Dustin Wade Hestand AKA Dustin W. Hestand v. State ( 2020 )


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  •                      In the
    Court of Appeals
    Second Appellate District of Texas
    at Fort Worth
    ___________________________
    No. 02-18-00334-CR
    ___________________________
    DUSTIN WADE HESTAND AKA DUSTIN W. HESTAND, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    On Appeal from 355th District Court
    Hood County, Texas
    Trial Court No. CR13595
    Before Sudderth, C.J.; Gabriel and Birdwell, JJ.
    Opinion on Remand by Justice Gabriel
    OPINION ON REMAND
    Appellant Dustin Wade Hestand appeals from his fifteen-year sentence arising
    from his conviction for possession of less than one gram of methamphetamine. In a
    single issue, he argues that the available punishment range was invalidly enhanced
    from a state-jail felony to a second-degree felony partially based on a prior juvenile
    adjudication. On original submission, we determined that Hestand had procedurally
    defaulted this issue; the Court of Criminal Appeals vacated our judgment, explaining
    that Hestand was raising an illegal-sentence claim that could be raised for the first
    time on appeal. Hestand v. State, No. PD-0513-19, 
    2019 WL 5784183
    , at *1 (Tex.
    Crim. App. Nov. 6, 2019) (per curiam) (not designated for publication). But even
    though preserved, Hestand’s argument is without merit, and we again affirm the trial
    court’s judgment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Hestand was indicted for possession of less than one gram of
    methamphetamine, a state-jail felony.         See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann.
    § 481.115(a)–(b); Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 12.35(a). The indictment included two
    enhancement paragraphs, alleging that Hestand had been convicted of the felony
    offenses of possession of methamphetamine in 2013 and of the manufacture or
    delivery of a controlled substance in 2008. The indictment further contained three
    habitual-offender paragraphs, alleging that Hestand had been convicted of the felony
    offenses of bail jumping and possession of a controlled substance in 2008 and had
    2
    been adjudicated as a juvenile of engaging in delinquent conduct for unauthorized use
    of a motor vehicle in 2001. Before trial, the State filed a notice that it intended to
    “elevate” the applicable punishment range from a state-jail felony to a second-degree
    felony by proving five prior-offense allegations—(1) Hestand’s 2013 possession
    conviction as an enhancement, (2) Hestand’s 2008 manufacture or delivery conviction
    as an enhancement, (3) Hestand’s 2008 bail-jumping conviction as an enhancement,
    (4) Hestand’s 2008 possession conviction as an enhancement, and (5) Hestand’s 2001
    juvenile adjudication as a “Habitual Count.” See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 12.425(b).
    See generally Brooks v. State, 
    957 S.W.2d 30
    , 33–34 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (recognizing
    State may notify defendant of sentence-enhancement convictions in a notice filed at
    least ten days before trial and is not required to amend indictment).
    A jury found Hestand guilty of the indicted offense. At the punishment trial,
    the State proceeded on two of the noticed enhancements—the 2008 manufacture or
    delivery conviction and the 2008 bail-jumping conviction—and on the habitual count,
    which was Hestand’s 2001 juvenile adjudication for the delinquent conduct of
    unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. Hestand pleaded not true to each.
    To prove the enhancements and the habitual count, the State introduced, and
    the trial court admitted, the penitentiary packets regarding the 2008 felony convictions
    and similar evidence regarding the 2001 juvenile adjudication. The 2001 juvenile
    adjudication, based on the delinquent conduct of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle,
    3
    had resulted in Hestand’s commitment to a Texas Juvenile Justice Department1
    (TJJD) facility “for an undetermined period of time not to exceed the time when he
    shall be 21 years of age or until duly discharged.” In the commitment order, the
    juvenile court recognized that Hestand had been adjudged delinquent three times
    previously, had unsuccessfully been through placement services, and had nevertheless
    continued to engage in illegal behavior. Accordingly, the juvenile court found that
    Hestand put himself and the community at risk and committed Hestand to a secure
    TJJD facility for an indeterminate term. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 54.04(c),
    54.04(d)(2), 54.04013.
