Lead Opinion
OPINION ON REMAND FROM THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
A jury found appellant, Donovan Keith Wappler, guilty of the misdemeanor offense of driving while intoxicated (DWI). The trial court, in accordance with an agreement between appellant and the State, assessed appellant’s punishment at 42 days in jail. On appeal, appellant argued that the trial court erred in imposing a 15-minute time limit on voir dire. We found that, by objecting to the trial judge’s proposed dismissal of the panel, appellant waived his right to complain that he did not have an adequate opportunity to conduct voir dire of the panel because any error caused by the voir-dire limitation would have been cured by the dismissal of the jury panel.
Appellant subsequently filed a petition for discretionary review with the Court of Criminal Appeals to challenge our holding that he was estopped from complaining about an inadequate opportunity to conduct voir dire after objecting to the trial judge’s expressed intent to dismiss the panel.
Facts
On December 2, 2000, Mary Chang was on her way from work when she stopped at a yield sign. Appellant, who was driving a Ford Taurus, hit her car from the
Chang called 911 from her cell phone and then called her husband. Chang noticed that appellant was “unbalanced” when he got out of his car, and that he had to hold onto his car to walk. Chang testified that appellant was “completely drunk.” When Chang asked appellant for his insurance information, he handed her three cards, but he did not say anything. Appellant said that he wanted to go to a gas station to make a telephone call. Chang was afraid that appellant would have an accident if he left, so she handed him her cellular telephone. Appellant was unable to dial, so he handed Chang’s telephone back to her, and she dialed the number for him. While they were waiting for EMS, appellant got inside his car. Chang noticed that appellant appeared to be cleaning the inside of his car.
Chang’s husband, Steve Fargo, arrived at the scene within 10 to 15 minutes after the accident. Fargo smelled alcohol on appellant’s breath and noticed that appellant was disoriented and seemed to be “meandering” around. Fargo called the police from the scene and again told them where the accident was located. Appellant interrupted and insisted that they were on Highway 249, rather than the Sam Houston Parkway at Bammel North Houston.
Harris County Constable Steven Romero arrived at the scene at about 7:50 p.m. He noticed that appellant had alcohol on his breath, that his speech was “kind of slurred,” and that he had bloodshot eyes. Fargo told the officer that he had seen appellant wiping his dashboard with a rag before Romero arrived. Romero found a rag on the ground that smelled like alcohol.
Romero performed a horizontal gaze nystagmus (HGN) test, on which appellant exhibited all six clues.
At some point during the investigation, Romero asked appellant whether he had been drinking. Appellant stated that he had been drinking at a casino in Louisiana, but that he had taken his last drink two hours earlier. Romero took appellant to the police station, where he was read his statutory rights. Romero offered appellant a breath test, which he refused. Appellant also refused to perform any field-sobriety tests. Appellant’s refusals were videotaped; the videotape showed appellant to be belligerent.
Procedural History
During jury selection at appellant’s trial, the jury panel initially consisted of 20 people. The trial judge conducted preliminary voir dire of the venire members. The trial judge introduced herself and had the attorneys stand and introduce themselves. She asked the panel members if anyone knew either herself or the attorneys. She
At the bench, for about an hour, the trial court and the attorneys each questioned the jurors who had information concerning the topics addressed by the Court. Of the panel of 20 venire members, nine people had information concerning the trial court’s voir-dire questions. The trial court and both the State’s and the appellant’s attorneys each individually questioned ve-nire members 1, 2, 4, 7, 10, 11, 12, 15, and 18. The trial court granted six challenges for cause on venire members 1, 2, 4, 10, 12, and 15 and excused them from the courtroom.
The trial court then asked each of the remaining 14 venire members to stand up individually and state his name and occupation. The remaining jurors then individually stated their names and described their occupations. The trial court explained to the jury that each side would conduct voir dire for 15 minutes. Neither the State nor appellant’s attorney voiced any objections to the court’s time limit of 15 minutes.
The State’s attorney questioned members of the venire panel concerning the elements of the DWI offense, their feelings about police officers, ways jurors could tell whether a driver or person was intoxicated, and the jurors’ willingness to convict based on the testimony of one witness. The trial court granted the State an additional minute and one-half to finish its voir dire when time was called, on the grounds that the court had made a few comments from the bench during the State’s voir dire.
