Saucedo, Andrew Melchor ( 2019 )


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  •              IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. WR-87,190-02
    EX PARTE ANDREW SAUCEDO, Applicant
    ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
    CAUSE NO. 1415435-A IN THE 262 ND DISTRICT COURT
    FROM HARRIS COUNTY
    K ELLER, P.J., filed a dissenting opinion in which K EEL, J., joined.
    Applicant knowingly possessed a controlled substance. He knew at the time of his plea that
    the substance had not yet been tested. But the State was giving him a great deal—six years’ deferred
    adjudication—so he pled guilty. Testing on the substance was complete less than two months after
    the plea,1 but for almost three years, Applicant did nothing to challenge his conviction. Now that
    his guilt has been adjudicated and he has been sentenced to ten years, Applicant wants a do-over, and
    the Court gives him one. There are three reasons this is a mistake.
    1
    Applicant was placed on deferred adjudication on January 27, 2014. According to
    Applicant’s habeas application and the trial court’s findings of fact, the Houston Police Department
    Crime Laboratory tested the substance on March 21, 2014. The habeas record contains a laboratory
    report dated March 21, 2014, which shows methylethcathinone rather than methamphetamine.
    SAUCEDO DISSENT — 2
    First, under Ex parte Broussard, Applicant has not shown that his guilty plea was
    involuntary.2 The testing did not disprove Applicant’s guilt of possessing an illegal drug; it just
    proved that he possessed a different illegal drug than the one charged.3
    Second, Applicant has not shown harm. Under the doctrine of transferred intent, he is still
    guilty of culpably possessing the drug that the testing revealed, and the punishment range for that
    drug is the same as the one with which he was charged. Consequently, Applicant is not actually
    innocent nor has he been subjected to a harsher punishment range than the offense that he actually
    committed would support.
    The general rule in post-conviction habeas proceedings is that the convicted person has the
    burden to show harm.4 To understand how harm could be shown in a case such as this, we begin
    with the fact that Applicant’s conviction was the result of a guilty plea. A guilty plea constitutes an
    admission of guilt to the charged crime.5 In pleading guilty to possession of methamphetamine,
    Applicant admitted to all of the elements of that offense. His claim now is that he is not guilty of
    possession of methamphetamine because the testing conclusively establishes that he possessed a
    different drug—methylethcathinone. This claim does not satisfy the requirements for showing actual
    innocence because Applicant could still be guilty of the lesser-included offense of attempted
    2
    
    517 S.W.3d 814
    , 820 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017).
    3
    See 
    id. 4 Ex
    parte Parrott, 
    396 S.W.3d 531
    , 534 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013).
    5
    United States v. Broce, 
    488 U.S. 563
    , 570 (1989).
    SAUCEDO DISSENT — 3
    possession of methamphetamine.6
    Applicant’s guilty plea to the methamphetamine offense and his habeas pleading and
    proceeding necessarily establish all the elements of the methylethcathinone offense. Under those
    circumstances, Applicant has effectively admitted his guilt of the methylethcathinone offense.
    Base drug-possession offenses7 ordinarily contain four elements: (1) the possession of a
    substance, (2) the amount of that substance, (3) the identity of that substance as a particular drug, and
    (4) the culpable mental state for possession of the drug.8 The possession of a substance and the
    amount of that substance were admitted by Applicant at his guilty plea, and he does not now
    challenge those admissions. Instead, the claim is that the substance possessed was a different drug
    than the one alleged, namely methylethcathinone, instead of methamphetamine. So Applicant’s
    guilty plea to the methamphetamine offense necessarily satisfied elements (1) and (2) of the
    methylethcathinone offense.
    As for element (3)—the identity of the substance as methylethcathinone—that element was
    necessarily satisfied by Applicant’s habeas pleading and this habeas proceeding. To even make his
    claim on habeas corpus, Applicant has to concede that the substance he possessed was
    methylethcathinone. He cannot claim, for example, that the chemist tested the wrong substance or
    that the testing procedure was flawed, because such claims would undermine his contention that the
    6
    See State v. Wilson, 
    324 S.W.3d 595
    , 598 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (“We hold that the term
    ‘actual innocence’ shall apply, in Texas state cases, only in circumstances in which an accused did
    not, in fact, commit the charged offense or any of the lesser- included offenses.”).
    7
    A base drug-possession offense would be one that is without enhancing elements such as
    the possession being in a drug-free zone. See TEX . HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 481.134 (drug free
    zone enhancement).
    8
    See e.g., 
    id. §§ 481.115,
    481.116.
    SAUCEDO DISSENT — 4
    testing shows he did not possess methampethamine. Applicant cannot use the identity of that
    substance when it operates in his favor but call its identity in question when it operates against him.
    And consistent with Applicant’s habeas pleading, the evidence in this habeas proceeding shows the
    substance to be methylethcathinone.
    That leaves element (4), the culpable mental state. We have said in the past that, for a
    possession-of-controlled-substance offense, the State is required to prove that the accused “knew the
    matter [possessed] was contraband.”9 If that is literally all the State is required to prove, then
    Applicant’s guilty plea to intentionally and knowingly possessing methamphetamine satisfies the
    culpable-mental-state element, and all four elements have been established.
