Staley, Steven Kenneth ( 2013 )


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  •            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. AP-76,798
    STEVEN KENNETH STALEY, Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    NO. AP-76,868
    EX PARTE STEVEN KENNETH STALEY, Applicant
    ON REVIEW FROM THE DETERMINATION OF EXECUTION
    COMPETENCY AND APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF
    HABEAS CORPUS FROM CAUSE NO. C-2-009642-0387844-C
    IN THE CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NUMBER TWO
    TARRANT COUNTY
    A LCALA, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which P RICE, W OMACK,
    J OHNSON, and C OCHRAN, JJ., joined. K ELLER, P.J., filed a dissenting opinion in which
    H ERVEY and K EASLER, JJ., joined. M EYERS, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which
    K ELLER, P.J., and H ERVEY, J., joined.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 2
    OPINION
    In this case, we are asked to decide whether state or federal law disallows the
    execution of a mentally ill inmate who was previously found incompetent to be executed and
    later became competent only after he was involuntarily medicated pursuant to a court order.
    Steven Kenneth Staley, appellant,1 raises this question in a subsequent application for a writ
    of habeas corpus and a motion for review under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article
    46.05.2 See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. arts. 11.071, § 5, & 46.05. Article 46.05 provides that
    a “person who is incompetent to be executed may not be executed” and permits appeal to this
    Court of a finding under that article. T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(a), (l). With respect
    to appellant’s motion for review, we conclude that this Court has jurisdiction over this appeal
    pursuant to the current competency-to-be-executed statute, including jurisdiction to review
    the involuntary-medication order to the extent that it is intertwined with the trial court’s
    1
    Staley is the applicant for purposes of the habeas application and the appellant for purposes
    of the Article 46.05 appeal, but, for consistency, we refer to him throughout the opinion as
    “appellant.”
    2
    See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 46.05(l); former TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 46.05(k)
    (Vernon 2005). The competency-to-be-executed statute provides the procedure and the standard
    under which an inmate’s competency to be executed is assessed. See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art.
    46.05(h). It states, “A defendant is incompetent to be executed if the defendant does not understand:
    (1) that he or she is to be executed and that the execution is imminent; and (2) the reason he or she
    is being executed.” 
    Id. It codifies
    the constitutional standards set forth in Ford v. Wainwright, 
    477 U.S. 399
    (1996), and Panetti v. Quarterman, 
    551 U.S. 930
    (2007). See Green v. State, 
    374 S.W.3d 434
    , 440 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012) (explaining that competency-to-be-executed statute codifies
    constitutional standards delineated by Supreme Court in Ford and Panetti).
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 3
    ruling that appellant is now competent to be executed.3 As to the merits of the appeal, we
    hold that the trial court’s order mandating involuntary medication of appellant was not
    permitted under the competency-to-be-executed statute and did not meet the requirements
    of other statutes that may permit involuntary medication. Because the trial court lacked
    authority to render it, we vacate the trial court’s involuntary-medication order. Furthermore,
    we determine that, but for that unauthorized order, the evidence conclusively shows that
    appellant is incompetent to be executed, and, therefore, we also vacate the trial court’s order
    finding appellant competent to be executed.4
    I. Background
    In 1991, appellant was convicted of capital murder in Tarrant County. Appellant and
    two others rounded up a group of employees at a restaurant, threatened them with firearms,
    took their possessions, and then killed the manager after taking him hostage. A jury found
    appellant guilty and answered the special issues in the affirmative. After the trial court
    sentenced him to death, appellant exhausted his appellate remedies and was denied relief on
    two applications for a writ of habeas corpus.5 The trial court set his execution date for
    3
    Appellant filed a “Brief In Support of Motion to Send Record To Court of Criminal Appeals,
    Notice of Appeal, And Application for Writ of Habeas Corpus Under Article 11.071, Texas Code
    of Criminal Procedure.” For most of his nine grounds, appellant presents a single set of arguments
    that are apparently intended to apply both to the appeal and to the writ application.
    4
    Regarding the competency claims raised in the application for a writ of habeas corpus, we
    dismiss those claims as non-cognizable. See 
    Green, 374 S.W.3d at 446
    (holding that competency-to-
    be-executed claims “not cognizable” on habeas corpus).
    5
    See Staley v. State, 
    887 S.W.2d 885
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1994) (affirming conviction and
    (continued...)
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 4
    February 2006. Since then, the trial court has held two hearings on the matter of whether
    appellant is competent to be executed. He was found incompetent at the first hearing and
    competent at the second hearing.
    A. The First Competency Hearing
    The month before the scheduled execution in 2006, appellant filed a motion with the
    trial court challenging his competency to be executed pursuant to the then-applicable
    competency-to-be-executed statute. See former T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05 (Vernon
    2005). The trial court ordered a psychiatric evaluation of appellant.
    The court held a hearing on appellant’s motion, at which the medical experts who had
    evaluated appellant, Dr. Randall Price and Dr. Mark Cunningham, testified. They explained
    that, although appellant understood that he was to be executed, he did not have a rational
    understanding of the reason for his execution.6 They testified that he suffered a severe,
    chronic psychosis, namely paranoid schizophrenia, with which he had been routinely
    diagnosed for nearly 15 years, and that his condition had deteriorated over time. They stated
    that, since 1993, appellant had been prescribed various psychotropic medications, most
    notably Haloperidol (“Haldol”), in an effort to control the symptoms of his illness. However,
    (...continued)
    sentence on direct appeal); Ex parte Staley, No. WR-37,034-01 (Tex. Crim. App. Sept. 16, 1998);
    Ex parte Staley, 
    160 S.W.3d 56
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). The prior writ applications challenged the
    judgment on various grounds not related to the present issues.
    6
    Another expert also testified that appellant did not understand that his execution was
    imminent.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 5
    they noted that he had not consistently complied with that prescription and, in the months
    preceding the competency evaluation, had frequently refused medication.