Appellant’s attorney then conducted his voir dire. He asked how many people were missing work to be in court, whether the jurors believed that people were innocent until proven guilty, whether the jurors wondered what appellant had done, and whether anyone had served on a grand jury; he then explained the concept of “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Appellant’s attorney also asked the venire members whether they could think of any reason why a sober person might not want to take a breath test and whether any of the venire members had experienced any bad interactions with police officers. Appellant’s attorney then discussed reasons people might choose not to testify in their own defense at their trial.
When time was called, appellant’s counsel requested additional time for voir dire, stating that he had more issues to cover. The court would not allow him any more time and told him that he could read the questions he wanted to ask the venire members into the record at the break, after the parties had exercised their peremptory strikes. The trial court then granted two challenges for cause, leaving 12 venire members remaining on the panel.
Appellant argued that he should be allowed to make his bill of exceptions before making his strikes and before the jury was impaneled, but the trial judge denied this request. Immediately before the parties began to exercise their peremptory challenges, however, venireperson number 18 asked to approach the bench. The venire-person informed the court that he would be biased against the defendant and for
Appellant objected and stated that there was no legal reason for the panel to be excused, because if the defense and the State exercised strikes against the same persons (double-strikes), there would still be enough members to constitute a jury. The judge agreed not to dismiss the panel. The parties both exercised a strike on venire member number six, leaving just enough venire members to obtain a jury. After the jury was seated, appellant renewed his objection to the limitation on voir dire and made a bill of exceptions about the questions he would have asked had he been given additional time. The trial court left the courtroom shortly after defense counsel began to make his bill, but counsel for the State remained in court.
The gist of the questions counsel contended he did not have time to ask included: (1) whether the venire could consider the full range of punishment; (2) whether any venire members were members of Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD); (3) whether any of the venire members had been affected by alcohol and whether those experiences would cause them to favor the State; (4) whether any of the venire members would believe a police officer simply because of his occupation and whether any of the venire members were related to or knew police officers, resulting in a bias for the State; (5) whether the venire members could disregard incriminating, but illegally obtained statements; and (6) whether the venire members would find appellant guilty simply because he had been in an accident.
Limitation of Voir Dire
Appellant argues that, because he was not able to explore the questions in his bill of exceptions with the venire, he could not intelligently exercise his peremptory strikes. Jury selection and the laws governing it are designed to ensure that juries in criminal cases are fair to both sides; of paramount concern is the defendant’s right to exercise peremptory challenges intelligently. See Smith v. State,
A trial court may impose reasonable restrictions on the exercise of voir-dire examination, including reasonable limits on the amount of time each party can question the jury panel. Caldwell v. State,
Standard of Review
The trial court does not err in restricting voir dire unless the court abuses its discretion. Barajas,
Bill of Exceptions
In his bill of exceptions, appellant’s attorney asserted that, had he been permitted additional time to question the venire panel, he would have explored several issues with the panel. On appeal, he complains about most of the issues he raised in his bill of exceptions, contending that:
(1) he was “going to ask whether the jury could consider the full range of punishment in this case including the minimum punishment range. None of the venire panels were examined on that topic.”;
(2) he was “not permitted to question the panel on ... whether anyone on the panel was a member of Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD) or how members of the panel’s lives had been affected by alcohol, either positively or negatively and whether such experiences might cause panel members to hold a particular bias in favor of the State.”;
(3) he “was unable to more adequately discuss feelings about police officers with the jury.” He acknowledged that one panel member did mention that she was related to two police officers. However, his complaint concerned an inability due to the time restriction to, “ask all of venire members whether they knew police officers, or whether they could be more likely to believe the testimony of police officers simply because of what those individuals did for a living. Further, [appellant’s attorney] would have attempted to ask the venire panel about whether they had a bias in favor of police officers and in favor of the State in this case because of the same.”;
(4) he “was also hoping to question the venire panel on the issue of illegally obtained statements, specifically becauseit is an issue in this case. And the defense plans on requesting a jury instruction regarding the same.”;
(5) he would have asked the venire panel, “whether they could disregard all statements which were taken in violation of defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights, his right under Article I, Section 10 of the Texas Constitution as well as Article 38.22 of the Code of Criminal Procedure by virtue of Article 38.23 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. More speeifically[,] the issue in this case was whether [appellant] had made incriminating statements to the police officer while [appellant] was under arrest and without the benefit of Miranda warnings”;
(6) he would have asked, “whether people have had a problem with alcohol or alcoholism in their families and whether those types of problems would affect venire members service as a juror.” Appellant’s attorney stated that he would have more thoroughly examined this issue with one of the seated jurors in the case, venire member 18, who had a son who was arrested for DWI in Galveston three years ago;
(7) he “would have liked to have asked that panel whether the fact that [appellant] was involved in a motor vehicle accident might cause the jurors to conclude he’s guilty on that basis and with nothing more.”
