ZAID ADNAN NAJAR, Appellant v. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
NO. 14-17-00785-CR
In the Fourteenth Court of Appeals
August 29, 2019
Reversed and Remanded and Majority and Dissenting Opinions filed August 29, 2019. On Appeal from the 338th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1503083
MAJORITY OPINION
The ultimate issue in this appeal concerns whether the jury followed the trial court’s charge: “During your deliberations in this case, you must not consider, discuss, nor relate any matters not in evidence before yоu. You should not consider nor mention any personal knowledge or information you may have about any fact or person connected with this case which is not shown by the evidence.” As a society, we generally balance the need for confidentiality in jury deliberation versus the
We also generally presume the jury follows the court’s charge. This appeal presents a rare instance in which what occurred during deliberation is open for review. And because the uncontroverted evidence is the jury did not follow the court’s charge and considered outside evidence that was advеrse on a critical issue, we must reverse.
A jury found appellant Zaid Adnan Najar guilty of the third-degree felony of fleeing, using a vehicle, from a peace officer who was attempting lawfully to detain him. See
BACKGROUND
A. Appellant’s Arrest
On March 17, 2016, at approximately 10 p.m., Officer Bachar of the Houston Police Department observed a white Ford Mustang driving at 100 miles per hour in the far-left lane of the I-610 freeway in the Galleria area. Bachar also noticed flashing red-and-blue lights emanating from the vehicle. At first glance, Bachar thought the vehicle was a law enforcement vehicle because of the flashing lights. However, upon a closer look, he realized it was a рrivate vehicle. At that point, Bachar turned on his own emergency equipment, which included flashing lights and a siren. Bachar followed the vehicle for approximately two miles before the vehicle pulled over. During that time, the vehicle’s driver cut across three lanes of traffic into the far-right lane. Bachar testified thаt he believed the driver was going to exit the freeway at this point; however, the driver then went back across the three lanes of traffic until the vehicle was again in the far-left lane. At no time did the vehicle’s driver use his turn signals to indicate lane changes. When Bachar was within twenty-five feet of the vehicle, it came to a sudden stop in the right-hand shoulder of the freeway. Bachar then approached the vehicle and identified appellant as the driver.
B. Trial
During her opening statement, appellant’s trial counsel emphasized that appellant was already driving over 100 miles per hour when Bachar turned on his lights and
After briefly deliberating, thе jury returned with a guilty verdict.
C. Post-trial
Attorneys for the State and for appellant interviewed the jury after announcement of the verdict. One of the jurors informed the attorneys that while they were in the jury room deliberating, they heard a siren coming from outside on the street fifteen floors below. The members of the jury reasoned that if they cоuld hear the siren while inside the building, appellant should have been able to hear the officer’s siren while in his vehicle. The juror said this reasoning was used by the jury as a whole in finding appellant guilty of the charged offense.
Appellant filed a motion for new trial arguing that (1) the jury received adverse outside evidence during deliberation and (2) appellant received ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial court held a hearing on the motion. Before appellant and the State presented their arguments, appellant’s counsel offered affidavits from appellant’s trial counsel and co-counsel in which each attorney recounted the jury’s comments regarding hearing a siren while deliberating. Appellant’s counsel pointed out that the State agreed with the “factual basis of the affidavit” and that there was solely a “dispute on the law.” Counsel for the State replied, “that’s correct.” And when asked by the trial court whether the Statе had any objections to the affidavits, the State’s counsel replied, “no objections, your honor.” The court admitted the affidavits into evidence. Appellant’s counsel then presented his arguments on the two issues. After which, the State responded by arguing that the allegations in the affidavit did not constitute an “outside influence.”3
After listening to arguments and reviewing the affidavits presented by both parties, the trial court denied the motion for new trial on both grounds. On appeal, appellant argues the trial court erred in denying his motion for new trial on the same grounds he raised in his motion for new trial.
ANALYSIS
A. Other Evidence
In his motion for new trial, appellant argued that
1. Standard of Review
Ordinarily, the grant or refusаl of a motion for new trial is committed to the discretion of the trial court. McQuarrie v. State, 380 S.W.3d 145, 150 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012). However,
2. Analysis
Appellant contends that during the new-trial hearing the State conceded that the “receipt” prong of the applicable two-part test has been met. At the hearing, appellant provided an affidavit from his trial counsel stating the following:
During our conversation with the jury, one of the jurors told us that during their deliberatiоns, while they were in the jury room, the members of the jury heard a siren outside on the street, and that the fact they could hear the siren from inside the jury room influenced their verdict. They believed that if they could hear a siren from inside the building, that [appellant] could have heard an officer’s siren inside his car.
The State’s counsel affirmed that it agreed with the factual basis of this affidavit, specifically that the “conversation with the jury took place.” The State neither contested that the jury heard and discussed the siren while deliberating, nor that the members of the jury had relied on their ability to hear the siren in finding appellant guilty. Further, the State did not present evidence to counter trial counsel’s affidavit. Because there is no evidence contradicting trial counsel’s unobjected-to affidavit, no factual dispute in that regard was presented for the trial court’s resolution. This satisfies the “receipt” prong of the test. See Alexander v. State, 610 S.W.2d 750, 751–52 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1980) (where testimony as to what oсcurred in jury room is not controverted and shows that jury during deliberation received other and new evidence, then there is no issue of fact for trial court’s determination); Rogers, 551 S.W.2d at 370 (holding unless there was fact issue raised on whether jury actually received other evidence, former Code of Criminal Procedure article 40.03(7)4 required reversal if
We consider the character of the evidence in light of the issues before the jury in our determination of the “detrimental” prong of the test. Alexander, 610 S.W.2d at 753; Carroll, 990 S.W.2d at 762. One (if not, the) central issue in this evading-detention case was whether appellant was aware that Bachar was attempting to detain him. Appellant’s counsel argued that appellant was not aware he was being pulled over until appellant came to an abrupt stop when Bachar narrowed down the distance between his vehicle and appellant’s vehicle. Appellant’s ability to hear Bachar’s siren was critical to the issue of whether appellant knew he was being signaled by Bachar to pull over. The siren heard by the members of the jury sitting inside on the fifteenth-floor of a building—while they were deliberating on whether appellant was in fact evading detention from an officer with an activated siren—was detrimental to appellant in their resolution of this issue. See Deary v. State, 681 S.W.2d 784, 788 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1984, pet. ref’d) (statement by juror concerning his experience in paying more than $200.00 for a cassette player “was detrimental to the appellant because his guilt on the felony charge depended upon whether the value of the cassette рlayer exceeded $200.00“). As stated in trial counsel’s affidavit, the jury’s ability to hear the siren from fifteen floors above led the members of the jury to believe that appellant must have heard Bachar’s siren, but deliberately ignored it in an attempt to evade detention. This is supported by the uncontested affidavit provided by trial сounsel stating, “that the fact they could hear the siren from inside the jury room influenced their verdict.”5
The issue in this appeal is not whether a criminal conviction should be reversed because there is
the
CONCLUSION
We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.
/s/ Charles A. Spain
Justice
Panel consists of Justices Christopher, Bourliot, and Spain. (Christopher, J., dissenting.)
Publish.
