             IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                         OF TEXAS
                                      NO. PD-1591-13



                  EX PARTE ERIC MICHAEL HEILMAN, Appellee



            ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
                  FROM THE NINTH COURT OF APPEALS
                          JEFFERSON COUNTY

              A LCALA, J., filed a dissenting opinion.

                                 DISSENTING OPINION

       Because it unnecessarily overrules this Court’s recent precedent in Phillips v. State,

I respectfully dissent from this Court’s judgment reversing the court of appeals’ affirmance

of the order granting post-conviction habeas corpus relief to Eric Michael Heilman.        See

Phillips v. State, 362 S.W.3d 606, 608-10 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011); State v. Heilman, 413

S.W.3d 503, 508 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2013). The majority opinion determines that it is

necessary to entirely overrule Phillips, a distinguishable case involving an ex post facto

claim, in order to resolve this relatively simple appeal involving an ordinary statute-of-

limitations claim, but I disagree. I would reverse the court of appeals’ holding that the trial
                                                                             Heilman Dissent - 2

court lacked jurisdiction and instead remand the case to that court for further consideration

of Heilman’s claim on the merits. See Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507-08. Because it goes too

far in delving into the ex post facto issues that were at the heart of this Court’s holding in

Phillips, but which are not implicated in the present appeal, I cannot join this Court’s

majority opinion, nor can I agree with its decision to resolve the merits of Heilman’s claim

on that basis.

                                        I. Background

       The facts of this case involve a simple claim, raised for the first time in an application

for a writ of habeas corpus, that a conviction was absolutely barred by the running of the

statute of limitations. Heilman had agreed to plead guilty to the misdemeanor offense of

tampering with a governmental record in exchange for the State’s agreement not to pursue

felony charges against him, and he was placed on deferred adjudication. Although the two-

year statute of limitations had already run at the time of his guilty plea, Heilman waived his

limitations defense, as indicated by his signature on the Deferred Adjudication Order, which

states, “Defense waives statute [of] limitation per Judge Flores.”

       After his successful completion of deferred adjudication, Heilman filed an application

for a writ of habeas corpus.      In response to Heilman’s application, the habeas court

determined that “the prosecution for the misdemeanor offense was, in the words and plain

sense of the charging document ‘on its face[,]’ barred by the applicable statute of

limitations.” Id. at 506. The habeas court dismissed the information and vacated the
                                                                             Heilman Dissent - 3

deferred adjudication order. Id. On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed the habeas court’s

order granting relief. Id. at 508. Relying on this Court’s opinion in Phillips, it determined

that, although generally a statute-of-limitations bar is not jurisdictional, that rule does not

apply to “‘pure law’ challenges, where the charging instrument shows on its face that the

prosecution is absolutely barred by the statute of limitations.” Id. at 507 (citing Phillips, 362

S.W.3d at 617-18). It further cited this Court’s opinion in Ex parte Smith for the proposition

that, “‘[w]hen the face of the pleading shows that the offense charged is barred by

limitations, that pleading is so fundamentally defective that the trial court does not have

jurisdiction and habeas relief should be granted.’” Id. at 508 (quoting Ex parte Smith, 178

S.W.3d 797, 802 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (citations and quotation marks omitted)). Applying

these principles to Heilman’s case, the court of appeals determined that, given that the statute

of limitations had already run at the time of his plea of guilty, “the information, on its face,

charged an offense the State could no longer prosecute, and one over which the trial court

did not have jurisdiction.” Id.

                 II. It Is Unnecessary to Overrule Phillips In Its Entirety

       Contrary to the majority opinion’s determination that it cannot resolve Heilman’s

appeal without overruling Phillips in its entirety, I conclude that it is unnecessary and

unadvisable for this Court to overrule Phillips’s core holding that an ex post facto violation

occurred in that case. See Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 616. Heilman’s claim does not involve

the application of retroactive legislation, nor does it implicate the Ex Post Facto Clause in
                                                                             Heilman Dissent - 4

any way, and, therefore, it is beyond the proper scope of our review to revisit Phillips’s

holding with respect to those matters in the course of resolving this appeal. I would,

therefore, more narrowly address only the “pure law” language from Phillips, and I would

reserve judgment as to the correctness of Phillips’s ex post facto analysis until that issue is

properly presented by the facts of a future case.