Propriety of Questions
A “proper” voir-dire question is one that seeks to discover a venire member’s views on issues relevant to the case. Rhoades,
Counsel’s first intended question, regarding the range of punishment, was an appropriate question on a topic that had not been previously covered. See Goodspeed v. State,
Of the intended questions that appellant complains about on appeal, we have concluded that five were proper questions. Appellant, therefore, satisfied the second prong of the McCarter test. See
Time Management
Counsel’s use of time during voir dire was neither a model of efficiency nor an egregious attempt to prolong the voir dire. Although counsel repeated questions on the same topics already discussed by the trial court during its voir dire and the individual voir dire and by the State — such as questions concerning the venire members’ feelings about police officers, whether anyone near to the venire members had been arrested for DWI, and the venire members’ feelings about alcohol — we cannot conclude that counsel’s repetition of the same topics was the result of an attempt to prolong voir dire unduly. Our review of the record shows that counsel discussed a few matters in a somewhat repetitive manner, but the overall tenor and content of his voir dire does not show that the questions posed to the venire members were irrelevant, immaterial, or unnecessarily repetitious. See id. at 121 (“[Djefense counsel may not be precluded from the traditional voir-dire examination simply because the questions asked are repetitious of those asked by the court and the prosecutor.”). Therefore, appellant satisfied the first prong of the McCarter test.
Truncated Examination of Jurors Who Actually Served on the Jury
The trial court terminated defense counsel’s voir-dire examination after 15 minutes, while counsel was questioning venire-person number 19, who actually served on the jury. See id. at 119. Therefore, appellant satisfied the third prong of McCarter. We hold that appellant has satisfied the three-part test in McCarter and that the trial court abused its discretion by prohibiting defense counsel from asking proper voir-dire questions.
Additional Error
Within his issue on appeal, appellant complains that the trial court erred by refusing to consider his bill of exception concerning the voir-dire questions that he was precluded from asking the venire panel due to the time limits imposed by the trial court. During his presentation of the bill of exceptions, appellant’s attorney stated on the record, as follows:
For the record, Judge Law has stepped out of the room and has not been present during the making of this bill of exception. And although I’ve given all the case law to Judge Law, I don’t believe that this bill of exception is being fairly considered ... The Defense has been harmed ... [a]nd the Defense has not been able to intelligently exercise the peremptory strikes because the Defense has not been permitted to question the venire panel on those topics.
The trial court was not present in the courtroom when appellant’s attorney made his bill of exception on the record. The trial court also refused to allow appellant’s attorney to present his bill of exception until after the venire panel was excused and a jury was seated. By refusing to consider appellant’s attorney’s bill of exception through her mere presence in the courtroom and before the attorneys made their peremptory strikes, the trial court deprived herself of the opportunity to evaluate whether appellant’s proposed voir-dire questions were proper at a time when the error could have been cured by allowing the questions before the dismissal of the venire. We hold that the trial
Harm Analysis
The Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to a trial before an impartial jury. Franklin v. State,
The Court of Criminal Appeals in Gonzales did not specify whether the harm analysis required when a defendant is denied his constitutional right to ask a proper voir-dire question is the constitutional harm analysis under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.2(a)
Under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.2, the standard of review for errors of a constitutional dimension differs from the standard for other errors .... We have said before that“[constitutional provisions bear on the selection of a jury for the trial of a criminal case.” And while not every error in the selection of a jury violates the constitutional right of a trial by an impartial jury, we conclude that the error in this case did violate that right.
The Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to a trial before an impartial jury. Part of the constitutional guarantee of the right to an impartial jury includes adequate voir dire to identify unqualified jurors. And we have consistently held that essential to the Sixth Amendment guarantees of the assistance of counsel and trial before an impartial jury “is the right to question vente members in order to intelligently exercise peremptory challenges and challenges for cause.”
Franklin,
When the record in a criminal case reveals constitutional error subject to harmless error review, we must reverse the trial court’s judgment unless we determine beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to the conviction or punishment. Tex.R.App. P. 44.2(a); Franklin,
The Court of Criminal Appeals has determined that, by applying certain, general factors, we may evaluate how a defendant was harmed by a trial court’s error in denying a proper voir-dire question during a group setting. Rich v. State,
In the ease of the erroneous admission of evidence, we have said that the appellate court should consider everything in the record, including any testimony or physical evidence admitted for the jury’s consideration, the nature of the evidence supporting the verdict, the character of the alleged error and how it might be considered in connection with other evidence in the case, the jury instructions, the State’s theory and any defensive theories, closing arguments, voir dire, and whether the State emphasized the error. We believe these same general factors are relevant considerations in determining the harm from being denied a proper question to the venire.
Id. at 577-78 (footnote omitted) (emphasis added).
Accordingly, we assess whether appellant was harmed by denial of the proper voir-dire questions during the group, voir-dire setting by reviewing the entire record, including (1) any testimony or physical evidence admitted for the jury’s consideration; (2) the nature of the evidence supporting the verdict; and (3) the character of the error and how it might be considered in connection with other evidence in the case, the jury instructions, the State’s theory and any defensive theories, closing arguments, voir dire, and whether the State emphasized the error. See id.
Using rule 44.2(a)’s heightened standard and applying Rich’s general factors, we address the harm resulting from the trial court’s error in refusing to permit proper voir-dire questions by appellant concerning (1) how the panel would treat illegally obtained statements and (2) whether the panel could disregard illegally obtained statements. Because we conclude that harmful error resulted from these excluded voir-dire questions, we need not address whether harmful error also resulted from the trial court’s exclusion of the other three proper voir-dire questions.
1. Evidence admitted for the jury’s consideration
Romero testified that before appellant’s arrest and during the investigatory phase of the traffic stop, he asked appellant questions that resulted in appellant’s admitting that he had been drinking since about 11:00 o’clock until he had his last drink, about two hours prior to the accident, and that the accident occurred while he was returning to Houston from the casinos in Louisiana. Appellant’s admission that he had been drinking earlier in the day at casinos is pertinent to the central issue in this DWI trial, whether appellant was intoxicated. We therefore conclude that this factor weighs in favor of finding the denial of the proper voir-dire questions harmful.
The jury faced two competing versions regarding whether appellant was intoxicated. Chang, the driver of the car that appellant struck, testified that he was “completely drunk” and unable to dial a cellular telephone. Chang’s husband testified that he smelled alcohol on appellant’s breath and that appellant seemed disoriented. Officer Romero likewise testified that appellant had alcohol on his breath, that his speech was slurred, and that his eyes were bloodshot. Romero also mentioned that appellant had apparently urinated on himself.
Contrary to the State’s evidence, appellant’s girlfriend, Debra McElhany, testified that appellant was not intoxicated and did not slur his speech or have bloodshot eyes. She also described appellant’s balance as normal for him and denied that he swayed. McElhany also testified that appellant gave her correct directions to the location where she found the collision near the West Sam Houston Tollway. McElhany denied that appellant’s pants were wet and that he smelled of urine. Dr. Joseph Citron, a doctor whom appellant hired to testify at trial, stated that appellant had difficulty walking and balancing himself due to various physical problems that included a missing toe, arthritis, and back problems. Dr. Citron also stated that appellant’s diabetes could cause his breath to smell “almost like a cheap wine that’s gone bad.” In Dr. Citron’s opinion, appellant did not appear or sound intoxicated on the videotape recorded at the police station. Additionally, the record shows that appellant refused to submit a breath sample into the intoxilizer, refused to perform all field sobriety tests at the scene of the accident and at the police station, and that the trial court excluded evidence of the results of the HGN test.