    The State also introduced evidence that Hestand had been convicted of
    offenses involving controlled substances four other times between 2004 and 2015 and
    that he had been adjudicated of engaging in delinquent conduct—misdemeanor
    possession of two grams or less of marijuana—in 2000. The jury additionally heard
    that Hestand had been convicted of assault involving family violence in 2016, of
    misdemeanor theft in 2015, and of the violation of a protective order in 2016.
    The jury charge on punishment included instructions regarding the 2008
    convictions for manufacture or delivery of a controlled substance and for bail
    jumping and regarding the 2001 juvenile adjudication. The trial court instructed that
    1
    The commitment order referred to the Texas Youth Commission, which was
    the former name of the TJJD. See Act of May 5, 2011, 82nd Leg., R.S., ch. 85,
    § 4.001(b), 2011 Tex. Gen. Laws 366, 441; see, e.g., In re N.G.-D., No. 03-14-00437-CV,
    
    2016 WL 105948
    , at *1 n.1 (Tex. App.—Austin Jan. 8, 2016, no pet.) (mem. op.).
    4
    if the jury found the enhancement paragraphs and the habitual count true, then it
    could assess punishment for “any term of not more than twenty (20) years or less than
    two (2) years”—the available punishment range for a second-degree felony. See Tex.
    Penal Code Ann. § 12.33. The jury found the enhancement paragraphs and habitual
    count true and assessed his sentence at fifteen years’ confinement.
    Hestand filed a pro se motion for new trial and argued that his sentence had
    been improperly enhanced through use of the 2001 juvenile adjudication, which had
    been based on the state-jail-felony offense of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. See
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 31.07(b); see also 
    id. § 12.425(b)
    (prohibiting use of state-jail
    felonies to enhance punishment range from that of a state-jail felony to a second-
    degree felony). The trial court held a nonevidentiary hearing on the motion on
    July 20, 2018, and orally denied it on the record. Because the trial court never entered
    a written order denying the motion, it was deemed denied on September 19, 2018—
    seventy-five days after sentence was imposed in open court. See Tex. R. App. P.
    21.8(b)–(c); State v. Zavala, 
    28 S.W.3d 658
    , 659 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg
    2000, pet. ref’d).
    II. SENTENCE ENHANCEMENT
    BASED ON PRIOR JUVENILE ADJUDICATION
    Under certain circumstances, an adjudication in juvenile court may be used as a
    prior felony conviction to enhance the available punishment range in later criminal
    proceedings. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 51.13(d). If a child is adjudged to have
    5
    engaged in conduct constituting “a felony offense” and if the child is committed to a
    TJJD facility, the juvenile adjudication “is a final felony conviction only for the
    purposes of . . . Section 12.425, Penal Code.” 
    Id. Section 12.425,
    in turn, provides
    that a state-jail felony may be enhanced for punishment purposes to a second-degree
    felony if “the defendant has previously [and sequentially] been finally convicted of
    two felonies other than a state jail felony.” Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 12.425(b).
    Hestand asserts that because unauthorized use of a motor vehicle is classified
    as a state-jail felony in the Penal Code, his juvenile adjudication based on his
    commission of that offense cannot be used for sentencing-enhancement purposes.
    Hestand is not arguing that juvenile adjudications can never be used to enhance
    punishment; he asserts that his 2001 juvenile adjudication cannot be used to enhance
    his punishment for the primary offense because the prior adjudication was based on a
    state-jail felony, which cannot be used to enhance punishment. See id.; see also Hestand
    v. State, 
    587 S.W.3d 409
    , 410–11 (Tex. Crim. App. 2019) (Yeary, J., dissenting)
    (“Appellant has never argued that the use of his juvenile adjudication to enhance his
    punishment to a second-degree felony was improper because it was only a juvenile
    adjudication per se. His position on appeal has been, consistently, that even if a
    juvenile adjudication may count as a ‘final felony conviction’ for purposes of Section
    12.425(b), a juvenile adjudication for what amounts to a state-jail felony does not.”).
