Court Opinion

ID: 2988868
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-23 02:36:41.650351+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:24:46.540542
License: Public Domain

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed September 11, 2012.

                                          In The

                       Fourteenth Court of Appeals

                                  NO. 14-10-01210-CR

                          RAYMOND MITCHELL, Appellant

                                             V.

                           THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                        On Appeal from the 351st District Court
                                 Harris County, Texas
                            Trial Court Cause No. 1181757

                     MEMORANDUM                      OPINION

       Following a bench trial, the trial court convicted appellant, Raymond Mitchell, of
burglary of a habitation and sentenced him to twenty-five years‘ confinement. In a single
issue, appellant contends the trial court erred by failing to conduct, sua sponte, an inquiry
regarding appellant‘s competency to stand trial. We affirm.

                                     I. BACKGROUND

       During the morning of September 3, 2008, Natasha Mosely was exercising on a
jogging track near the house of her relative, Rachel Lee. Mosely observed an unknown
man—later identified as appellant—inside Lee‘s house, walking back and forth between
the glass front door and a window, peering outside. Mosely left and returned shortly in a
car with a male friend.        Mosely parked in front of Lee‘s house and called 9-1-1.
Appellant repeatedly checked to see whether Mosely was still parked outside.

         Officer Sellers arrived at the scene and observed appellant exiting the back of the
house.     Officer Sellers commanded appellant to stop, but appellant ran across the
backyard and began climbing a fence. Officer Sellers pulled appellant off the fence and
placed him on the ground. Officer Sellers pressed his knee against appellant‘s back and
handcuffed him. Officer Sellers then searched appellant. Appellant possessed a foam
baseball bat, shoe strings, a grocery-store card, and a debit card. Appellant stated his
name was ―Raymond Mitchell‖ and admitted he did not reside at Lee‘s house.

         Officers observed that the front door to the house had been pried open and a
window was broken. The interior of the house was in disarray. Appellant had also
turned on the air conditioner and made a sleeping pallet on the floor in Lee‘s bedroom.
Officers spoke with Lee, who stated she did not permit appellant to enter her house. Lee
explained that she owned the items recovered from appellant and the debit card had been
inside a nightstand in her bedroom. She also told officers she spent the prior night at her
boyfriend‘s house and had left her house in an orderly condition.

         Officer Huff transported appellant to jail. According to Officer Huff, appellant
stated he had been asked to watch the house by its owner. Appellant said ―Mr. Lee‖ was
the owner of the house; apparently, appellant made this statement because he saw the
name ―Lee‖ on the debit card. However, appellant later told Officer Huff he entered the
house because his foot hurt.

         During October 2008, appellant was charged with burglary of a habitation.      On
August 5, 2009, the 180th District Court ordered appellant to undergo a medical exam
because his ―family claims [he] is HIV positive [and] has dementia.‖ The physician who
conducted the exam found that appellant was taking medication and physically able to
attend court. On August 21, 2009, the parties filed ―Motion for Psychiatric Examination:

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Competency,‖ alleging,

          [T]he defendant‘s sister reports symptoms of AIDS related dementia. The
          defendant is not able to relate a consistent statement of the events of the day
          of the alleged offense and presents facts to attorney which are not based on
          reality. Defendant is disoriented as to the evidence [of] persons and
          events—[i.e.,] defendant think he has a son and does not per his sister. The
          sister reports defendant‘s doctor told her that AIDS lesions were inside.

The 180th District Court granted appellant‘s motion and ordered that appellant receive
psychiatric and medical examinations.

          On August 17, 2009, Ginari Price, M.D., determined appellant did not need
psychiatric medication. However, a month later, Stephen McCary, Ph.D. determined
appellant was incompetent at that time to stand trial. In his September 21, 2009 report,
Dr. McCary noted appellant (1) is known as Raymond Mitchell and Raymond White, (2)
claimed to be diagnosed with HIV and suffer from vision and hearing impairments and
foot problems, (3) used a cane, (4) rambled and had difficulty remaining focused, and (5)
stated he has an adult daughter. Dr. McCary concluded appellant was probably unable to
discuss pertinent facts and make strategic decisions with counsel or testify on his own
behalf. Dr. McCary recommended appellant receive additional evaluations and opined
that appellant likely will not regain competency if he suffers from AIDS-related dementia
but probably will regain competency if he is predominantly affected by psychiatric
issues.

