Court Opinion

ID: 9755299
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-28 20:34:12.891435+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:28:06.019602
License: Public Domain

*152JOHNSON, J.,
filed a concurring opinion in which PRICE, J., joined.
Today the court adopts the compelling-need test as the standard for determining whether during a criminal trial, the state may properly call, as a fact witness for the state, the defense counsel in that trial. While the test is narrow and the burden on the state properly heavy under this test, I do not believe that it completely addresses the problem.
Very rarely will circumstances permit the state to carry its burden of demonstrating the lack of a feasible alternative and critical need for the testimony. In the few cases in which the state can demonstrate such compelling need, that need will almost always have been evident long before trial begins and should have been addressed before trial by a motion to disqualify or other appropriate motion. See Brown v. State, 921 S.W.2d 227, 231 (Tex.Crim.App.1996)(Keller, J., coneur-ring)(the state must show that the testimony is important to the state’s case or is required to rebut the defense case and that “the need for the testimony could not reasonably have been anticipated”). In such a case, the state should not be permitted to ambush the defense during trial, and a request for the opposing counsel to testify should be denied. The same should be true when a defense attorney seeks to call a prosecutor as a witness.
If the compelling need is claimed to have arisen during trial, as is the assertion here, it will most likely be the result of counsel’s conduct during trial. In this case, the prosecutor’s excuse for calling defense counsel was that counsel had created a “false impression” by questioning the complainant about his identification of the defendant as the person who had stabbed him, a proper inquiry. There was no “false impression,” but even if there had been, as the court of appeals noted, “ ‘false impressions’ left by defense counsel’s questioning of witnesses is best addressed by skillful re-direct or re-cross examination by the State, not by calling defense counsel as a witness.”1 The most appropriate action by the state would have been to call the interpreter2 who had allegedly been asked for help in identifying the defendant and who was the only person who could testify from personal knowledge. Instead, the prosecutor improperly called the defense counsel, who had no personal knowledge and who had properly attempted to impeach the complainant’s identification of his client’. When the state disrupts the attorney — client relationship in such a manner, the client is unrepresented during the time that the counsel is testifying, a constitutional violation. The counsel is put in an ethical bind: how to maintain confidentiality, how to zealously represent, how to cross-examine oneself effectively-all without compromising the client’s interests. It is also likely that the jury may be confused by the defense counsel’s dual role3 or that counsel’s credibility would be *153compromised in the eyes of the jury; is defense counsel speaking as an advocate for the defendant or as a witness for the state?4
Pending in this Court is another appeal, from Kendall County,5 in which the court of appeals noted that this same prosecutor, citing the creation of “false impressions” by defense counsel, called herself as a witness, testified to an irrelevant and collateral matter, revealed the substance of pre-trial negotiations with defense counsel, declined to allow herself to be cross-examined by the defense counsel, and then “resumed her role as an advocate for the state and continued to try the case.”6 The prosecutor in this cause has demonstrated an unfortunate tendency to abuse her authority to call witnesses. Such conduct is reprehensible in a public official and ought to be soundly censured, especially when the conduct is a continuing course of conduct, not a single lapse.
Article 2.01 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure states that it “shall be the primary duty of all prosecutors, ..., not to convict, but to see that justice is done.” Justice is not done when the defendant is deprived of a fair trial by the actions of the prosecutor.
I concur in the judgment of the Court.

. Flores v. State, 90 S.W.3d 875, 884 (Tex.App-San Antonio 2002).

. The burden is on the proponent to show the unavailability of a witness. Boyd v. State, 643 S.W.2d 708, 709 (Tex.Crim.App.1982)(appellant's proffered testimony by a witness in a prior proceeding was excluded; "He could have presented the witness in person to testify, or, by making proper demonstration of unavailability of that witness, he could have presented evidence of the defensive theory by alternative means.”) There is nothing in the record to indicate that any inquiry was made as to the availability of the interpreter.

.See Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 3.08, Comment 4 (2003)("the principal concern over allowing a lawyer to serve as both an advocate and witness for a client is the possible confusion that those dual roles could create for the finder of fact.”).

. Brown v. State at 231.

. Ramon v. State, No. 04-02-00219-CR, 2003 WL 22082410, 2003 Tex.App. LEXIS 7892 (Tex.App.-San Antonio, September 10, 2003)(not designated for publication).

.Id., slip op. at 6.