       A. Unnecessary to Disturb Phillips Court’s Analysis of Ex Post Facto Claim

       As the first step in its analysis in Phillips, the Court addressed the merits of Phillips’s

claim that his 2007 convictions for sexual offenses committed in 1982 and 1983 violated the

Ex Post Facto clauses of the state and federal constitutions. See id. at 610-16 (discussing

“absolute” right to be free from ex post facto laws, and holding that Phillips’s ex post facto

claim was “valid”). The basis for Phillips’s complaint was that, by applying a 1997

amendment to the statute of limitations in such a way as to resurrect his prosecution for

otherwise time-barred offenses, his convictions violated the Ex Post Facto Clause. Id. at

607-08. Because his offenses had been “extinguished by the running of limitations” in 1993,

those offenses, he contended, “could not be revived by the 1997 version of the statute of

limitations” without violating that constitutional prohibition. Id. at 609-10. After the court

of appeals rejected his argument, this Court granted Phillips’s petition for discretionary

review to determine whether the “appellate court improperly appl[ied] the decision in Stogner

v. California, 539 U.S. 607, 123 S. Ct. 2446, 156 L.Ed.2d 544 (2003)[,] allowing convictions

for offenses which had been extinguished by the running of limitations and thereby
                                                                             Heilman Dissent - 5

violat[ing] the ex post facto provisions of the Texas and Federal Constitutions[.]”

       Addressing the merits of Phillips’s ex post facto complaint, the Court held that the

application of the amended statute of limitations to Phillips’s conduct violated the Ex Post

Facto Clause. Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 616. It stated that “prosecution under the 2007

indictment . . . was absolutely barred by the statute of limitations in 1993. These charges

could not be resurrected by a 1997 statute extending the statute of limitations for sexual

offenses.” Id. at 607; see also id. at 613 (explaining principle that, to comply with Ex Post

Facto Clause, “a statute of limitations may be extended by the [L]egislature, but a

prosecution within the new time period will be permitted only if the limitations period had

not already run before the law was changed”). Although the Court in Phillips observed that

the 1997 amendment contained a standard savings clause and thus was “not an ex post facto

law on its face,” the Court nevertheless held that the statute’s “application to a situation in

which the statute of limitations had already run before its enactment violates that

constitutional provision.” Id. at 616; see also id. at 610 (determining that the Ex Post Facto

Clause applies “not only to laws that are facially retroactive, but also to laws that are applied

retroactively”) (citations omitted).

       As the court of appeals in this case indicated, unlike the complaint in Phillips,

Heilman’s claim does not implicate or rely upon the Ex Post Facto Clause in any way, and

the court of appeals did not address that aspect of Phillips in reaching its holding. See

Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507 n.1 (distinguishing Phillips because it “dealt with an ex post
                                                                            Heilman Dissent - 6

facto claim. Court action, not an ex post facto law, was under consideration in the habeas

proceeding in this case.”). The core holding in Phillips—that application of an amended

statute of limitations to conduct for which the prior limitations period had already run results

in an ex post facto violation—is irrelevant to our resolution of Heilman’s claim, which, by

contrast, involves a relatively straightforward argument that prosecution was absolutely

barred by the running of the statute of limitations. Compare Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 616, with

Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507-08. This Court should accordingly limit its reevaluation of

Phillips to those matters that are called into question by the facts of this case.

       Judicial restraint and stare decisis counsel against the majority opinion’s approach in

revisiting matters that are beyond the scope of the issue presently before us. In Rangel v.

State, this Court cautioned that “[j]udicial restraint and prudence prevent us from reaching

out and grabbing issues simply because they are interesting and important. We will exercise

our discretionary review authority only where the issues are properly presented for our

consideration.” 250 S.W.3d 96, 98 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008). And “stare decisis should

generally be followed, because it promotes judicial efficiency and consistency, it fosters

reliance on judicial decisions, and contributes to the actual and perceived integrity of the

judicial process.” Hammock v. State, 46 S.W.3d 889, 892-93 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) (citing

Proctor v. State, 967 S.W.2d 840, 844 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998)). These principles all counsel

against the majority opinion’s decision to overrule the ex post facto holding in Phillips,

which involved a discrete claim that application of an amended statute of limitations had
                                                                            Heilman Dissent - 7

resulted in an ex post facto violation, and which is not properly presented for our review

because it was neither addressed by the court of appeals nor called into question by the facts

of this case.

       B. Phillips’s “Pure Law” Discussion Must Be Overruled

       Although I disagree with this Court’s majority opinion’s decision to overrule

Phillips’s holding as to the merits of the ex post facto claim in that case, I agree with its

determination that it is necessary to reevaluate, and ultimately overrule, some problematic

language in Phillips indicating that a “pure law” statute-of-limitations claim, even one that

does not implicate ex post facto concerns, constitutes a category-one, non-forfeitable right.

See Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 608, 616-19; Marin v. State, 851 S.W.2d 275, 279 (Tex. Crim.

