Court Opinion

ID: 4650275
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-11 08:13:07.751943+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:31.864011
License: Public Domain

In the
             Court of Appeals
     Second Appellate District of Texas
              at Fort Worth
           ___________________________

                No. 02-19-00394-CR
           ___________________________

         ROHN M. WEATHERLY, Appellant

                           V.

                THE STATE OF TEXAS

         On Appeal from the 371st District Court
                Tarrant County, Texas
              Trial Court No. 1380491D

     Before Sudderth, C.J.; Womack and Wallach, JJ.
Concurring Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth
                 CONCURRING MEMORANDUM OPINION

      Although I join the majority opinion and agree that it correctly reflects the

current status of the law, I write separately to urge the Court of Criminal Appeals to

reconsider its characterization of “judicial error” in the context of judgments nunc pro

tunc. In my mind, the substantive change made to the judgment here should be

considered a “judicial error,” notwithstanding that the change was made to comply

with the law.

      Here, the trial court erred at the outset in its decision to omit the requirement

that Weatherly register as a sex offender. Because the requirement to register as a sex

offender implicates fundamental rights and liberty interests, the nunc pro tunc

judgment adding this requirement involved a substantive change in the judgment.

Such a change should not be classified as a correction of a “clerical error” unless the

record reflects that the trial court’s true decision was to impose this requirement but it

was erroneously omitted from the judgment signed.

      Later, when the trial judge considered the law and decided to alter the judgment

to require that Weatherly register as a sex offender, that was a deliberate act resulting

from a judicial decision to follow the law. The test should be whether the change was

substantive and whether the court considered the issue and made a judicial

determination. If so, then the judgment nunc pro tunc, if signed outside of the trial

court’s plenary power, should be declared void.

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      To hold otherwise would allow a trial court to ignore the law and sign

erroneous judgments with full knowledge that a defendant’s fundamental rights and

liberty interests could be later altered dramatically through a judgment nunc pro tunc,

with no right provided to the defendant to appeal the change or lodge a challenge to

the constitutionality of the law later imposed. 1 And, to that extent, I agree with the

dissent that, under such circumstances, procedural due process rights are violated by

denying a defendant a meaningful opportunity to appeal the changes made to the

judgment that has been rendered against him.

                                                     /s/ Bonnie Sudderth

                                                     Bonnie Sudderth
                                                     Chief Justice

Do Not Publish
Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b)

Delivered: January 7, 2021

      1
        At a minimum, our courts should be allowed to review substantive changes
like the one made here despite the case’s procedural posture. “The criminal law
should not be a series of traps for the unwary,” and correcting the trial court’s
oversight should not result in a penalty to the unwary defendant. See United States v.
Hussein, 351 F.3d 9, 13 (1st Cir. 2003). Thus, when a clerical correction brings an
issue of substance to light for the first time, a defendant should be permitted to
challenge that issue as he or she would in any other appeal.

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