Adam Terrell Rhyne v. State , 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 9654 ( 2012 )


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  •                           COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 02-11-00410-CR
    Adam Terrell Rhyne                        §    From County Court
    §    of Clay County (13538)
    v.                                        §    November 21, 2012
    §    Opinion by Justice Gabriel
    The State of Texas                        §    (p)
    JUDGMENT
    This court has considered the record on appeal in this case and holds that
    there was error in the trial court‘s judgment. It is ordered that the judgment of the
    trial court is reversed and this case is remanded for a new trial.
    SECOND DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    By_________________________________
    Justice Lee Gabriel
    COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 02-11-00410-CR
    ADAM TERRELL RHYNE                                                     APPELLANT
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                           STATE
    ----------
    FROM COUNTY COURT OF CLAY COUNTY
    ----------
    MEMORANDUM OPINION1
    ----------
    Introduction
    Appellant Adam Terrell Rhyne appeals, seeking a reversal and remand for
    a new trial after a jury found him guilty of driving while intoxicated (DWI). In two
    points, he claims that (1) the trial court abused its discretion by admitting breath-
    test results, and (2) the State failed to prove venue. We sustain his first point
    and reverse.
    1
    See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
    2
    Background Facts and Procedural History
    Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) Trooper Zachary Ward was the
    only witness called to testify at Appellant‘s trial. He stopped Appellant‘s pickup
    truck around five minutes before one o‘clock on a weekend morning after
    observing it drift across the white line that separates the shoulder from the
    roadway and then back across the center line of southbound U.S. Highway 287
    near the ―Gainesville overpass.‖ Trooper Ward conceded that Appellant was not
    speeding or committing any traffic offenses other than failing to stay in his lane.
    Appellant pulled over without incident.     Trooper Ward approached him,
    asked him for his driver‘s license and insurance, and also asked if he had been
    drinking. Appellant admitted that he had.
    Trooper Ward ordered him out of his truck, administered field sobriety
    tests, and formed the opinion that Appellant was ―intoxicated by alcohol.‖ He
    arrested Appellant for DWI, and took him to the Clay County Sheriff‘s Office,
    which was ―a minute or two‖ away.
    The trooper‘s patrol car was equipped with a dash-cam video recorder that
    recorded the stop, but the recording was lost by the time Appellant‘s case went to
    trial. On the stand, Trooper Ward could not recall whether Appellant‘s eyes had
    been bloodshot or his speech slurred, and Trooper Ward admitted that the
    offense report indicated neither of these facts nor that Appellant had fumbled for
    his license or insurance. Trooper Ward also admitted that the report did not
    mention that Appellant smelled of alcohol, but the trooper explained that he had a
    3
    cold on the night he arrested Appellant that had interfered with his sense of
    smell.
    Appellant agreed to take a breath test at the jail.        Trooper Ward
    administered the test on an Intoxilyzer 5000, and Appellant provided two breath
    samples that yielded results of 0.148 and 0.141, respectively.
    When the State offered these results at trial, Appellant objected that the
    State had not laid the proper predicate because it had offered no testimony that
    the intoxilyzer had been properly operating on the day of Appellant‘s breath test.
    The trial court replied, ―I‘m going to overrule your objection. I realize where you
    are coming from. The intoxilyzers have been around long enough that I feel like
    that the State has proved their reliability.‖
    Trooper Ward then testified that the intoxilyzer was working properly on
    that day because otherwise it would have ―kicked out a negative results [sic].‖
    He further testified that the intoxilyzer is maintained periodically by a technical
    supervisor who inspects it and makes sure it is working properly.
    Trooper Ward continued to refer to the technical supervisor as Appellant
    questioned him on voir dire:
    BY [Counsel for Appellant]:
    Q. Trooper Ward, can you give us a scientific basis for the
    operation of the Intoxilyzer 5000?
    A. No. You would have to subpoena a technical supervisor to
    do that.
    4
    Q. And as far as –– you just answered a question that you
    believe this is checked and maintained by a technical supervisor.
    Do you have the records of this instrument with you?
    A. No, I do not.
    Q. Do you know if it was tested to determine whether the ––
    the known sample was correct or not?
    A. If it wasn‘t, the technical supervisor would have previously
    taken it out of service and replaced it with another intoxilyzer.
