DocketNumber: PD-0093-04
Filed Date: 1/26/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/15/2015
I respectfully dissent. "Our constitutional duty, of course, is to effectuate what the Legislature intended when it enacted the statute." (1) It is beyond peradventure that the Texas Legislature did not intend to enact any dramatic substantive changes to the felony DWI enhancement statute in its 2001 amendment. The infelicitous language found in the amendment to section 49.09(e) of the Texas Penal Code is a drafting mistake and the result of a last-minute floor amendment which promised "no substantive change" in the law. The Texas Legislature can, and probably will, quickly repair its drafting error, but I think that we ought not apply a rigid "plain language" interpretation to statutory language that we know was not intended by the Legislature, created a statutory ambiguity, and is nothing more than a technical error.
In this case, the two jurisdictional enhancement paragraphs alleged prior DWI convictions in 1984 and 1997. The trial court overruled appellant's motions to dismiss or quash the indictment which asserted that the 1984 conviction was too remote to use because it occurred more than ten years before the present offense. The Twelfth Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the 2001 amendments to Section 49.09(e) limited the use of prior DWI convictions for enhancement purposes to those which occur within ten years of each other. (2) We granted review to determine whether the court of appeals correctly interpreted the 2001 amendment. (3) Because I find that the plain language of amended section 49.09(e) is ambiguous, I would apply the usual statutory construction aids. I conclude that the relevant ten-year period is the time between the commission of the present or primary offense and the date of the defendant's discharge from probation, parole, or incarceration for the most recent prior DWI. Therefore, I would reverse the court of appeals and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
On May 23, 2002, appellant, Bobby Doyle Getts, was indicted for felony DWI. The indictment alleged that he had two prior convictions for DWI: one conviction on April 26, 1984, and another on September 11, 1997. Appellant filed motions to dismiss and to quash the indictment, arguing that the 1984 conviction could not be used for enhancement of the present DWI because it occurred outside the ten-year window set out in amended section 49.09(e). After the trial court denied the motions, appellant pleaded guilty to felony DWI and was sentenced to three years in prison.
The court of appeals reversed appellant's conviction after concluding that the use of the 1984 DWI conviction to enhance the present offense from a misdemeanor to a felony was improper. (4) The court of appeals concluded that the 2001 amendment to section 49.09(e) limits the use of prior DWIs for enhancement purposes by changing the relevant ten-year remoteness period from the former "ten years from the most recent prior offense to the date of the present offense" to "ten years between the most recent prior conviction and the date of the earlier prior conviction." (5) Because there was a greater than ten-year gap between appellant's most recent prior conviction in 1997 and his earlier prior conviction in 1984, the court of appeals reversed the trial court's judgment, ordered that the judgment be reformed to reflect a conviction for a class B misdemeanor, and remanded the case for a new punishment hearing. (6)
II.
This case presents an issue of statutory interpretation of the Texas Legislature's 2001 amendment to the ten-year remoteness rule for felony DWI enhancement. Under our traditional rules of statutory interpretation, we must look to the plain meaning of the language used. (7) When the statutory language is "clear and unambiguous, the Legislature must be understood to mean what it has expressed, and it is not for the courts to add or subtract from such a statute." (8) However, when the plain language is ambiguous or its straightforward application would lead to absurd results, courts may consider extra-textual factors to arrive at a sensible interpretation. (9) Our overriding goal is to carry out the legislative intent of the law. (10)
A. Historical Overview of DWI Enhancements
Although DWI is normally a misdemeanor offense, when a person has two prior DWI convictions, the third DWI charge may be elevated to a felony. (11) The public policy rationales for increased penalties for repeat DWI offenders include:
(1) repeat offenders should be punished more severely for repeatedly endangering the public welfare; (2) harsher penalties for repeat offenders function as a deterrent, discouraging the offender and others from drinking and driving; and (3) the jail sentence for repeat offenders ... reflects the need to physically remove drunk drivers from public streets for a period of time, both as punishment for them and as protection for the rest of society. (12)
Historically, Texas law provided that any one prior driving while intoxicated conviction, no matter how remote, (13) could enhance a misdemeanor DWI offense to a felony. (14) In 1983, that requirement was increased to two prior DWI convictions. (15) Then, in 1993, the Legislature limited the elevation of a DWI to a felony only when the defendant had two prior DWI convictions, one of which had been committed within the ten-year period before the commission of the present offense. (16) Under the 1993 law, the ten-year remoteness clock began ticking backwards from the date of the present offense to the date the person committed his most recent prior DWI. (17)
B. The 2001 Amendments to the DWI Enhancement Statute
In 2001, the Legislature made changes to three provisions within section 49.09. First, any prior intoxication manslaughter conviction, regardless of whether it involved the use of a car, airplane, or boat, can be used to elevate a misdemeanor DWI to a felony DWI offense. (18) Second, any intoxication manslaughter conviction, no matter how remote, can be used to enhance the present DWI offense. (19) Third, the Legislature amended Section 49.09(e), the provision we are now charged with interpreting, to "modif[y] the ten-year time period to begin after the individual's sentence is completely discharged." (20) The first two amendments broaden the enhancement provisions considerably by allowing for the use of any prior intoxication manslaughter convictions for enhancement, regardless of type or remoteness. At issue in this case is whether the Legislature's change to section 49.09(e) broadened or drastically restricted the use of prior DWI convictions when there are two prior convictions rather than simply one.
