Ex Parte Arthur Lynn Faust Jr. ( 2019 )


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  •                                         In The
    Court of Appeals
    Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont
    ____________________
    NO. 09-18-00462-CR
    ____________________
    EX PARTE ARTHUR LYNN FAUST JR.
    ________________________________________________________________________
    On Appeal from the 9th District Court
    Montgomery County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. 15-12-13314-CR
    ________________________________________________________________________
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Arthur Lynn Faust Jr. appeals the denial of habeas corpus relief from a
    judgment of conviction ordering community supervision for invasive visual
    recording, a state jail felony offense alleged to have been committed on or about
    November 17, 2015. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 11.072 (West 2015); see
    also Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 21.15(b)(1), (c) (West Supp. 2018). Faust contends the
    trial court abused its discretion in denying habeas relief because his guilty plea was
    involuntary. Additionally, he argues the trial court erred in refusing to hold a hearing
    1
    to address Faust’s claim, brought for the first time in his motion for reconsideration,
    that he would have withdrawn his guilty plea and gone to trial. We conclude the trial
    court’s findings are supported by the evidence and the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion by denying Faust’s motion to reconsider without conducting an
    evidentiary hearing. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order denying habeas
    relief.
    Habeas Corpus
    Faust rejected a plea bargain offer of deferred adjudication community
    supervision without jail time. He alleges this rejection was uninformed, and his
    guilty plea without an agreement on punishment was involuntary because of his trial
    counsel’s incorrect advice. Counsel had advised Faust that he was eligible for the
    pre-trial diversion Veteran’s Court Program but failed to inform Faust of the
    program’s eligibility requirements. Faust alleged that his counsel advised him that
    the trial court would decide whether to allow him to enter the program but failed to
    inform him that the State had to agree to his participation in the program. Faust
    alleged that had his lawyer provided correct advice, “Faust would have asked him to
    try to negotiate a plea to a misdemeanor; if he could not do so, Faust would have
    accepted the offer of deferred adjudication probation without jail time and, when
    eligible, moved to seal his record[.]” Faust’s habeas application did not allege that
    2
    he would have withdrawn his guilty plea and insisted on going to trial if the trial
    court had rejected the plea bargain. The affidavit Faust submitted with his
    application is silent as to what he would have done if the State had withdrawn the
    offer or the trial court rejected an agreement that did not provide for jail time as a
    condition of community supervision.
    A reporter’s record of the trial court proceedings was submitted as an exhibit
    to the habeas application. The records show that Faust pled guilty without the benefit
    of a plea bargain agreement. The trial court accepted the open plea, recessed without
    making a finding of guilt, and reconvened on a later date to hear evidence relevant
    to sentencing. In the sentencing hearing, the complaining witness testified that she
    caught Faust crouching behind her with his arm extended and holding his cellphone
    with the screen facing up under her dress. Deputy Richard Jackson testified that he
    obtained mall surveillance video that helped him identify Faust as the suspect. In an
    interview, Faust admitted that he recorded video of the complaining witness on his
    cell phone and that he had engaged in similar behavior between 10 and 100 other
    times. Faust consented to a search of his cell phone. Exhibits containing the contents
    of the phone dump and the surveillance video were admitted in the hearing.
    Faust testified that he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder related to his
    military service. He claimed he acted impulsively without any thought at all. Faust
    3
    testified at length about his disorder and the counseling he received to treat his
    condition. He explained that he has sole custody of his ten-year-old son. He stated
    that he successfully completed deferred adjudication community supervision in the
    past. Faust estimated that fifty times he had surreptitiously videoed skirt-wearing
    women while shopping at retail locations in The Woodlands, and he admitted he
    often had his son with him when he did it. He claimed the thrill was in obtaining the
    video, and he would delete them immediately or would watch them once and delete
    them. After the complaining witness confronted Faust, he sat in his car, deleted the
    videos, and Googled “Up-Skirt crime in Texas[.]” Faust denied receiving any sexual
    gratification from the videos. He resigned from the fire department after an internal
    affairs investigator informed Faust there would be a formal investigation into his
    conduct.