Due to the lack of any physical evidence to connect appellant to the offense, the State’s case rested entirely on testimonial evidence. Appellant’s admission that he had been drinking earlier in the day at casinos was part of the State’s evidence indicating that appellant was intoxicated and, more importantly, corroborated testimony by the State’s witnesses that described appellant. We therefore conclude that this factor, too, weighs in favor of finding the denial of the proper voir-dire questions harmful.
3. The character of the error when considered in connection with other evidence in the case, the jury instructions, the State’s theory and any defensive theories, closing arguments, voir dire, and whether the State emphasized the error
At appellant’s request, the court’s charge to the jury included an instruction that allowed the jury to disregard statements appellant made to the arresting officer at the scene of the traffic stop.
The court has admitted into evidence before you the alleged oral statements of the defendant at the accident scene, and you are instructed that before you may consider the same for any purpose you must first believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the same was freely and voluntarily made by the defendant without compulsion or persuasion by him, and that prior thereto the defendant had been warned by the person to whom the statement was made that: (1) he had a right to remain silent and not make any statement at all andthat any statement he made may be used against him at trial; and (2) any statement he made may be used as evidence against him in court; and (3) he had the right to have a lawyer present to advise him prior to and during any questioning; and (4) if he was unable to employ a lawyer, he had the right to have a lawyer appointed to advise him prior to and during any questioning; and (5) he had the right to terminate the interview at any time; and that the defendant prior to and during the making of the statement, knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived these rights; but if you do not so believe, or if you have a reasonable doubt thereof, then the alleged statement is entirely withdrawn from your consideration, and you shall not give the same any force or effect whatever or consider it as any evidence of the defendant’s guilt in this case, and you shall not consider any evidence obtained as a result thereof, if any.
Appellant contends that the trial court’s error in denying him the opportunity to question the venire members about their ability to follow this instruction precluded him from determining, in time to exercise his peremptory strikes, whether there were members of the venire who could not follow this instruction and would vote to convict based on statements that they determined to be illegally obtained.
We cannot ascertain whether the jurors actually followed the trial court’s instruction that could have resulted in their disregarding evidence of appellant’s admission to drinking earlier in the day at casinos because appellant was deprived of the opportunity to question whether the jurors could follow this type of jury instruction. It is possible, though, that a juror was seated who would otherwise have been subject to a challenge for cause because of an inability to disregard this type of evidence, despite the trial court’s instruction not to consider the evidence. See Barney v. State,
Despite our inability to determine whether the empaneled jurors could actually follow the jury instruction, we “generally presume the jury follows the trial court’s instructions in the manner presented,” unless that presumption is rebutted by evidence showing that the jury did not follow the jury instruction presented. Colburn v. State,
We must reverse the trial court’s judgment unless we determine beyond a reasonable doubt that the error in denying proper voir-dire questions in a group setting did not contribute to the conviction or punishment. Tex.R.App. P. 44.2(a); Franklin,
The remaining factors all point to a conclusion that the trial court’s error was harmful. Appellant’s admission that he had been drinking earlier in the day at the casinos was nearly the equivalent of a confession to DWI; the admission corroborated the State’s witnesses’ testimonial evidence that described appellant as intoxicated and was persuasive evidence of appellant’s guilt in this sharply contested DWI trial. Under these circumstances, which include the denial of proper voir-dire questions on a topic on which the jurors received a charge requiring them to make an assessment of the evidence that was central to the pertinent issue in the case, and the deprivation of a trial judge who would listen to or evaluate the excluded voir-dire questions during a bill of exceptions, we cannot conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the denial of the proper voir-dire questions did not contribute to the conviction or punishment. See Tex.R.App. P. 44.2(a); Franklin,
Conclusion
We reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the cause for a new trial.
Justice KEYES dissenting.
