Court Opinion

ID: 4095873
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-11-05 14:25:38.566974+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:35:59.055422
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                         OF TEXAS
                                      NO. PD-0992-15

                       ANTWAIN MAURICE BURKS, Appellant

                                              v.

                                 THE STATE OF TEXAS

        ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
             FROM THE FOURTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS
                        FORT BEND COUNTY

       A LCALA, J., filed a dissenting opinion.

                                 DISSENTING OPINION

       Because intermediate courts of appeals will find it impossible to comply with the

approach set forth by this Court’s majority opinion, I must respectfully dissent in this case.

This Court’s majority opinion holds that, when an appellant raises a global complaint

challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction, a court of appeals must

sua sponte examine the entire record for any evidence supporting each of the elements of the

offense, or, alternatively, it must permit him to file a supplemental brief, even if he has
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presented no particular argument challenging the sufficiency of the evidence as to one or

more of the elements. Despite an appellant’s failure to assert arguments and authority in his

initial appellate brief, a supplemental brief requested by an appellate court would likely

require an appellant to articulate his arguments more specifically, provide legal authority, and

include citations to the pertinent parts of the record. This novel approach to appeals presents

a sea change in the traditional view that, except for structural errors, an appellant must, at a

minimum, actually present some argument to an appellate court before the court may

consider reversing a conviction on that basis. Although I applaud this Court’s majority

opinion for seeking to ensure that convictions are supported by sufficient evidence, I cannot

join that opinion in its adoption of an approach that will prove to be unworkable in the

appellate courts.

       The problems in this case stem from the apparent failure of appellate counsel to

adequately brief and argue the issue of the sufficiency of the evidence on direct appeal.

Rather than upend established traditional rules of appellate procedure as a means of

correcting this failure, there is an avenue, albeit one that is much more difficult, by which

appellant might obtain relief from his conviction—that is, through an application for writ of

habeas corpus under Article 11.07 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. Although that

process would not permit relief on the basis of insufficient evidence, appellant could obtain

relief if he showed, for example, that his appellate attorney rendered ineffective assistance

of counsel by failing to adequately challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the
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element of appellant’s intent to impair the availability of the body as evidence in a

subsequent investigation or official proceeding.

       I acknowledge that, for two reasons, even if the evidence is legally insufficient to

establish the element of intent to impair, habeas relief is a much more difficult avenue of

relief for appellant than direct appeal. First, unless an applicant can convince a trial court

that the interests of justice require it to appoint habeas counsel for him, he will be required

to proceed pro se in his habeas application if he is indigent. Regardless of whether they have

actual merit, most habeas applications filed by indigent pro se applicants will fail due to their

lack of expertise in meeting the pleading and proof requirements for a claim of

ineffectiveness. Thus, assuming he is indigent and that the trial court acts in conformance

with the vast majority of other trial courts by declining to appoint habeas counsel for

appellant, his habeas application will likely fail on the basis of a pleading and proof

deficiency, irrespective of its merits.

       Second, for appellant to prevail in a post-conviction habeas application on the basis

of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, he would need to meet an additional layer of

proof than what he would be required to establish on direct appeal. To prevail in a legal

sufficiency challenge on direct appeal, an appellant would have to show that a rational trier

of fact could not have found one or more of the essential elements of the crime beyond a

reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 316 (1979). But, to prevail in a post-

conviction habeas application, an appellant would additionally have to prove, for example,
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that his appellate attorney performed deficiently by failing to assert that complaint on direct

appeal, and that that deficient performance prejudiced him in that an appellate court would

have likely reversed his conviction on direct appeal if that complaint had been asserted. See,

e.g., Ex parte Flores, 387 S.W.3d 626, 639 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012).

       Given these problems with habeas applications, I come back to whether this Court

should do exactly what this Court’s majority opinion proposes by permitting an appellant to

raise a global sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge and placing the burden on appellate

courts to determine whether there is evidence on each of the required elements. As much as

I believe that habeas litigation is fraught with problems in the manner that this Court

currently implements it in its refusal to require habeas courts to appoint counsel for indigent

defendants when the interests of justice require it, I would be even more concerned with the

upending of traditional briefing requirements in the intermediate appellate courts that would

congest the resolution of almost every appeal. The large volume of sufficiency-of-the-

evidence challenges, each involving discrete elements that would require a sua sponte review

of the record or supplemental briefing in almost every appeal, would clog the courts and

impede the timely and orderly disposition of appeals.

       The answer to this case is not to impose a new procedural requirement on direct

appeals for intermediate courts. The answer to this case is for this Court to enforce Article

1.051 of the Code of Criminal Procedure that requires habeas courts to appoint counsel in

the interests of justice for an indigent habeas applicant. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art.
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1.051(d)(3). Only then will habeas litigation under Article 11.07 be a real forum for relief

in appropriate cases filed by all applicants, and not merely those applicants who can afford

to hire an attorney to represent them during that process.

       Because the relief awarded by this Court’s majority opinion would systematically

upend the normal procedural rules that require that an appellant’s arguments be clearly and

concisely briefed on appeal, and because this revised approach would result in an unworkable

requirement for intermediate appellate courts, I cannot join it. For this reason, I respectfully

dissent.

Filed: November 2, 2016

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