Harold Odum v. State ( 2009 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-08-00242-CR
    Harold Odum, Appellant
    v.
    The State of Texas, Appellee
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LLANO COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. 5763, HONORABLE DANIEL H. MILLS, JUDGE PRESIDING
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appellant Harold Odum pleaded guilty to two counts of intoxication manslaughter.
    See Tex Penal Code. Ann. § 49.08 (West Supp. 2008). A jury found him guilty of both counts and
    assessed punishment at six years’ imprisonment and a $10,000 fine for each count. The trial court
    ordered that the sentences be served consecutively and included a deadly weapon finding in the
    judgment. In his sole point of error, Odum argues that the jury did not affirmatively find that he used
    a deadly weapon and therefore the trial court erred by entering the finding in its judgment. Because
    we hold that the jury’s verdict included an affirmative finding that Odum used a deadly weapon, we
    affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    BACKGROUND
    On January 11, 2006, Odum and two friends and business associates,
    Michael Klinglesmith and Cory Buchanan, gathered to celebrate a successful business deal.
    According to Odum, the three men spent much of the evening at his father’s house near Lake LBJ,
    drinking beer and wine as they prepared and ate dinner. Around midnight, Odum and his friends
    decided to leave the house and go to a bar in nearby Horseshoe Bay that Odum sometimes
    patronized. Odum drove his friends to the bar in his vehicle. The bartender testified that she refused
    to serve Odum because she and her co-workers were in the process of closing up the bar and because
    Odum appeared to already be intoxicated. The bartender testified, “[Odum] had been coming to us
    for about two years and he could tell us what he wanted when he came in the door. That night he
    couldn’t even focus on what we had back there.” After being refused service at the bar, the men
    decided to return to the lake house. On the way back, while driving along Ranch Road 2147 in Llano
    County during the early morning hours of January 12, 2006, Odum lost control of his car. The
    vehicle spun across the road, through a fence, across a pasture, and into a rock pillar before it flipped
    over and came to a stop. The Department of Public Safety’s accident investigator testified that
    Odum was driving at least eighty-six miles an hour when he lost control of the car. Klinglesmith and
    Buchanan were killed in the accident. Odum, the only survivor, was seriously injured and had to be
    flown by Starflight to Brackenridge Hospital in Austin.
    Odum was indicted for both intoxication manslaughter and manslaughter in the deaths
    of Klinglesmith and Buchanan. At a jury trial, Odum pleaded guilty to the two counts of intoxication
    manslaughter. Each count charged Odum with operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and
    causing the deaths “by driving said motor vehicle in such a manner that the defendant lost control
    of the vehicle and the said loss of control of the vehicle resulted in a collision of the vehicle with the
    ground, the road surfaces, the shoulder of the roadway, a rock pillar, a fence or other fixed movable
    objects.” Each count also charged Odum with using “a deadly weapon, to wit: a motor vehicle.”
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    After a hearing on punishment, the jury found Odum guilty of both counts and
    sentenced him to six years’ imprisonment and a $10,000 fine for each count. The trial judge entered
    a deadly weapon finding in its judgment and granted the State’s motion to cumulate the sentences.
    DISCUSSION
    A deadly weapon finding limits a defendant’s eligibility for community supervision
    and parole.1 See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 42.12, § 3g(a)(2) (West 2006); Tex. Gov’t Code
    Ann. §§ 508.145(d), .149, .151 (West Supp. 2008). A judgment may only include a deadly weapon
    finding when the trier of fact affirmatively finds—or expressly determines—that a deadly weapon
    was actually used or exhibited during commission of the offense. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann.
    art. 42.12, § 3g(a)(2); LaFleur v. State, 
    106 S.W.3d 91
    , 94-95 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (citing
    Polk v. State, 
    693 S.W.2d 391
    , 393 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985)). Thus, when a jury is the trier of fact
    at both stages of trial, the jury must make the affirmative finding.2 See 
    LaFleur, 106 S.W.3d at 95
    ;
    1
    If the judgment contains an affirmative deadly weapon finding under section 3g(a)(2) of
    article 42.12, a prisoner is not eligible for parole until his actual calendar time served, without
    consideration for good conduct time, equals one half of the sentence or thirty calendar years,
    whichever is less. Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 508.145(d) (West Supp. 2008); Tex. Code Crim. Proc.
    Ann. art. 42.12, § 3g(a)(2) (West 2006). Thus, a deadly weapon finding requires Odum to serve a
    substantially longer period than would be required without the finding.
    2
    The State argues that the trial court may make an affirmative finding at punishment even
    if the jury made no such determination, citing to Fann v. State, 
    702 S.W.2d 602
    (Tex. Crim. App.
