Court Opinion

ID: 4642565
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-12-14 08:18:40.895719+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:00:33.414609
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                       OF TEXAS

                                     NO. PD-0635-19

                         JAMES RAY HAGGARD, Appellant

                                             v.

                                THE STATE OF TEXAS

        ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
                FROM THE NINTH COURT OF APPEALS
                         LIBERTY COUNTY

       YEARY, J., filed a concurring opinion.
                               CONCURRING OPINION

       We have observed many times that this Court’s discretionary review capacity is

typically limited to reviewing “decisions” of the courts of appeals, subject to very limited

exceptions. E.g., Davison v. State, 405 S.W.3d 682, 691 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). In the

instant case, the court of appeals “assumed without deciding” that the Confrontation Clause

was violated in this case, without engaging in any analysis of that question. Haggard v.

State, Nos. 09-17-00319-DR & 09-17-00320-CR, 2019 WL 2273869, at *7 (Tex. App.—

Beaumont May 29, 2019) (mem. op., not designated for publication). It then determined
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that any error that may have occurred was harmless. Id. It rendered no “decision” at all

regarding whether the Confrontation Clause was violated.

       The Court today reaches and extensively discusses the merits of the Confrontation

Clause issue, although the court of appeals never decided that question. (That may explain

why the Court’s opinion does not even mention the court of appeals’ opinion until it comes

to address that court’s harm analysis; and why the Court never seems to articulate a definite

holding with respect to Confrontation Clause error.) The Court never explains why it is

appropriate to do so. And I do not agree that the Court’s opinion should address the merits

of whether Confrontation Clause error occurred.

       I concur in the Court’s judgment to send the case back for further proceedings with

respect to the court of appeals’ harm analysis. Should the court of appeals determine on

remand that error, if any, was not harmless after all, it will be obliged to address the merits

of the Confrontation Clause issue at that time. We can then review that determination, if

that seems appropriate, in due course.

       Having said that, I am compelled to make one observation about the Court’s

competing opinions in this case touching on whether Confrontation Clause error occurred,

superfluous though I regard my observation to be. The dissenting opinion takes the position

that two-way video testimony is in all things consistent with core Confrontation Clause

principles requiring the appearance of the accuser face-to-face; that literal, physical

presence in the courtroom is not an indispensable feature of true confrontation. See

Dissenting Opinion, at 8 (“Two-way video allows this face-to-face meeting and, with
                                                                               HAGGARD – 3

today’s technology, usually allows each party to see and hear the other better than if they

were across the courtroom from each other.”). But I agree with the Court that binding

United States Supreme Court precedent seems squarely to the contrary. Majority Opinion

at 8–10 & 12.

       I would only add to this debate that the founders of our country could not have

thought that some then-undreamed-of technological advancement, such as testimony by

two-way video, could take the place of literal face-to-face confrontation, no matter how

faithfully it might mimic the perceived truth-finding advantages of physical presence in the

courtroom. Such technology did not exist when the Sixth Amendment was adopted, and

thus it could not have resided within the people’s common understanding of the language:

“In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with

the witnesses against him.” U.S. CONST., amend. VI. Literal, physical, face-to-face

confrontation, live in the courtroom, is the procedure the Sixth Amendment mandates—

not some other procedure that might be thought by us today to secure the objectives of

confrontation at least as efficaciously, if not more so. See Crawford v. Washington, 541
U.S. 36, 61 (2004) (“To be sure, the [Confrontation] Clause’s ultimate goal is to ensure

reliability of evidence, but it is a procedural rather than a substantive guarantee. It

commands, not that evidence be reliable, but that reliability be assessed in a particular

manner[.] * * * The Clause thus reflects a judgment . . . about how reliability can best be

determined.”). We are not at liberty to accept some alternative procedure just because, in

our belated judgment, we think it might work as well as, or better than, the constitutionally

required one.
                             HAGGARD – 4

FILED:    December 9, 2020
PUBLISH