Notes
. We also found that (1) a venire member was not challengeable for cause simply because he stated that he would "probably” believe policemen and doctors more than other witnesses; (2) appellant's statements to the constable at the scene of the automobile collision were not obtained during custodial interrogation; (3) even if the trial court erred when it failed to suppress appellant’s statements, the error was harmless; (4) the trial court’s giving of an abstract jury charge not raised by the evidence was not reversible error; (5) appellant's rights under the confrontation clause were not violated; and (6) the evidence presented at trial was factually sufficient to support appellant’s conviction. See Wappler v. State, No. 01-01-00389-CR (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] Jan. 9, 2003), reh’g denied, opinion withdrawn, substituted opinion at
. Appellant did not challenge our other holdings; nor did the Court of Criminal Appeals address our other holdings.
. Evidence of the HGN test was admitted at the pretrial hearing on the motion to suppress, but was not admitted at trial because the State had failed to designate the testifying police officer as an expert witness.
. Except for certain federal constitutional errors deemed "structural” by the United States Supreme Court, no error is categorically immune from a harmless error analysis. Cain v. State,
. Rule 44.2(a) provides as follows:
(a) Constitutional Error. If the appellate record in a criminal case reveals constitutional error that is subject to harmless error review, the court of appeals must reverse a judgment of conviction or punishment unless the court determines beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to the conviction or punishment.
Tex.R.App. P. 44.2(a).
.Rule 44.2(b) provides as follows:
(b) Other Errors. Any other error, defect, irregularity, or variance that does not affect substantial rights must be disregarded.
Tex.R.App. P. 44.2(b).
. The Court of Criminal Appeals has recently issued two opinions that imply, without expressly holding, that it is appropriate to conduct a rule 44.2(b) harm analysis of a trial court’s error in precluding a defendant from asking proper questions of a jury panel during voir dire.
In Rich v. State, the Court of Criminal Appeals stated that "[a] trial judge's impermissible exclusion of a proper question during jury voir dire is subject to a harmless error analysis” when voir dire is conducted in a group setting, but it did not state whether the analysis should be conducted under rule 44.2(a), governing constitutional error, or under rule 44.2(b), governing non-constitutional error; however, because the court of appeals had concluded that rule 44.2(b) applied, and because the appellant did not contest that conclusion, the Court of Criminal Appeals assumed that rule 44.2(b) applied. See160 S.W.3d 575 , 577 (Tex.Crim.App.2005). The dissent pointed out that "prohibiting appellant from asking the veni-re members a proper question was, under binding precedent, an error of constitutional dimension.” Id. at 578 (Holcomb, J., dissenting). Subsequently, in Sanchez v. State,165 S.W.3d 707 , 713, n. 16 (Tex.Crim.App.2005), the Court of Criminal Appeals noted in a footnote that Rich had stated that rule 44.2(b) "is applicable when voir dire is conducted in a group setting and defendant is prohibited from asking a proper question of the panel.” By analogy, the court applied a rule 44.2(b) analysis in Sanchez; Sanchez, however, addressed a different question, namely the proper analysis to apply when a trial court erroneously permits the State to improperly commit jurors to a set of facts during voir dire. See id.
Because both Gonzales and Franklin characterized the denial of the right to ask proper voir-dire questions as a constitutional right; because the majority opinion in Rich assumed, instead of affirmatively holding, that a rule 44.2(b) harm analysis, governing non-constitutional error, applied to such an error; and because Sanchez addressed a different form of voir-dire error, we will continue to follow binding Court of Criminal Appeals precedent and our own precedent holding that rule 44.2(a), governing constitutional error, is the correct harm analysis to apply when the trial court precludes a defendant from asking proper questions during voir dire. See Franklin,138 S.W.3d at 354 ; Rios,4 S.W.3d at 403 ; Gonzales,2 S.W.3d 600 at 604.
. The State objected to the trial court’s charge at trial, but, because no complaint about this portion of the charge has been asserted on appeal, we do not address the accuracy or propriety of the instruction.