C. The Boykin Plain Language Analysis
In interpreting a statute under Boykin, we look first to the plain language used. (21) Amended section 49.09(e) states that a prior DWI conviction may not be used for enhancement if:
Under Subsections (A)-(D), the Legislature unambiguously changed the time at which the prior conviction clock begins ticking. Formerly, it had been the date of the commission of the offense. Now, it is a much later date-whichever date is the latest of the date of judgment, termination of community supervision or parole, or release from jail or prison. That change clearly broadens the use of a single prior conviction because it moves forward-closer to the time of the present offense-the ten-year window. (22)
The difficulty in interpreting Subsection (e) is deciding how it applies when the defendant has two prior DWI convictions. Does the clock run backward (as it did under prior law and as it does for a single prior conviction) to the date that the most recent prior conviction sentence expires and, if that conviction is not remote, revitalize any other earlier conviction? Or does the clock, for purposes of two prior DWI convictions, now run forward to measure only the ten-year interval between the first and second prior conviction?
The court of appeals said that the clock now runs forward from the earliest prior conviction. It reasoned:
Appellant's 1984 conviction for DWI meets each of the requirements for remoteness because 1) the conviction was a final conviction, 2) the 2002 DWI offense was committed more than ten years after the 1984 date of conviction for DWI, and 3) the 1997 DWI conviction did not occur within ten years of the 1984 conviction. (23)
Several other courts of appeals have followed the reasoning of the Tyler Court of Appeals. They have stated that, under the pre-2001 amendments, "the proper approach was to 'look back' ten years from the date of the primary DWI offense to determine whether an intervening DWI conviction had occurred since the remote conviction." (24) After the 2001 amendments, however, these courts reason that they are required to "look forward" from the earliest of the prior convictions to see if there is an intervening conviction within ten years of that earliest conviction. (25) Viewed in a vacuum, this is a reasonable reading of the literal words of the statute.
However, I think that the plain language of this statute is ambiguous under Boykin because there are at least three other reasonable interpretations of the plain language in the amended statute. (26) First, as suggested during oral argument on this case, the statute could be read to mean that the two prior DWIs both had to be within ten years of the present offense before they could be used for felony enhancement purposes. (27) Second, the amended statute could be read to require "chaining" of prior convictions-the sentence on each prior DWI conviction used to enhance must have been completed within ten years of the next one. Third, as Professors Dix and Dawson read the amended statute, it could mean that "if the State proves two prior DWI convictions and the date of either conviction is not more than ten years before the commission of the primary offense," the State may elevate the offense to a felony. (28)
D. Extra-textual Considerations and Legislative Intent
Because each one of these four "plain language" interpretations is plausible, I believe that the statute is ambiguous under Boykin. (29) Therefore, I would look to extra-textual considerations to determine the intent of the Legislature. (30) The Code Construction Act, which provides the tools for interpretation when the plain language of a law is ambiguous, (31) states that, in construing a statute, a court may consider the
(1) object sought to be attained;
(2) circumstances under which the statute was enacted;
(3) legislative history;
(4) common law or former statutory provisions, including laws on the same or similar subjects;
(5) consequences of a particular construction;
(6) administrative construction of the statute; and
(7) title (caption), preamble, and emergency provisions. (32)
I would apply the first two factors-the object to be attained and the circumstances under which the statute was enacted-together because of their similarity in this instance. The 2001 Legislature's first two amendments to Section 49.09 show the expansion of offenses (any and all prior intoxication manslaughter convictions regardless of remoteness) and the broadening of the time-window triggering the enhancement of the charged DWI offense (increasing it from the date of the commission of the prior offense to the latest date for which any sentence would affect the defendant). Additionally, the circumstances under which the 2001 amendments were enacted further support the legislative intent to broaden the scope of eligible offenses used for enhancement purposes. The Bill Analysis of HB 314 clarifies the background and purpose of the 2001 amendments in stating:
Under current law, if an individual is convicted of a third DWI within ten years of the date the previous offense was committed the offense is increased to a third degree felony offense. However, the ten-year period begins with the individual's incarceration and could be partially or completely executed during the individual's confinement. House Bill 314 modifies the ten-year time period to begin after the individual's sentence is completely discharged and authorizes a previous conviction of intoxication manslaughter to be used for the purposes of enhancement regardless of when the conviction occurred. (33)
Thus, the amendment's stated purpose was to broaden the scope of DWI convictions that could be used for enhancement purposes.
