Court Opinion

ID: 3117502
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-16 07:53:55.810795+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:52:53.193350
License: Public Domain

NO. 07-09-0060-CR

                            IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                      FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                    AT AMARILLO

                                       PANEL B

                               FEBRUARY 16, 2010
                         ______________________________

                               KENNETH LAWRENCE,

                                                             Appellant

                                           v.

                               THE STATE OF TEXAS,

                                                     Appellee
                         ______________________________

            FROM THE 181ST DISTRICT COURT OF RANDALL COUNTY;

                  NO. 19791-B; HON. JOHN B. BOARD, PRESIDING
                        ______________________________

                                     Opinion
                         ______________________________

Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and HANCOCK, JJ.

      Appellant Kenneth Lawrence was convicted of failing to register as a sex offender

after pleading guilty. On appeal, he contends his plea was not knowing and voluntary

because the trial court failed to admonish him as to the range of punishment and the

possible consequence of deportation. We affirm the judgment.

      Appellant originally opted for a jury to try him and assess his punishment if found

guilty. Prior to voir dire, however, he changed his mind and requested the trial court to

assess punishment. During trial, appellant changed his mind again but this time about
being tried. Consequently, he pled guilty. The trial court accepted the plea, but, before

doing so, it failed to admonish appellant about the range of punishment and the

possibility of deportation if he was not a United States citizen. See TEX. CODE CRIM.

PROC. ANN. art. 26.13(a)(1) & (4) (Vernon Supp. 2009) (requiring such admonishments).

Such a failure is error. See Burnett v. State, 88 S.W.3d 633, 637 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).

The error, nevertheless, remains subject to a harm analysis under Rule 44.2(b) of the

Rules of Appellate Procedure. Id.

       The nature of the applicable harm analysis was most recently explained in

Anderson v. State, 182 S.W.3d 914 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006). Like the case before us,

Anderson also involved the failure to fully admonish one pleading guilty. Furthermore,

the Court of Criminal Appeals reiterated that the issue is whether the error affected the

substantial rights of the defendant. Id. at 918-19. In cases like that before us, this

normally requires an investigation of the record to determine with fair assurance whether

the plea would have stayed the same had the admonishment been given. Id. at 919.

With that said, we turn to the record before us.

       Regarding the failure to admonish about deportation, the omission is harmless if

the record shows that the defendant is a United States citizen and, therefore, not subject

to deportation. VanNortrick v. State, 227 S.W.3d 706, 709 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). That

is the situation here. According to a pen packet admitted into evidence, appellant was

born in Texas. Since Texas remains part of the United States, appellant was born a

United States citizen and is not subject to deportation. Thus, this particular error was

harmless.

                                             2
       As for the failure to admonish about the range of punishment, the record reveals

that appellant was convicted of a “2nd degree felony,” sentenced to a prison term of ten

years, and fined $1000. So too does it illustrate that appellant admitted, during the

punishment phase of the proceeding, that he “understood” the trial court could sentence

him to “to jail anywhere up to ten years,” place him on probation for “up to ten years,”

and “assess any fine that he wants to.”      Despite this knowledge, he wanted to “make

amends” and seek “mercy” from the trial court. So, he pled guilty and relied on the trial

court to select his sentence. Moreover, the sentence ultimately levied fell within the two

to 20 year range applicable to second degree felonies.       TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. '12.33

(Vernon Supp. 2009). So too did the fine assessed fall under the $10,000 maximum

permitted by the same statute. Id.

       Yet, the record fails to indicate whether he knew that his prison term could have

exceeded ten years.       The presence of this deficiency makes it difficult for us to

determine, per Anderson, whether his plea would have differed had been told that. But,

before we conclude that the error was harmful, we must remember that Anderson was

attempting to explain how one was to apply Rule 44.2(b) to cases involving the failure to

admonish a defendant who pleads guilty. In undertaking that explanation, the court did

not reject the actual wording of Rule 44.2(b). Quite the contrary. It initially specified that

the “issue is whether, in a given case, the error affected substantial rights” of the

defendant. Anderson v. State, 182 S.W.3d at 918-19. Given this, we can safely say that

assessing whether a defendant’s plea would have differed had the appropriate

admonishments be given is simply one, but not the sole, way of determining the

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harmfulness of the type of error encompassed here. We remain free to apply the words

of Rule 44.2(b). And, in doing so here, we discover that appellant’s sentence fell within

the range allowed by law, and was much less than the permissible maximum. It is also

clear that he received what he knew he could get; no more, no less. So, in the final

analysis, appellant’s right to be told the full range of punishment so that he could make

an informed decision was protected from injury by the trial court limiting (whether

intentionally or otherwise) his punishment to that about which he knew and was ready to

accept.1

       Accordingly, the issue is overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.

                                                      Brian Quinn
                                                      Chief Justice

       Publish.

       1
         To the extent that appellant argues he was not afforded the admonishments relating to plea
bargains, nothing of record indicates that such a bargain existed. Rather, his desire to simply seek
“mercy” from the trial court, coupled with his acknowledgement that his sentence could range from
probation to ten years imprisonment allows one to reasonably conclude that there was no bargain between
the parties. There being no bargain, it therefore cannot be said that he was harmed by the lack of
admonishments regarding plea bargains and the trial court’s authority to reject them.
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