Court Opinion

ID: 2940516
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-15 22:07:19.387069+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:40:48.548898
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                         OF TEXAS
                                         NO. PD 1687-06

                           CODY LEE OURSBOURN, Appellant

                                                  v.

                                   THE STATE OF TEXAS

           ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
                   FROM THE FIRST COURT OF APPEALS
                            HARRIS COUNTY

       C OCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.

                                          OPINION

       We granted review in this case to clarify when a trial court has the duty to instruct the

jury on the voluntariness of a defendant’s statement in the absence of any request for such

instructions.1 We hold that when the evidence raises an issue of the “voluntariness” of a

       1
          We granted review of Appellant’s sole question: “Did the court of appeals err by
disregarding Thomas in preference of Mendoza, when deciding whether ‘egregious harm’
resulted by the trial court’s failure to sua sponte instruct the jury pursuant to 38.22 and 38.23,
where a factual dispute existed regarding the voluntariness of appellant’s statement?”
                                                                           Oursbourn       Page 2

defendant’s statement under Article 38.22, 2 the trial judge must give a general voluntariness

instruction under Sections 6 and 7 of that article because it is the “law applicable to the case.”

But when the defendant does not request this statutorily mandated instruction, the trial

court’s failure to include it is reviewed only for “egregious harm” under Almanza.3 In this

case, a majority of the court of appeals held that, because appellant did not object to the jury

charge or request any instruction on voluntariness, there was no error in the charge.4 We

conclude that the trial judge did err, and therefore we reverse and remand the case to the

court of appeals to determine if appellant suffered “egregious harm” under Almanza.

                                                  I.

                        The Background Facts and Procedural History

A.     The Facts

       Frances Rapp drove her Chevy Impala to a Houston nightclub off Richmond Avenue

one night in November, 2003. Her friend, Brendon Martin, was with her. As they got out

of the Impala, they were “car-jacked” by a light-skinned man wearing dark clothes and

gloves and a beanie on his head. That man approached them and pointed a semi-automatic

handgun against Ms. Rapp’s stomach and demanded her car keys. She complied. The

gunman then drove off in her car, which was equipped with “OnStar,” a communications and

       2
           T EX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 38.22, §§ 6-7.
       3
           Almanza v. State, 686 S.W.2d 157 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985).
       4
          Oursbourn v. State, ___ S.W.3d ___, No. 01-05-00141-CR, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS
8407, at *18 (Tex. App.–Houston [1st Dist.] Sept. 28, 2006).
                                                                             Oursbourn       Page 3

tracking service. Ms. Rapp called both the police and “OnStar.”

       At about 3:30 a.m. that night, “OnStar” located the Impala. HPD Sergeant De Los

Santos was dispatched to the location–an apartment complex. He waited until someone got

into the Impala and drove it off, then he initiated a traffic stop. But the driver, later identified

as appellant, did not pull over; instead he sped up, leading Sgt. De Los Santos and three other

patrol-car units on a short chase. Appellant drove southbound in a northbound lane, then

jumped out of the Impala and fled on foot. When appellant tried to cross a bayou, he slipped

on a rock and hit his head. The officers caught up with him and took him into custody.

Because appellant suffered a minor injury, he was taken to Ben Taub Hospital.

       The officers then contacted Ms. Rapp who came to the scene and gave them

permission to search her car. The Impala was undamaged, but her purse, CDs, DVDs, and

camera were missing. The “OnStar” manual was on the passenger seat, and its casing had

been removed from the unit in the trunk. Gloves like those worn by the car-jacker were on

the console.

       Two days later, HPD Investigator Colleen Guidry showed a photo lineup to Ms. Rapp,

Mr. Martin, and a third witness, Olivia Martinez. Although appellant’s photograph was in

the lineup, all three picked out other people.

       Investigator Guidry then interviewed appellant. She read him his Miranda rights, and

he agreed to waive them and make a videotaped statement. Investigator Guidry denied

making any promises or threats or using coercion in taking the statement, and she said that
                                                                        Oursbourn      Page 4

appellant never asked for a lawyer. She also said that he was injured and had a neck brace

on, which impaired his ability to communicate somewhat, but otherwise he had no physical

problem speaking. He did not appear intoxicated.

       At first, appellant said that he had been at a different nightclub that evening. To get

him to “tell the truth,” Investigator Guidry lied and said that “some of the witnesses had

picked him out of the photo spread,” and they said that he had a gun. Appellant then

admitted to the car-jacking, but said that he did not have a gun. He explained that the

witnesses might have thought that he did because he is not able to flex his index finger and

he had dark gloves on. Appellant did not tell Investigator Guidry that he was bipolar.

       A week later, Ms. Rapp and Mr. Martin viewed a live lineup which included

appellant, but again they picked out other people. Investigator Guidry described all of these

identifications as “tentative” and thus “unreliable.”

B.     The Procedural History

1.     Pretrial

       Appellant was indicted for aggravated robbery. The trial judge ordered a competency

evaluation, and appellant was interviewed on January 29, 2004, by a court-appointed

psychologist, Dr. Edward P. Friedman, who concluded that appellant was incompetent to

stand trial. Appellant was admitted to North Texas State Hospital for observation and

treatment. Later that year, he was declared competent and returned to Houston to stand trial.

       Appellant then filed a motion to suppress his videotaped statement, alleging that “he
                                                                           Oursbourn         Page 5

was not competent to understand his rights and knowingly and voluntarily waive his rights

to make the statement.” He noted that the trial court had previously found him “incompetent

in this case.” At the hearing on his motion to suppress, the State called three witnesses: Sgt.

De Los Santos testified to the facts of the arrest; Investigator Guidry testified about taking

appellant’s statement; and Dr. Friedman testified about appellant’s mental status.

       Dr. Friedman said that, based on his initial interview, appellant was not competent to

stand trial because he was depressed and non-verbal. Appellant was “so depressed that he

simply wasn’t motivated to speak” and “might be too depressed to be motivated to cooperate

with defense counsel.” Dr. Friedman said that he met with appellant three more times during

the following year and “felt that he was competent.” He was communicative and “what he

communicated to me was accurate and indicated that he did have both . . . an adequate and

an accurate understanding of the criminal justice system.” Dr. Friedman also stated that he

thought that appellant was competent when he gave his videotaped confession on November

24, 2003, even though “initially he was fairly uncommunicative with the police officer who

was interviewing him, just as he had been with me.” 5 Dr. Friedman agreed that persons with

bipolar disorder might “have trouble evaluating their constitutional rights and making a

       5
         Dr. Friedman explained:
       As the videotape continued and the interview progressed, he became increasingly
       more verbal with her. He appeared to not only understand what the allegations
       were, what the charges were against him, but he also appeared motivated to
       present his behavior in a way that suggested an alternative explanation for what he
       was charged with, which to me meant that he was at that time motivated to
       basically portray himself and his actions in a better light than those in which the
       offense report had portrayed them.
                                                                             Oursbourn       Page 6

proper choice as to what to do with those in mind,” but only if they were so depressed that

they did not care what happened to them. In this case, appellant appeared depressed at the

beginning of the tape, but he later appeared “very motivated to present himself in a more

favorable light,” which indicated that “he wasn’t that depressed.” 6

       Defense counsel argued that appellant’s statement should be suppressed because,

“looking at the first part of his statement where the warnings were given, is when he

appeared to be uncommunicative and in a depressed state.” The trial judge denied the motion

to suppress without making findings of fact and conclusions of law.7

2.     The Trial

       At trial, defense counsel argued in his opening statement that appellant had made a

“false confession” to protect his girlfriend’s relatives. When the prosecutor offered the

statement into evidence, defense counsel renewed his objection “on the grounds that it’s not

a voluntary statement. The Defendant’s bipolar and was incompetent to give consent.” The

trial judge overruled the objection and admitted the statement. After the State rested, defense

counsel called appellant’s mother, Elizabeth Stephenson, to the stand. Ms. Stephenson

testified that appellant was diagnosed as ADD in elementary school and was put on Ritalin.