Further, the legislative history of the 2001 amendment also reflects a broadening purpose. The original version of HB 2250 (the bill that eventually created the amendment to 49.09(e)) addressed only intoxication manslaughter. (34) However, HB 2250 was amended by the addition of language from HB 314, discussed above, which modified the ten-year rule and was the basis for the present version of 49.09(e). (35) The current language-interpretation dilemma was created by a floor amendment to HB 2250 by Senator Moncrief. Senator Moncrief's introduction of HB 2250 stated that the proposed amendment was a way of closing loop-holes in the previous DWI enhancement statute. He explained:
Members, this bill closes some of the loop-holes in the DWI statutes, to ensure that repeat DWI offenders face appropriate charges. It provides that a person convicted of intoxication manslaughter - that is, someone who kills someone driving drunk - that any subsequent DWI would be a felony. It also states DWI penalty enhancements apply for up to ten years after the completion of the sentence for previous convictions. (36)
In further explaining the purpose of the floor amendment to HB 2250, Senator Moncrief stated:
Mr. President, this is merely a Legislative Council clean-up amendment of
language that was added on the House floor. The House added new language
without removing the old statute, and this [current floor amendment] removes
duplicative language to avoid confusion within the statute. It makes no
substantive change to the bill. (37)
Senator Moncrief's floor amendment indicates that the amendment did not make any
substantive changes to HB 2250, but rather, made the language in subsection(e)(3) congruent
with the changes made to subsection (e)(2). Under this change, subsections (e)(2) and (e)(3)
provide that the relevant time period is that looking backward from the commission of the
present offense to the latest date under the revised Subsection(e)(2) (i.e., the date of the
conviction, or the date of the release from probation, parole, or confinement) of the most
recent prior conviction. Thus, the legislative history indicates that the 2001 amendment was
not intended to radically limit the scope of eligible prior DWIs used for enhancement
purposes, but rather to broaden that scope. There is no indication from any source that the Legislature intended the type of radical
revision and limitation of the DWI felony enhancement statute that would occur under the
interpretation given by the majority, the court of appeals, or by the first two alternate "plain
language" possibilities-both prior DWIs within the single ten-year window before the
commission of the charged offense or "chaining" of DWIs with each prior within ten years
of the one before it. The interpretation given by the majority and court of appeals in this case
has an additional deleterious effect: it unduly emphasizes the sins of one's youth without
regard for more recent reformation because two very remote DWIs would permit
enhancement to a felony as long as both of those prior DWI convictions occurred within a
ten-year window. (38) I cannot agree that the majority's interpretation accords with the legislative intent or
with the other two simultaneous amendments to section 49.09 which significantly broaden
the use of intoxication manslaughter convictions to enhance a DWI offense to a felony. I
think that the legislature intended to broaden, not drastically limit, the use of prior DWI
convictions for enhancement purposes. (39) Furthermore, under the literal "plain meaning" of the words, no conviction obtained
before September 1, 1994, is barred for enhancement purposes under the statute. As the State
aptly points out, under section 49.09(e)(1), the ten-year rule prohibits the use of a prior DWI
only if "the conviction was a final conviction under Subsection (d)." (40) Subsection (d),
however, refers only to convictions occurring on or after September 1, 1994. (41) Therefore,
under a purely technical application of the "plain meaning" rule, no conviction-regardless
of how remote-obtained before that date is barred from use under subsection (e). Now, of
course, that is not at all what the legislature intended. The clear intent of subsection (d) is
to include within the definition of "final conviction" any conviction obtained after September
1, 1994, whose sentence was probated as well as those in which the sentence was "imposed."
But that is not what the literal words of the statute say. If we are to adhere to the "plain
meaning" of the literal words in one subsection of article 49.09, we should, for the sake of
consistency, adhere to the technical "plain meaning" in the other pertinent subsection of
article 49.09. But in neither subsection would strict application of the literal words of the
statute be a reasonable interpretation of the law or one that is in accord with legislative intent. In sum, I would find that the most reasonable interpretation of the 2001 amendments
is that of Professors Dix and Dawson. That interpretation is also most faithful to the
legislative intent and history. Although the language of the 2001 amendment to the statute
is infelicitous, I believe that the relevant ten-year period under section 49.09(e) is the time
from the commission of the present DWI offense backwards to the date on which the
defendant was discharged from probation, parole, or confinement for the most recent prior
offense. If that conviction was discharged within ten years of the present offense, it
revitalizes any other earlier DWI conviction-regardless of the date it was committed-for
enhancement purposes. I would reverse the decision by the court of appeals and affirm the judgment of the
trial court. Cochran, J. Filed: January 26, 2005 Published
1. 2.