    The trial judge noted on the record that, in his opinion, a state jail sentence
    might not address Faust’s underlying problems, and a term of confinement followed
    by community supervision with sex offender treatment would be a more appropriate
    sentence. The trial court sentenced Faust to two years of state jail confinement,
    probated for five years, with 180 days of state jail confinement as a condition of
    probation. The trial court denied Faust’s request for deferred adjudication of guilt.
    4
    In the habeas proceedings before the trial court, Faust’s trial counsel provided
    an affidavit in which he admitted that he provided deficient advice by informing
    Faust that the trial court had the ability to place him in the Veterans Court Program
    without the State’s agreement. The State conceded deficient performance by trial
    counsel but argued that Faust failed to prove prejudice. In response, Faust asked for
    an evidentiary hearing so that Faust could develop a record that the custom and
    practice throughout Texas is that courts accept plea bargain offers almost all the time
    in cases involving non-violent offenses. The trial court considered the application,
    the State’s answer, the contents of the Court’s file, and the affidavits and exhibits
    submitted to the trial court in the habeas proceeding without holding a live hearing.
    The trial court denied relief on findings which included a finding that had the trial
    court been presented with a plea offer of deferred adjudication without jail time as a
    condition, it would not have accepted the plea offer. The trial court denied Faust’s
    motion to reconsider, in which Faust argued, “Had the court rejected the plea bargain
    because it did not include jail time as a condition of probation, he would have pled
    not guilty and gone to trial.” 1
    1
    The motion to reconsider references a supplemental affidavit that is not
    included in the clerk’s record.
    5
    Appeal
    Faust argues that his rejection of a plea bargain offer of deferred adjudication
    community supervision without jail as a condition was uninformed and his guilty
    plea without an agreed recommendation was involuntary because his trial counsel
    advised Faust that he was eligible for the pre-trial diversion Veteran’s Court Program
    without informing Faust that the State had to agree for him to enter the program. To
    establish prejudice in a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in which a
    defendant rejects a plea-bargain because of bad legal advice, “the applicant must
    show a reasonable probability that: (1) he would have accepted the earlier offer if
    counsel had not given ineffective assistance; (2) the prosecution would not have
    withdrawn the offer; and (3) the trial court would not have refused to accept the plea
    bargain.” Ex parte Argent, 
    393 S.W.3d 781
    , 784 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). An
    applicant for an article 11.072 writ of habeas corpus bears the burden of proving his
    claim by a preponderance of the evidence. Ex parte Torres, 
    483 S.W.3d 35
    , 43 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2016). Because the trial judge is the sole finder of fact, in the appeal we
    afford almost total deference to a trial court’s factual findings, especially findings
    based on credibility and demeanor, and conclusions of law when they are supported
    by the record. 
    Id. at 42.
    Here, the trial court found that had it been presented with a
    plea offer of deferred adjudication without jail time as a condition, it would not have
    6
    accepted the plea offer. Therefore, Faust failed to establish that the trial court would
    not have refused to accept the plea bargain, as required by Argent. 
    See 393 S.W.3d at 784
    .
    Faust argues that he established the prejudice necessary to demonstrate that
    his guilty plea was involuntary because he would have been entitled to withdraw his
    guilty plea as a matter of law if the plea bargain offer had been presented to but
    rejected by the trial court. See generally Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 26.13(a)(2)
    (West Supp. 2018). However, his habeas application does not allege that he would
    have withdrawn his guilty plea and gone to trial if the original plea bargain offer had
    been presented to and rejected by the trial court. Further, the affidavit Faust attached
    to the habeas application does not state that he would have withdrawn his guilty plea
    and gone to trial. In the absence of allegations that he would have pleaded not guilty
    and gone to trial, Faust’s allegations are insufficient regarding the showing of
    prejudice required on a claim of an involuntary plea due to ineffective assistance of
    counsel. See Hill v. Lockhart, 
    474 U.S. 52
    , 60 (1985).