    Dr. Cunningham, a clinical and forensic psychologist, testified that appellant had
    demonstrated numerous symptoms of psychosis over the course of many years, including
    self-inflicted injuries, grossly neglected personal hygiene, resting in his own excrement and
    urine, irregular eating and sleeping habits, including refusing food and fluids, delusions of
    paralysis, and lying on one spot in his cell so long as to rub a bald spot in the back of his
    head. He explained that appellant had a history of “spontaneously and repeatedly refusing
    medication” so that long-term stabilization “may well require” compulsory medication. He
    opined that it would be “good medical practice” to medicate appellant to control his
    symptoms.
    Dr. Price, also a clinical and forensic psychologist, testified that appellant’s symptoms
    included “syntactical aphasia,” which he described as “word salad,” or the nonsensical
    ordering of words, as well as the regular use of fictitious language. He said that during those
    periods when appellant was compliant with his prescription, he showed no overt signs of
    decompensation, but that he had frequently refused medication because he denied his illness
    and believed the medication was an attempt to “poison” him.
    Based on this testimony, the trial court ruled that appellant was incompetent to be
    executed. Afterward, the case was forwarded to this Court in accordance with the then-
    applicable statute. See 
    id. at 46.05(k).
    The next day, the trial court withdrew the execution
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 6
    date.7 Nevertheless, appellant later filed a motion to stay the execution with this Court. This
    Court issued an order dismissing his motion as moot because the trial court had already
    withdrawn the execution date. Ex parte Staley, No. WR-37,034-03 (Tex. Crim. App. April
    12, 2006) (per curiam). The order advised the trial court, however, of its statutory duty to
    conduct periodic evaluations of appellant. See 
    id. (citing former
    T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art.
    46.05(k) (Vernon 2005)).8
    The following month, the State filed a motion with the trial court seeking involuntary
    medication of appellant.       In support, it cited both a medical purpose—to control the
    symptoms of appellant’s psychosis and ease his suffering as a result of his mental
    illness—and the State’s interest in enforcing the judgment.              Appellant disputed both
    purposes. He challenged the medical purpose by arguing that psychotropic drugs can yield
    harmful side effects. He also contended that “artificial competence” achieved by medication
    does not constitute competence under the competency-to-be-executed statute, the federal
    Constitution, or the Texas Constitution.
    7
    The trial court’s withdrawal of the execution date was premised on Texas Code of Criminal
    Procedure Article 43.141, which governs the scheduling, modification or withdrawal of an execution
    date. See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 43.141.
    8
    We note that the competency-to-be-executed statute permits a trial court to order periodic re-
    examination of an incompetent inmate by mental health experts only after this Court has entered a
    formal stay of execution, which it did not do in this case. See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 46.05(m);
    former TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 46.05(k) (Vernon 2005). Although it is arguable that the trial
    court was without authority to conduct periodic re-evaluations of appellant absent a stay, let alone
    to order him medicated, we do not consider that argument because it was not advanced by the parties
    and would only serve as an alternative disposition leading to the same result in this appeal.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 7
    The trial court held a hearing at which it heard arguments from the State and
    appellant. Based largely on the evidence that had been introduced at the competency hearing,
    the trial court granted the motion and entered an order authorizing the involuntary medication
    of appellant. It concluded that (1) the State has a legitimate interest in enforcing the
    sentence, which is not outweighed by appellant’s interest in avoiding medication; (2)
    medication is the least intrusive and, in fact, only method of achieving competency; (3)
    compelled medication is in appellant’s “best medical interest” because (a) without it, he will
    suffer “frightening delusions and general disorder within his mind” and (b) there is no
    evidence that he had suffered any side effects from the medication; and (4) without
    medication, appellant posed a danger to himself and others.
    By mandamus and direct appeal, appellant attempted to challenge the trial court’s
    order requiring involuntary medication, but those challenges were unsuccessful. This Court
    denied him leave to file an application for a writ of mandamus and prohibition and a motion
    for stay, but presumably this denial was based on his failure to show that a ministerial duty
    was at issue. After that, this Court, by written opinion, dismissed his direct appeal for lack
    of jurisdiction on the basis that the involuntary-medication order was a non-appealable,
    interlocutory order. Staley v. State, 
    233 S.W.3d 337
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (“Staley I”); see
    former T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05 (Vernon 2005). By mid-2006, therefore, appellant
    was found incompetent to be executed but was to be involuntarily medicated pursuant to the
    trial court’s order, and no litigation transpired for six years.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 8
    B. The Second Competency Hearing
    In 2012, the State filed with the trial court a “request for further competency
    examination” under the current competency-to-be-executed statute, and the trial court held
    a second competency hearing. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(k), (m).
    The trial court received testimony from Dr. Price and another clinical and forensic
    psychologist, Dr. Kristi Compton, who each determined that appellant was competent to be
    executed. By April 2012, Dr. Price had examined appellant five times. Dr. Price discussed
    his findings from examinations done in June 2006 and October 2010. He stated that,
    although appellant was experiencing delusional thoughts such as having “180 zillion dollars,”
    his psychotic and schizophrenic symptoms were under control with about 60 percent
    compliance with the Haldol prescription. Dr. Price testified that appellant knew many of the
    details about his litigation and the crime. He knew the names of the defense attorneys, the
    prosecutors, and the victim, and that he was convicted of killing a man during the course of
    a robbery of a restaurant. Appellant said that he thought he had received a fair trial except
    for the admission of certain extraneous-offense evidence during the guilt stage. He knew that
    the death penalty was, in his words, to “retribute the public for a heinous crime.” He
    understood that the process for the death penalty is lethal injection after “6:00 p.m. at night
    on the date of your execution” and could name two of the three lethal fluids. He explained
    death as permanently going to sleep and said he did not believe in an afterlife. Dr. Price
    acknowledged that appellant did not actually believe that he would be executed because he
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 9
    was convinced that his attorneys would obtain a stay. Dr. Price opined that appellant
    understood (1) that he was to be executed and that his execution was imminent and (2) the
    reason for his execution, thus satisfying the statutory two-pronged standard for competency
    to be executed. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(h). In addition to the competency
    finding, Dr. Price determined that appellant was not mentally retarded.