3. Did the Court of Appeals correctly interpret the 2001 amendment to Penal Code § 49.09(e)
such that the relevant ten-year period for an intervening conviction is now the period between
the two prior DWI's rather than the ten-year period before the date of the primary offense?
4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
10. 11. Tex. Pen Code § 49.09 et. seq.; 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. The former version of Section 49.09(e) read: A conviction may not be used for purposes of enhancement under this section if: (1) the conviction was a final conviction under Subsection (d) and was for an offense
committed more than ten years before the offense for which the person is being tried
was committed; and (2) the person has not been convicted of an offense under Section 49.04, 49.05, 49.06,
49.065, 49.07, or 49.08 or any offense related to operating a motor vehicle while
intoxicated committed within ten years before the date on which the offense for which
the person is being tried was committed. Tex. Pen. Code §49.09(e) (2000).
18. 19. 20. House Comm. On Criminal Jurisprudence, Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 314, 77th 21. 22. Suppose, for example, that a defendant is charged with a DWI alleged to have occurred
on November 1, 2004. He has a prior conviction for a DWI which was committed on November
1, 1990. Under the pre-2001 amendment, that prior conviction is too remote to use as an
enhancement. But under the 2001 amendments, if the defendant was not sentenced for that 1990
DWI until November 10, 1992, and then served two years on community supervision which
terminated on November 9, 1994, that prior conviction can be used to enhance the present
offense.
23. 24. 25. 26. 27. Tr. Oral Argument (September 29, 2004). This interpretation had been accepted by one
court under the pre-2001 enhancement statute, 28. In 2001, the legislature totally changed the nature of the remoteness ban.
Instead of measuring the time between the commission of the primary DWI
offense and the date of commission of the latest prior DWI, the amended
provision measures the time from the commission of the primary DWI offense to
the date the defendant was discharged from probation, parole or incarceration for
the newest of the prior offenses. Id. As they further note, "[o]f course, this substantially extends the reach of the felony DWI
statute to include more offenses." Id.
29. 30. 31. 32. Tex. Gov't Code § 311.023.
33. House Comm. On Criminal Jurisprudence, Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 314, 77th
Leg., R.S. (2001).
34. 35. House Comm. On Criminal Jurisprudence, Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 314, 77th
Leg., R.S. (2001).
36. 37. 38. As the State Prosecuting Attorney points out, under this interpretation, a teenager could
have two DWI convictions in the halcyon days of his youth, then lead an exemplary life for the
next forty years, and, celebrating his sixtieth birthday, commit a new offense. He could be
charged with a felony DWI. On the other hand, the town drunk who finishes each of his five
prior DWI sentences exactly eleven years apart, except for the most recent one which was just
two years before the present offense, could not be charged with a felony.
39. The majority quotes the Supreme Court's recent statement that, "[i]f Congress enacted
into law something different from what it intended, then it should amend the statute to conform it
to its intent. It is beyond our province to rescue Congress from its drafting errors, and to provide
for what we might think ... is the preferred result." 40. Tex. Penal Code § 49.09(e)(1).
41. Tex. Penal Code § 49.09(d) reads: "For the purpose of this section, a conviction for
an offense under Section 49.04, 49.05, 49.06, 49.065, 49.07, or 49.08 that occurs on or after
September 1, 1994, is a final conviction, whether the sentence for the conviction is imposed or
probated."
Lamie v. United States Trustee , 124 S. Ct. 1023 ( 2004 )
Joles v. State , 1978 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1100 ( 1978 )
Howard v. State , 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 3818 ( 2004 )
Brown v. State , 1997 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 11 ( 1997 )
Rawlings v. State , 1980 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1301 ( 1980 )
Anderson v. State , 110 S.W.3d 98 ( 2003 )
Edwards v. State , 166 Tex. Crim. 301 ( 1958 )
Badgett v. State , 2001 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 27 ( 2001 )
Renshaw v. State , 981 S.W.2d 464 ( 1999 )
Smith v. State , 1 S.W.3d 261 ( 1999 )
Ex Parte Kuester , 2000 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 65 ( 2000 )
Uriega v. State , 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 2208 ( 2004 )
Weaver v. State , 2002 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 151 ( 2002 )
Guinn v. State , 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 11886 ( 1985 )