Wilbert James TEAL, Appellant, v. The STATE of Texas.
No. PD-0689-06.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
March 7, 2007.
Bill Burnett, Coldspring, for Appellant.
OPINION
COCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which MEYERS, PRICE, KEASLER and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
Appellant was indicted for the offense of hindering apprehension.1 The indictment failed to allege that appellant knew that Curtis Brown, the person whose apprehension appellant was hindering, was a fugitive for Failure to Register as a Sex Offender. The court of appeals held that the district court never acquired subject-matter jurisdiction to try the case because the indictment alleged only a misdemeanor.2 We granted the State‘s Petition for Discretionary Review to determine whether “the court of appeals erred in holding that the indictment presented in this case was insufficient to vest the district court with subject-matter jurisdiction.” We hold that, under Studer v. State,3 the indictment sufficed to vest jurisdiction in the district court. Therefore, we vacate the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court to address appellant‘s remaining claims.
I.
On June 8, 2004, Lufkin police received a Crimestopper‘s tip that a fugitive, Curtis Brown, was staying at appellant‘s house. When police officers arrived at his house, appellant was sitting on the front porch with his front door open. Officer Burfine told appellant that they were looking for Brown, a fugitive with outstanding parole violator and sex offender warrants. He informed appellant that both of these were
Meanwhile, Officer Smith heard noises from the rear of the house, so he went to check and discovered Brown attempting to flee. Officer Smith arrested Brown. The officers also found another man who had an outstanding sexual assault warrant when they searched appellant‘s house.
Appellant was indicted for the offense of hindering apprehension. The indictment alleged that appellant
then and there intentionally, with intent to hinder the arrest, prosecution, or punishment of Curtis Brown for the offense of Failure to Comply with Registration as a Sex Offender, did harbor or conceal Curtis Brown by stating to peace officers that Curtis Brown was not present at said residence occupied by defendant at a time when Curtis Brown was then and there present....
As soon as the jury was empaneled, appellant objected to the indictment and argued that the district court did not have jurisdiction because the indictment alleged only a misdemeanor, not a felony.4 The trial court overruled his objection. After hearing the evidence, the jury convicted appellant and sentenced him to two years in prison.
On appeal, appellant argued that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient and that the jury instructions were erroneous.5 The court of appeals, however, sua sponte addressed the issue of whether the trial court had subject matter jurisdiction. A two-justice majority of the court of appeals stated that the indictment failed to allege “that Teal had knowledge of Brown‘s felony fugitive status so as to facially charge a third degree felony under section 38.05, and vest the district court with subject-matter jurisdiction.”6 Because the charging instrument did not charge an offense that fell within the district court‘s jurisdiction, the court of appeals concluded that the district court should have transferred the indictment to a county court with misdemeanor jurisdiction.7 Justice Gaultney dissented and stated that the indictment did vest the district court with jurisdiction.8 Relying on the Texas Constitution and this Court‘s decision in Studer v. State, Justice Gaultney concluded that the indictment was valid because “[a]n indictment vests the court with jurisdiction even if it fails to allege an element of the offense.”9
II.