    Q. Yeah. If that had happened.         But you don‘t have the
    records of this, right?
    A. No, I do not.
    Q. Okay. So you don‘t know if that next test –– if there was
    another test of that intoxilyzer machine showed it to be out of –– out
    of tolerance, do you?
    A. No, I do not.
    Q. Okay. And as far as the pressure switch on there, do you
    know if the pressure switch was working properly so that the tone
    sounded when enough pressure was going through there?
    A. The tone sounded so it must have been.
    Q. What if the pressure switch wasn‘t operating correctly and
    still sounded a tone, do you know if that can happen?
    A. You would have to take that up with the technical
    supervisor. I do not know the internal workings. I‘ve only been
    certified to operate it.
    Q. Right. Right. And so your –– the limits of your ability are
    to go into the machine, turn it on, and march it through the steps that
    you have been trained to do?
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. But as far as how that works or the reliability of that
    specific machine on the date of November 25th, 2007, the only thing
    you can say is that that printed out a result that day?
    A. That is correct.
    Q. But whether it was actually working correctly or not as
    tested by the technical supervisor as you say on a routine basis, you
    don‘t know that?
    A. It would have not printed out a result if it hadn‘t been
    operating correctly? [sic]
    Q. How do you know that?
    A. ‗Cause they never have in the past.
    Q. Well, you‘re saying that it can‘t print out and be wrong?
    A. You would have to take that up with a technical supervisor.
    Q. So you don‘t know if it could print out and be wrong, right?
    A. I have been instructed in class that it will not.
    Q. But you don‘t know that it will or will not so if you get a slip
    out you‘re going to take that as being true and you don‘t really know
    whether it is or not because that‘s what the technical supervisor‘s job
    is, right?
    A. The technical supervisor advised us that ––
    Q. No. I didn‘t ask you ––
    A. –– if it prints out a result ––
    Q. I‘m not asking what you were told. I am asking what you
    can testify to as you sit here today.
    A. That‘s what I know. A technical supervisor told me if it
    printed that out it worked correctly.
    6
    Q. Okay. But if a technical supervisor comes and five days
    later finds out that that sample, reference sample, is out of tolerance
    but yet prints out right they‘d have to go back and invalidate all those
    test[s], right?
    A. I don‘t know.
    Q. Okay. Again, I think I‘ve asked you this. On November
    25th, at 1:26 a.m. of 2007, you don‘t know whether –– you can‘t sit
    here and say of your own knowledge that that Intoxilyzer 5000 was
    working correctly that morning?
    A. It printed out a test sample and it would have given an
    invalid test if it hadn‘t been working correctly.
    Q. And that‘s because ––
    A. That‘s –– it‘s been designed to do that.
    Q. And that‘s really outside of your ––
    A. I cannot give you the ––
    Q. –– training?
    A. –– I cannot give you the internal workings of it, no.
    Q. Okay. And so if the pressure switch wasn‘t working and so
    they weren‘t getting deep alveolar air from the lungs of the person in
    order to test, you don‘t know that?
    A. It would have kicked out an invalid test.
    Q. Unless the pressure switch was not working right, correct?
    A. I don‘t believe the pressure switch would have allowed it to
    do that.
    Q. What do you mean you don‘t believe that? Do you know
    that?
    A. Yeah, I‘ve been told if it prints out a test record then the
    machine is operating correctly.
    7
    Q. Okay. Same thing. So if I ask you, what if the reference
    sample is out of tolerance but it prints out close enough but really
    the true value was different but your answer is going to be if the test
    record prints out it‘s operating properly?
    A. If the reference sample is out of tolerance there is a
    reference sample in there and we have been trained to replace the
    reference sample and change it out.
    Q. Yeah. But I am saying if it‘s supposed to be a certain
    value but the machine reads it at a value that‘s different than what
    the real value of it is wrong, you‘re going to say, well, if it prints out, it
    prints out?
    A. It wouldn‘t print out.
    Q. Oh, it wouldn‘t?
    A. The instrument would recognize that the reference sample
    was out of tolerance and would not –– it would kick out an invalid
    test and I‘d have to ––
    Q. What if ––
    A. –– to request a blood sample.
    Q. What if the light source –– ‗cause you‘re familiar with
    infrared spectroscopy, right?