. Appellant assigned error to the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress as a point of error on appeal. We concluded in our original opinion that Romero’s questions to appellant were not custodial interrogation and that any error in the admission of appellant’s in-culpatory statements to Romero was harmless because the statements were "cumulative of other evidence of intoxication presented by the State.” Wappler v. State,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. The majority acknowledges that the trial court’s denial of a defendant’s right to ask proper voir dire questions deprives the defendant of his Sixth Amendment right to exercise his peremptory strikes intelligently and is thus constitutional error subject to a Rule 44.2(a) analysis under Gonzales v. State,
Although the majority correctly recites the Rule 44.2(a) standard of review for harmless constitutional error, it actually constructs its own standard of review of non-constitutional error subject to a Rule 44.2(b) analysis in an apparent attempt to follow Rich v. State,
While stating that it is using the Rule 44.2(a) standard of review and is applying the Rich factors, the majority in this case actually constructs its own standard of review of harm from denial of the opportunity to put a proper voir dire question to the venire. Unlike Wesbrook, McCarthy, and Rich, the majority limits its analysis to addressing “the harm resulting from the trial court’s error in refusing to permit proper voir-dire questions by appellant concerning (1) how the panel would treat illegally obtained statements and (2) whether the panel could disregard illegally obtained statements,” and it assesses that harm by asking how the voir dire error might have impacted the jury’s mental state as gleaned by reviewing the Rich factors.
While the Rich factors are a useful gloss on the thoroughness of the review of the record required both by Rich and by authorities analyzing voir dire error under Rule 44.2(a), Rich does not purport to overrule Gonzales, Franklin, and Rios. Therefore, I believe we are compelled to conduct a standard Rule 44.2(a) harm analysis by reviewing the record to determine whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the voir dire error changed the jury’s persuasion on the issue in question, namely appellant’s guilt, incorporating the Rich factors as a guide to our review. The standard of review for constitutional error under Rule 44.2(a) is set out by the Court of Criminal Appeals in Wesbrook,
In Wesbrook, the Court of Criminal Appeals stated that “the critical inquiry is whether the error may have contributed to appellant’s conviction or punishment.”
If there is a reasonable likelihood that the error materially affected the jury’s deliberations, then the error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. We must be able to conclude from the record that the erroneously admitted evidence was, in fact, harmless as to punishment beyond a reasonable doubt. An appellate court should not focus on the propriety of the outcome of the trial. Instead, the appellate court should calculate as much as possible the probable impact of the error on the jury in light of the existence of other evidence. While the most significant concern must be the error and its effects, the presence of overwhelming evidence supporting the finding in question can be a factor in the evaluation of harmless error. If an appellate court rules that an error is harmless, it is in essence asserting the nature of the error is such that it could not have affected the jury. Stated in an interrogatory context, a reviewing court asks if there was a reasonable possibility that the error, either alone or in context, moved the jury from a state of nonper-suasion to one of persuasion as to the issue in question.
Applying the same standard of review to the record in McCarthy, the Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that, even though there was ample independent evidence of guilt, it was impossible to say there was no reasonable likelihood that the State’s use of the defendant’s illegally obtained statement materially affected the jury’s deliberations and thus contributed to the jury’s verdict of guilty. See
Had it followed Wesbrook and McCarthy and incorporated the Rich factors in its review, the majority in this case would have reviewed the record to determine whether “there was a reasonable possibility that the error [in denying appellant the opportunity to question the venire members about their ability to follow an instruction to disregard appellant’s incul-patory statements if they believed them illegally obtained], either alone or in context, [of the entire voir dire, evidence, instructions, parties’ theories of the case, closing arguments, and emphasis placed on the error], moved the jury from a state of nonpersuasion to one of persuasion as to the issue in question,” namely appellant’s guilt. See Wesbrook,
Instead, the majority first considers the effect on the jury of the trial court’s instruction to disregard any inculpatory statement made by appellant unless the jurors “first believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the same was freely -and voluntarily made by the defendant without compulsion or persuasion by him” and that he was first given his article 38.22 warnings. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.22 (Vernon 2005). It is well established that a jury is presumed to follow such an instruction and that error may not be found on the basis that it did not unless that presumption is rebutted by evidence. See Colburn v. State,
The only fair inference from the majority’s statement is that while an instruction to disregard cures error in the improper admission of genuinely illegally obtained evidence presented to the jury itself in the absence of evidence that a juror failed to disregard the illegally obtained evidence, it does not cure error in the denial of the opportunity to question the entire venire about whether a veniremember who might or might not have sat on the jury would be able to follow an instruction to disregard evidence that might or might not turn out to have been illegally obtained, even if there is no evidence that such a person sat on the jury or that such evidence affected the verdict, because the reviewing court cannot actually know what the jury thought.
