799 S.W.2d 261 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1990
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
This is a typical “Rose harm” case: having heard all about parole law, a jury assesses punishment for a term of years less than that the prosecution called for and
The court of appeals recognized and acknowledged the trial judge did not give a Rose “curative instruction,” but it characterized the last sentence of the § 4(a) instruction as “the court’s limiting instruction,” observing it was “the court’s ‘last word’ on the subject of parole,” and converted it into a “rebuttable presumption.” Washington v. State, supra, at 499-500. However, in Arnold v. State, supra, we made plain that “no part of a § 4 instruction can reasonably be characterized and fairly regarded as ‘curative.’ ” Id., at 311, n. 23. Thus the very foundation of the opinion below is flawed.
Thereafter, both prosecutor and defense counsel discussed ramifications of declarations in a § 4(a) instruction; at one point the prosecutor recommended the jury assess not less than fortyfive years but he still requested life, and in closing argument the prosecutor told the jury straightout: “Well, it doesn’t matter if you give her ninety-nine years or if you give her sixty-five years. Anything over sixty is just there. If you want her to spend twenty years in the penitentiary before she is eligible for parole, you’ve got to give her life or sixty years,” and again asked for life. Id., at 499.
Notwithstanding those explicit statements by the prosecutor, consonant with its notion that “the evidence more than justifies the jury’s assessment," the court of appeals found “no evidence that the jury disregarded the court’s limiting instruction,” and reasoned that “if the jury had disregarded the instruction, it likely would have assessed appellant’s punishment at 60 years or life imprisonment, as requested by the prosecutor,” so the “presumption” that the jury followed the “cautionary instruction” was not rebutted. Id., at 500. But if there is any presumption at work here, it is that the jury considered, as the court expressly instructed it could, the existence of the parole law as declared in the § 4 instruction to inform its “assessment of punishment.” Arnold, supra, at 298-299.
“The evil to be avoided is the consideration by the jury of parole in assessing punishment.” Rose v. State, 752 S.W.2d 529, at 535, quoting Clark v. State, 643 S.W.2d 723, 725 (Tex.Cr.App.1982). Even assuming the jury adhered to what we have determined is not a limiting instruction, and thus did not consider “the manner in which the parole law may be applied to [her],” that would not reasonably make it “likely” to assess sixty years or life. The jury well knew from the § 4(a) instruction and argument of counsel that in light of its own finding that appellant used or exhibited a deadly weapon “she will not become eligible for [any application of the parole law] until the actual time [she] served equals one-third of the sentence [the jury] imposed or twenty years, whichever is less, without consideration of any good time she may earn." And we have seen that “once a jury comes to understand that any term of years beyond the formula number has no effect on eligibility for parole, ... jurors are willing to settle on a term higher than the minimum but within the limits of the formula.” Arnold, at 306, and 312, n. 24; see also Jones v. State, 725 S.W.2d 770 (Tex.Cr.App.—Dallas 1987) PDR refused.
Here the minimum term is five years; eighteen years old with one child and pregnant, appellant applied, proved her eligibility and argued for probation which the jury rejected, leaving only the question of her serving a term of imprisonment. The prosecutor requested life but recommended not less than fortyfive years, explaining that life or sixty years meant she would spend twenty years before becoming eligible for parole.
The jury settled on fifty years, and in my judgment a rational appellate court could not determine and declare beyond a reasonable doubt that the error in allowing jurors
Accordingly, I would grant review. Because by inexplicably dismissing appellant’s petition as improvidently granted the majority appears willing so soon to ignore the teachings of Arnold et al., I must dissent.
Lead Opinion
OPINION ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
Appellant was convicted by a jury of the offense of aggravated robbery. The jury assessed punishment at fifty years confinement in the Texas Department of Corrections.
We now find that our decision to grant the appellant’s petition for discretionary review in order to determine whether the court of appeals erred in their holding was improvident. Tex.R.App.Pro. 202(k). See Arnold v. State, 786 S.W.2d 295 (Tex.Cr.App.1990).
With this understanding, we dismiss the appellant’s petition for discretionary review.
It is so ordered.
. Now the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division.