OPINION ON REHEARING
The State of Texas filed a motion for rehearing of our December 20, 2018 opinion. We overrule the motion for rehearing, withdraw our December 20, 2013 opinion, and substitute the following opinion in its place.
Appellee Terence Johnson was charged by complaint and information with the offense of destruction of a flag, committed on or about April 29, 2012. Appellee filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds that Section 42.11 of the penal code (the Texas flag destruction statute) is unconstitutional and its enforcement interferes with his right to free speech. The State argued that Appellee’s conduct was not speech and that the statute is constitutional.
The trial court disagreed with the State’s contention that Appellee’s act of pulling a local business establishment’s flag off its post and throwing it into the street did not constitute speech. The court reasoned that if the act of burning the flag is protected speech, then so too is the act of throwing a flag to the ground. Stating that it was bound by the holdings in United States v. Eichman, Texas v. Johnson, and State v. Jimenez, the trial court dismissed the case.
I. Is Texas Penal Code § 42.11, which prohibits intentionally or knowingly damaging, defacing, mutilating, or burning the flag of the United States or the State of Texas, unconstitutional on its face?’
II. Did the enforcement of Texas Penal Code § 42.11 unconstitutionally interfere with Appellee’s right of symbolic speech under the First Amendment?
Challenging Constitutionality
The trial court dismissed the State’s information against Appellee, finding “that Section 42.11 is unconstitutional and [its] enforcement ... uneonstitutionally interferes with [Appellee’s] right of free speech.” When the constitutionality of a statute is challenged on appeal, we review the trial court’s ruling de novo. See Lawson v. State,
A statute may be found unconstitutional “as applied” to a specific set of facts or “on its face.” See Scott v. State,
A facial challenge to the constitutionality of a statute is more difficult for
Constitutionality of Section 42.11
Under Section 42.11 of the Texas Penal Code, a person commits a criminal offense when he “intentionally or knowingly damages, defaces, mutilates, or burns the flag of the United States or the State of Texas.” Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 42.11(a) (West 2011). The First Amendment provides, in relevant part, that “Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech.... ” U.S. Const, amend. I.
This guarantee of free speech is applicable to the states by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and generally protects the free communication and receipt of ideas, opinions, and information. Scott,
Section 42.11 As Applied to Appellee
In its second issue, the State contends that application of Section 42.11 did not interfere with Appellee’s First Amendment rights because his conduct did not constitute symbolic speech. In deciding whether Section 42.11 is constitutional as applied to Appellee, our first step is to determine whether Appellee’s actions constitute expressive conduct. See Johnson,
1. Expressive Conduct
“[T]he First and Fourteenth Amendments have never been thought to give absolute protection to every individual to speak whenever or wherever he pleases or to use any form of address in any circumstance[ ] that he chooses.” Cohen v. California,
“Pregnant with expressive content, the flag as readily signifies this Nation as does the combination of letters found in ‘America.’ ” Johnson,
In Spence v. Washington, the Court held that attaching a peace symbol to an American flag and hanging it upside down from a window, when viewed in light of recent events (invasion of Cambodia and killings at Kent State University occurring a few days prior to the student’s arrest), was sufficiently communicative to trigger First Amendment protection. Spence,
Flag burning by protesters during a political demonstration was also considered expressive conduct in United States v. Eichman and Texas v. Johnson. See United States v. Eichman,
2. Appellee’s Conduct
It is Appellee’s burden to prove that Section 42.11 is unconstitutional as applied to him. See Battles,
In a recorded interview, Appellant admitted that he threw the flag into the street. He explained that he threw the flag because he was “mad.” The interview also included the following dialogue:
Appellee: I ain’t gonna lie, I got, I just got you know, how I tripped out from the woman in the store and everything, so I threw the flag, that uh, Texas flag thing, I threw it.
Law Enforcement: The American flag.
Appellee: Yeah, American flag, I didn’t mean to, you know what I’m sayin’ I just got so mad.
Law Enforcement: What did you get mad about?
Appellee: See, I don’t know, I told the woman in the store, you know what I’m sayin’ she was she was looking at me, like, looking at the family, I guess my mama was with us [unintelligible] when we went to the store, she was looking at us crazy, she was looking at us real crazy, so I told her, said you gotta problem? Like, you lookin’ at us like we’re gonna take something, or something. And then later on we went back to the store again, and she said, uh, I guess she she married or she went with a black man, or something like that, she was tellin’ us. Then I, you know what I’m saying my brother in law I don’t know, he don’t, know what he did. He did something, I don’t know, I went with him the other day, he he he [unintelligible] by himself.