          On September 25, 2009, the 180th District Court found appellant incompetent to
stand trial and ordered him committed for 120 days to a state mental health facility. The
case was transferred to the 351st District Court, which was responsible for the
competency-restoration docket. On February 19, 2010, the State filed a ―Motion for
Psychiatric Examination: Competency‖ with the 351st District Court. Attached to the
motion was a letter from an employee with the Mental Health-Mental Retardation
Authority of Harris County, who reported appellant displayed ―no mental impairment that
would suggest that he is not able to assist in his own defense‖ and appeared to

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―understand court procedure and the nature of the charges pending against him.‖ The
351st District Court ordered appellant to receive another psychiatric evaluation.

       On February 25, 2010, Dr. McCary re-evaluated appellant and found ―he did not
appear to be psychotic or out of touch with reality‖ and was competent to stand trial. Dr.
McCary explained appellant (1) stated his actual name was Raymond ―Bubba‖ Mitchell,
Jr., (2) rambled and had difficulty remaining focused, (3) had a history of foot problems
and head traumas and suffered from AIDS per his medical records, and (4) has not had
inpatient or outpatient psychiatric treatment. Dr. McCary also noted, ―[Appellant‘s] jail
medical records indicate that during the past month he has exhibited symptoms or
behaviors including: ‗well groomed with bright affect; was tangential at times, but easily
redirectable; he has visual impairment, hearing impairment and is HIV+; has reasonable
knowledge about his legal situation and appears to have capacity at this time.‘‖ When
Dr. McCary asked appellant about his legal circumstances, appellant provided the
following account:

       [Appellant] described how a truck had run over his foot. He said that he
       tried to get the driver to drive him to a nearby hospital, but the driver took
       him to within a block of the hospital and then pulled him out of the truck.
       He discussed how he ―limped‖ along and followed the driver to a house.
       He stated that he went into the house and he was looking for the driver. He
       reported that the police soon arrived and they arrested him. He said that he
       thought that he could have been charged for trespassing, but he denied that
       he was trying to commit a burglary.

Dr. McCary opined, ―While it was difficult to keep [appellant] focused as he gave his
rambling description of what happened, he did appear to have sufficient ability to
disclose pertinent facts, events, and states of mind to Counsel.‖ Dr. McCary did not
reference dementia in his report but expressed that appellant should remain competent to
stand trial, particularly with ongoing treatment and medication.

       On October 19, 2010, the 351st District Court determined appellant was mentally
competent to stand trial. On December 7, 2010, the trial court conducted a bench trial.
Appellant did not testify during the guilt-innocence phase. After the trial court found

                                             4
appellant guilty of the charged offense, appellant pleaded true to two enhancement
offenses. Appellant then testified on his own behalf, explaining that he was sixty-three
years old and suffers from severe hearing and vision impairment and HIV; according to
appellant, the last time he was incarcerated, he received a compassion release due to his
illness.     Appellant then provided the following, narrative testimony regarding the
underlying incident:

       [Defense Counsel:] So your vision is almost gone?
       [Appellant:] My vision almost gone. I had surgery on this eye
       (indicating). It cleared up. I went back to have the right eye surgery and
       they scratched it.
               During the period of time I was supposed to go back, this accident
       occurred. They said I burglarized something. I was standing on the corner,
       me and another gentleman, talking. The truck passed by, pinned me down.
       I said, ―Take me to LBJ.‖
               He said, ―Mister, I don‘t have no insurance.‖ I say, ―Own up to it,
       sir, and I will say it was accident.‖ He put me in his truck, we get a half a
       block, he snatched me out the truck. Same time I had a phone in my pocket,
       a cellular phone. I called my nephew and my stepson at the park because
       they thought the person would rob me.
               We get there, right there on that street. It‘s Hoffman and that other
       street that went into that street. I pull him out the truck. I said, ―Man, why
       you lie?‖ Hit him. He broke and run. I say, ―You-all, go ahead. I got
       him.‖ I left out. That house where they said I burglarized, I can see
       through it. I say he must have went up in there. I walked up there. I seen
       two cards. I picked up the cards. It say Lee. There‘s another card, a
       discount food card. I say he got to be in there. Must be his name Lee.
              A truck pull up, a lady and a gentleman in the truck. I say, ―Man,
       you-all live here?‖ They say, ―Hold up.‖ I say, ―No, I‘m looking for this
       fellow.‖
              I limp around the back. I say he might have jumped the fence.
       When I turn around, the law came up, threw the pistol on me. He say, ―Get
       down.‖ I say, ―Get down for what?‖ He snatch me down and kick me. I
       say, ―Man, what the hell you kicking me for?‖ Excuse my -- ―Man, what
       the hell you kicking me for?‖ He said -- going through my pocket. I had
       3500 and one penny. Took the 3500 and stick it in his pocket --
       ...