    Dr. Price further testified as to the effects of the medication. He explained that, in his
    opinion, Haldol is medically beneficial to a patient who has the symptoms of schizophrenia
    experienced by appellant. Without the prescription, a person with symptoms of schizophrenia
    is in a distressed state of mind, suffering from an illness that is “creating havoc” in his head.
    He acknowledged, however, that the side effects to Haldol can be “unpleasant” in that it is
    a “major tranquilizer,” slows down thinking and functioning, may affect a person’s use of
    his arms and legs, and may cause dryness of the mouth. Dr. Price explained that these side
    effects were controlled in appellant, who was taking another drug, Cogentin, for that purpose.
    He further confirmed that no evidence suggested that appellant has suffered any harmful side
    effects. He testified that, without medication, appellant will continue to suffer “frightening”
    delusions and other mental disorders and that appellant has been asymptomatic while on
    medication.
    The State also introduced a report by Dr. Compton detailing her findings from her
    examination of appellant in April 2012. The report indicated that, in October 2010,
    appellant’s condition had deteriorated and he was “catatonic.” He heard auditory
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 10
    hallucinations and believed an “electric polygraph” transmitted thoughts into his head that
    were not his own. The report indicated that, as of 2011, treatment providers doubled his
    intake of Haldol and that, as of the time of the examination in 2012, his condition had
    improved. He no longer heard voices or experienced other hallucinations and reported “a
    positive mood state with no severe depressive symptoms.” He continued to experience
    delusions of grandeur, but his thought processes appeared “concrete.” The report also
    showed that appellant reported “being forced to take medication because he was told ‘a new
    law says I have to take the medication’” and that if he refused “oral medication then he is
    strapped down and injected.” Her report further indicated that animal studies have shown
    that the use of Haldol caused a ten to twenty percent reduction in brain cortex volume after
    eight weeks of use.
    In its ruling after both sides rested, the trial court, in accordance with the opinions of
    the two experts, found that appellant was competent to be executed, but only because of the
    effects of the forcible medication. The trial court stated,
    When [appellant] is on Haldol and Zoloft, that his understanding is equivalent
    to competency, that he is competent, that if he—and I think both doctors have
    stated that if he is taken off this medication, that he could deteriorate and
    decompensate. But based upon the fact that he has been on this medication,
    that he is competent at this time. And that is both from the State’s expert, Dr.
    Price, and also the Defense’s expert, Dr. Compton. As such, the Court is going
    to make a finding that Mr. Staley is competent at this time. . . .
    The trial court scheduled appellant’s execution for May 2012. Appellant sought a stay
    of execution in this Court, which we granted to address the disputes currently before us. Ex
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 11
    parte Staley, No. WR-37,034-05, 2012 Tex. Crim. App. Unpub. LEXIS 482, at *3 (Tex.
    Crim. App. May 14, 2012) (per curiam) (not designated for publication). We sustain
    appellant’s seventh issue, which challenges the trial court’s authority to involuntarily
    medicate him for purposes of making him competent to be executed.9 Having determined
    that the trial court lacked the authority to order involuntary medication under these
    circumstances, we sustain appellant’s first and second issues on the basis that, but for the
    unauthorized involuntary-medication order, the evidence conclusively shows that appellant
    is incompetent to be executed.10 We do not reach any of appellant’s constitutional challenges
    that may be involved in those issues, nor his remaining issues that contend that (1) the trial
    9
    Appellant presents this challenge in issue seven:
    7. The trial court’s April 11, 2006 [involuntary-medication] order exceeds the
    district court’s jurisdiction under Article 46.05 of the Texas Code of Criminal
    Procedure.
    10
    Appellant presents this challenge in issues one and two:
    1. The court erred in finding that appellant was competent to be executed because
    he does not understand that he is to be executed and that execution is imminent and
    the reason he is being executed in violation of the eighth and fourteenth amendments
    to the U.S. Constitution.
    2. The court erred in finding that appellant was competent to be executed because
    he does not understand that he is to be executed and that execution is imminent and
    the reason he is being executed in violation of Section 13 of Article I of the Texas
    Constitution.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 12
    court’s involuntary-medication order violates the federal and state constitutions,11 and (2) that
    he is severely insane to the point that he is functionally mentally retarded and his execution,
    therefore, would violate the federal and state constitutions.12
    II. This Court Has Jurisdiction Over the Appeal From the Trial Court’s Finding of
    11
    Appellant presents this challenge in issues five, six, eight, and nine:
    5. Appellant’s continued treatment with Haloperidol to make him competent to be
    executed violates the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment under the
    eighth and fourteenth amendments to the U.S. Constitution because it is causing
    irreparable damage to his brain by causing a reduction in brain cortex volume.
    6. Appellant’s continued treatment with Haloperidol to make him competent to be
    executed violates the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment under Article
    I, Section 13 of the Texas Constitution because it is causing irreparable damage to
    his brain by causing a reduction in brain cortex volume.
    8. Forcible medication for the purpose of rendering an inmate competent for
    execution violates the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment under the
    eighth and fourteenth amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
    9. Forcible medication for the purpose of rendering an inmate competent for
    execution violates the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment under Article
    I, Section 13 of the Texas Constitution.
    12
    Appellant presents this challenge in issues three and four:
    3. Appellant’s execution would violate the prohibition against cruel and unusual
    punishment under the eighth and fourteenth amendments to the U.S. Constitution
    because he is severely insane to the point where he is functionally mentally retarded
    and to execute him would violate the prohibition against cruel and unusual
    punishment contained in the eighth and fourteenth amendments to the U.S.
    Constitution.
    4. Appellant’s execution would violate the prohibition against cruel and unusual
    punishment under Art. I, § 13 of the Texas Constitution because he is severely insane
    to the point where he is functionally mentally retarded and to execute him would
    violate the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment contained in Section 13
    of Article I of the Texas Constitution.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 13
    Competency Under the Current Competency-To-Be-Executed Statute 13
    As an initial matter, we determine that this Court has jurisdiction to review this
    competency appeal because the the current competency-to-be-executed statute applies to this
    case. That statute, unlike its predecessor, expressly permits appeal of any competency
    determination to this Court. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(l). We further conclude
    that we have jurisdiction to review the involuntary-medication order because it is intertwined
    with the trial court’s finding that appellant is competent. We explain these conclusions in
    more detail below.