    A. Sure.
    Q. And you know how that works in the machine?
    A. Vaguely.
    Q. Okay.
    A. They gave us a little spin down of it.
    Q. Okay. So if the light source is weak and doesn‘t produce
    as much light as it should and so reads it incorrectly about how
    8
    much light is being absorbed by the alcohol molecules in there and
    prints it out wrong, it‘s going to be right because it prints out, right?
    A. Could you restate the question?
    Q. Can the light source ––
    A. You lost me there.
    Q. Can the light source be weak and not produce the amount
    of light that should be in there and the amount that should be
    absorbed –– ‗cause you know that‘s how they measure it are the
    molecules of alcohol that absorb light from one side to the other,
    right?
    A. That‘s correct.
    Q. All right. So if the light source that comes out of there is
    weaker and not as much as absorbs as it should be but it still prints
    out, it‘s still right; is that right?
    A. I couldn‘t say. You‘d have to talk to a technical supervisor
    about that.
    Q. But as far as you know if it prints out it‘s right; that‘s your
    answer?
    A. That is what I have been told.
    Appellant re-urged his objection that the proper predicate had not been
    laid, the objection was overruled, and the breath-test results were admitted and
    published to the jury.
    After the parties had rested and as the trial court recessed the jury to
    prepare the charge, one juror asked if the jury would be allowed to look at the
    evidence of Appellant‘s breath-test results, which had been admitted as State‘s
    Exhibit Number One.
    9
    JUROR: Excuse me, Judge?
    THE COURT: Yes?
    JUROR: Are we allowed to look at that Exhibit No. 1?
    THE COURT: Not until you go to the deliberation room. It has
    been passed to you once already.
    JUROR: Right.
    THE COURT: But you can request it at that time.
    JUROR: Okay.
    During closing arguments, the prosecutor noted that Appellant was
    arrested after he had drifted out of his lane and failed the field sobriety tests.
    But the prosecutor stressed the evidence of the breath-test results. He
    observed that it showed Appellant‘s alcohol concentration was almost twice the
    legal limit, and he argued that it substantiated the facts obtained at the scene.
    Further, he conceded that it was the ―best evidence‖ of whether Appellant was
    intoxicated:
    And you‘ve got a test that‘s 40–something minutes, 45 minutes, after
    the time of driving and that test is .14. That is the best evidence we
    have of what –– of whether or not this Defendant was intoxicated.
    The prosecutor also argued that the intoxilyzer was working properly
    because Trooper Ward said it was and that Appellant, himself, could have
    subpoenaed a technical supervisor:
    That –– the machine was working properly. You heard
    Trooper Ward testify that it was working properly. The Defense has
    the exact same subpoena power that I have. They could have
    subpoenaed the technical breath test operator [sic] also. But it‘s
    10
    easier to tell what the State didn‘t do than what actually did happen.
    I mean, that‘s a .14.
    The jury found Appellant guilty and the trial court sentenced him to six
    months in jail, probated for six months, and a $2000 fine.
    Venue
    In his second point, Appellant raises for the first time the issue whether the
    State proved venue, that is, whether the events forming the basis of Appellant‘s
    conviction occurred in Clay County.
    Unless an appellant timely disputed venue in the trial court, or unless the
    record affirmatively shows the contrary, the rules require that we presume that
    venue was proven in the county as alleged in the charging instrument. See Tex.
    R. App. P. 44.2(c); Holdridge v. State, 
    707 S.W.2d 18
    , 20–21 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1986). Appellant did not challenge the State‘s proof of venue in the trial court.
    He did not object to the information‘s allegation that the offense occurred in Clay
    County, he did not cross-examine the State‘s witness on the issue, he did not
    present evidence showing that the events for which he was prosecuted occurred
    in some county other than Clay County (and we have found none), he did not
    move for a directed verdict on the ground (or any other ground) that the State
    failed to prove venue, he did not object to the jury charge, he did not argue to the
    jury that the State had not proven venue, and he did not move for a new trial.
    Accordingly, we hold that Appellant failed to raise the issue of venue and that the
    11
    presumption that venue was proved in the trial court stands. See 
    Holdridge, 707 S.W.2d at 22
    . We overrule Appellant‘s second point.