    Statutory construction is an issue of law that we review de novo. Curry v. State,
    No. PD-0577-18, 
    2019 WL 5587330
    , at *4 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 30, 2019). We are
    6
    guided by the language used and, if unambiguous, must “effectuate that plain
    language.” Id.; see also Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 1.05(a) (providing construction of
    Penal Code must be according to terms’ “fair import”); Arteaga v. State, 
    521 S.W.3d 329
    , 334 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017) (holding courts look first to plain language in
    statutory construction).   Here, the Family Code clearly provides that a juvenile
    adjudication based on conduct constituting a “felony offense” may later be used for
    sentence-enhancement purposes under Section 12.425(b) if the adjudication resulted
    in a commitment to the TJJD. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 51.13(d). In the Penal Code, a
    felony is defined as “an offense so designated by law or punishable by death or
    confinement in a penitentiary,” and state-jail felonies are expressly classified as
    felonies. Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 1.07(a)(23), 12.04(a); see Garrett v. State, 
    377 S.W.3d 697
    , 704 n.29 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012) (concluding state-jail felonies are governed by
    community-supervision provisions applicable to felonies); Tapps v. State, 
    294 S.W.3d 175
    , 178–79 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (holding prior state-jail felony may be used to
    secure later conviction for possession of a firearm by a felon and stating “state-jail
    felonies are felonies unless the language of the particular statute in question indicates
    otherwise”).
    As the State points out, portions of the Juvenile Justice Code do not
    differentiate between state-jail felonies and felonies of degree, instead referring to
    felony offenses generally. See, e.g., Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 51.03(a)(1), 51.13(d),
    54.0401(c)(2), 54.04013. Other sections indicate that when the legislature intended to
    7
    exclude state-jail felonies from the operation of a particular provision, it clearly did so.
    See, e.g., 
    id. §§ 51.031(a),
    52.031(a), 53.045, 54.02(a).     In the context of Section
    51.13(d), nothing indicates that the legislature intended for the words “felony offense”
    to exclude state-jail felonies, especially given the inclusive definition and classification
    of felonies in the Penal Code. See 
    Garrett, 377 S.W.3d at 704
    n.29; see also Tex. Gov’t
    Code Ann. § 311.011(a) (mandating statutory words and phrases to be construed in
    context); Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 1.05(b) (recognizing applicability of Government
    Code Section 311.011 to construction of Penal Code).
    The only express prerequisites for juvenile adjudications to later qualify as a
    state-jail-felony sentencing enhancement are that the adjudication must have been
    based on a felony offense and must have resulted in the child’s commitment to the
    TJJD under specified circumstances. See 29 Thomas S. Morgan & Harold C. Gaither
    Jr., Texas Practice: Juvenile Law and Practice § 13:27 (3d ed. 2019). Hestand’s 2001
    juvenile commitment order contained both. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 54.04(d)(2).
    Under the plain language of Section 51.13(d), Hestand’s 2001 juvenile adjudication,
    even though based on conduct classified as a state-jail felony in the Penal Code, could
    validly be used to enhance the available punishment range under Section 12.425(b).2
    2
    For his contention that the State improperly enhanced his sentence, Hestand
    relies on Thomas v. State, 
    481 S.W.3d 685
    , 693 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2015), rev’d on
    other grounds, 
    516 S.W.3d 498
    , 501, 504 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017). Thomas addressed
    allowable sentence enhancements under Section 12.425(a), which is not at issue here.
    
    Id. at 693.