The Texas Constitution requires that, unless waived by the defendant, the State must obtain a grand jury indictment in a felony case.10 Absent an indictment or valid waiver, a district court does not
Before 1985, defects of form and defects of substance in an indictment had very different results.14 Failure to object to a defect of form waived any error on appeal, but the failure to object to a defect of substance did not waive error on appeal.15 The reasoning was that an indictment that contained a substantive defect was “void” and therefore insufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of the court. Under this reasoning, a defendant could attack a felony conviction based on a substantively defective indictment on appeal, even though he had not objected at trial.16 Defendants could “lie behind the log,” and either plead guilty or take their chances at trial and, if convicted, then raise a claim of a “void” indictment in a later appeal or application for habeas corpus relief.17 Numerous decisions from this Court exhaustively debated the fine technical distinctions between defects of form and those of substance, and numerous decisions from this Court reversed convictions years after the fact for defects of substance in the indictment.18
a written instrument presented to a court by a grand jury charging a person with the commission of an offense. An information is a written instrument presented to a court by an attorney for the State charging a person with the commission of an offense. The practice and procedures relating to the use of indictments, and informations, including their contents, amendment, sufficiency, and requisites, are as provided by law. The presentment of an indictment or information invests the court with jurisdiction of the cause.19
As part of the same reform package, the legislature amended several provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure to ensure that indictment defects could be objected to and repaired pretrial, but that these defects would not invalidate an otherwise valid conviction if not raised before trial. For example, the implementing legislation added section (b) to article 1.14:
If the defendant does not object to a defect, error, or irregularity of form or substance in an indictment or information before the date on which the trial on the merits commences, he waives and forfeits the right to object to the defect, error, or irregularity and he may not raise the objection on appeal or in any other postconviction proceeding. Nothing in this article prohibits a trial court from requiring that an objection to an indictment or information be made at an earlier time in compliance with Article 28.01 of this code.20
Additionally, the legislature amended article 28.10 to ensure that the State had ample opportunity to repair indictment defects and that the defendant received the requisite notice of indictment changes, as well as an opportunity to respond to them:
(a) After notice to the defendant, a matter of form or substance in an indictment or information may be amended at any time before the date the trial on the merits commences. On the request of the defendant, the court shall allow the defendant not less than 10 days, or a shorter period if requested by the defendant, to respond to the amended indictment or information.
(b) A matter of form or substance in an indictment or information may also be amended after the trial on the merits commences if the defendant does not object.
(c) An indictment or information may not be amended over the defendant‘s objection as to form or substance if the amended indictment or information charges the defendant with an additional or different offense or if the substantial rights of the defendant are prejudiced.21
The legislature‘s purpose in amending the constitution and the statutes was to change the focus from “whether a defect is fundamental [i.e. a defect of substance or not]” to “whether the defendant brought the defect to the court‘s attention.”22 And the legislature intended the constitutional provision and statutes to work together. That is, indictments charging a person with committing an offense, once presented, invoke the jurisdiction of the trial court and jurisdiction is no longer contingent on whether the indictment contains defects of form or substance.23 The 1985 statutes clearly mandate that defendants must object to errors in the form or substance of an indictment “before the date on which the trial on the merits commences[.]”24 Thus, Texas law now requires the defendant to object to any error in the indictment before the day of trial and certainly before the jury is empaneled.
This Court‘s first interpretation of the indictment reform legislation did not come “clad, so to speak, in sheep‘s clothing.” Instead this “wolf came as a wolf.”25 The wolf was Studer, and this Court was clear: raise indictment defects before the date of trial.
In Studer, the defendant was charged by information with indecent exposure.26 He pled nolo contendere, and, on direct appeal, despite having failed to object in the trial court, claimed that the information was fatally defective.27 The defendant complained “that the informa-
Clearly both the House and Senate believed that all defects in a charging instrument were waived if not raised by a defendant before trial. Clearly the perceived evil that they were correcting was the raising of indictment defects for the first time after a trial and conviction and the subsequent reversal of that conviction because of that defect.31
We also concluded that the 1985 constitutional amendment made the specifics of an indictment or information statutory requirements, not constitutional requirements.32 Thus, all substantive defects in indictments are waiveable under the statutes and these defects do not render the indictment “void.”33
In the five years after Studer, this Court addressed indictment defects and Studer related issues approximately thirty times. Those cases consistently reiterated the same proposition: “In Studer ... we interpreted the amendments to art. V, § 12(b) and art. 1.14 and held a defect in a charging instrument is waived unless raised prior to trial.”34
The “fatally flawed indictment” is-
Studer and Cook are “book-end” cases. Studer held that the defendant must object to any indictment defects before the date of trial or forfeit any complaint about its sufficiency thereafter. Cook held that the Texas Constitution requires that an indictment allege that (1) a person, (2) committed an offense. Without both of those elements the charging instrument is not an indictment and does not vest the district court with jurisdiction.
III.
