Court Opinion

ID: 9778409
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-29 21:03:42.179538+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:33:08.500239
License: Public Domain

OPINION
DOUGLAS, Judge.
Henry Mendoza appeals his conviction for possession of heroin. Punishment was assessed by the court at twenty years.
Mendoza contends that the evidence was insufficient, that his consent to search was not voluntary and that he was improperly *397denied the right to conduct an independent chemical analysis of the heroin. We reject these contentions and affirm.
During the evening of February 25, 1976, officers from the Lockhart Police Department conducted a search of appellant’s home after he gave his written consent. The officers entered a closet in the home and found behind a chest of drawers a plastic bag which they thought to contain heroin. On a shelf in the closet they found a can of lactose. They found some plastic baggies and small pieces of tinfoil. They found a coat with $1800 in cash in a pocket. This was some three or four feet from the lactose. Appellant stated that the money and the coat were his. He counted out the money and kept it. He claimed that the lactose was his, that he used it for food. The small pieces of tinfoil were about two inch squares. An officer testified that narcotic dealers used the tinfoil squares like those they found in the closet to wrap heroin and sell it. One square would hold one “shot” of heroin. He also testified that lactose was used to cut heroin. An officer testified that appellant had $1,000 on his person. Appellant, his wife and children were in the house. One baby was up and the rest were asleep. Appellant had a lot of names and telephone numbers on his person.
A chemist for the Department of Public Safety said he found eight milligrams of heroin in the packet submitted to him for examination. It was a small sample but enough for a dosage. He found it to be extremely pure. He also testified that lactose was milk sugar and that it is used for cutting heroin.
The evidence shows that appellant had lived in the house from October until February, the time of the arrest; that his wife and children lived with him. There is no one else shown to be in the house except his wife and his children. The heroin was found in the closet, along with his clothes. All of the circumstances, such as the finding of the tinfoil, the plastic bags, the lactose near where appellant kept his clothes, was sufficient to show that he possessed heroin. It would have to be an unbelievable hypothesis that he did not possess it.
This case is distinguishable from Damron v. State, 570 S.W.2d 933 (Tex.Cr.App.1978). In Damron, where marihuana was found in the closet of a house occupied by the defendant and his wife, we reversed the conviction because the evidence was insufficient. In Damron, we stressed that the defendant was not present at the time of the search, that the closet was not shown to be in his bedroom, that no personal items belonging to him were in the closet and he did not make any incriminating statements at the time of the arrest. In the instant case, clothing and a large amount of cash belonging to appellant were found in the closet. Appellant also admitted that the lactose was his. Unlike Damron, Mendoza was directly linked to the closet.
Complaint is next made that a consent to search signed by Mendoza was not freely and voluntarily made. Officer Dean Reed of the Lockhart Police Department testified as follows concerning the events surrounding Mendoza’s consent:
“Q. Would you read it in front of the jury as you read it to Henry Mendoza.
“A. T have been requested by Dean Reed, Patrolman for the Police Department of the City of Lockhart, Texas, to permit him and other officers to search my house located at 614 S. Blanco St., Lockhart, Caldwell County, Texas. I have been informed that I do not have to consent to such a search and that I have the right to refuse to consent to such a search. I understand my rights and I freely and voluntarily consent to the search. Date: 2/25, 1976.’ Signed by Henry Mendoza.”
The written consent form was introduced. Officers Ed Braun and Mark Hinnenkamp both testified that Mendoza executed the consent. Appellant did not introduce any evidence to show coercion.
The written consent in the record indicates that Mendoza voluntarily and with *398knowledge that he could refuse the search signed the consent form. The record does not reflect any evidence of coercion beyond that inherent in any situation where an officer asks a citizen to consent to a search. We conclude that the consent was freely and voluntarily given with full knowledge that he could refuse permission to search.
Mendoza contends that he was denied the opportunity to have an independent chemical analysis made of the heroin. The accused is entitled to have any alleged contraband tested by his own chemist if he makes a timely request for such an opportunity. Montes v. State, 503 S.W.2d 241 (Tex.Cr.App.1974); Detmering v. State, 481 S.W.2d 863 (Tex.Cr.App.1972).
Mendoza argues that item 15 of his discovery motion, which was granted by the court, constitutes his request for the independent chemical analysis. Item 15 requested inspection of:
“Any tangible object, written statement, report, or any other type of evidence that would be favorable to this Defendant in the preparation of his defense.”
This is insufficient to constitute a request for an independent chemical analysis of the drug.
There is no error. The judgment is affirmed.