© 2002 Lang Baker
State v McCaffreyJune 5, 2002No. 2254-01 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. 2254-01 THE STATE OF TEXAS v. VIRGIL L. MCCAFFREY, Appellee ON THE STATES PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS GILLESPIE COUNTY Keller, P.J., delivered the unanimous opinion of the Court O P I N I O N Appellee was indicted for possessing more than four ounces but less then five pounds of marijuana. The trial court granted appellees motion to suppress, and the State appealed. The San Antonio Court of Appeals affirmed the trial courts order,1 and we granted the States petition for discretionary review. Appellee has died, however, and counsel for appellee has moved to dismiss the States petition. Under Tex. R. App. P. 7.1(a)(2), if an appellant in a criminal case dies after an appeal is perfected but before the appellate court issues the mandate, the appeal will be permanently abated. This rule, however, does not address the situation where the State is the appealing party in a criminal case and appellee dies during the pendency of the appeal. In March v. State, we held that a criminal prosecution does not survive the death of a criminal defendant.2 The question then becomes, what happens when the death of the defendant occurs during the pendency of an appeal. We have long held that the death of the appellant during the pendency of his appeal deprives the court of jurisdiction and the proper disposition is abatement.3 In Vargas v. State, we explained the rationale behind requiring permanent abatement, rather than dismissal, in the situation where the appellant dies during the pendency of the appeal:
But when the State is the party appealing, this rationale does not apply. Although this Court has not previously addressed this issue, the Corpus Christi Court of Appeals did so in State v. Curl.5 That Court reasoned that when a defendant dies during the pendency of a States appeal, all issues become moot:
The court dismissed the appeal.7 We agree that the proper disposition is dismissal of the appeal rather than permanent abatement. The States petition for discretionary review is dismissed. KELLER, Presiding Judge Date delivered: June 5, 2002
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© 2002 Lang Baker |