Without the presumption, the instruction to disregard is necessarily of negligible weight under the majority’s standard of review of voir dire error as an inquiry into “how the panel would treat illegally obtained statements and ... whether the panel could disregard illegally obtained statements.” These are generally unknowable subjective factors in the absence of a presumption that the jury disregarded evidence it thought illegally obtained and in the absence of any evidence in the record that any juror was actually persuaded to find appellant guilty on the basis of illegally obtained evidence, of which there was none. With both checks on the reviewing court’s subjective assessment of what the panel might have thought nullified, it is not surprising that the majority found it could not determine the effect of the voir dire error on the jury that was actually seated. In short, the majority assesses the impact of the error on the jury’s mental state and finds it unknowable, rather than looking to the record to determine the impact of the denial of the question on the jury’s determination of guilt.
Had the majority reviewed the record to determine whether appellant’s inability to question the venire regarding their ability to disregard illegally obtained evidence might have “moved the jury from a state of nonpersuasion to one of persuasion” as to appellant’s guilt, as Wesbrook requires, it would have had to conclude that there was no evidence that the error moved the jury to find appellant guilty rather than not guilty. Not only was the jury presumed to follow the trial court’s instruction to disregard such evidence, and not only was there no evidence that they disregarded the instruction, but also, as we held in a portion of our original opinion, appellant’s inculpatory statements were not illegally obtained, and, even if they had been, they were merely cumulative of other evidence which was sufficient to establish appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Wappler,
Wesbrook states, “While the most significant concern must be the error and its
Chang, Faro, and Romero all testified that appellant appeared intoxicated. There was evidence that appellant was unsteady on his feet, that his eyes were bloodshot, and that his speech was slurred. Chang testified that he could not dial the cell phone. Appellant was seen using a rag to clean the inside of his car, and the rag smelled of alcohol. Finally, there was evidence that appellant had lost control of his physical faculties by urinating in his pants and that he was belligerent. Therefore, the in-culpatory statements by appellant were cumulative of other evidence of intoxication presented by the State.
Wappler,
Nevertheless, ignoring and effectively overruling our prior holding, the majority now reweighs the evidence and determines that “[t]he remaining [Rich ] factors all point to a conclusion that the trial court’s error was harmful.” Specifically, “Appellant’s admission that he had been drinking earlier in the day at the casinos was nearly the equivalent of a confession to DWI.” It thus necessarily finds there is a reasonable likelihood that the trial court’s denial of the opportunity to ask a proper voir dire question was sufficient to have moved the jury from a state of nonpersuasion to one of persuasion as to appellant’s guilt, even though we had previously held that appellant’s inculpatory statements were admissible and that the other evidence of his guilt was sufficient to convict him of DWI beyond a reasonable doubt. Cf. Wesbrook,
Like the Court of Criminal Appeals in Wesbrook, I would conclude that because the jury is presumed to have followed the instruction to disregard evidence it thought illegally obtained, because it possessed overwhelming evidence supporting appellant’s conviction for DWI, and because appellant’s inculpatory statements, even had they been illegally obtained, which they were not, were merely cumulative of other evidence that appellant had been drinking heavily prior to being stopped, there is no reasonable likelihood that the denial of the opportunity to ask the proper voir dire question at issue moved the jury from a state of nonpersuasion to one of persuasion with regard to appellant’s guilt.
I would affirm the judgment of the trial court.
. The dissent pointed out that “prohibiting appellant from asking the venire members a proper question was, under binding precedent, an error of constitutional dimension." Rich,
. Appellant moved to suppress his statement, in response to the police officer’s question at the scene, that he had been drinking at a casino in Louisiana but that he had taken his last drink two hours earlier. Appellant assigned error to the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress as a point of error on appeal. We concluded in our original opinion that Romero’s questions to appellant were not made during custodial interrogation; moreover, even if appellant’s inculpatory statements to Romero were improperly admitted, the error was harmless, given the other evidence admitted on the issue of intoxication. See Wappler v. State,