                                             5
       They say a -- it was -- they say a burglary. I say, ―I‘m -- not a
burglary.‖ One law standing there was on the scene. He say, ―I know
you.‖ Big, Spanish guy. He say, ―Your name Bubba.‖ I say, ―Yes, sir.‖ I
say, ―Look at my feet.‖ He say, ―God damn.‖ They swole up.
       I say nobody -- he say just go on with them. Black officer put me in
the car, took me to the city. I‘m sitting in the city. They shook me down.
They say what -- put me, then it flood. I couldn‘t walk up the steps. They
pick me up, put me in medical facility. They gave me some pills. I fell out.
       When I woke up, they said, ―You all right?‖ I said, ―I‘m in pain.‖
Woke up, was in the county. I say, ―Man,‖ I say, ―I‘m not no burglar,
Man.‖ I ask my niece -- I made one call. I made no call since. They ask
me did I say that. They say that lady -- I guess whoever was in that truck,
they say he was storing dope in that woman‘s house and they messed over
the dope. So they using you as the suspect to say you took the dope. But
the man say who got the dope say he know you ain‘t no user.
       I say don‘t mess with it. I just got to ride this out. And I‘ve been
riding it out ever since. Because first I was in 180. He got my medical
records. They put me on the docket and they took me off the docket. I
say, ―What‘s going on?‖ They say, ―You‘re going to 351.‖ I say, ―My
band say 180, band say that right now, 180.‖ I say, ―No, I‘m not going.‖
They say, ―Hold up, Bubba, we know you. Go on up there.‖
        I‘ve been coming up here ever since the last time -- the first time I
ever seen Your Honor was that time I stumbled with that door because of
my vision. Then I was at -- in the county jail. He took me to LBJ. They
take me on this name on my band, Raymond White. I stay shackled up. I
say, ―I‘m in for my eyes‖ -- because when I got arrested, I had an envelope
in my pocket, too, for my appointment on the 6th. I say, ―I‘m in for my
name.‖ They say, ―Your name Raymond White.‖ I say, ―My name is
Raymond Mitchell.‖ Left me standing up on the wall. They take me back
to this county.
      I say, ―Man‖ -- I went down. I say, ―Would you-all please put me
on my right name so I can go get my physical on my eyes and everything?‖
They say, ―We‘ll see if we can do it.‖ Call me back down there (inaudible)
--
...
They gave me some eye drops. The eye drops say do not put them in your
eyes when it‘s foggy. I took a magnifying glass -- I say I‘m putting these
drops in my eyes. I go to the physician. He give me these glasses. He say,
―Man, I don‘t know what to do.‖ He give me not this pair, I got two pair. I
say, ―Man, my vision is gone.‖ Every time I stumble I run into something.

                                     6
I say, ―Man, I can‘t hear out of‖ --
[Defense Counsel:] Mr. Mitchell, did the doctors also make a diagnosis
that you might have some mental health issues?
[Appellant:] He said -- when he come, took my thing, he say, ―You got
glaucoma.‖ I said I had surgery - -
[Defense Counsel:] Let me try to see if we can talk about your mental
health. Okay? Have you been diagnosed as having bipolar disease?
[Appellant:] What are you saying?
[Defense Counsel:] Bipolar disease.
[Appellant:] Bipolar?
[Defense Counsel:] Bipolar.
[Appellant:] What‘s that?
[Defense Counsel:] Do you remember the doctor telling you he was
diagnosing you with bipolar disorder?
[Appellant:] I don‘t know what - -
[Defense Counsel:] Have you been taking any medicines while you‘ve
been in county jail to help keep your mind straight?
[Appellant:] I don‘t know. They be saying I can hear out of one side. I
know from being in TDC getting hit with them clubs, billy clubs, is kind of
-- (inaudible) kind of out here in this county I was well known. (Inaudible).
I work classification. I ain‘t never ask for a favor. They always say -- type
up the change list, pull a coat. I ask him, I say, ―Would you subpoena
Major, the captains, can all speak for me.‖ Every time I come (inaudible)
they say, ―Where are you going?‖ I say I‘m going to -- (inaudible) what
they got it for. (Inaudible). It ain‘t me, man -- I say every time I come here
to this county jail, if you‘ve got me right, I accept my time. I go to TDC. I
say, ―This, it‘s not me.‖ I just got to go away. If I get a life, I got to get a
life because it ain‘t me. I ain‘t no burglar. My feet still haven‘t healed, sir.
It was swole up. They x-rayed it four, five times (inaudible). They can‘t --
that‘s why I walk with a cane.
[Defense Counsel:] Mr. Mitchell, is there anything else in particular you
wanted the Judge to know?
[Appellant:] That‘s all I have to say on my behalf, Your Honor. I
appreciate you taking time out to listen to me and I thank you for seeing me
that time when I stumbled in your court the last time.
[Trial Court:] All right. Thank you, Mr. Mitchell. [Prosecutor], do you
have any questions?

