OPINION
This is an appeal from a conviction for burglary of a building, enhanced by proof of a prior felony conviction. A jury found the appellant guilty and assessed punishment at a twenty-six-year prison term and *40 a $1,000.00 fine. Appellant had previously been indicted and tried for the same offense, but without the enhancement allegation. The trial judge in that case declared a mistrial on appellant’s motion after the jury indicated it was unable to reach a verdict.
Soon thereafter, the State reindicted appellant and added an enhancement paragraph to the burglary charge, the prior felony conviction for distribution of heroin. Under the first indictment, appellant faced a possible sentence of twenty years. He contends that the superseding indictment, under which he received a twenty-six-year sentence due to the enhancement allegation, raises a presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness in violation of the due process rule announced in
North Carolina v. Pearce,
North Carolina v. Pearce
held that the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment was offended by an appearance of vindictiveness against a defendant who had successfully challenged his conviction.
Blackledge v. Perry
applied this rule to the actions of a prosecutor. To protect defendants from vindictiveness by governmental authorities and to prevent defendants from being deterred from exercising a procedural or constitutional right, the Supreme Court established a prophylactic rule of review.
United States v. Motley,
In
United States v. Ruppel,
The parties have not cited us to a Texas case involving facts similar to those before us, and we have found none. Appellant relies on
Bouie v. State,
The presumption of vindictiveness need not be applied in this case, because the circumstances of retrial were explained by the prosecution and do not indicate to us vindictiveness. Here, for instance, the record does not include a statement of facts from the original trial, in which a mistrial was declared. However, we accept the facts as set out in appellant’s brief, for argument purposes. The brief states that the mistrial was declared on appellant’s motion after the jury had deliberated six or seven hours and had told the trial judge it was unable to reach a unanimous verdict. We have no indication whether this motion was vigorously opposed by the State, whether it was even discussed, or whether the State agreed to it.
We do have the statement of facts from the second trial, from which this appeal is taken. In appellant’s pretrial motion to strike the enhancement allegation, the prosecutor took the stand to explain her reason for adding the count alleging the prior conviction. She stated that, at the time of the first trial, she had not obtained a “pen pack” 2 from the federal authorities that she considered adequate to support the enhancement allegation. For that reason, she did not seek to reindict appellant and add the enhancement paragraph before the first trial. After the mistrial was declared, the State sought reindictment in order to add the enhancement allegation. The prosecutor testified that she either had an adequate pen packet or felt she could get one in time for trial. The original burglary count was left unchanged. She also testified that a third indictment was obtained because the defense wanted the name of the building alleged in the indictment. This third indictment presents the charge on which appellant’s conviction was obtained.
United States v. Goodwin,
Indeed, the action of appellant in seeking a mistrial does not of itself support appellant’s contention that reversal is required. Without a statement of facts from the first trial, we are unable to declare that appellant took the type of action which would provoke a retaliatory response from the prosecutor. We find this case closer to
United States v. Ruppel,
The prosecutor’s explanation of the procedural history of appellant’s prosecution adequately negated any reasonable likelihood of vindictiveness, especially in view of the context of appellant’s motion for mistrial.
See United States v. Andrews,
Appellant has filed two
pro se
briefs assigning error to the trial court’s determination that his inculpatory statement was voluntary. The voluntariness of appellant’s statement was litigated at the first trial outside the presence of the jury. The trial court at that time determined that the statement was admissible and filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. At the second trial, appellant again objected to the admissibility of the statement on the grounds that it was involuntary. The jury was excused, and another hearing was convened on the voluntariness issue.
See Jackson v. Denno,
Appellant’s grounds of error are overruled, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
.
United States v. Ruppel,
. This term refers to the criminal record of a present or former inmate, on file at the penitentiary, which is used to prove the commission of a prior offense.
