Texas lawyer Bob Mabry kept you up with legal writing and also with appeals courts, particularly Texas's Court of Criminal Appeals and Beaumont Texas's Ninth Court of Appeals.
About Me
- Bob Mabry
- Civil appellate, criminal appellate, and criminal trial lawyer at 704 North Thompson Street, #157, Conroe, Texas 77301-2578, (936) 494-1393.
Showing posts with label State of Texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label State of Texas. Show all posts
Thursday, March 3, 2011
We Do It Different in the South Central U.S.
Texas and Oklahoma each have a highest criminal court in addition to their Supreme Courts. A criminal appellant would not be before the Supreme Court in either state. In Texas, juvenile cases are civil, while bond forfeitures are criminal. Furthermore, Texas capital cases are automatically appealed to the Court of Criminal Appeals.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
A Suprising Place to Find a Summary of Texas Criminal Law
I was surprised to find the best short summary of the Texas criminal law today on Hidalgo County Criminal District Attorney Rene Guerra's web site. It's an outline, but comprehensive.
Labels:
criminal,
Hidalgo County,
Rene Guerra,
State of Texas,
web site
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
The Main Real Lesson of Rouse v. State
A defendant pleads guilty without a plea bargain(an "open plea"). The crime: shoplifting that turned into a robbery. (The law used to be that if a shoplifter grabbed or pushed someone while leaving the store, that would be a misdemeanor theft, now it's a felony robbery.). The defendant used to have a good job, and has fallen into crime by becoming addicted to drugs. The defendant has priors. The lawyer was hired, not appointed.
The defendant is shocked to get prison time, real prison time, not probation or the substance-abuse punishment facility. " . . . I was misled," said the prisoner. The trial judge says, "I don't believe that's true."
Defense lawyer faxes the trial court coordinator a paper titled "Notice of Appeal" 31 days after sentencing,apparently stating that counsel had told the defendant that the plea could be withdrawn if the judge's sentence were harsher than the defendant would like and complaining- accurately- that the judge had been impermissably involved in plea bargaining. The appeal notice is not followed up. More than three-and-a-half years later, the defendant seeks, and gets, an out-of-time appeal. The opinion of the Austin Court of Appeals is assigned to retired presiding judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals John F. Onion, Jr., who reverses the trial court and remands the case to it.
Now this case can be said to be about the importance of filing a motion for new trial timely, having whatever evidence is necessary for it to be presented to the trial court . It is not, though. The trial court stated in the record that it did not believe the defendant's claim of having been misled. The trial judge had considered the defense argument, and disagreed. This trial judge was no prosecution whore. The trial judge was elected out of Austin and contributed to MoveOn.org back in the day
The trial judge really made a judgment about the situation at the beginning, knowing the circumstances and observing demeanor of the witness before him. Every appellate judge is, by comparison, a paper-shuffling latecomer to the situation.
If the motion for new trial had been OK, the Court of Criminal Appeals would likely have found some other reason to reverse.
The defendant is shocked to get prison time, real prison time, not probation or the substance-abuse punishment facility. " . . . I was misled," said the prisoner. The trial judge says, "I don't believe that's true."
Defense lawyer faxes the trial court coordinator a paper titled "Notice of Appeal" 31 days after sentencing,apparently stating that counsel had told the defendant that the plea could be withdrawn if the judge's sentence were harsher than the defendant would like and complaining- accurately- that the judge had been impermissably involved in plea bargaining. The appeal notice is not followed up. More than three-and-a-half years later, the defendant seeks, and gets, an out-of-time appeal. The opinion of the Austin Court of Appeals is assigned to retired presiding judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals John F. Onion, Jr., who reverses the trial court and remands the case to it.
Now this case can be said to be about the importance of filing a motion for new trial timely, having whatever evidence is necessary for it to be presented to the trial court . It is not, though. The trial court stated in the record that it did not believe the defendant's claim of having been misled. The trial judge had considered the defense argument, and disagreed. This trial judge was no prosecution whore. The trial judge was elected out of Austin and contributed to MoveOn.org back in the day
The trial judge really made a judgment about the situation at the beginning, knowing the circumstances and observing demeanor of the witness before him. Every appellate judge is, by comparison, a paper-shuffling latecomer to the situation.
If the motion for new trial had been OK, the Court of Criminal Appeals would likely have found some other reason to reverse.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
She Is My Candy, Girl
In Nolan v. State, No. 13-08-00526-CR in the Thirteenth Court of Appeals (Corpus Christi- Edinberg), the court notes refer to the reporter as Kelly Kelly. Wasn't there a song written about her in the late '60s?
Labels:
Archies,
court reporter,
criminal,
Nolan,
State of Texas,
Sugar,
Thirteenth Court of Appeals
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