    A. Current Statute Applies to This Case
    The parties dispute whether the former or current competency-to-be-executed statute
    applies to this case. That distinction is relevant here because under the former competency-
    to-be-executed statute, only a finding of incompetence could be appealed. See former T EX.
    C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(k) (Vernon 2005); Ex parte Caldwell, 
    58 S.W.3d 127
    , 130
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2000). The State argues that the former version of the statute applies and
    that appellant is thus not permitted to challenge the trial court’s finding that he is competent.
    Appellant disagrees and urges that the current version of the statute should apply to his case.
    In Ex parte Caldwell, this Court dismissed an inmate’s appeal of the trial court’s
    competency finding because we determined that the former competency-to-be-executed
    13
    Although neither party directly challenges this Court’s jurisdiction to address appellant’s
    appeal from the trial court’s competency determination, a court may always address jurisdictional
    matters before reaching the merits of an appeal. See White v. State, 
    61 S.W.3d 424
    , 427 n.2 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2001).
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 14
    statute did not permit review of “the finding that the defendant is competent to be executed.”
    
    Caldwell, 58 S.W.3d at 130
    (citing former T EX . C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(k) (Vernon
    2005)). In reaching our conclusion, we relied on the plain terms of the former statute, which
    authorized this Court to take subsequent action in a competency proceeding only upon the
    trial court’s “finding by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant is incompetent
    to be executed.” See former T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(k). By contrast, the current
    statute, which became effective on September 1, 2007, expressly authorizes this Court to
    review a finding that a defendant is competent. See T EX. C ODE C RIM . P ROC. art. 46.05(l)
    (statute amended by Act of May 23, 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., ch. 677, § 1, 2007 T EX. G EN.
    L AWS 677 (H.B. 1545)).14
    14
    In pertinent part, the current competency-to-be-executed statute states,
    (g) If the trial court does not determine that the defendant has made a substantial
    showing of incompetency, the court shall deny the motion and may set an execution
    date as otherwise provided by law.
    ....
    (k) The trial court shall determine whether . . . the defendant has established by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the defendant is incompetent to be executed. If
    the court makes a finding that the defendant is not incompetent to be executed, the
    court may set an execution date as otherwise provided by law.
    (l) Following the trial court’s determination under Subsection (k) and on motion of
    a party, the clerk shall send immediately to the court of criminal appeals in
    accordance with Section 8(d), the appropriate documents for the court’s review and
    entry of a judgment of whether to adopt the trial court’s order, findings, or
    recommendations issued under Subsection (g) or (k). . . .
    TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 46.05 (g), (k), (l) (emphasis added).
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 15
    The State filed its motion and the trial court issued its competency finding in 2012,
    long after the current statute became effective. Appellant points to that motion and trial
    court’s finding as invoking the current statute. The State, however, suggests that the former
    competency-to-be-executed statute should apply instead of the current statute because the
    trial court’s first finding of incompetency was made prior to the effective date of the current
    statute.
    The State’s 2012 motion asked the trial court to find appellant competent based on the
    results of examinations that had been conducted under the competency-to-be-executed
    statute’s requirement that the trial court order the periodic re-examination of appellant to
    determine whether he remained incompetent. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(m);
    former T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(k) (Vernon 2005). This requirement, present in
    the former and current versions of the statute, is part of a trial court’s continued jurisdiction
    over the matter of a defendant’s competency to be executed. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art.
    46.05(b) (trial court “retains jurisdiction over motions filed by or for a defendant under this
    article”); T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 43.141 (convicting court has continuing authority to
    set execution date). This continued jurisdiction could last an extended period of time, from
    the time that a defendant’s death sentence is imposed until his death by execution or natural
    causes or until he obtains extraordinary relief from a writ of habeas corpus that reverses a
    death sentence. In light of this extended post-conviction period, the Legislature specified
    that the current statute would apply only to motions filed on or after September 1, 2007. The
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 16
    legislative note to the amendment stated that the amendment
    applies only to a motion filed under Article 46.05, Code of Criminal
    Procedure, on or after the effective date of this Act. A motion filed under that
    article before the effective date of this Act is covered by the law in effect on
    the date the motion was filed, and the former law is continued in effect for that
    purpose.
    Act of May 23, 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., ch. 677, at § 2. Here, because the State filed its motion
    to find appellant competent in 2012, the current competency-to-be-executed statute applies
    to the review of the trial court’s competency finding, and that statute permits this Court to
    review the trial court’s order finding appellant competent.15
    Having determined that this Court has jurisdiction to review the trial court’s
    competency order, we must next address whether this Court has jurisdiction to address
    appellant’s complaint that his competence was “artificial” due to his involuntary medication.
    B. Involuntary-Medication Order is Intertwined with Trial Court’s
    Finding That Appellant Is Competent To Be Executed
    Appellant contends that the trial court erred by finding him competent to be executed
    under the competency-to-be-executed statute because his competence has been achieved
    artificially through court-ordered involuntary medication. Although it disputes the merits of
    15
    Under Subsection (m), the competency-to-be-executed statute gives the trial court continuing
    authority to periodically order that a defendant be reexamined by mental-health experts to determine
    his competency, which the trial court did in this case. TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 46.05(m). In
    2012, after experts had found that appellant was competent following these periodic examinations,
    the State filed a motion under that subsection, and it is that motion that invokes the current
    competency-to-be-executed statute. We do not construe the State’s previous motion for further
    evaluation as initiating competency proceedings “on the defendant’s behalf” under Subsection (c)
    of that statute. See 
    id. at art.
    46.05(c).
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 17
    appellant’s claim, the State essentially concedes that this Court has jurisdiction to address
    appellant’s argument that he is “artificially competent” because that argument “goes to the
    heart of whether he is actually competent.” On the other hand, the State disputes that the
    involuntary-medication order itself is reviewable under the competency-to-be-executed
    statute because that statute limits the scope of this Court’s review to the narrow confines of
    the trial court’s competency determination. The State urges that “[w]hether the trial court’s
    medication order was appropriate, legally justified, or constitutional, is beyond the purview
    of article 46.05.”
