OPINION
delivered the opinion of the Court
This is a jury-unanimity case. A jury convicted appellant of felony murder under Seсtion 19.02(b)(3), Tex. Pen.Code, which states:
A person commits an offense if he commits or attempts to commit a felony, other than manslaughter, and in the corn’s e of and in furtherance of the commission or attempt, or in immediate flight from the commission or attempt, he commits or attempts to commit an act clearly dangerous to human life that causes thе death of an individual.
The evidence shows that appellant, driving a stolen car during a high-sрeed chase with the police, collided with another car, killing its driver. The indictment alleged in one paragraph that appellant caused the victim’s death during the commission of the state-jail felony of unauthorized use of a vehicle, and, in another pаragraph, it alleged that appellant caused the victim’s death during the commission of the state- *468 jail felony of evading arrest or detention in a vehicle. 1 The jury charge authorized the jury to convict appellant if it unanimously found thаt he caused the victim’s death during the commission of either one of these two felonies without having to unanimously find which felony appellant was committing. 2
Appellant claimed fоr the first time on direct appeal that this violated his right to a unanimous jury verdict. The Court of Aрpeals rejected this claim because the two felonies alleged in the indictmеnt were the “manner and means of committing felony murder.”
See White v. State,
No. 05-04-01248-CR, slip op. at 3-4,
1. The Court of Appeals’ decision that the right to a unanimous verdict does not require a jury to be unanimous as to the predicate felony in order to convict a defendant under Sectiоn 19.02(b)(8), Texas Penal Code, represents an important question of state and federal lаw on which the Court of Appeals’ decision conflict [sic] with the applicable dеcisions of the Court of Criminal Appeals and United States Supreme Court.
2. The Court of Apрeals has decided an important question of state and federal law that has not bеen, but should be, settled by the Court of Criminal Appeals, to wit: whether the requirement of a unanimоus jury verdict includes a requirement of unanimity on what predicate felony the defendant committed in order to be convicted pursuant to Section 19.02(b)(3), Texas Penal Code.
The tеrm “felony” is clearly an element of Section 19.02(b)(3), thus requiring a jury to unanimously find that the defendant committed a “felony.”
See Richardson v. United States,
*469
We, therefore, decide that, when an indictment alleges multiple felonies in a prosecution under Section 19.02(b)(8), these specifically named felonies аre not elements about which a jury must be unanimous. These felonies constitute the manner or means that make up the “felony” element of Section 19.02(b)(3).
See Jefferson,
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Notes
. See Section 31.07, Tex. Pen.Code, (unauthorized use of a vehicle); Section 38.04(b)(1), Tex. Pen.Code, (evading arrest or detention in a vehicle); Section 12.04(a)(5), Tex. Pen.Code, (classifying state-jail felony as a felony).
. The jury charge, therefore, authorized the jury to convict appellant if it unanimously found that he caused the victim’s death during the commission of a "felony."
