would have consumed the house.”6 Sims stated that, as far as he knew, no one was inside the house when the fire occurred but that the firefighters who came to extinguish the fire were “in peril.”7
B. The Court of Appeals’ Opinion
The court of appeals found that “[t]here was no one else in the home at the time, and there is no evidence in this record that these firefighters were ever in actual danger of death or serious bodily injury.”8 The court further reasoned that, because two neighbors summoned the fire department and managed to suppress the grass fire before it could spread and possibly engulf the entire structure, a deadly-weapon finding was not proper.9 The court acknowledged the testimony that the firefighters were placed in peril but ultimately found the evidence insufficient to support a deadly-weapon finding because the fire did not actually seriously harm or kill anyone.10 This is not the correct standard.
II. ANALYSIS
We review the record to determine whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, any rational trier of fact could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that the fire was a deadly weapon.11 Sometimes, however, a sufficiency-of-the-evidence issue also turns on the meaning of the statute under which the defendant has been prosecuted.12 Whether appellant‘s fire is a “deadly weapon” under
We interpret a statute according to the plain meaning of its language unless the statute is ambiguous or the plain meaning leads to absurd results that the Legislature could not possibly have intended.14 A “deadly weapon” is anything that in
The statute does not say “anything that in the manner of its use or intended use causes death or serious bodily injury.” Instead the statute provides that a deadly weapon is “anything that in the manner of its use or intended use is capable of causing death or serious bodily injury.” The provision‘s plain language does not require that the actor actually intend death or serious bodily injury; an object is a deadly weapon if the actor intends a use of the object in which it would be capable of causing death or serious bodily injury. The placement of the word “capable” in the provision enables the statute to cover conduct that threatens deadly force, even if the actor has no intention of actually using deadly force.17
In McCain, we focused on the “manner of intended use” element of
In finding the evidence insufficient to support a deadly-weapon finding, the court of appeals relied primarily upon cases in which this Court remanded or vacated deadly-weapon findings related to motor vehicles in DWI offenses.18 Although neither a vehicle nor fire is a deadly weapon per se, the court of appeals’ reliance on the vehicle-deadly-weapon cases alone does not take into consideration important areas of this Court‘s deadly-weapon jurisprudence. In such cases, we have discussed how “objects [e.g., cars] that are not usually considered dangerous weapons may become so, depending on the manner in which they are used during the commission of an offense.”19 These cases involve fact-intensive inquiries into the manner in which an intoxicated driver uses a vehicle, and the sustainability of a deadly-weapon finding often depends upon officers’ testimony about the variabilities of traffic patterns and the impulses of drunk drivers.20
This fire was dangerous because it was left unattended and because appellant used an accelerant. As a result, the fire endangered not only the lives of the firefighters who responded to the call but also the lives of neighbors who could have been killed or seriously injured if the fire continued to spread. The fire also posed a danger from both the heat effects and the emissions of toxic chemicals. In this case, the State adequately demonstrated that the fire that appellant started was capable of causing death or serious bodily injury.
Finally, the capability of the fire to cause death or serious bodily injury is not obviated by the fact that neighbors decided to take a water hose to the burning house or that firefighters showed up and did their job. In assessing the sufficiency of the evidence to establish serious bodily injury, we analyze the degree of risk posed by the injury as it was inflicted, not after the harm is ameliorated or exacerbated by other actions such as medical treatment.21 We think a similar rule applies when determining whether something is a deadly weapon. The instrument in question must be analyzed according to its inherently dangerous capability when it is used during the crime—and without regard to any “windfall” gratuitously delivered through the deeds of third-party Good Samaritans.22 However fortuitous and laudable the mitigating efforts of the neighbors and firefighters proved to be, the dangerous capability of the fire remained the same.
III. CONCLUSION
When evidence at trial demonstrates that someone ignites combustible material to intentionally burn down a house in a residential neighborhood, a deadly-weapon finding may appropriately attach to the arson conviction when the fire is capable of causing death or serious bodily injury. That is what happened in this case. Viewed in a light most favorable to the State, the evidence in this case supports a finding that the fire that appellant started was a