    8
    The State recognizes in its brief that the Amarillo Court of Appeals has reached
    an opposite conclusion. In Fortier v. State, Jody Lewis Fortier was charged with the
    second-degree felony offense of burglary of a habitation. 
    105 S.W.3d 697
    , 698 (Tex.
    App.—Amarillo 2003, pet. ref’d) (op. on reh’g).          The indictment contained two
    enhancement paragraphs—Fortier’s prior convictions for burglary of a building and
    for “unlawfully using a motor vehicle.” 
    Id. Fortier pleaded
    guilty to the charged
    offense, the State waived the burglary-of-a-building enhancement, Fortier pleaded true
    to the unlawful-use enhancement, and the trial court deferred adjudicating his guilt
    and placed him on community supervision. 
    Id. The State
    later moved to adjudicate
    Fortier’s guilt, and the trial court admonished Fortier that if his guilt were adjudicated,
    he would be subject to first-degree felony punishment based on the enhancement
    paragraph. 
    Id. at 698–99.
    The trial court revoked Fortier’s community supervision,
    adjudicated him guilty of burglary of a habitation, and sentenced him to seventeen
    years’ confinement.     
    Id. at 699.
       The court of appeals held that because the
    enhancement allegation involved a state-jail felony, it could not be used to enhance
    the punishment range available for the burglary offense under the plain language of
    Section 12.42(d). 
    Id. at 699–700.
    On the State’s further motion for rehearing, the court of appeals clarified that
    the unlawful-use conviction arose in the context of a juvenile adjudication but rejected
    the State’s argument that the juvenile adjudication was a final felony conviction under
    the Family Code that was eligible to be used for sentencing enhancement under
    9
    Section 12.42(f). 
    Id. at 701
    (op. on further reh’g). The court concluded that because
    the adjudicated delinquent conduct involved the unauthorized use of a motor vehicle,
    a state-jail felony, it could not be used for enhancement purposes under Section
    12.42(e). 
    Id. at 701
    –02.
    As Judge Kevin Yeary, joined by Judge Michelle Slaughter, noted in a dissent in
    the instant case, Fortier “did not speak to the enhancement of primary offenses that
    are state-jail felonies” as is at issue in the instant case. 
    Hestand, 587 S.W.3d at 411
    n.3
    (Yeary, J., dissenting). Judge Yeary also recognized that Fortier was decided “before
    Section 12.425 even existed,” and “largely relied upon former Section 12.42(e), which
    was repealed in 2011, in the same legislative act that created Section 12.425.” 
    Id. Further, the
    Amarillo Court of Appeals did not specifically address Section 51.13(d)
    or analyze its specific language allowing juvenile adjudications to be used as
    punishment enhancements in specified circumstances.              We find Fortier to be
    unpersuasive here because we must focus on the plain language of the statutes at
    issue. See, e.g., Curry, 
    2019 WL 5587330
    , at *4. The court in Fortier was not asked to
    address the statutory language at issue today and was not presented with the same
    factual context that we look at today.
    III. CONCLUSION
    Although Hestand’s 2001 juvenile adjudication was based on the commission
    of a state-jail felony, Section 51.13(d) of the Family Code allows juvenile adjudications
    based on “a felony offense,” regardless of degree, to subsequently be used to enhance
    10
    a state-jail felony offense’s punishment range under Section 12.425(b) of the Penal
    Code. Accordingly, we conclude that Hestand’s sentence was not illegally enhanced
    partially through the use of the 2001 juvenile adjudication, which arose from the
    commission of a felony offense and resulted in Hestand’s indeterminate commitment
    to a TJJD facility. We overrule Hestand’s appellate issue and affirm the trial court’s
    judgment. See Tex. R. App. 43.2(a).
    /s/ Lee Gabriel
    Lee Gabriel
    Justice
    Publish
    Delivered: February 27, 2020
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 02-18-00334-CR

Filed Date: 2/27/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/29/2020