                                       7
        [Prosecutor:] Nothing from the State, Your Honor.
        [Trial Court:] Anything else from the defense[?]
        [Defense Counsel:] No, Your Honor. Defense rests. Judge, we -- if I
        might, Your Honor, we would ask the Judge to take judicial notice of the
        reports that have been filed amongst the Court‘s paper concerning Mr.
        Mitchell‘s competency and his mental health.
        [Trial Court:] I will do that.

        The trial court then sentenced appellant to twenty-five years‘ confinement.

             II. SUA SPONTE INFORMAL INQUIRY REGARDING COMPETENCY

        In his sole issue, appellant contends the trial court erred by failing to conduct an
inquiry into appellant‘s competency during trial.

A. Relevant Law and Standard of Review

        We review a trial court‘s failure to conduct a competency inquiry sua sponte for
abuse of discretion. Montoya v. State, 291 S.W.3d 420, 426 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009);
Hobbs v. State, 359 S.W.3d 919, 923–24 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2012, no
pet.). Under this standard, we do not substitute our judgment for that of the trial court but
determine whether the trial court‘s decision was arbitrary or unreasonable. Montoya, 291
S.W.3d at 426; Hobbs, 359 S.W.3d at 924.

        The trial court‘s duty to conduct an informal inquiry into the defendant‘s
competency is triggered when some evidence raises a ―bona fide doubt‖ that the
defendant lacks a rational and factual understanding of the proceedings against him or the
ability to consult his attorney with a reasonable degree of rational understanding. See
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 46B.003(a) (West 2006); id. art. 46B.004(c) (West Supp.
2012)1; Montoya, 291 S.W.3d at 425. A bona fide doubt may exist if the defendant

        1
            Article 46B.004 was amended, effective September 1, 2011, to add subsection c-1, which
provides in relevant part that ―the court is not required to have a bona fide doubt about the competency of
the defendant.‖ See Act of May 24, 2011, 82nd Leg. R.S., ch. 822, §§ 21(a), 22, 2011 Tex. Sess. Law
Serv. 1893, 1899–1900 (codified at Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 46B.004(c-l) (West Supp. 2012).
We do not determine the effect of subsection c-1 to the instant case because the subsection was not in
effect at the time of appellant‘s trial and neither party has suggested its application.

                                                    8
exhibits truly bizarre behavior, has a recent history of severe mental illness, or has at least
moderate mental retardation. See Montoya, 291 S.W.3d at 425. Evidence sufficient to
create a bona fide doubt about the defendant‘s competency may come from the trial
court‘s own observations, known facts, evidence presented, motions, affidavits, or any
other reasonable or credible sources. Hobbs, 359 S.W.3d at 924. The evidence need not
be sufficient to find an accused actually incompetent; rather, it must create ―a real doubt
in the judge‘s mind as to the defendant‘s competency.‖ See Fuller v. State, 253 S.W.3d
220, 228 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008). If evidence warrants a competency hearing, and the
trial court denies such a hearing, the defendant is deprived of his constitutional right to a
fair trial. See Pate v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375, 385 (1966).

B. Analysis

       Appellant contends the trial court should have inquired into his competency
because of his bizarre testimony during the punishment phase, particularly in light of his
prior incompetency. Appellant argues his testimony was ―truly bizarre‖ because (1)
appellant stated he was ―pinned‖ by a truck and sustained a foot injury (despite officers‘
testimony that appellant did not appear to be injured), (2) appellant explained he called
his ―stepson‖ even though he does not have a son, (3) appellant‘s testimony was largely
off-topic and irrelevant, and (4) when asked about his mental health, appellant provided
non-responsive answers.