       6
          The trial judge asked whether a person with bipolar disorder could be both competent
and incompetent in a single 20-minute period. Dr. Friedman said no, because the mood swings
just don’t occur “that rapidly.” When asked whether a bipolar individual in a depressed or manic
state would be incompetent, Dr. Friedman said: “It might, but it doesn’t necessarily mean that.”
       7
         The court of appeals abated this appeal to the trial court to make the findings of fact and
conclusions of law required by art. 38.22, § 6. Oursbourn, __ S.W.3d at __, 2006 Tex. App.
LEXIS 8407, at *4.
                                                                        Oursbourn      Page 7

He was diagnosed as bipolar when he was 14. She explained appellant’s mood swings and

stated that on Saturday, November 22, 2003–the day of the offense–he was in a manic state.

She said that he was still manic when she saw him in jail the following Monday.

       The State called Dr. Friedman in rebuttal. He testified that appellant suffers from

depression, and that, if he is bipolar, Dr. Friedman has seen him only in the depressed state.

The prosecutor asked Dr. Friedman about appellant’s statement:

Q      Dr. Friedman, have you reviewed the statement given to the police in this case?

A      I saw the videotape of the statement that he gave, yes.

Q      Do you think at the time that the Defendant gave that videotaped statement to the
       police that he was able to voluntarily give a statement to the police?

A      I believe so. I think he was depressed, but I think that the content of the videotape
       makes it clear that he was aware of what he was doing and, you know, aware of whom
       he was giving the statement to.

He acknowledged that on January 29, 2004, he found that appellant was not competent:

Q      Why was that?

A      At least I had a serious question about his competence. Because even though I saw
       no sign that he was, you know, delusional, hallucinating or in any other way out of
       touch with reality, he was acting so depressed at that time that I really couldn’t get
       him to communicate with me to any meaningful extent. And I was concerned that he
       was so depressed that if he couldn’t communicate with me, perhaps he was so
       depressed he couldn’t communicate with his attorney as well.
              And for that reason, I recommended that he be found incompetent and
       committed to a state hospital for treatment.

Q      And was that done?

A      Yes.
                                                                           Oursbourn       Page 8

Q      And the – his demeanor on the video interview was different from the demeanor he
       held with you on January the 29 th ?

A      At the very beginning he was similarly, you know, kind of shut down and, you know,
       acting withdrawn. But within a few minutes on the videotaped interview with the
       police officer he began to talk very spontaneously, I thought.
              When I saw him in January of last year, I wasn’t able to get him to talk, you
       know, as spontaneously as he had talked to the police officer in the videotape a couple
       of months before.

Dr. Friedman testified he then met with appellant on July 4 th and July 30 th and “felt at that

time that he had become competent as a result of his treatment at the state hospital.”

       In closing argument, defense counsel again argued that appellant’s confession was

false and suggested that he was willing to make it because “a person with bipolar disorder

might not have as good an appreciation for the consequences of what would happen to him

if he protected somebody, say, with a false confession.”

       The State, in its closing, argued that the bipolar evidence was a rabbit trail:

       And don’t you also know that if his bipolar disorder in any way figured into
       what he did here, that there’d be a doctor up here to tell us all about it. The
       only doctor you heard from was called by the State and he told you that at the
       time the Defendant committed this crime he knew it was wrong.”

The jury found appellant guilty as charged and sentenced him to 75 years’ imprisonment.

3.     The Direct Appeal

       Appellant argued on appeal that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on

the law of voluntariness of custodial confessions.8 The court of appeals, in a two-to-one

       8
           Appellant claimed that the trial judge had a “sua sponte” duty to include such an
instruction. The term “sua sponte” in this context means simply that the applicable law requires
the trial judge to include such an instruction under the appropriate circumstances. The term “sua
                                                                              Oursbourn       Page 9

decision, disagreed. The majority noted the potentially conflicting precedents that we

mentioned in Perry v. State,9 about whether the trial court must instruct the jury on the

voluntariness of a custodial confession.10 The majority concluded that a challenge to the

voluntariness of a confession is a defensive issue; thus, under Posey v. State,11 the defense

must request a jury instruction before any error can result.12 Justice Jennings dissented,

stating that the majority had incorrectly found that there was no error in the jury charge and

that it failed to conduct an Almanza “egregious harm” analysis.13

                                                II.

                                       The Pertinent Law

       Under Article 38.21, “A statement of an accused may be used in evidence against him

sponte” does not increase or modify the trial judge’s responsibility to instruct the jury on the
applicable law.
       9
            158 S.W.3d 438, 443 & n.1 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
       10
           The court of appeals suggested that one line of cases, represented by Mendoza v. State,
88 S.W.3d 236, 239 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002), requires the defendant to request an instruction on
voluntariness before any error can be found. The second line of cases, represented by Thomas v.
State, 723 S.W.2d 696, 707 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986), focuses on the appellate standard of review
for harm if the defendant does not request such an instruction.
        In Mendoza, the question before us was whether the trial court properly included
defendant’s requested general instructions on voluntariness (based on art. 38.22), while
excluding his others (based on art. 38.23). 88 S.W.3d at 239. In Thomas, the question was
whether the trial court erred in failing to include a properly worded Article 38.23 instruction.
Thomas had requested an improperly worded instruction. We found no error and opted not to
decide “whether appellant preserved any asserted jury charge error.” 723 S.W.2d at 707.
       11
            966 S.W.2d 57, 60-61 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998).
       12
            Oursbourn, ___ S.W.3d at ___, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 8407, at *17-19.
       13
            Id. at ___, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 8407, at *19-30 (Jennings, J., dissenting).
                                                                           Oursbourn       Page 10

if it appears that the same was freely and voluntarily made without compulsion or

persuasion[.]”14 A defendant may claim that his statement was not freely and voluntarily

made and thus may not be used as evidence against him under several different theories: (1)

Article 38.22, § 6–general voluntariness; (2) Miranda v. Arizona 15 as expanded in Article

38.22, §§ 2 and 3 (the Texas confession statute); or (3) the Due Process Clause.16 It may be

involuntary under one, two, or all three theories. A statement that is “involuntary” as a

matter of constitutional law is also “involuntary” under Article 38.22, but the converse need

not be true.     The theory of involuntariness determines whether and what type of an

instruction may be appropriate.17 Thus, the first step in deciding upon an appropriate jury

instruction is identifying the theory of involuntariness.