    We disagree with the State’s position and hold that we may properly review the trial
    court’s involuntary-medication order within the scope of our competency-determination
    review. For purposes of understanding the underlying proceedings, we briefly explain why
    we have jurisdiction over the present appeal but did not have jurisdiction over an earlier
    appeal from this involuntary-medication order. In 2006, this Court dismissed appellant’s
    appeal from the involuntary-medication order because we determined that, under the prior
    competency-to-be-executed statute, that order was a non-appealable, interlocutory order.
    Staley 
    I, 233 S.W.3d at 337
    ; see former T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05 (Vernon 2005).
    In Staley I, this Court reasoned that in order for it to obtain jurisdiction over the appeal, the
    appellant had to appeal a “judgment of guilt or other appealable order.” 
    Id. at 338
    n.4 (citing
    T EX. R. A PP. P. 25.2(a)(2)). Appellant had not presented either. Rather, he challenged the
    trial court’s medication order, which was a stand-alone order that was separate and distinct
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 18
    from the trial court’s finding that he was incompetent. See 
    id. Because the
    finding of
    incompetency was in his favor, appellant could not present any appeal under the former
    competency-to-be-executed statute. See 
    id. at 338
    n.5 (holding that involuntary-medication
    order was unreviewable because “[n]either the withdrawal of an execution date nor a review
    of a finding of incompetence” was at issue, interpreting former T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art.
    46.05(k)).
    In contrast to Staley I, the present challenge to the trial court’s involuntary-medication
    order comes to this Court as a challenge to the finding of competency under the current
    competency-to-be-executed statute, which permits this type of appeal. See T EX. C ODE C RIM.
    P ROC. art. 46.05(l) (permitting appeal to this Court from any competency determination). The
    case before us is not merely an interlocutory appeal of a non-appealable order. Compare
    Staley 
    I, 233 S.W.3d at 338
    n.4. Instead, the trial court’s ruling that appellant is competent
    to be executed only because of his involuntary medication makes the trial court’s medication
    order an inextricable part of its competency determination. Because the involuntary-
    medication order was entered for the specific purpose of making appellant competent to be
    executed, its validity is reviewable as a core element of this Court’s competency review. We
    hold that this Court has jurisdiction to review (1) the trial court’s competency finding under
    the competency-to-be-executed statute because the current statute applies to this case and (2)
    the trial court’s involuntary-medication order because that order is intertwined with
    appellant’s challenge that forcible medication has made him artificially competent. See
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 19
    Eichelberger v. Eichelberger, 
    582 S.W.2d 395
    , 399 (Tex. 1979) (explaining that “implied
    powers are those which can and ought to be implied from an express grant of power” and
    finding appellate jurisdiction because no other mechanism existed to review lower court’s
    decision).
    III. Trial Court Erred By Finding Appellant Competent
    Following Court-Ordered Involuntary Medication
    As explained in more detail below, we conclude that the trial court lacked the
    authority to order the involuntary medication of appellant and that the competency finding
    must be reversed because that determination is wholly dependent on that unauthorized
    involuntary medication of appellant.
    A. Trial Court Lacked Authority to Involuntarily Medicate Appellant
    Under the Evidence Presented
    In his seventh claim, appellant argues that the trial court lacked jurisdiction and
    authority under the competency-to-be-executed statute to order him involuntarily
    medicated.16 The State responds that the trial court’s order “is nothing but a vehicle for
    16
    The Supreme Court has held that, under certain circumstances, the involuntary medication
    of inmates may be constitutionally permissible. “‘[T]he Due Process Clause permits the State to
    treat a [non-death-row] prison inmate who has a serious mental illness with antipsychotic drugs
    against his will, if the inmate is dangerous to himself or others, and the treatment is in the inmate’s
    medical interest.’” Sell v. United States, 
    539 U.S. 166
    , 178 (2003) (quoting Washington v. Harper,
    
    494 U.S. 210
    , 227 (1990)). The Supreme Court has never addressed whether it would violate the
    federal constitution to involuntarily medicate an inmate to make him competent to be executed, and
    we do not reach that ultimate question in this case because that is a separate question from whether
    a trial court has the authority to order involuntary medication.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 20
    enforcing its own judgment and sentence, and the mandate of” this Court, which falls within
    a trial court’s general judicial power. We disagree with the State.
    1. Applicable Law for Trial Court’s Post-Conviction Power
    A trial court must derive its jurisdiction from either the Texas Constitution or
    legislative enactments. State v. Holloway, 
    360 S.W.3d 480
    , 485 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012).
    When a conviction has been affirmed on appeal and the mandate has issued, general
    jurisdiction is not restored in the trial court. State v. Patrick, 
    86 S.W.3d 592
    , 594 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2002) (plurality op.).
    A trial court can obtain post-conviction jurisdiction over a case under many different
    statutes, for example, to set the date of execution, conduct DNA testing, or, as here,
    determine whether an inmate is competent to be executed. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. arts.
    43.141(b) (“If an original application is not timely filed under Article 11.071 . . . the
    convicting court may set an execution date.”); 64.01(a-1) (authorizing convicting court to
    hear motions for DNA testing); and 46.05(b) (“The trial court retains jurisdiction over
    motions filed by or for a defendant under this article.”). These post-conviction statutes
    define the scope of the trial court’s jurisdiction. See 
    Holloway, 360 S.W.3d at 485
    .
    Furthermore, a trial court may have jurisdiction over a matter, but no authority to act.17 
    Id. 17 This
    Court recently explained the difference between a trial court’s jurisdiction and authority.
    We stated,
    Jurisdiction is typically used to refer to the power of a court to hear a controversy and
    make decisions that are legally binding on the parties involved, also commonly
    (continued...)
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 21
    2. Competency-To-Be-Executed Statute Does Not Authorize Trial Court
    to Order Involuntary Medication
    A plain reading of the competency-to-be-executed statute indicates that the trial court
    lacked the authority to order appellant involuntarily medicated. See Boykin v. State, 
    818 S.W.2d 782
    , 785 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991). In relevant part, the competency-to-be-executed
    statute provides that, after an execution is stayed on the basis of incompetency, “the trial
    court shall periodically order that the defendant be reexamined by mental health experts to
    determine whether the defendant is no longer incompetent to be executed.” T EX. C ODE C RIM.