       We agree that, from the cold record, appellant‘s account of the underlying incident
seems tangential and improbable. However, the trial court was in a superior position to
assess appellant‘s competency, credibility, and demeanor during his testimony.             See
LaHood v. State, 171 S.W.3d 613, 619 n.2 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2005, pet.
ref‘d). Despite his rambling and inarticulate narrative, the crux of appellant‘s testimony
was his explanation for entering Lee‘s house.          Significantly, Officer Huff testified
appellant initially stated he had permission to be in Lee‘s house but then changed his
story and claimed he entered the house because his foot hurt. In his second report, Dr.
McCary noted appellant stated that a man had ―run over‖ appellant‘s foot and he

                                              9
followed the man into Lee‘s house. During both of Dr. McCary‘s evaluations, appellant
stated he could have been charged with trespassing but insisted he did not commit
burglary. During the punishment phase of trial, appellant offered a substantially similar
story—that a man ―pinned‖ appellant with a truck, injuring his foot, and appellant
followed the man to Lee‘s house. Again, appellant insisted he did not commit burglary.

       Appellant argues his following testimony regarding events after he was brought to
jail is particularly disjointed and strange:

       I say nobody -- he say just go on with them. Black officer put me in the
       car, took me to the city. I‘m sitting in the city. They shook me down.
       They say what -- put me, then it flood. I couldn‘t walk up the steps. They
       pick me up, put me in medical facility. They gave me some pills. I fell out.
              When I woke up, they said, ―You all right?‖ I said, ―I‘m in pain.‖
       Woke up, was in the county. I say, ―Man,‖ I say, ―I‘m not no burglar,
       Man.‖ I ask my niece -- I made one call. I made no call since. They ask
       me did I say that. They say that lady -- I guess whoever was in that truck,
       they say he was storing dope in that woman‘s house and they messed over
       the dope. So they using you as the suspect to say you took the dope. But
       the man say who got the dope say he know you ain‘t no user.

       In the first paragraph, it appears appellant described going to the jail infirmary and
receiving medicine. His reference to a ―flood‖ is odd but could simply mean it was
raining outside.    The second paragraph appears to be a continuation of appellant‘s
explanation regarding why he was wrongly charged with burglary.

       Appellant also notes that, toward the end of his testimony, counsel questioned
appellant regarding bipolar disorder and whether he had been taking medication.
Appellant responded that he does not know what bipolar disorder is or whether he had
been taking medication.      Appellant then provided unrelated testimony regarding (1)
having been beaten by jail guards, (2) his friends in the police department who should
have been subpoenaed, and (3) his propensity to confess when he truly is guilty.
However, appellant‘s failure to directly answer counsel‘s questions may have been due to
his hearing impairment or concentration difficulties. If so, his failure to answer the
questions would not be probative of his incompetency.

                                               10
        The progression of appellant‘s account regarding the incident supports an
inference that appellant recognized burglary was more serious than trespassing and
offered an alibi for being in Lee‘s house. There is also nothing unusual about a man with
a long criminal history claiming officers kicked and robbed him during his arrest or beat
him while he was in jail. We are unable to discern from the record appellant‘s demeanor
and credibility while testifying and must give great deference to the court‘s implicit
decision not to inquire into appellant‘s competency. See McDaniel v. State, 98 S.W.3d
704, 713 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).2 It may have been apparent to the trial court that
appellant‘s testimony was fabricated, not delusional. Accordingly, the trial court did not
err by failing to conduct a competency inquiry based on appellant‘s outlandish and
tedious testimony.

        Next, we consider whether appellant‘s reference to a ―stepson‖ should have raised
concerns regarding his competency. As discussed above, in a motion for psychiatric
evaluation, defense counsel asserted that appellant claims he has a son ―but does not per
his sister.‖ During his first evaluation with Dr. McCary, appellant stated he has an adult
daughter but did not mention having a son. However, during trial, appellant testified that
he called his ―stepson‖ at the time of the incident. Perhaps appellant intentionally used
the term ―stepson‖ instead of ―son‖ because he realized it had been revealed that he does
not have a son. Appellant may also have been referring to a family member or friend

        2
         We also note the dissimilarities between appellant‘s testimony and the defendant‘s testimony in
Greene v. State, which the San Antonio Court of Appeals determined was so bizarre it necessitated an
informal competency inquiry. 225 S.W.3d 324, 329 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2007, no pet.). In Greene,
the defendant testified he (1) thinks he is insane, (2) was recently institutionalized because he was hearing
voices and having a vision of an evil twin, (3) thinks the complainant may have been his ―baby‘s mama‖
but is not sure ―because [the defendant had] seen people change shape in front of [him],‖ (4) the
complainant‘s eyes turned evil, and the defendant started seeing warping shadows, (5) police shot him
with a ―marker gun‖ which caused a part of his spine to chip, and (6) he once bit a police officer because
another officer believed the defendant was a vampire and telepathically instructed him to do so. Id. at
326–28. Inarguably, the Greene defendant‘s testimony is exponentially more bizarre than appellant‘s
testimony. Further, it is worth noting that the Court of Criminal Appeals later abrogated the standard of
review employed by the San Antonio court and employed the standard we apply in the instant case. See
Montoya, 291 S.W.3d at 424–25.