Appellant alleges that the present indictment was missing one of the elements that raises the offense of Hindering Apprehension from a misdemeanor to a felony:
In order for the State to prosecute Appellant for the third degree felony offense of hindering apprehension in district court the State had to additionally allege and prove that the person, in the present case Curtis Brown, who was allegedly being harbored or assisted was facing arrest, charge or had been convicted of a felony and that Appellant had knowledge that the person (Curtis Brown) who he was allegedly harboring or assisting had been convicted of a felony.40
Appellant further argues that “[e]ven though the indictment in the instant case did state that Curtis Brown did have felony fugitive status for failure to comply with Registration as a Sex Offender it failed to additionally allege that Appellant had knowledge of Curtis Brown‘s felony fugitive status.”41 Thus, appellant contends that the indictment was defective because it did not explicitly state that appellant knew that Curtis Brown was a felon. This defect, he contends, was jurisdictional and thus it “may be raised at any time [because] [j]urisdiction is a systemic requirement that cannot be waived or conferred by consent and which may be considered at any time.”42
The State responds that it did allege that appellant was harboring a fugitive, and “it is clear that the State intended to prosecute the defendant for the felony of-fense of Hindering Apprehension, by including the language ‘with intent to hinder the arrest, prosecution, or punishment’ of Curtis Brown for the offense of Failure to Comply with Registration as a Sex Offender.”43 This offense is itself a felony, which, the State argues, clearly indicates its intent to prosecute appellant for the felony offense of Hindering Apprehension.44
After Studer and Cook, courts must now look to the indictment as a whole, not to its specific formal requisites. Constitutionally, district courts have jurisdiction over a felony when an indictment charging a person with an offense is signed by the grand jury foreman and presented to the
all that Studer and Cook require to satisfy the mandate of Art. V, § 12 [is] that an indictment charge “the commission of an offense.” This is true whether an indictment fails to allege one element of an offense or whether it contains additional information that may indicate innocence.47
Implicit within both Studer and Cook is that “the offense” charged must be one for which the trial court has subject-matter jurisdiction. Although the “indictment” provision of the constitution explicitly speaks only of the two requirements of “a person” and “an offense,” the constitution also sets out the subject-matter jurisdiction of Texas courts.48 An indictment must also satisfy the constitutional requirement of subject-matter jurisdiction over “an offense.”
Thus, the complete test for the constitutional sufficiency of a particular charging instrument goes slightly further than that expressly set out in Studer and Cook: Can the district court and the defendant determine, from the face of the indictment, that the indictment intends to charge a felony or other offense for which a district court has jurisdiction? Suppose, for example, that a named person is indicted for the offense of speeding. The constitutional requirements of an indictment are met—a named person and an offense—but district courts do not have subject-matter jurisdiction over speeding offenses, regardless of how “perfect” the wording of the charging instrument might be. Thus, the indictment, despite whatever substantive defects it contains, must be capable of being construed as intending to charge a felony (or a misdemeanor for which the district court has jurisdiction).
The element that was missing in this indictment was whether appellant knew that Brown was a felony fugitive. This is one of the two mens rea requirements for Hindering Apprehension.49 We have pre-
viously upheld the validity of the indictment in several cases, including Studer itself, in which the mens rea allegation was missing or defective.50 In this case, the indictment, as a whole, was sufficient to vest the district court with subject-matter jurisdiction and give the defendant notice that the State intended to prosecute him for a felony offense. It alleged whom appellant was hiding (Brown); it stated the offense Brown was hiding from (a felony); it alleged that appellant told police that Brown was not present. Because Brown was alleged to be a fugitive “for the offense of Failure to Comply with Registration as a Sex Offender” which is a felony, the district court could conclude, from the face of the charging instrument, that the State intended to charge a felony hindering apprehension offense. It certainly was a defective indictment because it omitted one of the two elements that raise hindering apprehension from a misdemeanor to a felony, but it was nonetheless sufficient to vest jurisdiction—it charged “an offense” and one could fairly conclude from the face of the charging instrument that the State intended to charge a felony offense. If appellant was confused about
whether the State did or intended to charge him with a felony, he could have and should have objected to the defective indictment before the date of trial.51
Appellant did not object to the substance of the indictment until right after the jury had been empaneled. His failure to make a timely objection before the date of trial was exactly the type of action that the citizens of Texas summarily rejected in voting for the 1985 constitutional amendment and the Texas Legislature prohibited in enacting the 1985 enabling statutes.52 Appellant forfeited any right to object to indictment defects thereafter, and the court of appeals should not have sua sponte reversed appellant‘s conviction on this basis. Therefore, we vacate the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court to address appellant‘s original complaints of legal and factual sufficiency and jury charge error.