    But methamphetamine and methylethcathinone fall within different penalty groups,10 and it
    could be argued that the culpable mental state applies at least to the penalty group that the substance
    is in. If that were so, then the intent or knowledge with respect to a drug in penalty group 2 might
    differ from the intent or knowledge with respect to a drug in penalty group 1.11 But this difference
    ultimately does not matter because of the law of transferred intent.
    The Penal Code contains two “transferred intent” doctrines, but the one applicable here
    involves the transfer of intent from one offense to another:
    9
    Ex parte Lane, 
    303 S.W.3d 702
    , 709 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009); Poindexter v. State, 
    153 S.W.3d 402
    , 405 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005), overruled on other grounds by, Robinson v. State, 
    466 S.W.3d 166
    , 173 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015); Joseph v. State, 
    897 S.W.2d 374
    , 376 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1995). Bracketed material absent from Lane but present in Poindexter and Joseph.
    10
    TEX . HEALTH & SAFETY CODE §§ 481.102(6), 481.103(4).
    11
    Compare TEX . HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 481.115 (“if the person knowingly or
    intentionally possesses a controlled substance listed in Penalty Group 1”), with 
    id. § 481.116
    (“if the
    person knowingly or intentionally possesses a controlled substance listed in Penalty Group 2”).
    SAUCEDO DISSENT — 5
    A person is nevertheless criminally responsible for causing a result if the only
    difference between what actually occurred and what he desired, contemplated, or
    risked is that . . . a different offense was committed.12
    We have applied this version of the “transferred intent” doctrine to drug offenses.13 Consequently,
    Applicant’s culpable mental state with respect to methamphetamine, admitted to by his guilty plea,
    transfers to the methylethcathinone offense.
    Because Applicant has effectively admitted, through his plea and his current pleadings, to
    all the elements of possession of methylethcathinone, and because that offense has the same
    punishment range as the methamphetamine offense to which he pled guilty, Applicant has suffered
    no harm.
    Finally, Applicant should be estopped from challenging his plea because he waited to do so
    until his guilt was adjudicated. A person who receives probation as a part of a plea agreement should
    be estopped from challenging the validity of his plea when he enjoys the benefits of being on
    probation and raises his challenge only after probation is revoked.14 Despite his allegation that he
    12
    TEX . PENAL CODE § 6.04(b)(1).
    13
    Mendoza v. State, 
    636 S.W.2d 198
    , 200 & n.2 (Tex. Crim. App. 1982). See also Palafox
    v. State, 
    949 S.W.2d 48
    , 49 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 1997, no pet.). Although the language of the
    transferred intent instruction talks about “causing a result,” at least one court of appeals has
    concluded that possession of a controlled substance can qualify as a result-oriented offense for the
    purpose of instructing the jury. Adams v. State, 
    744 S.W.2d 622
    , 628-29 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
    1987, pet. ref’d). See also Skillern v. State, 
    890 S.W.2d 849
    (Tex. App.—Austin 1994, no pet.)
    (citing Adams for the proposition that “an offense may not fit neatly into either a ‘result’ type or a
    ‘nature of conduct’ offense”).
    14
    See Rhodes v. State, 
    240 S.W.3d 882
    , 890-91, 891 n.52, 892 n.57 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007)
    (discussing with approval the concurring opinion in Ex parte Williams, 
    65 S.W.3d 656
    , 658-60 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2001) (Keller, P.J., concurring), which concluded that the plea-bargaining defendant in
    that case was estopped from challenging the trial court’s judgment on the basis that probation was
    illegal because he had accepted the benefits of probation).
    SAUCEDO DISSENT — 6
    would not have pled guilty if he had known the relevant circumstances, Applicant enjoyed the
    benefit of his plea bargain for almost three years after the substance was tested.15 The habeas court
    found that Applicant was never made aware of the lab report after his initial plea or during the
    motion to adjudicate. Even so, Applicant could have inquired as to the result of testing, and had he
    done so earlier, could have filed a habeas application under Article 11.072, while he was still on
    probation.16 Granting relief under such circumstances creates a windfall for defendants who have
    nothing to lose by laying behind the log. I would hold that Applicant’s claim is barred by estoppel.17
    For these reasons, I would deny relief.
    Filed: June 26, 2019
    Publish
    15
    See 
    Rhodes, 240 S.W.3d at 892
    (defendant was estopped who had “quietly enjoyed the
    benefits” of the illegal judgment, challenging it now only because, due to his own subsequent
    criminal conduct, the judgment could be used to enhance his punishment for a new offense).
    16
    See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 11.072.
    17
    Maybe the State agreed to relief because it believed the law demanded it. But the State’s
    concession has no legal effect, so by granting relief here, the Court establishes a right to relief in
    these circumstances even when the State contests a writ application. The next time an applicant
    proves that the substance he pled guilty to possessing was in a different penalty group than the
    substance he actually possessed, he will be entitled to relief under the Court’s opinion.