A.     Claims of involuntariness under the Due Process Clause and Miranda

       A confession may be involuntary under the Due Process Clause only when there is

police overreaching.18 Even if a confession is not the product of a meaningful choice (for

       14
        T    EX . CODE   CRIM . PROC. art. 38.21.
       15
            384 U.S. 436 (1966)
       16
            Wolfe v. State, 917 S.W.2d 270, 282 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).
       17
           See 41 GEORGE E. DIX & ROBERT O. DAWSON , TEXAS PRACTICE : CRIMINAL PRACTICE
AND PROCEDURE § 13.391 at 218 (2d ed. 2001) (“Jury submission of matters under article
38.23(a) may be different from submission under article 38.22. Therefore, in some cases care
must be taken to identify the basis for the defendant’s claim that the jury should be instructed as
to a need to disregard a self-incriminating statement.”).
       18
          See Perry, 158 S.W.3d at 446 (defendant not entitled to any jury instruction under art.
38.23(a) as evidence of his intoxication and injury “does not raise any constitutional
voluntariness issues because this evidence does not involve any police coercion or other official
                                                                            Oursbourn       Page 11

example, when it is made in response to hallucinations or to a private person’s threat), it is

nonetheless “voluntary” within the meaning of the Due Process Clause absent some coercive

police activity. The Supreme Court made this clear in Colorado v. Connelly,19 when it held

that if there is no police coercion or overreaching, there is no due-process violation–even if

a suspect is suffering from chronic schizophrenia and is in a psychotic state following the

“voice of God” at the time he confesses.20 Absent police misconduct causally related to the

confession, there is “simply no basis for concluding that any state actor has deprived a

criminal defendant of due process of law.” 21 The Due Process Clause is aimed at protecting

suspects from police overreaching, not at protecting people from themselves or other private

actors.

          The same is true for Miranda rights and waivers that apply to custodial-interrogation

over-reaching.”); Alvarado v. State, 912 S.W.2dd 199, 211 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (statement
involuntary under federal due process “only if there was official, coercive conduct of such a
nature that any statement obtained thereby was unlikely to have been the product of an essentially
free and unconstrained choice by its maker”).
          19
               479 U.S. 157 (U.S. 1986).
          20
           Id. at 164. In Connelly, the defendant approached a Denver police officer and said that
“he had come all the way from Boston to confess to the murder of Mary Ann Junta, a young girl
whom he had killed in Denver sometime during November 1982.” Id. at 160. Unbeknownst to
the police (who scrupulously followed the dictates of Miranda), the defendant was apparently
obeying the “voice of God” which had instructed him “to withdraw money from the bank, to buy
an airplane ticket, and to fly from Boston to Denver.” Id. at 161. Even though the evidence
showed that the defendant was suffering from “command hallucinations that interfered with his
volitional abilities; that is, his ability to make free and rational choices” and “he wasn’t capable
of making a ‘free decision’ to waive his Miranda rights,” his confession was not involuntary
under the Fifth Amendment. Id. at 161-64, 169-71.
          21
               Id. at 164.
                                                                        Oursbourn      Page 12

statements. As the Supreme Court explained in Connelly: “Miranda protects defendants

against government coercion leading them to surrender rights protected by the Fifth

Amendment; it goes no further than that.” 22 Thus, the defendant’s waiver of his Miranda

rights, made under the perception of coercion flowing from the “voice of God, . . . is a matter

to which the United States Constitution does not speak.” 23 As Judge Posner has explained:

       The significance of the principle of Connelly, the principle that the
       Constitution doesn’t protect the suspect against himself, is that if he
       understands the Miranda warnings yet is moved by a crazy impulse to blurt out
       a confession, the confession is admissible because it is not a product of
       coercion. The police have given him his Miranda warnings in an intelligible
       form; it is not their fault that he is impulsive.24

       Statements that have been found to be involuntary under Miranda or the Due Process

Clause were collected in Connelly;25 they involve the crucial element of police overreaching

and involve fact scenarios such as the following: (1) the suspect was subjected to a four-hour

interrogation while incapacitated and sedated in an intensive-care unit;26 (2) the suspect,

while on medication, was interrogated for over eighteen hours without food, medication, or

sleep;27 (3) the police officers held a gun to the head of the wounded suspect to extract a

       22
            Id. at 170.
       23
            Id. at 170-71.
       24
Rice v. Cooper, 148 F.3d 747, 750 (7th Cir. 1998).
       25
479 U.S. at 164 n.1.
       26
            Mincey v. Arizona, 437 U.S. 385 (1978).
       27
            Greenwald v. Wisconsin, 390 U.S. 519 (1968).
                                                                       Oursbourn      Page 13

confession;28 (4) the police interrogated the suspect intermittently for sixteen days using

coercive tactics while he was held incommunicado in a closed cell without windows and was

given limited food;29 (5) the suspect was held for four days with inadequate food and medical

attention until he confessed;30 (6) the suspect was subjected to five days of repeated

questioning during which police employed coercive tactics;31 (7) the suspect was held

incommunicado for three days with little food, and the confession was obtained when

officers informed him that their chief was preparing to admit a lynch mob into the jail;32 (8)

the suspect was questioned by relays of officers for thirty-six hours without an opportunity

for sleep.33

       As is evident from these fact scenarios, due-process and Miranda claims of

involuntariness generally do not require “sweeping inquiries into the state of mind of a

criminal defendant who has confessed.” 34 They involve an objective assessment of police

behavior. The Constitution leaves voluntariness claims based on the defendant’s state of

       28
            Beecher v. Alabama, 389 U.S. 35 (1967).
       29
            Davis v. North Carolina, 384 U.S. 737 (1966).
       30
            Reck v. Pate, 367 U.S. 433 (1961).
       31
            Culombe v. Connecticut, 367 U.S. 568 (1961).
       32
            Payne v. Arkansas, 356 U.S. 560 (1958).
       33
            Ashcraft v. Tennessee, 322 U.S. 143 (1944).
       34
            Connelly, 479 U.S. at 167.
                                                                              Oursbourn        Page 14

mind “to be resolved by state laws governing the admission of evidence.” 35 In Texas, that

state law is Article 38.22, the Texas Confession Statute.

B.     Claims of involuntariness under the Texas Confession Statute

         Article 38.22 of the Code of Criminal Procedure sets out rules governing the

admissibility of an accused’s written and oral statements that are the product of custodial

interrogation. Under our precedents, however, Section 6 of Article 38.22 applies to both an

accused’s custodial and non-custodial statements because it provides that only “voluntary”

statements may be admitted.36 Sections 2 and 3 apply to an accused’s custodial-interrogation

statements and provide that only “warned and waived” statements may be admitted. That is,

an accused’s custodial-interrogation statement is not admissible unless, prior to making the

statement, he received the warnings provided in Article 15.17 or Article 38.22, § 2(a) or §

3(a) (which incorporate the requirements of Miranda), and he knowingly, intelligently, and

voluntarily waived those rights.

