LEE ANN DAUPHINOT, JUSTICE.
A jury convicted Appellant Gilbert Junior Collins, also known as Gilbert Jouinor Collins, of five instances of aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon, charged in five separate indictments, and assessed his punishment at life imprisonment in each case. The trial court sentenced him accordingly. Appellant brings four issues on appeal, challenging the trial court's ruling on his motion to suppress and complaining of charge error. Because the trial court committed no reversible error, we affirm the trial court's judgments.
Fort Worth police suspected Appellant and Lisa Rasberry of aggravated robbery with a handgun of people at a Fort Worth game room and of another robbery two days later involving their attempt to steal a car in which they were riding. Monica Soto, another passenger, was shot and killed, and two other passengers were injured.
Police obtained warrants for the arrests of Lisa and Appellant for the game room robbery and executed the warrants at the home of Lisa's mother, Betty. The home was located at 3051 Hutchison in Fort Worth, Texas. Betty told the police that Appellant and Lisa were at the house, and she let the police in upon their arrival. After they entered the home, the police discovered that Lisa and Appellant were in a bedroom with the door closed and locked from the inside. Officer Michael Johnson kicked open the door to execute the arrest warrants.
When the officers entered the bedroom, they saw on the floor near the mattress a gun matching the description of the one used in the robbery. After Lisa and Appellant were taken into custody and removed from the room, Detective Edward Brian Raynsford arrived at the home. He read Betty a consent-to-search form and asked for permission to search the room. After Betty consented to the search, Raynsford seized the handgun and articles of clothing that he believed were used in the game room robbery.
Appellant was charged with five counts of aggravated robbery for the events at the game room. He filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized in the warrantless search. The State stipulated that "this [was] a warrantless search." Subsequently, the State clarified its position by agreeing that there was no search warrant but pointing out that the officers seized the evidence in question after they had entered under an arrest warrant and had seen the evidence in plain view. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion to suppress.
A senior forensic scientist with the Fort Worth Police Department Crime Lab testified that a casing found at the scene of the game room robbery matched the handgun found in the bedroom. A forensic DNA analyst from the UNT Center for Human Identification testified about her analysis of two swabs taken from the gun. She stated that there was a mix of DNA from more than one person on the gun. From her analysis, Appellant could not be excluded as a contributor to DNA collected in the swabs. His DNA fit the profile found on the grip, and she expected that one out of every 7,479 people would fit that profile. His profile also fit the DNA sample taken from the trigger of the gun, and she testified that the probability of randomly selecting someone with that same profile was 1 in 4.9 million.
Appellant requested a jury instruction under code of criminal procedure article
In his first issue, Appellant argues that because the police had no search warrant, and fell within no exception to the warrant requirement, the search of the bedroom and seizure of evidence violated the Fourth Amendment. He argues that the police lacked the probable cause coupled with exigent circumstances required to support the search of the bedroom in which they found the handgun and clothing used in the robbery. In his second issue, he argues that Betty lacked the authority and apparent authority to authorize the search of the bedroom. Although both Appellant and the State agree that there were arrest warrants for Lisa and Appellant, the arrest warrants are not part of the record. We therefore cannot say whether the arrest warrants name a location to enter in order to execute the warrants or whether the warrants contain instructions to search. Because no one argues that the warrants were arrest-and-search warrants, and because there is no evidence that the warrants contained instructions to conduct a search, we treat the warrants solely as arrest warrants that authorize no entry into a specific address to locate Appellant or Lisa.
The officers entered the bedroom in Betty's house where Appellant and Lisa were sleeping on a mattress on the floor in order to execute arrest warrants for Lisa and Appellant. The officers saw a black handgun and magazine lying on the floor near Lisa. They also saw hats on the wall and other items of clothing around the bedroom. The officers testified that the gun and clothing were in plain view when they entered the bedroom. State's Exhibit 43 shows the gun lying on the floor near the mattress.
While searches conducted without a warrant are per se unreasonable, seizing contraband in plain view does not run afoul of the Fourth Amendment.
We conclude that the seizure of the firearm, magazine, and clothing satisfies these requirements.
A well-recognized exception to the search warrant requirement is a search
But Appellant relied on Betty's testimony that Lisa and Appellant stayed in the searched bedroom about half the time and that they locked the door when they were there to argue that Betty lacked authority to grant permission to search the bedroom.
To comply with Payton v. New York, officers who execute an arrest warrant must have a "reasonable belief that the suspect resides at the place to be entered ... and have reason to believe that the suspect is present"
That is, whether because of consent or because they were executing arrest warrants where Appellant or Lisa lived, the officers were lawfully in the bedroom to execute the arrest warrants and required no additional search warrant to discover the firearm, magazine, and items of clothing. The officers were therefore authorized to seize weapons and evidence plainly visible while they were executing the arrest
Appellant contends in his third and fourth issues that the trial court reversibly erred by denying his requested article 38.23 jury instruction on plain view and Betty's apparent authority to consent. The State argues that Appellant is estopped from complaining about the failure to submit instructions under article 38.23(a) because when testimony about the seized evidence was first elicited, he informed the trial court that he was "not consenting to the relitigation ... of the motion to suppress." Additionally, the State contends that Appellant was not entitled to the instructions because there were no disputed issues of material fact regarding the search of the bedroom after Appellant's arrest there.