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Law Enforcement: Well now, you you said that you, she kinda offended you you felt like she offended you at a store or the way she talked to you or looked at you?
Appellee: I kinda felt like she offended me so, I got mad.
Law Enforcement: Was that the first time when you was in the store?
Appellee: Yeah, that’s the first time we went to the store.
Law Enforcement: When you was with your mama and them?
Appellee: Yeah I was with everybody the first time we went to the store.
Law Enforcement: — And that’s when you threw—
Appellee: That’s when we went back to the uh, we went back to the park, and then we parked and then me and my sister and my brother — the dude, we walked to the store, right, and we walked to the store and we came back up and that’s when I got mad, I threw the flag, I ain’t gonna lie, I just realize—
Law Enforcement: Where [was] the flag at?
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Law Enforcement: Where was the flag at when you got—
Appellee: The flag was, it was some kind of stretched, it was like on the side of a of a building, it was right there hanging up like this you know what I’m sayin, I took, I didn’t know it came off, I took it off and when I did this [gesturing] I didn’t know it was going to come off, it came off, actually I didn’t know it was going to come off.
Law Enforcement: What did you do with it?
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Law Enforcement: How did it go into the road, be honest now, how did it go in the road?
Appellee: Oh, I threw it.
Law Enforcement: Ok—
Appellee: I’ll be real with you.
Law enforcement: ’Cause you were mad?
Appellee: Yeah, I was mad.
Law Enforcement: At that woman?
Appellee: Yeah, I was mad at her.
At the conclusion of the interview, Appel-lee apologized for throwing the flag into the street.
3. Discussion
In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court states that if conduct involving the burning of a flag is protected speech, the act of throwing a flag to the ground can also be protected speech. However, the trial court’s findings do not address whether Appellee intended to convey a particularized message and whether the likelihood was great that the message would be understood by those who viewed it. See Johnson,
Based upon our review of the evidence, we conclude that Appellee’s conduct was not “sufficiently imbued with elements of communication” to implicate the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Id.,
Although the trial court’s findings reflect that Appellee “claim[ed]” a local merchant made “racial remarks about his mother,” we have found no such evidence in the record. Appellee did not testify during the hearing, and the only explanation for his conduct is the one he gave in the interview. Appellee’s explanation that he was mad because he “felt like he had been offended” by a local merchant does not implicate the protections afforded to symbolic speech.
The individuals prosecuted in Spence, Johnson, and Eichman found something offensive about what the government was doing, and their disagreement with and protest of the offending action was conveyed by their conduct. Spence protested the invasion of Cambodia and the killings at Kent State University and sought to associate the American flag with peace instead of war and violence. See Spence,
These cases refer to conduct that was beyond an act of criminal mischief. Spence, Johnson, and the individuals in Eichman each had a specific cause that they found objectionable, and that cause was a result of government policies or action. Assuming Appellee was justified in “feeling offended” by the way the merchant looked at him, or something that she said, the fact that he used an American flag while engaging in an act of criminal mischief does not make him any less culpable. See Johnson,
The record does not show that Appellee intended to convey a particularized message when he threw the flag into the street. Therefore, Appellee did not satisfy his burden by proving that the Texas flag destruction statute is unconstitutional as applied to him. See Battles,
Section 42.11 “On its Face”
In its first issue, the State argues “the statute is not unconstitutional and no court has found the statute to be unconstitutional on its face.” The State argued further that Appellee failed to meet his burden of establishing the statute’s unconstitutionality because he has not presented any evidence, cases, or arguments establishing its unconstitutionality, “with the exception of cases that never reached the issue of whether the statute in question was unconstitutional on its face.” Appellee compares the current statute to the Flag Protection Act of 1989 and argues that Section 42.11, as did the Flag Protection Act of 1989, “attempts to legislate a limitation on expression when that expression includes the negative use of a flag.”