       Claims of involuntariness under Article 38.22 can be, but need not be, predicated on

       35
            Id.
       36
            State v. Terrazas, 4 S.W.3d 720, 727 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (“Article 38.22, Section
6, literally applies to ‘all cases where a question is raised as to the voluntariness of a statement of
an accused.’”). In Terrazas, this court explicitly overruled Nenno v. State, 970 S.W.2d 549, 556
(Tex. Crim. App. 1998), to the extent that it held that Article 38.22, § 6 applied only to custodial
statements. Id. However, the Court concluded in Terrazas that the trial court erred, as a matter
of law, in ruling that the defendant’s statement to a Department of Human Services investigator
could be considered “involuntary.” Id. at 726 (the investigator “telling [defendant] in a
noncustodial setting ‘what had to be’ in her statement is not the type of practice that has been
held to be inherently coercive as to make a statement involuntary”).
                                                                         Oursbourn         Page 15

police overreaching, and they could involve the “sweeping inquiries into the state of mind

of a criminal defendant who has confessed” found in Connelly that are not of themselves

relevant to due process claims.37 Article 38.22 is aimed at protecting suspects from police

overreaching. But Section 6 of that article may also be construed as protecting people from

themselves because the focus is upon whether the defendant voluntarily made the statement.

Period.     Does it appear–as Article 38.21 requires–that the statement was freely and

voluntarily made without compulsion or persuasion? 38 Or, in the case of a custodial-

interrogation statement, did the suspect “knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily” waive the

rights set out in Article 38.22 § 2(a) or § (3)(a)? These inquiries do not turn solely on police

overreaching. The behavior of the police may or may not be a factor. A confession given

under the duress of hallucinations, illness, medications,39 or even a private threat, for

example, could be involuntary under Article 38.21 and the Texas confession statute.40 The

       37
            Connelly, 479 U.S. at 166-67.
       38
        T EX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 38.21 (“A statement of an accused may be used in
evidence against him if it appears that the same was freely and voluntarily made without
compulsion or persuasion, under the rules hereafter prescribed.”).
       39
           See, e.g., Rocha v. State, 16 S.W.3d 1, 19-20 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (trial court’s
general jury instruction under articles 38.21 and 38.22 concerning voluntariness of statement
sufficed for jury to consider any evidence of his illness and medication; no error in denying
instruction that specifically mentioned illness and medication as that would be a comment on the
weight of the evidence).
       40
           This has long been the case in Texas. See Cain v. State, 18 Tex. 387, 389-90 (1857)
(“Before confessions can be received in evidence in a criminal case, it must be shown that they
were voluntary. They must not have been obtained by the influence of hope or fear, applied by a
third person to the prisoner’s mind.”).
                                                                            Oursbourn       Page 16

defendant in Connelly did not have a valid federal constitutional involuntariness claim, but,

had he confessed in Texas, he might have had a viable claim under Articles 38.21 and 38.22.

As Professor Dix has noted, “evidence of a defendant’s psychological abnormality” (such as

Connelly’s evidence of hallucinations and following God’s command) “has its full logical

relevance” under Texas law.41

       Under Articles 38.21 and 38.22 and their predecessors, fact scenarios that can raise

a state-law claim of involuntariness (even though they do not raise a federal constitutional

claim) include the following: (1) the suspect was ill and on medication and that fact may

have rendered his confession involuntary;42 (2) the suspect was mentally retarded and may

not have “knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily” waived his rights;43 (3) the suspect

“lacked the mental capacity to understand his rights”;44 (4) the suspect was intoxicated, and

he “did not know what he was signing and thought it was an accident report”;45 (5) the

       41
         George E. Dix, “Voluntariness” and “Intelligence” of Confessions as “Independent”
Texas Law Issues, 20 TEX . TECH L. REV . 1017, 1080, 1091 (1989).
       42
            Rocha v. State, 16 S.W.3d 1, 20 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
       43
         Bell v. State, 582 S.W.2d 800, 812 (Tex. Crim. App. 1979); Casias v. State, 452
S.W.2d 483, 488 (Tex. Crim. App. 1970).
       44
            Rogers v. State, 549 S.W.2d 726, 729-30 (Tex. Crim. App. 1977) (finding reversible
error in trial court’s refusal to give jury general instruction on voluntariness of statement when
evidence raised an issue that defendant lacked the mental capacity to understand and waive his
rights before giving his statement).
       45
           Ritchie v. State, 296 S.W.2d 551, 554 (Tex. Crim. App. 1956). In Ritchie, the
evidence was undisputed that the defendant was intoxicated, but the trial judge found that he was
not so intoxicated that he could not understand what he was doing. Id. Therefore, the trial judge
“instructed the jury not to consider the [statement] unless they believed beyond a reasonable
                                                                            Oursbourn       Page 17

suspect was confronted by the brother-in-law of his murder victim and beaten;46 (6) the

suspect was returned to the store he broke into “for questioning by several persons armed

‘with six-shooters.’” 47

       In sum, the potential “involuntary” fact scenarios encompassed by Articles 38.21 and

38.22 are broader in scope than those covered by the Due Process Clause or Miranda.

Although this Court has held that youth, intoxication, mental retardation, and other

disabilities are usually not enough, by themselves, to render a statement inadmissible under

Article 38.22, they are factors that a jury, armed with a proper instruction, is entitled to

consider.48

doubt that, prior to making the statement, the appellant was duly warned, and that thereafter he
voluntarily and freely made the same and understood and signed it.” This Court held that the
trial court did not err in admitting the evidence and instructing the jury as he did. Id.; see also
Foster v. State, 101 S.W.3d 490, 497 (Tex. App.– Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, no pet.) (noting that
“[l]ack of sleep for as long as 16 hours does not, in and of itself, render a confession
involuntary,” and that “a person’s illiteracy alone will not necessarily render his statement
inadmissible.”).
       46
           Hamin v. State, 47 S.W. 656 (Tex. Crim. App.1898). As Professor Dix points out, in
these early decisions, “It was simply beyond question that private coercion rendered a confession
involuntary and that even private detention invoked the predecessor to article 38.22.” Dix, 20
TEX . TECH L. REV . at 1083. After 1977, however, the provisions of Article 38.22 (except for
Sections 6 and 7) apply only to custodial interrogations by law enforcement officials. See 41 DIX
& DAWSON , supra note 17, § 13.31 at 33-35.
       47
            Warren v. State, 29 Tex. 369 (1867); See also Dix, 20 TEX . TECH L. REV . at 1084.
       48
           See Rogers, 549 S.W.2d at 729-30; Ritchie, 296 S.W.2d at 554; see also Grayson v.
State, 438 S.W.2d 553, 555 (Tex. Crim. App. 1969) (upholding trial court’s ruling that statement
was admissible despite defendant’s mental retardation and stating that jury was given proper
instruction to redetermine voluntariness; “Whether appellant had the mental competency or
intelligence required to waive his right to remain silent and to have counsel present was for the
court and the jury. The issue was fairly presented and resolved against appellant.”).
                                                                         Oursbourn       Page 18

C.     Jury Submission of Voluntariness Instructions

       Under Texas statutory law, there are three types of instructions that relate to the taking

of confessions: (1) a “general” Article 38.22, § 6 voluntariness instruction; (2) a “general”

Article 38.22, § 7 warnings instruction (involving warnings given under § 2 and § 3); and (3)

a “specific” Article 38.23(a) exclusionary-rule instruction.        In essence, the Section 6

“general” instruction asks the jury: “Do you believe, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the

defendant’s statement was voluntarily made? If it was not, do not consider the defendant’s

confession.” The Section 7 instruction sets out the requirements of 38.22, § 2 or § 3 and asks

the jury to decide whether all of those requirements were met. The Article 38.23(a)

“specific” instruction is fact-based: For example, “Do you believe that Officer Obie held a

gun to the defendant’s head to extract his statement? If so, do not consider the defendant’s

confession.”