Article 38.23(a) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides,
Appellant did not litigate the motion to suppress before the jury. He did, however, challenge the officers' claim that the objects seized were in plain view. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals instructs us that the article 38.23 instruction is proper only when the motion to suppress is litigated before the jury:
Appellant essentially objected to litigating the motion to suppress before the jury while challenging the justification for seizing the evidence he complains of. He argued that the gun was not in plain view and supported his argument with the fact that the gun is not visible in State's Exhibits 35 and 36. Appellant in this case established all three elements required for the instruction. Thus, given the posture of this case at the point the trial court instructed the jury on guilt, we hold that the trial court erred by refusing Appellant's requested jury instruction on plain view.
We review jury charge error under the Almanza standard.
The police entered the bedroom pursuant to an arrest warrant. They also had consent to enter both the house and the bedroom. The factual issue of whether the weapon, clothing, and glasses were in plain view was resolved by photographic evidence. There was no evidence that State's Exhibit 43 did not accurately depict the location of the gun and no challenge to the clothing's being in plain view other than the challenge to the lawfulness of the search.
The police were lawfully in the bedroom when they saw the items depicted in the photographs. The evidence of Appellant's guilt was overwhelming. We therefore hold that the trial court's error in refusing the requested jury instruction was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, and we overrule Appellant's third issue.
As for Appellant fourth issue, in which he argues he was entitled to a 38.23 instruction on Betty's apparent authority to consent, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has explained that a trial judge has a sua sponte duty to prepare a jury charge that accurately sets out the law applicable to the specific offense charged.
Having overruled Appellant's four issues, we affirm the trial court's judgments.
LIVINGSTON, C.J., filed a concurring opinion in which GABRIEL, J., joins.
TERRIE LIVINGSTON CHIEF JUSTICE, concurring.
Although I concur in the judgment, I write separately to address appellant's third and fourth issues regarding the trial court's refusal to give the jury an article 38.23 jury instruction on plain view because I do not believe the trial court erred.
Regarding the State's argument that appellant was estopped from seeking an article 38.23 instruction, the following exchange occurred during the State's questioning of one of the officers who served the warrant:
Despite indicating that he was not consenting to the relitigation of the motion to suppress, appellant's counsel nevertheless simultaneously objected — and requested a running objection — to the admission of the items found in the room into evidence. During the trial, appellant's counsel questioned the officers involved in the search extensively regarding whether they could actually see the gun when they entered the room, based on its location in relation to other items around it and the officers' positions in the room. He also questioned witnesses regarding the circumstances of appellant's and Lisa's living arrangements.
A pretrial motion to suppress and a trial objection to the admission of evidence both challenge the admissibility of evidence. Holmes v. State, 248 S.W.3d 194, 199 (Tex. Crim.App.2008). But a defendant's entitlement to an article 38.23 instruction concerns whether the jury should consider evidence already admitted, and we determine whether a material fact issue has been raised (and whether an instruction should have been given) based on the state of the admitted evidence. Id. Therefore, an objection to the admissibility of evidence — via pretrial motion to suppress or contemporaneous trial objection — is not a prerequisite to a request for an article
However, I would hold that the trial court did not err by refusing to give the instruction on plain view because appellant did not raise a contested fact issue material to the lawfulness of the seizure. Appellant argued that the gun was not in plain view — and that he raised a fact issue as to whether it was — based on State's exhibits 35 and 36, photographs of the area around the bed in which the gun is not visible. But the State also introduced exhibit 43, a photograph of the bed from a greater distance and different angle that clearly shows the gun was in plain view. No witness testified that the gun was blocked from view, obscured by any other item, or that it had been moved before the photograph in exhibit 43 was taken.
The majority author concludes that the evidence raised a material factual dispute solely because of the admission of exhibits 35 and 36. But the fact that two photographs were taken that did not show the gun does not show a factual dispute or contradict the officers' unequivocal testimony that they saw the gun upon entering the room. See Hamal v. State, 390 S.W.3d 302, 307 (Tex.Crim.App.2012); Oursbourn v. State, 259 S.W.3d 159, 177 (Tex.Crim. App.2008) (clarifying that a factual dispute is "raised only by affirmative evidence, not by mere cross-examination questions or argument"). Accordingly, I would hold that the trial court did not err by refusing to submit an article 38.23 instruction on plain view.
For the reasons stated above, I concur in the judgment only as to issues three and four.
GABRIEL, J., joins.