    P ROC. art. 46.05(m). Aside from the provision permitting re-examination, the statute does
    not authorize the trial court to take any other action with respect to a defendant found
    incompetent under that statute. See 
    id. The State
    argues that the trial court had inherent or implied authority to enter the
    medication order as necessary to carrying out the sentence. In support, it cites Kelley v. State
    for the proposition that judicial power under the Texas Constitution includes the power to
    execute the judgment. 
    676 S.W.2d 104
    , 107 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984) (determining that civil
    (...continued)
    referred to as subject-matter jurisdiction. Jurisdiction, then, is vested in the actual
    judicial body, the court. Authority, on the other hand, may be used to refer to the
    power of an individual—the judge who presides over the court—to act under that
    grant of jurisdiction. A lack of authority, therefore, is not always co-extensive with
    a lack of jurisdiction; a judge’s lack of authority to act in a particular manner will not
    necessarily call into doubt the court’s jurisdiction over the particular case.
    State v. Holloway, 
    360 S.W.3d 480
    , 485 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012) (internal citations and quotation
    marks omitted).
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 22
    statute (1) did not create “courts” with independent jurisdiction, but rather permitted
    magistrates to assist district-court judges in certain limited matters, and (2) was not
    unconstitutional). As noted in Kelley, this Court has long construed “‘[j]udicial power’ as
    envisioned by the Constitution [to] embrace[] ‘(1) The power to hear facts, (2) the power to
    decide the issues of fact made by the pleadings, (3) the power to decide the questions of law
    involved, (4) the power to enter a judgment on the facts found in accordance with the law as
    determined by the court, (5) and the power to execute the judgment or sentence.’” 
    Id. (quoting Morrow
    v. Corbin, 
    62 S.W.2d 641
    , 645 (Tex. 1933)).
    We disagree with the State that the trial court’s general power under the Texas
    Constitution authorized the court’s order in this case.            With respect to a defendant’s
    competency to be executed, the Legislature has limited the trial court’s general power to
    execute its judgment by specifically prohibiting the execution of an incompetent inmate. See
    T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05. Aside from permitting it to periodically reexamine an
    incompetent inmate, the Legislature did not authorize the trial court to take any collateral
    steps to restore the inmate to competency. See id.18
    18
    In his dissenting opinion, Judge Meyers suggests that the involuntary medication of appellant
    is authorized by the Texas Constitution. See TEX . CONST . Art. V, § 8; Kelley v. State, 
    676 S.W.2d 104
    , 107 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984) (stating that constitution empowers district court to “execute the
    judgment or sentence”). The jurisdiction or authority to execute a sentence, however, is not unlimited
    and cannot be invoked as the basis to permit a court to take any collateral act to ensure that its
    ultimate sentence is carried out. For example, a district court has the authority to set an execution
    date, but the Code of Criminal Procedure limits the circumstances under which the execution date
    may be withdrawn. See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 43.141. And a district court lacks the authority
    to specify the procedures by which an inmate will be executed; that decision is left to the director
    (continued...)
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 23
    This Court has addressed the limits to post-conviction jurisdiction in State v.
    
    Holloway, 360 S.W.3d at 485
    . In that case, we examined whether Chapter 64 of the Texas
    Code of Criminal Procedure, which governs post-conviction motions for DNA testing and
    to which we refer as the “DNA statute,” authorized the trial court to grant Holloway a new
    trial after DNA testing produced exculpatory results. 
    Id. at 482
    (analyzing T EX. C ODE C RIM.
    P ROC. ch. 64). Holding that it did not, we first noted that, “on its face,” the DNA statute did
    not expressly authorize the trial court to grant a new trial or to take any remedial action. 
    Id. at 486-87.
    We observed that “the only substantive order that Chapter 64 contemplates is the
    one that grants or denies the movant’s request for DNA testing.” 
    Id. at 486.
    Because the
    statute, by its plain language, authorized the trial court only to make a finding as to whether
    a defendant is entitled to testing, we concluded that the language “expresses the evident
    (...continued)
    of correctional institutions. See 
    id. at art.
    43.14 (execution procedure “determined and supervised
    by” director of correctional institutions division). Although the Texas Constitution gives it
    jurisdiction to execute a sentence, the district court plainly does not have unlimited authority in
    deciding all the parameters for carrying out a sentence of death.
    Similarly, under the Texas Constitution, this Court has jurisdiction to issue post-conviction
    writs in criminal cases, but our power to grant subsequent writs has been limited by the Legislature
    in such a way as to preclude our consideration of those writs under certain circumstances. See Ex
    parte Sledge, 
    391 S.W.3d 104
    , 109 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013) (stating that applicant raising
    procedurally barred claim on habeas corpus “cannot call upon [this Court’s] general authority” to
    grant post-conviction relief in light of “plain limitations” upon that power) (citing TEX . CODE CRIM .
    PROC. art. 11.07, § 4(a)). We have held that this Court’s general grant of authority in the Texas
    Constitution may be limited or defined by the parameters set forth by the Texas Legislature. See 
    id. at 108,
    109 n.24 (citing “legislative prerogative” to regulate post-conviction habeas corpus
    procedure). Even if we assume that the trial court had the general jurisdiction to see that appellant’s
    death sentence was carried out, it lacked the authority to order the collateral act that would transform
    an otherwise unconstitutional event—the execution of an incompetent person—into a constitutional
    one—the execution of a person who is competent because of involuntary medication.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 24
    legislative purpose” of the DNA statute, which was to provide a defendant “an avenue for
    post-conviction forensic DNA testing—and no more.” 
    Id. at 487.
    Holloway nevertheless argued, as the State does in the present case, that the trial court
    had “implicit authority” to order a new trial “because it was in furtherance of the
    ‘jurisdictional purpose’” of the DNA statute. 
    Id. at 487-88.