       As we noted in Vasquez v. State,49 confusion exists about which, if any, jury

instruction is appropriate because our case law “does not always distinguish, and sometimes

blurs, the requirements for getting an instruction under article 38.22 and for getting an

instruction under the exclusionary rule of article 38.23.” 50

       We again try to clarify the distinction: Due process and Miranda claims may warrant

both “general” and “specific” voluntariness instructions; Texas statutory claims warrant only

       49
            225 S.W.3d 541 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
       50
            Id. at 544.
                                                                         Oursbourn       Page 19

a “general” voluntariness instruction. It is the defendant’s responsibility to delineate which

type of “involuntariness” he is claiming–a general (perhaps subjective) lack of voluntariness

or a specific police-coerced lack of voluntariness–because the jury instruction is very

different depending upon the type of claim.

       Obviously, the evidence must raise a “voluntariness” issue, and the defendant should

request a jury instruction that relates to his theory of involuntariness. But if the defendant

never presents a proposed jury instruction (or fails to object to the lack of one), any potential

error in the charge is reviewed only for “egregious harm” under Almanza.51

1.     Article 38.22, § 6 (General Voluntariness) Instructions

       Article 38.22, § 6 is a very detailed section that is essentially independent of the other

sections contained within Article 38.22.52 Section 6 provides:

       In all cases where a question is raised as to the voluntariness of a statement of
       an accused, the court must make an independent finding in the absence of the
       jury as to whether the statement was made under voluntary conditions. If the
       statement has been found to have been voluntarily made and held admissible
       as a matter of law and fact by the court in a hearing in the absence of the jury,
       the court must enter an order stating its conclusion as to whether or not the
       statement was voluntarily made, along with the specific finding of facts upon
       which the conclusion was based, which order shall be filed among the papers
       of the cause. Such order shall not be exhibited to the jury nor the finding
       thereof made known to the jury in any manner. Upon the finding by the judge
       as a matter of law and fact that the statement was voluntarily made, evidence
       pertaining to such matter may be submitted to the jury and it shall be

       51
            See Madden v. State, 242 S.W.3d 504, 513 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
       52
          See State v. Terrazas, 4 S.W.3d 720, 727 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (deciding that
Article 38.22, § 5’s provision exempting non-custodial statements from the coverage of Article
38.22 did not apply to § 6).
                                                                             Oursbourn        Page 20

       instructed that unless the jury believes beyond a reasonable doubt that the
       statement was voluntarily made, the jury shall not consider such statement for
       any purpose nor any evidence obtained as a result thereof. In any case where
       a motion to suppress the statement has been filed and evidence has been
       submitted to the court on this issue, the court within its discretion may
       reconsider such evidence in his finding that the statement was voluntarily
       made and the same evidence submitted to the court at the hearing on the
       motion to suppress shall be made a part of the record the same as if it were
       being presented at the time of trial. However, the state or the defendant shall
       be entitled to present any new evidence on the issue of the voluntariness of the
       statement prior to the court’s final ruling and order stating its findings.53

       The language “where a question is raised” contrasts with the language found in Article

38.22, § 7 and Article 38.23 which speaks of the evidence raising an issue.54 Because raising

a “question” is what triggers the trial court’s duty under Section 6 to conduct a hearing

outside the presence of the jury, the only reasonable reading of this language is that a

“question is raised” when the trial judge is notified by a party or raises on his own an issue

about the voluntariness of the confession. This is the sequence of events that seems to be

contemplated by Section 6: (1) a party notifies the trial judge that there is an issue about the

voluntariness of the confession (or the trial judge raises the issue on his own); (2) the trial

judge holds a hearing outside the presence of the jury; (3) the trial judge decides whether the

confession was voluntary;55 (4) if the trial judge decides that the confession was voluntary,

       53
         T   EX . CODE   CRIM . PROC. art. 38.22, § 6 (emphasis added).
       54
             See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. arts. 38.22, § 7 (“When the issue is raised by the evidence
. . . ”) and 38.23(a) (“where the legal evidence raises an issue hereunder . . .”).
       55
          The trial judge must also make written findings of fact and conclusions of law in
support of his ruling. TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 38.22, § 6. The need for written findings
should alert the parties and trial judge to the need for a general voluntariness jury instruction as
                                                                             Oursbourn       Page 21

it will be admitted, and a party may offer evidence before the jury suggesting that the

confession was not in fact voluntary; (5) if such evidence is offered before the jury, the trial

judge shall give the jury a voluntariness instruction. It is only after the trial judge is notified

of the voluntariness issue (or raises it on his own) that a chain of other requirements comes

into play, culminating in the defendant’s right to a jury instruction.

        And Section 6 expressly dictates the content of that instruction to be as follows:

“unless the jury believes beyond a reasonable doubt that the statement was voluntarily made,

the jury shall not consider such statement for any purpose nor any evidence obtained as a

result thereof.” Because Section 6 contains its own jury-instruction provision, it is not

governed by the jury-instruction provision found in Section 7.56 The obvious purpose of

Section 7 is to authorize and require jury instructions regarding the warnings and safeguards

for written and oral statements outlined in Article 38.22, § 2 & § 3 (warnings on the right to

remain silent, right to counsel, etc).

        Consequently, a Section 6 instruction becomes “law applicable to the case” under

Posey v. State 57 only if the parties actually litigate a Section 6 voluntariness issue before the

trial judge. If such litigation occurs (on the admissibility of evidence for example), a jury

well.
        56
             See Terrazas, supra (§ 5 not applicable to § 6, given the specific provisions found in §
6).
        57
          966 S.W.2d 57, 60 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998) (a defensive issue is not “law applicable to
the case” unless the defendant timely requests the issue or objects to its omission from the jury
charge).
                                                                        Oursbourn      Page 22

instruction need not be specifically requested to pass the Posey gateway, although a request

would still be necessary to obtain the most beneficial harm analysis under Almanza v. State.58

       An interpretation of Section 6 that requires some sort of litigation before it becomes

law applicable to the case accords not only with the statutory language but also with common

sense. The broad range of voluntariness issues covered by Section 6 could easily be

implicated by evidence that would also be relevant for other purposes, and Section 6 does not

even require the existence of a factual dispute that might at least obliquely alert the trial

judge to the need for an instruction. The Section 6 requirement that voluntariness be litigated

in some manner before a jury instruction becomes necessary ensures that the trial judge is on

notice that the instruction is required.59

       For example, the evidence may be undisputed that the defendant did not sleep for 24

hours, or has a low I.Q., or was “high” on drugs at the time he gave his statement. If a

reasonable jury could find that the facts, disputed or undisputed, rendered him unable to

make a voluntary statement, he is entitled to a general voluntariness instruction when he has

raised a question of the voluntariness of his statement.