    Breath-Test Predicate
    In his first point, Appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion
    by admitting the results of his breath test over his objection that the State failed
    to lay the proper predicate. More specifically, he complains that the State failed
    to establish that (1) the intoxilyzer machine was functioning properly on the day
    of Appellant‘s test; (2) the intoxilyzer was periodically supervised by one
    understanding the scientific theory behind it; and (3) the results were interpreted
    by a witness qualified to do so. See Harrell v. State, 
    725 S.W.2d 208
    , 209 (Tex.
    Crim. App.1986). We agree.
    In Harrell, the court of criminal appeals established the predicate for
    intoxilyzer-test results, holding that if the State seeks to introduce the results in
    evidence the State must establish: (1) that the machine functioned properly on
    the day of the test as evidenced by a reference sample having been run through
    it; (2) the existence of periodic supervision over the machine and operation by
    one who understands the scientific theory behind it; and (3) proof of the results of
    the test by a witness or witnesses qualified to translate and interpret such results.
    See 
    id., at 209–10;
    Kercho v. State, 
    948 S.W.2d 34
    , 37 (Tex. App.––Houston
    [14th Dist.] 1997, pet. ref‘d).
    Professors Dix and Schmolesky have observed that the predicate for
    breath-test results is typically met by testimony of two witnesses. 40 George E.
    12
    Dix & John M. Schmolesky, Tex. Practice: Criminal Practice & Procedure, §
    14:84 (3d ed. 2011); see Reynolds v. State, 
    204 S.W.3d 386
    , 387 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2006); 
    Kercho, 948 S.W.2d at 37
    ; Guardiola v. State, No. 03-08-00399-CR,
    
    2010 WL 1170204
    , at *3–4 (Tex. App.––Austin Mar. 23, 2010, no pet.) (mem.
    op., not designated for publication); Smith v. State, No. 05-96-01724-CR, 
    1998 WL 908905
    , at *1 (Tex. App.––Dallas Dec. 31, 1998, pet. ref‘d) (not designated
    for publication). The certification framework established by DPS distinguishes
    between persons who are certified to administer breath tests—operators of
    breath testing devices––and those certified to function in a supervisory
    capacity—technical supervisors.      See French v. State, 
    484 S.W.2d 716
    , 719
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1972) (―[A]n officer may administer a breath test even though he
    is not otherwise qualified to interpret the results, and the standards required to
    qualify one to administer the test are far less than those qualifying to interpret the
    result[.]‖); 37 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 19.5 (operator certification), 19.6; (technical-
    supervisor certification) (West Mar. 26, 2006). Certification in the latter capacity
    requires ―knowledge and understanding of the scientific theory and principles as
    to the operation of the instrument and reference sample device.‖               
    Id., § 19.6(b)(4).
      ―Thus,‖ Professors Dix and Schmolesky have noted, ―a person
    certified as a technical supervisor is generally required to meet the second and
    third requirements of the Harrell predicate.‖ Dix & Schmolesky, § 14:84. In other
    words, the technical supervisor is usually the one who testifies that he or she
    understands the scientific theory behind the intoxilyzer; periodically supervises
    13
    the intoxilyzer program in the locale where the defendant took the test; has the
    qualifications necessary to interpret the results; and actually does so at trial. See
    
    Harrell, 725 S.W.2d at 209
    –10.
    With these principles in mind, Professors Dix and Schmolesky have
    outlined the typical manner in which breath-test evidence is presented at trial:
    First, the officer who administers the test testifies that he is
    certified as an intoxilyzer operator, that he administered the test to
    the defendant and did so in accordance with the Department‘s
    regulations, and that the results are contained in a data readout that
    the State offers as an exhibit. As part of this testimony, the operator
    testifies that he ran a reference test on the intoxilyzer and what
    results were produced by this reference test.
    Second, an officer who was the technical supervisor with
    supervisory responsibility for the machine used in the test testifies
    that he is certified by the Department as a technical supervisor, the
    machine used was certified by the Department for testing purposes,
    the machine used was checked periodically to assure that it
    operated properly, and that the reference sample used by the officer
    administering the test was properly prepared. This witness generally
    asserts that he understands the scientific theory of the device and
    interprets the numbers on the data readout. He may also explain
    the reference test and what is meant by the results of this process.
    Dix & Schmolesky, § 14:84.