KELLER, P.J., filed a concurring opinion in which WOMACK and HERVEY, JJ., joined.
JOHNSON, J., concurred.
Article 1.14 provides that a defendant forfeits appellate review if he “does not object to a defect, error, or irregularity of form or substance in an indictment ... before the date on which the trial on the merits commences.”1 The statute essentially dictates a three-step process for reviewing appellate complaints relating to indictments: (1) Is there an indictment? (2) If so, is the indictment defective, erroneous, or irregular in some respect? (3) If so, did the defendant lodge a timely objection to the defect, error, or irregularity? The Court treats the issue before us as a step (1) inquiry, but I believe that the pivotal issue is actually a step (2) inquiry.
1. Is there an indictment?
According to the Texas Constitution, an indictment is “a written instrument presented to a court by a grand jury charging a person with the commission of an offense.”2 In Cook v. State, we held that this language literally required a “person” to be named as the perpetrator in the written instrument in order for that instrument to qualify as an indictment.3 In Duron v. State, we addressed the requirement that an indictment charge an “offense.”4 We held that an “offense” is charged if the written instrument “accuses someone of a crime with enough clarity and specificity to identify the penal statute under which the State intends to prosecute.”5 If the written instrument purporting to be an indictment does not in fact qualify as an “indictment,” then the defendant is exempted from the usual require-
ment that he object to defects in the indictment before the date of trial.6
Duron‘s standard for determining when an “offense” is alleged can be understood through the following example. Suppose the purported indictment alleged only the name of the perpetrator and a culpable mental state: e.g. “John Smith intentionally.” Any number of criminal offenses could contain those allegations. Under Duron, this simply would not be enough information to allege an offense.
But even under appellant‘s reasoning, the indictment in the present case alleges an offense: it at least alleges the misdemeanor offense of hindering apprehension.7 That is an offense that is insufficient to invoke the district court‘s jurisdiction, but it is an offense nonetheless. The State, of course, contends that the indictment alleges more than that, charging the felony offense of hindering apprehension. But the fact that an offense of some sort is alleged is not in dispute. Therefore, under the Texas constitution, the written instrument in this case is, indisputably, an indictment.
2. Is the indictment defective?
The real question in this case is what kind of offense is being charged in the indictment? That question brings us to step (2) of the inquiry, whether the indictment is defective, erroneous, or irregular. Even when an indictment is error-free, a defendant can raise a claim that he was convicted of an offense that was not authorized by the facially complete indict-
In appellant‘s case, however, we are not confronted with a facially complete indictment alleging the misdemeanor offense of hindering apprehension. The misdemeanor offense of hindering apprehension does not require proof that the fugitive committed a felony offense, but the felony offense of hindering apprehension does.11 The indictment in this case contains an additional allegation that suggests the greater offense of felony hindering apprehension: that the harbored fugitive was wanted for the offense of “failure to comply with reg-
istration as a sex offender,” which is a felony offense. Consequently, we have an incomplete indictment alleging the felony offense of hindering apprehension, so the indictment was defective, and appellant was required by statute to lodge a pretrial objection to preserve error on appeal.12
I concur in the Court‘s judgment.
No. PD-0866-06.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
March 7, 2007.
Notes
did unlawfully then and there intentionally and knowingly expose his genitals to R.E. Bishop, hereinafter called complainant,