2.     Article 38.22, § 7 (Statutory Warnings) Instructions

       If the defendant made his statement as the result of custodial interrogation, he is also

       58
            686 S.W.2d 157, 171 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985) (“some harm” versus “egregious harm”).
       59
          Vasquez v. State, 225 S.W.3d 541, 545 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (noting that, although a
defendant may be entitled to an Article 38.22 jury instruction even when the evidence is
undisputed, “[s]ome evidence must have been presented to the jury that the defendant’s
confession was not given voluntarily.”).
                                                                         Oursbourn       Page 23

entitled–when the issue is raised by the evidence–to have the jury decide whether he was

adequately warned of his rights and knowingly and intelligently waived these rights. Section

7 of Article 38.22 states:

       When the issue is raised by the evidence, the trial judge shall appropriately
       instruct the jury, generally, on the law pertaining to such statement.60

The phrase “the issue” refers to compliance with the statutory warnings set out in both

Articles 15.17 (Duties of Arresting Officer and Magistrate) and 38.22, §§ 2 & 3, and the

voluntariness of the defendant’s waiver of the rights. For it to be “raised by the evidence”

there must be a genuine factual dispute, just as is true under Article 38.23 issues. The same

procedures–including a hearing outside the presence of the jury and the entry of written

findings–that apply to a general voluntariness challenge under Section 6, also apply to a

challenge that is made to the sufficiency of warnings and voluntary waiver of the rights

communicated by those warnings.            As with Section 6, the trial judge’s Section 7 jury

instructions are “general” ones that set out the pertinent law and legal requirements of

Sections 2 and 3 (or, in an appropriate case, those of Article 15.17).61

       But suppose there is some evidence that the police held a gun to the head of the

defendant–who, unbeknownst to the police, had not slept for twenty-four hours–to extract

the confession.      In that case, the defendant may also be entitled to a fact-specific,

       60
            TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 38.22, § 7.
       61
           See, e.g., Mendoza v. State, 88 S.W.3d at 238 n.1 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (quoting a
portion of an Article 38.22, § 7 jury instruction).
                                                                        Oursbourn       Page 24

exclusionary-rule instruction, in addition to the two general voluntariness instructions.

3.     Article 38.23 (Exclusionary Rule) Instructions

        Article 38.23 (a) states that

         (a) No evidence obtained by an officer or other person in violation of any
       provisions of the Constitution or laws of the State of Texas, or of the
       Constitution or laws of the United States of America, shall be admitted in
       evidence against the accused on the trial of any criminal case.

       In any case where the legal evidence raises an issue hereunder, the jury shall
       be instructed that if it believes, or has a reasonable doubt, that the evidence
       was obtained in violation of the provisions of this Article, then and in such
       event, the jury shall disregard any such evidence so obtained.62

       The wording is absolute (“the jury shall be instructed”), just as it is in Article 38.22,

but the triggering mechanism is more complex.63 As we recently held in Madden v. State,64

the second sentence of Article 38.23 requires a jury instruction only if there is a genuine

dispute about a material fact.65 A defendant must establish three foundation requirements to

trigger an Article 38.23 instruction: (1) the evidence heard by the jury must raise an issue

of fact; (2) the evidence on that fact must be affirmatively contested; and (3) the contested

factual issue must be material to the lawfulness of the challenged conduct in obtaining the

       62
        T    EX . CODE   CRIM . PROC. art. 38.23.
       63
            See Murphy v. State, 640 S.W.2d 297, 299 (Tex. Crim. App. 1982).
       64
            242 S.W.3d 504 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
       65
           Id. at 510; See also Holmes v. State, 248 S.W.3d 194, 199 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008);
Pierce v. State, 32 S.W.3d 247, 251 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
                                                                         Oursbourn          Page 25

statement claimed to be involuntary.66 The defendant must offer evidence that, if credited,

would create a reasonable doubt as to a specific factual matter essential to the voluntariness

                    67
of the statement.        This factual dispute can be raised only by affirmative evidence, not by

mere cross-examination questions or argument.68

       For example, the officer in our hypothetical may deny, on cross-examination, that he

held a gun to the defendant’s head to extract the confession. The implication by counsel, that

the officer did perform that act, does not, by itself, raise a disputed fact issue. But if the

defendant (or some other witness) testifies that the officer held a gun to his head, then a

disputed fact issue exists. And the jury must resolve that disputed fact issue.69

       If the jury finds that the officer did hold a gun to the defendant’s head, the statement

is involuntary as a matter of federal constitutional law. If the jury finds the officer did not

do so, the statement is not constitutionally involuntary. Of course, if there is no disputed

       66
            242 S.W.3d 510.
       67
         Id. See also 40 GEORGE E. DIX & ROBERT O. DAWSON , TEXAS PRACTICE : CRIMINAL
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE , § 4.194, at 282 (2d. ed. 2001).
       68
            Madden, 242 S.W.3d at 513 nn. 22-23.
       69
          A fact-specific, exclusionary-rule instruction might look something like this:
       If you find from the evidence that Officer Obie held a gun to the defendant’s head
       in an effort to make the defendant give him a statement, or if you have a
       reasonable doubt thereof, you will disregard the defendant’s videotaped statement
       and not use it for any purpose whatsoever during your deliberations. However, if
       you find from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Officer Obie did not
       hold a gun to the defendant’s head in an effort to make the defendant give him a
       statement, then you may consider the defendant’s videotaped statement during
       your deliberations.
                                                                            Oursbourn     Page 26

factual issue–if there is a video definitively showing that the officer did or did not hold a gun

to the defendant’s head–the legality of the conduct is determined by the trial judge alone, as

a question of law. The legal question would never go to the jury.

       Normally, “specific” exclusionary-rule instructions concerning the making of a

confession are warranted only where an officer uses inherently coercive practices like those

set out in Connelly.70 In Texas, if there is a disputed fact issue about whether this type of

coercive practice was employed–by either an officer or a private citizen 71 –to wring a

confession out of a suspect against his will, a specific exclusionary-rule instruction under

Article 38.23 is appropriate.

4.     Error in the Failure to Give Appropriate Voluntariness Instructions

       The question then becomes: When does a trial judge err in failing to give an Article

38.22 or 38.23 jury instruction? As the court of appeals noted, our cases might appear to be

in conflict on whether there can be any error whatsoever–at least in the Article 38.23

context–absent a proper request by the defendant. The court of appeals pointed to Mendoza,

in which we stated, “Generally, when evidence from any source raises a defensive issue and

       70
           Connelly, 479 U.S. at 164 & n.1; see also State v. Terrazas, 4 S.W.3d 720, 727 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1999) (citing Note: Evidence-Criminal Law-Constitutional Law-Due
Process-Confessions-Judge and Jury-Determination of Preliminary Fact of Voluntariness of
Confession, 3 BAYLOR L.REV . 561, 563-65 (1951) (inherently coercive practices include:
subjection to persistent and protracted questioning, threats of mob violence, unlawful detention
incommunicado without advice of counsel or friends, and taking at night to lonely and isolated
places for questioning)).
       71
            See Miles v. State, 241 S.W.3d 28, 39 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
                                                                             Oursbourn        Page 27

the defendant properly requests a jury charge on that issue, the trial court must submit the

issue to the jury.” 72 But that general statement does not imply the converse–that the trial

court need never submit a jury instruction on a particular defensive issue unless the defendant

properly requests one. There is nothing in that sentence or in the rest of the Mendoza opinion

that states or holds that the trial judge shall instruct the jury to disregard illegally obtained