“A statute is considered impermis-sibly overbroad if, in addition to proscribing activities which may constitutionally be forbidden, it sweeps within its coverage speech or conduct which is protected by the First Amendment.” Clark v. State,
A challenger may prevail in a facial challenge to an overly broad statute by demonstrating that, although the law may be validly applied to the challenger and others, “it nevertheless is so broad that it may inhibit the constitutionally protected speech of third parties.” New York State Club Ass’n, Inc.,
The first step in our overbreadth analysis is to construe the challenged statute. United States v. Stevens,
1. Construction of Section 1.2.11
An individual can be prosecuted under Section 42.11 if he “intentionally or knowingly damages, defaces, mutilates, or burns” an American or Texas flag. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 42.11(a). The penal code does not define “damage,” “deface,” “mutilate,” or “burn.” When statutory terms are undefined, the courts may consult standard dictionaries in determining the fair, objective meaning of the undefined statutory terms. See Clinton v. State,
The most relevant definition of “burn” means “to undergo combustion.” Merriam WebsteR’s Collegiate Dictionary 165 (11th ed. 2011). “Damage” is defined as “loss or harm resulting from injury to person, property, or reputation”; thus, when damage is used as a verb, it means “to cause damage to.” Id. at 314. “Deface” means “to mar the appearance of: injure by effacing significant details.” Id. at 325. “Mutilate” means “to cut up or alter radically so as to make imperfect.” Id. at 820.
The only exception to the prohibited conduct is an act done “in conformity with statutes of the United States or of this state relating to the proper disposal of damaged flags.” See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 42.11(c). Section 42.11 criminalizes both expressive and nonexpressive conduct involving the flag. The statute also makes no distinction as to whether the actor’s conduct is directed towards his privately owned flag or the flag of another.
2. Constitutionally Protected Conduct
Section 42.11’s criminalization of burning, damaging, and defacing a flag unless it is for purposes of “proper disposal” prohibits the conduct that was recognized and deemed constitutionally protected in Eichman, Johnson, and Spence. See generally Eichman,
Moreover, we have reviewed the eases decided in other jurisdictions since the Court handed down Eichman and Johnson. Yet we have found no case in which an individual was prosecuted under a flag desecration statute that was determined to be both constitutional on its face and as applied. Although decisions from other state and lower federal courts are not binding on this court, they are nevertheless helpful in analyzing the issue before us.
In State v. Janssen, Wisconsin’s flag desecration statute was struck down as being unconstitutionally overbroad because it made it an offense for anyone to “intentionally and publicly mutilate[ ], deflle[ ], or cast[ ] contempt upon the flag....” State v. Janssen,
In Roe v. Milligan, the Iowa flag desecration and flag misuse statutes were challenged as being unconstitutional on their face for overbreadth and vagueness. See Roe,
3. Discussion
The most significant distinction between the previous and current versions of the Texas flag destruction statute is that the current statute does not condition criminal culpability on the actor’s intent to offend someone. See Act of June 14, 1973, 63rd Leg., R.S., ch. 399, § 1, sec. 42.09, 1973 Tex. Gen. Laws 957, amended by Act of Aug. 2, 1989, 71st Leg., 1st C.S., ch. 27, § 1, sec. 42.14, 1989 Tex. Gen. Laws 94, renumbered from V.T.C.A., Penal Code § 42.14 by Act of June 19,1993, 73rd Leg., R.S:, ch. 900, § 1.01, sec. 42.11, 1993 Tex. Gen. Laws 3680. By omitting this element, the current statute criminalizes (1) conduct intended and not intended to offend others, (2) conduct intended and not intended to convey a particularized message, and (3) conduct involving the use or treatment of one’s personal property in the privacy of one’s home. In other words,
We agree with Appellee that the current statute is similar to the Flag Desecration Act of 1989 that was held unconstitutional as applied to a group of protesters who burned a flag during a political demonstration. See Eichman,
The lack of authority relating to the prosecution of individuals under Section 42.11 for flag desecration arguably shows a pattern of nonenforcement. See Lawrence v. Texas,
Section 42.11 is not sufficiently narrow to prevent a chilling effect on the exercise of First Amendment freedoms as they relate to conduct involving the flag. See New York State Club Ass’n, Inc.,
Disposition
Section 42.11 is not unconstitutional as applied to Appellee, but is unconstitutionally overbroad. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order of dismissal.
Notes
. See generally United States v. Eichman,
. Displaying the American flag upside down is known as a signal of distress in instances of extreme danger to life or property. See 4 U.S.C.A. § 8(a) (West, Westlaw current through P.L. 113-65 approved 12-20-13).
. Although we must defer to a trial court’s factual findings, we may review de novo "indisputable visual evidence” contained in a videotape. See State v. Duran,
. The trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are based on the surveillance camera video, the recorded interview with Appellee, and the arguments of counsel. The trial court’s findings do not contain any credibility determinations. If a trial court's factual findings do not contain any credibility determinations, the appellate court may abate the appeal and remand for more specific findings. See State v. Mendoza,
. The Missouri flag desecration statute provides as follows:
2. National flag desecration is a class A misdemeanor.
Mo. Ann. Stat. § 578.095 (West, Westlaw through end of 2013 First Reg. Sess.).