    We rejected this contention,
    noting that the “jurisdictional purpose” of that statute was “simply to provide deserving
    applicants with a mechanism for post-conviction DNA testing and a favorable finding on the
    record if justified by that testing; it does not include any other remedy or form of relief in the
    convicting court.” 
    Id. at 488.
    We concluded that permitting the trial court to take that extra-
    statutory action would conflict with the plainly expressed jurisdictional purpose of the DNA
    statute. Id.; see Wolfe v. State, 
    120 S.W.3d 368
    , 372 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (observing that
    trial court’s jurisdiction and authority under DNA statute limited to that prescribed by that
    statute).
    Here, similarly, we conclude that the trial court’s involuntary-medication order was
    not authorized by the competency-to-be-executed statute. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art.
    46.05. The language of that statute evinces its purpose of enabling defendants to seek a
    determination as to their competency to be executed and to obtain a stay of execution upon
    a finding of incompetency. See 
    id. Nothing in
    the statute permits the trial court, once it has
    found a defendant incompetent, to take any action other than ordering periodic reevaluation
    of the defendant. See 
    id. The statutory
    language plainly and strictly limits the trial court’s
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 25
    authority in competency-to-be-executed proceedings, and application of that language does
    not yield an absurd result. See 
    Boykin, 818 S.W.2d at 785-86
    . In light of the plain language
    expressly limiting the trial court’s role to ordering periodic reevaluations of an individual
    who has been found incompetent and to determining whether he is competent, the trial
    court’s extraordinary measures aimed at restoring appellant’s competency through his
    involuntary medication cannot be characterized as mere actions in furtherance of the
    statute’s jurisdictional purpose. See 
    Holloway, 360 S.W.3d at 488
    .19
    We cannot conclude that ordering treatment of any kind for the specific objective of
    restoring an inmate to competency merely furthers the court’s ability to evaluate and make
    a determination regarding his competency as permitted by the competency-to-be-executed
    statute. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(m). The trial court’s order in this case,
    therefore, was not implicitly authorized under the statute. 
    Id. 19 Because
    the language is plain, we do not resort to an extratextual analysis. See Boykin v.
    State, 
    818 S.W.2d 782
    , 785 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991). We note, however, that the Legislature has
    clearly set forth the parameters for involuntary medication of people in other contexts. In the statute
    governing competency-to-stand-trial proceedings, for example, the Legislature detailed procedures
    for restoring a defendant’s competency, which include involuntary medication. See TEX . CODE CRIM .
    PROC. arts. 46B.073 & 46B.086. The involuntary-medication provision specifically authorizes the
    State to file a motion to compel, and the trial court to order, involuntary medication under certain
    circumstances and if certain standards are met. 
    Id. at art.
    46B.086. By contrast, nothing in the
    competency-to-be-executed statute refers to or incorporates these procedures or criteria or otherwise
    authorizes such action. See 
    id. at art.
    46.05. The absence of the authorizing language in the
    competency-to-be-executed statute as compared to the presence of the authorizing language in the
    competency-to-stand-trial statute suggests that the Legislature knows how to authorize the
    involuntary medication of a person and opted not to authorize that action in this case.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 26
    3. No Other Statute Permits Post-Conviction Judicial Authorization of
    Involuntary Medication of Inmates
    Although Texas permits the involuntary medication of people in limited
    circumstances, the record does not show that those circumstances existed here. Specifically,
    prison regulations permit the involuntary medication of inmates in limited circumstances.
    And, in limited circumstances, courts may order the involuntary medication of people who
    are involuntarily committed or incompetent and awaiting trial. To the extent that they might
    be applicable to this case, neither of those procedural vehicles was invoked here.
    In Texas, inmates may be involuntarily medicated following a limited, non-judicial
    administrative process set forth by the Texas Correctional Managed Health Care Committee.
    See Texas Correctional Managed Health Care Policy Manual, § I-67.1, Compelled
    Psychoactive Medication For Mental Illness (October 15, 2012), available at
    http://www.cmhcc.state.tx.us/CMHC_Policy_Manual/I/I-67.1%20(1012).pdf.20 In a non-
    emergency situation, an inmate may be compelled to take psychoactive medication when
    failure to do so “[i]s likely to result in continued suffering from severe and abnormal mental,
    emotional and physical distress or deterioration of the patient’s ability to function
    independently.” 
    Id. at 3,
    § I-B. This process does not involve an adversarial hearing before
    20
    Some states permit penitentiaries to institute procedures for involuntarily medicating inmates
    pursuant to a determination by a panel of medical professionals. See 
    Harper, 494 U.S. at 215-16
    (Washington state policy allowed prison authorities to administer medication to inmates
    involuntarily); Sullivan v. Flannigan, 
    8 F.3d 591
    , 597 (7th Cir. 1993) (Illinois has two-person
    “treatment review committee” composed of physician and prison administrator); see also 28 C.F.R.
    § 549.46 (federal law requiring administrative proceeding prior to involuntary medication of inmate).
    Other states require a court order. See Commonwealth v. Sam, 
    952 A.2d 565
    , 567 (Pa. 2008).
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 27
    a judge, but rather requires an administrative hearing before a “nontreating,
    psychiatrist/psychiatric mid-level practitioner.” 
    Id. at 3,
    § V-D. This administrative process
    was not implemented in the present case.
    Furthermore, although trial courts may forcibly medicate patients receiving inpatient
    mental-health services, that provision does not apply to inmates facing execution. See T EX.
    H EALTH & S AFETY C ODE, Title 7, Subtitle C, Ch. 574 (“Court-Ordered Mental Health
    Services”); 
    id. at subchapter
    G (“Administration of Medication to Patient Under Court-
    Ordered Mental Health Services”). Specifically, Section 574.106 sets forth the conditions
    under which a court may order administration of psychoactive medication. 
    Id. at §
    574.106.
    That provision limits such judicial authorization to a defendant who is, at the time, under a
    court order to receive inpatient mental-health services or who is receiving those services
    while awaiting trial after being found incompetent to stand trial. Id.; see also T EX. C ODE
    C RIM. P ROC. arts. 46B.073 & 46B.086. This provision does not appear to be applicable to
    individuals sentenced to death and was not invoked as the basis for the involuntary
    medication in this case.