evidence only if the defendant requests a jury charge on that issue.73

       72
            Mendoza v. State, 88 S.W.3d 236, 239 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
       73
            Indeed, the opinion indicates that the trial judge shall instruct the jury whenever a fact
issue is raised concerning the legality of obtaining evidence. A little later in Mendoza, we stated:
       Further, art. 38.23(a) provides that in any case where a party raises an issue
       regarding whether evidence was obtained in violation of the laws of Texas or the
       United States, the jury shall be instructed that if it believes, or has a reasonable
       doubt, that the evidence was obtained because of such a violation, then the jury
       shall disregard any such evidence.
Id. at 239. Then we stated:
       When the evidence presented at trial raises a factual issue as to whether a
       defendant had been warned of his rights and voluntarily waived them prior to
       making a statement, he is entitled to an instruction on voluntariness of the
       confession. In such cases, it is proper to include in the jury charge a specific
       instruction informing the jury that, if it has a reasonable doubt as to whether a
       defendant knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived his rights before giving
       a confession, it must disregard the confession and not consider it for any purpose.
Id. (citation omitted). We later stated:
       In any case in which the evidence raises an issue regarding whether evidence was
       obtained in violation of the laws of Texas, the jury shall be instructed that if it
       believes, or has a reasonable doubt, that the evidence was obtained in violation
       thereof, then the jury shall disregard any such evidence. The terms of art. 38.23(a)
       are mandatory. Therefore, when an issue of fact is raised as to compulsion or
       persuasion in obtaining a confession, a defendant has a statutory right to have the
       jury charged accordingly.
Id. (citation omitted). Nowhere did we say that this statutory entitlement depends upon the
defendant making a proper request for a jury instruction on “general” voluntariness or a
“specific” instruction on illegally obtained evidence.
                                                                            Oursbourn       Page 28

       The court of appeals’s argument for concluding that a trial judge has no duty to

instruct the jury on the voluntariness of a defendant’s statement under either Article 38.22

or Article 38.23 rests on the premise that the voluntariness of a confession is a “defensive

issue.” And, under Posey v. State,74 a trial court has no duty to instruct the jury on

unrequested defensive issues–such as mistake of fact. 75 A defensive issue is not “law

applicable to the case” for purposes of Article 36.14 76 unless the defendant timely requests

the issue or objects to the omission of the issue in the jury charge. Any other holding, we

said in Posey, would render Article 36.14–which also requires a party to make specific

objections to the charge–meaningless, and “might encourage a defendant to retry the case on

appeal under a new defensive theory effectively giving him two bites at the apple.” 77 We

stated that the result in Posey “in no way undercuts or limits Almanza’s analytical framework

in cases to which Almanza applies” because when “Almanza speaks of ‘errors’ of

commission and omission in the court’s charge, it speaks of issues upon which a trial court

       74
            966 S.W.2d 57 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998).
       75
            Id. at 60.
       76
         T EX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 36.14 (stating, in pertinent part, that “in each felony case
and in each misdemeanor case tried in a court of record, the judge shall, before the argument
begins, deliver to the jury, except in pleas of guilty, where a jury has been waived, a written
charge distinctly setting forth the law applicable to the case; not expressing any opinion as to the
weight of the evidence, not summing up the testimony, discussing the facts or using any
argument in his charge calculated to arouse the sympathy or excite the passions of the jury.”).
       77
966 S.W.2d at 62-63.
                                                                           Oursbourn      Page 29

has a duty to instruct without a request or objection from either party[.]” 78

       The principle in Posey is that no rule or statute requires the trial judge to give

instructions on traditional defenses and defensive theories absent a defendant’s request. As

we recently stated in Delgado: “The trial judge has an absolute sua sponte duty to prepare

a jury charge that accurately sets out the law applicable to the specific offense charged. But

it does not inevitably follow that he has a similar sua sponte duty to instruct the jury on all

potential defensive issues, lesser-included offenses, or evidentiary issues. These are issues

that frequently depend upon trial strategy and tactics.” 79 These are also issues on which

instructions are not mandated by any statute.80 Thus, under Posey, it is only when a

“requirement of [the] various statutory provisions referenced in Article 36.19 ‘has been

disregarded,’” that the trial court errs in omitting instructions relative to that statute.81

       78
            Id. at 61 n.9.
       79
            Delgado v. State, 235 S.W.3d 244, 249 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (footnote omitted).
       80
           For example, TEX . R. EVID . 105(a) explicitly recognizes that the advocates bear full
responsibility for requesting appropriate limiting instructions when they are entitled to them. The
rule states:
        (a) Limiting Instruction. --When evidence which is admissible as to one party or
        for one purpose but not admissible as to another party or for another purpose is
        admitted, the court, upon request, shall restrict the evidence to its proper scope
        and instruct the jury accordingly; but, in the absence of such request the court’s
        action in admitting such evidence without limitation shall not be a ground for
        complaint on appeal.
TEX . R. EVID . 105(a) (emphasis added). Trial judges should be wary of giving a limiting
instruction under Rule 105(a) without a request because a party might well intentionally forego a
limiting instruction as part of its deliberate strategy “to minimize the jury’s recollection of the
unfavorable evidence.” United States v. Johnson, 46 F.3d 1166, 1171 (D.C. Cir. 1995).
       81
            Posey, 966 S.W.2d at 60 & n.5.
                                                                           Oursbourn       Page 30

       But where a rule or statute requires an instruction under the particular circumstances,

that instruction is “the law applicable to the case.” Such statutes and rules set out an implicit

“If-then” proposition: If the evidence raises an issue of [voluntariness, accomplice witness,

confidential informant, etc.], then the trial court shall instruct the jury that [whatever the

statute or rule requires]. In Huizar v. State,82 for example, we held that Article 37.07 is “the

law applicable” to all non-capital punishment proceedings. Thus, the trial judge must instruct

the jury at the punishment phase concerning that law, including the fact that the State must

prove any extraneous offenses beyond a reasonable doubt.83 We distinguished Posey and

explained the difference between instructing the jury on “defensive” issues and instructing

them on the law that is applicable to all cases:

       In Posey, we held that “a defensive issue is not [law] ‘applicable to the case’
       for purposes of article 36.14 unless the defendant timely requests the issue or
       objects to the omission of the issue in the jury charge.” In contrast to a
       “defense” which depends on the defendant’s theory of the case and the
       evidence presented, applicability of article 37.07 § 3(a) is not contingent on
       either party’s theory of the case. Rather, article 37.07 § 3(a) is a legislatively
       prescribed burden of proof applicable to extraneous offense and bad act
       evidence admitted at punishment in all non-capital cases.84

       82
            12 S.W.3d 479 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
       83
            Id. at 484.
       84
           Id. at 484 n.7 (citations omitted). As was noted by the Austin Court of Appeals, the
same is true for instructions on accomplice-witness testimony:
       An instruction as to the proper effect of accomplice-witness testimony . . . is not a
       defensive issue. Unlike defensive issues which are discretionary, the need for
       corroborating evidence when basing a conviction on an accomplice’s testimony is
       codified by our legislature. TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. ANN . art. 38.14. Although deciding
       which defensive issues to request is typically a strategic decision left to the lawyer and
       client, it is difficult to think of a situation where any reasonably competent lawyer would
                                                                             Oursbourn        Page 31

Similarly, Articles 38.21-38.23 are legislatively mandated procedures governing the

admission and consideration of a defendant’s statements. Article 38.21 explicitly states that

voluntary statements may be used in evidence “under the rules hereafter prescribed” –that

is, Article 38.22 and Article 38.23.

