PD-1779-08, Ronald Lamont Guyton v. State: The CCA granted Guyton's petition for discretionary review without oral argument in this possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver case out of Brazos County on the following issues:
1. Review is justified because the Tenth Court of Appeals misapplied the "mailbox rule" contained in rule 9.2(b)(1) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure and therefore was without jurisdiction to issue their second opinion dated February 6, 2009.Here's a link to the court of appeals opinion (unpublished). Here's a link to Judge Gray's concurring opinion (always a must read). Here's a link to the underlying court of appeals case info. [Note: The Court did not grant as to issue number 3, whatever that was. I just point this out because I didn't want you to think I got the numbers wrong. And, as a note that may interest only me, the CCA granted review in this case on the same day that it heard oral argument in Brooks.]
2. Review is justified because the Tenth Court of Appeals failed to meet the requirements of amended Rule 50 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure limiting the issuance of a new opinion on petition for discretionary review to "[t]he justices who participated in the [original] decision..."
4. Review is justified to again revisit the scope and standard of factual sufficiency review in light of Tenth Court of Appeals decision in this case and that of the same court of appeals in Brooks v. State currently pending before this Court on both State and Appellant petitions for discretionary review.
PD-0811-09, Ralph Franklin Welsh v. State: The CCA granted Welsh's petition for discretionary review without oral argument in this assault out of Tarrant County on the following issue:
1. The Fort Worth Court of Appeals erred in holding that Appellant was not entitled to an instruction on the lesser included offense of assault by contact. (R. III-102).Here's a link to the court of appeals opinion (unpublished). Here's a link to the court of appeals case info.
PD-0987-09, Richard Lynn Winfrey, Sr. v. State: The CCA granted Winfrey's petition for discretionary review with oral argument in this murder case out of San Jacinto County on the following issues:
1. An important question implicating the administration of justice is presented by the Court of Appeals' reliance upon a dog scent lineup to sustain the legal sufficiency of the evidence without regard to the inherent limitations of such evidence.Here's a link to the court of appeals opinion (published). Here's a link to the court of appeals info.
2. An important question implicating the administration of justice also is presented by the Court of Appeals' failure properly to evaluate the factual sufficiency of the evidence by addressing the inherent limitations of dog scent lineup evidence.
PD-0906-09, PD-0907-09, PD-0908-09, & PD-0909-09, Eduardo & Heriberto Arias Valtierra v. State: The CCA granted the State's petition for discretionary review without oral argument in all of the Valtierra's possession of a controlled substance cases from Kendall County on the following issues:
1. After viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court's findings and conclusions, did the Honorable Court of Appeals err in finding that the officer did not have consent to walk down the apartment hallway to the location of the runaway child, when a resident of the apartment, Heriberto Valtierra, had just told the officer where the female runaway child was located and consented to the officer talking to her?Here's a link to the court of appeals opinion in Eduardo's case (published). Here's a link to the court of appeals opinion in Heriberto's case (published). Here's a link to the court of appeal case info for Eduardo's first and second cases. Here's a link to the court of appeals case info for Heriberto's first and second cases.
2. Did the Honorable Court of Appeals fail to apply the proper standard of review pursuant to Guzman v. State, 955 S.W.2d 85 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997), in that the Court failed to consider all of the facts and circumstances shown to have been in possession of the officers at the time of the incident?
3. Did the Honorable Court of Appeals err in finding that the protective sweep conducted by the law enforcement officers was not justified for safety of the officers or the child?
4. Did exigent circumstances exist for law enforcement officers to proceed down a hallway toward a room where the runaway child was said to be located, given the fact that her status was that of a "runaway," and that adult males were seen in the residence with this 13 year old female, together with observations made of suspicious activities by one of the four adult males?
PD-1373-09, Ronnie Duane Mason v. State: The CCA granted the State's petition for discretionary review with oral argument in Mason's capital murder out of Potter County on the following issues:
1. The Court of Appeals employed an incorrect harm analysis in reviewing the State's error in allowing unauthorized persons to question a witness before the grand jury; the focus should have been on whether the error affected appellant's substantial rights, rather than whether it contributed to the grand jury's charging decision.Here's a link to the court of appeals opinion (published). Here's a link to the court of appeals case info.
2. In reversing a conviction for the avowed purpose of deterring the State's future violation of grand jury procedural statutes, notwithstanding the harmlessness of the violation involved, the Court of Appeals improperly assumed a supervisory role.
1 comments:
So, are we done here?
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