    1986). In Fann, however, the trial court assessed punishment. 
    Id. at 604.
    The court of criminal
    appeals specifically limited its holding to such cases, stating that “[t]he trial court in the instant case
    had authority to make an affirmative finding because the court was the trier of fact at the punishment
    stage.” 
    Id. at 605.
    The court of criminal appeals distinguished Ex Parte Thomas, 
    638 S.W.2d 905
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1982), as “a case in which the jury was the trier of facts at the guilt-innocence stage
    and at the punishment stage of trial. Therefore, the trial judge did not have the authority to make an
    affirmative finding on an issue of fact.” Id.; see also Sullivan v. State, 
    248 S.W.3d 746
    , 752
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2008, no pet.) (“When a trial court is not the fact finder, it does not
    have the authority to ‘find’ implied facts that the jury did not expressly find.”).
    3
    Barecky v. State, 
    639 S.W.2d 943
    , 945 (Tex. Crim. App. 1982). In an intoxication manslaughter
    case, a motor vehicle can be considered a deadly weapon. See Tyra v. State, 
    897 S.W.2d 796
    , 798
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1995); Sullivan v. State, 
    248 S.W.3d 746
    , 751-52 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]
    2008, no pet.).
    A jury makes an affirmative finding that a defendant used a deadly weapon when
    (1) the indictment alleges the use of a “deadly weapon” and the jury’s verdict finds the defendant
    “guilty ‘as charged in the indictment’”; (2) the indictment alleges the use of a weapon and the
    weapon is deadly per se; or (3) the jury affirmatively answers a special issue on the use of a deadly
    weapon. 
    Polk, 693 S.W.2d at 394
    ; see also 
    LaFleur, 106 S.W.3d at 95
    . An indictment alleges the
    use of a deadly weapon when a deadly weapon is an element of the offense, see Sarmiento v. State,
    
    93 S.W.3d 566
    , 570 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2002, pet. ref’d), or when the indictment
    contains an express allegation that a deadly weapon was used, see 
    LaFleur, 106 S.W.3d at 99
    .
    In the case at bar, both counts of the indictment contained an express allegation that
    a deadly weapon was used: “And it is further presented that the defendant used or exhibited a
    deadly weapon, to wit: a motor vehicle, during the commission of or immediate flight from said
    offense.” The jury’s verdict found the defendant “guilty of intoxication manslaughter, as charged
    in Count One of the indictment” and “guilty of intoxication manslaughter, as charged in Count Two
    of the indictment.”
    Odum contends that this verdict does not include an affirmative finding that he used
    a deadly weapon. He argues that, because the indictment in this case included the specific allegation
    that a deadly weapon was used, when the jury found him “guilty of intoxication manslaughter as
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    charged” and not simply “guilty as charged,” the jury found him guilty of the intoxication
    manslaughter offense only and was required to affirmatively answer a special issue on the use of a
    deadly weapon or otherwise specifically reference the use of a deadly weapon in its verdict in order
    to make an affirmative finding. We disagree.
    A defendant is not indicted for or found guilty of an affirmative finding; he is indicted
    for and found guilty of a specific offense. In this case, Odum was indicted for intoxication
    manslaughter. As a result, Odum would have been found guilty “of intoxication manslaughter”
    whether the jury found him “guilty as charged” in the indictment or “guilty of intoxication
    manslaughter as charged” in the indictment. Therefore, we hold that the insertion of the phrase “of
    intoxication manslaughter” does not take the verdict out of the first category described by the court
    of criminal appeals in Polk. 
    See 693 S.W.2d at 394
    . Nor is there any requirement that a jury answer
    a special issue on the use of a deadly weapon when the indictment separately and specifically alleges
    its use. 
    Id. (“Thus, if
    the indictment by allegation specifically places the issue before the trier of
    fact . . . then an affirmative finding is de facto made when the defendant is found guilty ‘as charged
    in the indictment.’”) (emphasis added).
    Each count of the indictment in this case specifically alleged that Odum committed
    intoxication manslaughter and that he used a “deadly weapon, to wit: a motor vehicle” in the
    commission of that offense. The jury then found Odum guilty of intoxication manslaughter as
    charged. By finding Odum guilty of the offenses as charged, the jury made an affirmative finding
    that he used a deadly weapon. Therefore, the trial court did not err in entering a deadly weapon
    finding in the judgment. We overrule Odum’s sole point of error.
    5
    CONCLUSION
    Because we hold that the jury’s verdict included an affirmative finding that Odum
    used a deadly weapon, we affirm the judgment of conviction.
    __________________________________________
    Diane M. Henson, Justice
    Before Justices Patterson, Waldrop and Henson
    Affirmed
    Filed: April 17, 2009
    Do Not Publish
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