                                                     11
whom he considers or simply calls his stepson.             Regardless, in light of all the
circumstances, the trial court was not required to inquire into appellant‘s competency
based on his reference to a stepson.

       There is also substantial evidence in the record suggesting appellant understood
the nature of the proceedings against him and was able to communicate with his attorney.
A defendant‘s competency to stand trial refers to his present ability to comprehend and
aid in his defense. See Montoya, 291 S.W.3d at 425; McCoin v. State, 56 S.W.3d 609,
613–14 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2001, no pet.).             Thus, the fact that appellant had
previously been found incompetent and suffered from a host of physical and mental
issues did not suggest he was incompetent at the time of his trial, particularly because Dr.
McCary determined appellant was competent during his last evaluation.                     See
McDaniel, 98 S.W.3d at 712 (―Appellant‘s history of mental illness was insufficient to
create a bona fide doubt about his present mental condition, in light of the more recent
psychological evaluation attesting to his mental competency.‖).

       During the guilt-innocence phase of trial, defense counsel cross-examined
witnesses regarding whether appellant had been injured on the day of the incident and
whether officers kicked or struck appellant while he was on the ground, recovered $3500
from appellant, or found more of Lee‘s property on the ground outside her house. The
fact that counsel asked these questions demonstrated appellant was able to effectively
communicate his account of the incident to counsel. Furthermore, after the State rested
its case during the guilt-innocence phase, defense counsel requested and was granted a
moment to confer with appellant. Thereafter, counsel stated, ―Judge, I‘ve discussed with
[appellant] his options to testify or not to testify and at this time he advises me that he
does not wish to testify in the matter.‖ Similarly, after the State rested its case during the
punishment phase, defense counsel again asked for a ―moment.‖ Apparently, counsel
and appellant used this ―moment‖ to discuss whether appellant would testify because
counsel then called appellant to the stand. These exchanges further evince that appellant
was able to consult with his attorney with a reasonable degree of rational understanding.

                                             12
        Finally, appellant‘s ability to answer the trial court‘s questions demonstrated that
he understood the nature of proceedings against him. At the beginning of trial, when the
trial court asked appellant for his plea to the indictment, appellant readily responded ―Not
guilty, sir.‖ Furthermore, appellant pleaded ―true‖ when the trial court inquired regarding
certain enhancement offenses. Although the record indicates appellant had difficulty
understanding some of the trial court‘s questions, such difficulty may have been
attributable to appellant‘s hearing and vision impairments, and appellant eventually
provided coherent answers. See Montoya, 291 S.W.3d at 426 (―[T]he court of appeals
took instances of the defendant‘s confusion or misunderstanding of the judge‘s questions
in isolation and out of context as evidence of incompetence when the rest of the record
shows that the issues were immediately and easily clarified by the trial judge or
defendant‘s attorney and that the defendant indicated her understanding.‖).3

        Accordingly, in light of all the evidence and circumstances, we do not conclude
the trial court must have had a ―bona fide doubt‖ regarding appellant‘s competency to
stand trial. We hold that the trial court‘s decision not to conduct an informal competency
inquiry was neither arbitrary nor unreasonable. Appellant‘s sole issue is overruled.

        We affirm the trial court‘s judgment.

                                        /s/             Charles W. Seymore
                                                        Justice

Panel consists of Chief Justice Hedges and Justices Seymore and Brown.
Do Not Publish — Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b).

        3
          We recognize appellant twice interrupted the proceedings by blurting out facts relevant to his
defense and account of the incident. Because appellant‘s outbursts, albeit inappropriate, were strategic,
the trial court did not err by failing to interpret the outbursts as evidence of appellant‘s possible
incompetency. See LaHood, 171 S.W.3d at 619 (―The fact that appellant made outbursts during trial is
not evidence of an inability to communicate with counsel or to appreciate the proceedings against him.
Although inappropriate, the outbursts were immediate and logical responses to statements made or
questions asked during trial.‖ (citation omitted)).

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