    Because appellant was involuntarily medicated pursuant to the trial court’s order
    under the competency-to-be-executed statute, we limit our holding to that circumstance and
    do not address the potential consequences of involuntary medication through a different
    procedure. We hold that the trial court exceeded its authority by ordering the involuntary
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 28
    medication of appellant under the competency-to-be-executed statute, and, therefore, reverse
    that order. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05. We sustain appellant’s seventh claim.21
    B. Evidence Conclusively Establishes Appellant’s Incompetence But For
    Involuntary Medication
    As we explain in more detail below, we conclude that, but for his involuntary
    medication achieved through the trial court’s unauthorized order, appellant is incompetent
    to be executed. We, therefore, agree with appellant’s first and second grounds, in which he
    contends that the evidence does not support the trial court’s finding that he is competent to
    be executed as defined by the competency-to-be-executed statute or the State or federal
    constitutions. See T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(h); Green v. State, 
    374 S.W.3d 434
    , 440
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2012) (competency-to-be-executed statute codifies constitutional
    standards).
    The trial court found, and the record shows, that the sole basis for the trial court’s
    finding that appellant was competent was due to his involuntary medication.22 Dr. Price
    explained that appellant is asymptomatic and competent so long as he is medicated. As noted
    by the State, Dr. Price testified that he did not regard “medically aided competence” and
    21
    We further note that, although it cited appellant’s best medical interests in support of forcible
    medication, the trial court’s order was not authorized by statute. As discussed above, if involuntary
    medication is in a prisoner’s best medical interest, prison regulations permit it under certain
    circumstances.
    22
    In its order, the trial court found that, “[b]ecause without medication the prisoner is likely to
    remain incompetent, the medication is not only the least intrusive method, but apparently the only
    method that would further the state’s interest.”
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 29
    “everyday competence” as distinguishable because the “cause of the competence is not a part
    of . . . an [expert’s] opinion that someone is competent or not.” Dr. Compton submitted an
    affidavit in which she concluded that appellant “appears to be currently competent. However,
    there is a reasonable degree of psychological certainty that without forced medications he
    would not be competent.” Her affidavit noted several instances in which appellant refused
    medication and had to be forcibly medicated. After hearing the evidence, the trial court noted
    that “both doctors have stated that if he is taken off this medication, he could deteriorate and
    decompensate. But based upon the fact that he had been on this medication, that he is
    competent at this time.”
    In light of the record, we conclude that, but for the trial court’s impermissible
    involuntary-medication order, the evidence does not support the trial court’s determination
    that appellant is competent to be executed under the competency-to-be-executed statute. The
    State and the dissenting opinion by Presiding Judge Keller, however, suggest that the
    underlying reasons for an inmate’s competency are immaterial to the sole question of whether
    he is competent under the competency-to-be-executed statute. This argument is unpersuasive
    because it mistakenly suggests that this court should apply the standard for traditional
    sufficiency-of-the-evidence review rather than the more analogous standard that this Court
    has applied when an unconstitutional act by the trial court has transformed the evidence in
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 30
    the case.23 Here, the latter standard applies because the trial court’s unauthorized order was
    the sole cause of the transformation of the evidence from evidence supporting a finding of
    incompetence into evidence supporting a finding of competence.
    The evidence conclusively shows that medication was critical to restoring appellant’s
    competency and that, but for the involuntary-medication order, appellant would not have
    been compliant in taking his medication as prescribed. We, therefore, vacate the trial court’s
    involuntary-medication order and its order finding appellant competent to be executed and
    remand the case to the trial court for periodic reevaluation of appellant under Article
    46.05(m). T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 46.05(m).
    23
    The procedural posture of this case makes a traditional review for sufficiency of the evidence
    inapplicable. See Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 324 (1979) (holding that appellate court
    reviewing conviction must find that rational trier of fact could have found essential elements of
    offense beyond a reasonable doubt). It is true, as Presiding Judge Keller points out, that in traditional
    sufficiency review, we review all the record evidence regardless of whether that evidence was
    properly admitted. See Winfrey v. State, 
    393 S.W.3d 763
    , 767 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). But here we
    are not faced with mere questions of properly or improperly admitted evidence. Rather, we are
    confronted with a situation in which the trial court, through an unauthorized order, has altogether
    altered the state of the evidence. By ordering appellant medicated, the trial court caused to come into
    existence the sole evidence of appellant’s competency. But for the unauthorized order, such evidence
    would not exist. The resulting competency determination must be reviewed in light of the invalid
    basis upon which it rests.
    Because the trial court exceeded its authority by ordering appellant medicated, the trial
    court’s determination that appellant is competent can stand only if it is wholly independent of the
    unauthorized order. It is not. See, e.g., Dansby v. State, 
    398 S.W.3d 233
    , 242 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013)
    (holding that district court’s revocation of community supervision on basis of discharge from sex
    offender treatment program must have been premised on grounds “wholly independent of” any
    constitutional violation). To uphold the competency determination in spite of our acknowledgment
    that the underlying medication order is invalid would represent a sanctioning of the trial court’s
    unauthorized action, which was undertaken for the purpose of circumventing the constitutional
    prohibition on the execution of incompetent persons. This Court will not permit the execution of an
    incompetent inmate who has become competent solely through an unauthorized order.
    Steven Kenneth Staley - 31
    IV. Conclusion
    We hold that the evidence conclusively shows that appellant’s competency to be
    executed was achieved solely through the involuntary medication, which the trial court had
    no authority to order under the competency-to-be-executed statute. The finding that appellant
    is competent must be reversed for lack of any evidentiary support. We do not reach the
    question of whether the federal or Texas constitution would disallow the execution of a
    prisoner who has been involuntarily medicated pursuant to a proper order. We do not reach
    appellant’s claims that challenge the constitutionality of achieving competency by way of
    forcible medication or his claim that he is functionally mentally retarded. With respect to his
    statutory appeal, we sustain appellant’s first, second, and seventh claims and dismiss his
    third, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, and ninth claims. We vacate the trial court’s order of
    involuntary medication and its order finding appellant competent to be executed. We remand
    the case to that court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Delivered: September 11, 2013
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