    After the trial court denied the application, Faust alleged that he would have
    withdrawn his plea and gone to trial, but we review the record as it existed before
    the trial court at the time the trial court made its decision. Ex parte Hernandez, 
    398 S.W.3d 369
    , 377 n.2 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2013, no pet.). When the trial court
    7
    denied the habeas application, the trial court did not have evidence before it that
    Faust would have withdrawn his guilty plea if a plea bargain offer had been rejected
    by the trial court because it did not provide for jail time. Moreover, Faust claims in
    his appeal that avoiding jail time was so important that he would have gone to trial
    if the plea bargain had been presented to and rejected by the trial court, but given the
    strength of the State’s case against him, it would have been irrational to insist on
    going to trial and risk two years of incarceration to avoid a shorter period of
    incarceration required as a condition of community supervision.
    In his appellate brief, Faust argues the trial court erred in refusing to conduct
    a hearing to address Faust’s claim that he would have pled not guilty and gone to
    trial after the trial court informed the parties that a plea bargain agreement without
    jail as a condition would have been rejected. Article 11.072 allows but does not
    require the habeas court to hold a hearing. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art.
    11.072, § 6(b); see also Ex parte Aguilar, 
    501 S.W.3d 176
    , 178 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [1st Dist.] 2016, no pet.) (“[A]rticle 11.072 does not require the trial court
    to hold any hearing—let alone an evidentiary hearing—before rendering its
    decision.”).
    Faust claims the affidavit he filed with his habeas application did not address
    the subject of whether the trial court could have accepted or rejected the plea because
    8
    he did not know that the trial court would have rejected the plea bargain until the
    trial court signed the written findings. When Faust submitted his habeas application,
    he knew that the finding was required for him to obtain relief and that it was possible
    that the trial court would find that it would have rejected the plea bargain. See 
    Argent, 393 S.W.3d at 784
    . Article 11.072 expressly allows the trial court to use its
    recollection of the proceedings in determining whether the applicant is entitled to
    relief. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 11.072, § 6(b). Without a hearing, Faust
    could refer the trial court to those parts of the proceedings that would support his
    argument that the plea bargain would have been accepted by the trial court. 2 The fact
    that the trial court declined to defer adjudication of guilt and assessed jail time as a
    condition of community supervision supports the trial court’s habeas finding that a
    plea bargain offer that did not include jail time would have been rejected, but that is
    a function of the facts of the case, not an undeveloped record. We conclude that
    Faust has not shown that the trial court abused its discretion by not holding a hearing.
    2
    For instance, Faust could argue the trial court would have been receptive to
    a sentence that did not involve jail time if the State’s plea bargain offer had been
    presented to the judge for approval as a plea bargain agreement because the pre-
    sentencing information record would have included information, such as that
    developed in his sentencing hearing, concerning Faust’s struggles with post-
    traumatic stress disorder and his attempts to address his condition through a program
    designed for veterans.
    9
    In view of the totality of the record, and deferring to the habeas court’s
    findings of fact, we conclude that Faust has failed to demonstrate that, but for
    counsel’s deficient performance, he would have accepted the plea bargain offer and
    the trial court would have accepted the plea. Further, in view of the totality of the
    record, and deferring to the habeas court’s findings of fact, we conclude that Faust
    has failed to demonstrate that, but for counsel’s errors, Faust would have withdrawn
    his plea and insisted on going to trial if the trial court rejected the plea bargain
    agreement. Because Faust failed to adequately show that he was prejudiced due to
    counsel’s erroneous advice, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying
    habeas relief. We affirm the trial court’s order denying the appellant’s application
    for a writ of habeas corpus.
    AFFIRMED.
    ________________________________
    CHARLES KREGER
    Justice
    Submitted on February 1, 2019
    Opinion Delivered April 10, 2019
    Do Not Publish
    Before McKeithen, C.J., Kreger, and Horton, JJ.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 09-18-00462-CR

Filed Date: 4/10/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/10/2019