    Here, Appellant‘s argument is that the trial court erred by admitting the
    results of his breath test because no one testified that the machine used was
    certified by DPS for testing purposes and was checked periodically to assure that
    it operated properly or that the reference sample used by the officer
    administering the test was properly prepared.       Further, no one asserted any
    understanding of the scientific theory of the device, and no one interpreted the
    14
    numbers on the data readout. In fact, whenever Appellant asked any questions
    touching on the scientific theory of the intoxilyzer, Trooper Ward referred him to
    the technical supervisor.
    The State responds that in order to satisfy the predicate for intoxilyzer
    results, it only had to satisfy the three-part Kelly test for reliability of scientific
    evidence. In other words, the State argues that it had to prove by clear and
    convincing evidence only that (1) the underlying theory is valid; (2) the technique
    applying the theory is valid; and (3) the technique was properly applied in this
    case. See Kelly v. State, 
    824 S.W.2d 568
    , 573 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992); see also
    Hartman v. State, 
    946 S.W.2d 60
    , 63 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (holding that Kelly
    applies to all scientific evidence). Further, the State asserts, it needed only to
    have proven the third of the Kelly criteria because, as the court of criminal
    appeals observed in Reynolds, the legislature has already determined that the
    underlying science behind intoxilyzer testing is valid and that the technique
    applying it is valid as long as the test is administered by individuals certified by
    and using methods approved by DPS rules. See 
    Reynolds, 204 S.W.3d at 390
    .
    Thus, the State argues, in order for the trial court to have properly served its
    ―gate-keeper‖ function, it need only have determined that the intoxilyzer
    technique was properly applied in this case.
    The State points to Trooper Ward‘s testimony that he was certified to
    administer the intoxilyzer test, he waited the requisite fifteen-minute period, and
    he administered two tests as required by law.
    15
    We do not read Appellant‘s claim to contest these aspects of Trooper
    Ward‘s testimony. He does not appear to challenge the evidence that Trooper
    Ward was qualified to administer the test. Rather, the rubbing point in this case
    is whether the intoxilyzer was maintained by someone with an understanding of
    the scientific theory behind it and, more importantly, whether the intoxilyzer was
    operating properly on the day that Appellant submitted to testing.
    On this latter point, the State offers up Trooper Ward‘s testimony that he
    knew the machine was operating properly because otherwise ―it would have
    kicked out a negative results [sic] saying it was not working properly.‖ This begs
    the question––as Appellant‘s counsel put to the trooper at numerous points on
    voir dire––what if the machine was not working properly but still printed a result
    that was plausible but inaccurate? Trooper Ward‘s response to questions along
    these lines varied from denying the premise to suggesting that counsel subpoena
    the technical supervisor. It started with the first question:
    Q. Trooper Ward, can you give us a scientific basis for the operation
    of the Intoxilyzer 5000?
    A. No. You would have to subpoena a technical supervisor for that.
    And it continued:
    Q. Do you know if it was tested to determine whether the –– the
    known sample was correct or not?
    A. If it wasn‘t, the technical supervisor would have previously taken
    it out of service and replaced it with another intoxilyzer.
    .....
    16
    Q. What if the pressure switch wasn‘t operating correctly and still
    sounded a tone, do you know if that can happen?
    A. You would have to take that up with the technical supervisor. . . .
    I‘ve only been certified to operate it.
    .....
    Q. But whether it was actually working correctly or not as tested by
    the technical supervisor as you say on a routine basis, you don‘t
    know that?
    A. It would have not have printed out a result if it hadn‘t been
    operating correctly[.]
    Q. How do you know that?
    A. ‗Cause they never have in the past.
    Q. Well, you‘re saying that it can‘t print out and be wrong?
    A. You would have to take that up with a technical supervisor.
    .....
    Q. All right. So if the light source that comes out of there is weaker
    and not as much as absorbs as it should be but it still prints out, it‘s
    still right; is that right?
    A. I couldn‘t say. You‘d have to talk to a technical supervisor about
    that?
    Q. But as far as you know if it prints out it‘s right; that‘s your
    answer?
    A. That is what I have been told.
    We review the trial court‘s decision to admit scientific evidence for an
    abuse of discretion, which means that we will not disturb it if the ruling was within
    17
    the zone of reasonable disagreement. Bigon v. State, 
    252 S.W.3d 360
    , 367
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2008).