         Article 38.22, § 6 is “the law applicable” to any case in which a “question” is raised

and litigated as to the “general” voluntariness of a statement of an accused. As noted above,

under that statute, the trial judge must then (1) make an independent determination that the

statement was made under voluntary conditions; and then (2) instruct the jurors that they

shall not consider the statement for any purpose unless they believe, beyond a reasonable

doubt, that the statement was made voluntarily.

         Article 38.23 is “the law applicable” to any case in which a specific, disputed issue

of fact is raised concerning the constitutional voluntariness of the making of the defendant’s

statement. These are statutorily mandated instructions and the trial judge must include them

in the jury instructions when the voluntariness of a defendant’s statement is at issue.85

     not seek an accomplice-witness instruction for strategic reasons. We find that the
     statutorily required instruction regarding accomplice-witness testimony, unlike defensive
     issues, is “law applicable to the case.” A failure to instruct the jury that an accomplice’s
     testimony must be corroborated by other evidence tending to connect the defendant to the
     crime is error.
Howard v. State, 972 S.W.2d 121, 126 (Tex. App.–Austin 1998, no pet.).

         85
              We recently reiterated this duty in Pickens v. State, 165 S.W.3d 675 (Tex. Crim. App.
2005):
         Based upon our holding in Almanza, supra, that unobjected-to jury-charge error
         warrants reversal only when the error results in egregious harm, we have held that
         the question of whether the defendant has preserved jury-charge error is relevant
                                                                           Oursbourn          Page 32

                                               III.

                            Application of the Law to This Case

       The question remains as to whether Article 38.22 or Article 38.23 jury instructions

were “the law applicable” to this particular case. The court of appeals noted that “there was

evidence presented before the jury that appellant was in pain, was lied to about the evidence

against him, and displayed characteristics of being in a vulnerable mental state due to his

bipolar disorder.” 86 That evidence was sufficient, according to the court of appeals, “to raise

the issue of voluntariness and to create a factual dispute as to voluntariness.” 87

       We agree to a certain extent, but this evidence raised only a “general” voluntariness

question under Article 38.22, § 6, not a constitutional due-process claim that the statement

was illegally obtained under Article 38.23. Appellant’s consistent claim, a claim which he

had litigated in the trial court, was that he was bipolar and in a depressed or manic state and

therefore he was unable to effectively waive his rights. There was evidence in the record that

        only if there is a determination that error actually occurred. Thomas v. State, 723
S.W.2d 696, 707 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986). Thomas also acknowledged that Article
        38.23 provides in mandatory terms “that a jury is to be instructed to resolve
        factual disputes over whether evidence was illegally obtained and, therefore,
        inadmissible.” Id. We have more recently reiterated that “an Article 38.23
        instruction must be included in the jury charge only if there is a factual dispute
        about how the evidence was obtained.” Garza v. State, 126 S.W.3d 79, 85 (Tex.
        Crim. App. 2004). Thus, if a defendant raises a factual dispute about whether
        evidence was illegally obtained, an Article 38.23 instruction must be included in
        the jury charge.
Id. at 680.
       86
            Oursbourn, ___ S.W.3d at ___, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 8407, at *13.
       87
            Id.
                                                                           Oursbourn       Page 33

appellant, two months after giving his confession, was declared incompetent to stand trial.

The State’s psychologist who found him incompetent to stand trial testified that he was

competent when he gave his confession, but, as appellant points out, that same psychologist

testified that appellant was manifesting symptoms of his bipolar disorder during his

interrogation, especially at the beginning. And appellant’s mother testified that appellant was

in a “manic” state shortly before and after his arrest. The issue of voluntariness should have

been submitted to the jury under Article 38.22, § 6, because a reasonable jury could conclude,

based on this evidence, that the statement was not voluntary. This is a statutory claim and

focuses upon appellant’s subjective mental state.

       Appellant did not raise any disputed factual issue under Article 38.23 concerning the

legality of obtaining his statement because there was no evidence of the type of police

coercion or overreaching envisioned by the Supreme Court in Connelly. Like Connelly,

appellant’s confession may have been “involuntary” because of his own subjective mental

status, but not because of illegal police conduct. Although appellant notes that Investigator

Guidry lied to him about some witnesses having identified him in the photo spread, it is well

established that lying about the state of the evidence is not the sort of “overreaching” that

implicates the Due Process Clause, as long as the subterfuge used is not one likely to produce

an untrue statement.88 Furthermore, there was no factual dispute concerning Investigator

       88
          See Frazier v. Cupp, 394 U.S. 731, 737-39 (1969) (refusing to find that a defendant
who confesses, after being falsely told that his codefendant has turned State’s evidence, does so
involuntarily); Rodriquez v. State, 934 S.W.2d 881, 890-91 (Tex. App.–Waco 1996, no pet.)
(“The fact that the interrogating officers falsely stated to Rodriquez that the victim, on his
                                                                           Oursbourn       Page 34

Guidry’s conduct. She lied about the result of the photo line-up. That is undisputed. The

trial judge would resolve any purported due process claim as a matter of law because there

was no factual dispute. Therefore, a jury instruction under Article 38.23 is not “the law

applicable” to this case.

       Article 38.22, § 6 was “the law applicable” to this case; Article 38.23 was not. But

because appellant never requested an Article 38.22, § 6 “general” voluntariness instruction,

he is entitled to review of that error only under Almanza’s “egregious harm” standard.89

Under that standard, reversible error in the omission of a required jury instruction without

objection occurs only when a defendant has been denied “a fair and impartial trial.” 90 We

deathbed, identified him as the assailant does not support a finding that the confession was
involuntarily given. The voluntariness of a confession is not destroyed, and a confession induced
by deception or trickery, is not inadmissible, unless the method used was calculated to produce
an untruthful confession or was offensive to due process.”); Snow v. State, 721 S.W.2d 943, 946
(Tex. App.– Houston [1st Dist.] 1986, no pet. ) (“voluntariness is not destroyed, and a confession
induced by deception or trickery is not inadmissible, unless the method used was calculated to
produce an untruthful confession or was offensive to due process.”); see also Holland v.
McGinnis, 963 F.2d 1044, 1051-52 (7th Cir. 1992) (police officer’s misrepresentations
concerning the strength of the evidence against the suspect “interfered little, if at all, with his
‘free and deliberate choice’ of whether to confess, for it did not lead him to consider anything
beyond his own beliefs regarding his actual guilt or innocence, his moral sense of right and
wrong, and his judgment regarding the likelihood that the police had garnered enough valid
evidence linking him to the crime. In other words, the deception did not interject the type of
extrinsic considerations that would overcome Holland’s will by distorting an otherwise rational
choice of whether to confess or remain silent.”) (citation omitted); see generally, C.T. Drechsler,
Annotation, Admissibility of Confession as Affected by Its Inducement through Artifice,
Deception, Trickery, or Fraud, 99 A.L.R. 2d 772 (1965 & Supp. 1993).
       89
          Under Almanza, the issue to address is the impact of the omission of a “general”
voluntariness instruction. See Ellison v. State, 86 S.W.3d 226, 228 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002); see
also Posey, 966 S.W.2d at 60 n.3
       90
            Almanza, 686 S.W.2d at 171.
                                                                       Oursbourn      Page 35

therefore reverse the court of appeals and remand this case for further proceedings consistent

with this opinion.

Delivered: June 4, 2008

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