    We are not persuaded by the State‘s assertion that Trooper Ward‘s
    testimony was sufficient because ―[e]vidence of one who holds a DPS‘
    certification is sufficient to meet the Kelly criteria.‖ The State cites Reynolds for
    this assertion, but omits an important qualifier from that opinion: the complete
    sentence from Reynolds is, ―The fact of certification is sufficient to meet the Kelly
    criteria with respect to the competence of the breath test 
    operator.‖ 204 S.W.3d at 390
    (emphasis added). As we have indicated, Appellant does not challenge
    Trooper Ward‘s competence as an operator.
    Moreover, the issue and the critical facts in Reynolds differ from those
    presented in this case. There, the issue was whether the operator of the breath-
    testing apparatus was required to understand the scientific and technological
    principles behind the device. 
    Id. at 387.
    The court of criminal appeals held that
    the operator need not demonstrate such understanding.            
    Id. at 391.
       And,
    importantly for our purposes, in Reynolds the State was able to produce another
    witness, a certified technical supervisor who was responsible for overseeing the
    particular intoxilyzer the trooper in that case operated. 
    Id. at 387.
    The technical
    supervisor testified that she was familiar with the science and technology upon
    which the device was based and that she had first-hand knowledge that it was
    maintained and in good working order on the date the trooper used it to test the
    appellant. 
    Id. Similar testimony
    is what the State failed to produce here.
    18
    While we defer to the trial court‘s implied determination that Trooper Ward
    was credible, we hold that it was outside the zone of reasonable disagreement
    for the trial court to have concluded from the trooper‘s testimony, credible though
    it may have been, that the State had shown by clear and convincing evidence
    that the intoxilyzer had been properly maintained by someone who understood
    the science behind it and that it was operating properly on the day of Appellant‘s
    breath test. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion by
    admitting the breath-test results in evidence. See 
    Harrell, 725 S.W.2d at 209
    .
    Having held that the trial court abused its discretion, we must determine
    whether the error affected Appellant‘s substantial rights. Tex. R. App. P. 44.2(b).
    A substantial right is affected when the error had a substantial and injurious
    effect or influence in determining the jury‘s verdict. Morales v. State, 
    32 S.W.3d 862
    , 867 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (quoting King v. State, 
    953 S.W.2d 266
    , 271
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1997)).
    Upon review of the entire record, we are left with no fair assurance that the
    trial court‘s error did not affect the jury‘s deliberations or had but a slight effect.
    See Bagheri v. State, 
    119 S.W.3d 755
    , 763 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003). The jury
    was instructed that it could find that Appellant had been intoxicated if it found that
    he had lost normal use of mental or physical faculties by reason of the
    introduction of alcohol into the body, or if he had an alcohol concentration of 0.08
    or more. The record shows that Trooper Ward pulled Appellant over late one
    night after observing his car weave twice from its lane. Appellant pulled over
    19
    appropriately and without incident. Trooper Ward determined after administering
    field sobriety tests that Appellant was intoxicated. The breath test subsequently
    administered at the jail showed that Appellant‘s breath alcohol concentration was
    nearly twice the legal limit, a fact that the State emphasized during closing
    argument. In fact, the State advised the jury that the breath-test evidence was
    the ―best evidence‖ that Appellant was intoxicated, conceding that evidence that
    Appellant had lost normal use was weaker. Even before deliberations, one juror
    asked whether the jury would be allowed to see the exhibit showing the breath-
    test results. Given the record before us, we cannot say that the trial court‘s
    erroneous admission of the breath-test results did not affect the jury‘s
    deliberations or had but a slight affect.          See Bagheri, 
    119 S.W.3d 755
    .
    Accordingly, we sustain Appellant‘s first point.
    20
    Conclusion
    Because we hold that no reasonable view of the record supports the trial
    court‘s conclusion that the intoxilyzer had been properly maintained and was
    properly operating when Appellant gave a breath sample, and because the
    record gives us no fair assurance that the error did not affect the jury‘s
    deliberations or had but a slight effect, we sustain Appellant‘s first point, reverse
    the judgment, and remand for a new trial.
    LEE GABRIEL
    JUSTICE
    PANEL: DAUPHINOT, WALKER, and GABRIEL, JJ.
    PUBLISH
    Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b)
    DELIVERED: November 21, 2012
    21