App. 1993).

       In Phillips, after initially concluding that Phillips had presented a meritorious ex post

facto claim, the Court then addressed the State’s argument that Phillips had nevertheless

forfeited his complaint by failing to raise it in the trial court. 362 S.W.3d at 617. In the

course of rejecting that argument, the Phillips Court initially explained that the right to be

free from ex post facto laws is a category-one, non-waivable right. Id. at 611-12 (describing

claims based on Ex Post Facto Clause as implicating an “absolute right—a first category

Marin right,” which “cannot be waived or forfeited”) (citing Marin, 851 S.W.2d at 279;

Ieppert v. State, 908 S.W.2d 217, 220 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995)). That rationale, standing

alone, would have constituted an adequate basis upon which to hold that Phillips had not
                                                                             Heilman Dissent - 8

forfeited his ex post facto complaint. Phillips should have stopped there, but instead, in dicta,

it went on to discuss law that was unnecessary to its holding and that has become problematic

in its broader application to this case.

       In response to the State’s argument that relief should be foreclosed by this Court’s

precedent in Proctor, the Court in Phillips broadly indicated that the Proctor rule was

inapplicable to all situations where the indictment shows on its face that prosecution is barred

by the running of the statute of limitations. See id. at 616-18; Proctor, 967 S.W.2d at 844.

Specifically, to address the State’s argument that Proctor had held that a defendant forfeits

a statute-of-limitations defense if he does not assert it at or before the guilt stage of trial,

Phillips stated,

       Proctor governs statute-of-limitations defenses that are based on facts
       (challenging a pleading that includes a “tolling paragraph,” “explanatory
       averments,” or even “innuendo allegations,” that suffice to show that the
       charged offense is not, at least on the face of the indictment, barred by
       limitations), not [to those based on] pure law (challenging an indictment that
       shows on its face that prosecution is absolutely barred by the statute of
       limitations). The pleading that gives rise to a limitations factual defense is
       reparable. The pleading that gives rise to a statute-of-limitations bar is not.
       The first is forfeited unless raised before or during the trial and cannot be
       raised in a pretrial writ. The second—a true ex post facto violation—is not
       forfeitable under Ieppert.

Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 617-18 (citations omitted). It is this passage from Phillips that the

court of appeals relied upon in concluding that, even in situations lacking any suggestion of

an ex post facto violation, a “pure law” limitations claim implicates a categorical right that

cannot be waived or forfeited and constitutes an absolute bar to prosecution. See Heilman,
                                                                                 Heilman Dissent - 9

413 S.W.3d at 507-08. And it is this aspect of Phillips that must now be overruled. In

suggesting that a “pure law” situation would always result in a non-forfeitable, categorical

bar to prosecution, this portion of the discussion in Phillips was unnecessary to its holding

with respect to what it had characterized as the category-one Marin right that was at issue

there, namely, the ex post facto violation based on the application of new legislation affecting

the limitations period. See Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 611-12.1 By including, in dicta, broader

language that would apply even to category-three Marin rights that were not at issue in

Phillips, this portion of Phillips was inconsistent with Proctor. See id. at 617-18; Proctor,

967 S.W.2d at 844. I disagree that this broader language necessarily should be interpreted

as constituting part of the Court’s holding in Phillips given that the facts of that case did not

involve an ordinary statute-of-limitations claim. But because this erroneous principle from

Phillips was the basis for the court of appeals’ holding that the trial court lacked jurisdiction

over Heilman’s case, I would overrule this broader language and hold that Proctor applies

to claims involving an ordinary lapse of a limitations period where there is no argument that


       1
         This Court’s majority and concurring opinions suggest that the Phillips Court erred by
deciding that a category-one right was at issue in that case and that Phillips’s dissenting opinion was
correct in its assessment that, because the amended statute of limitations contained a savings clause,
an ordinary lapse of limitations was actually at issue there. See Phillips v. State, 362 S.W.3d 606,
619 (Keller, P.J., dissenting). But this Court should not decide cases based upon how a dissenting
opinion characterized certain facts. The bottom line is that the majority opinion in Phillips decided
the case under the theory that a category-one right was at issue because of the new legislation
extending the statute of limitations in that case. Even if the majority opinion in Phillips was
erroneous in its ultimate holding with respect to that matter given the existence of a savings clause,
this case does not involve new legislation, a savings clause, or any of the constitutional principles
this Court addressed in deciding that a category-one right was implicated in Phillips. The limiting
principle of stare decisis requires that we not overrule precedent based upon the inclusion of dicta
when that precedent is procedurally and factually distinguishable.
                                                                           Heilman Dissent - 10

any legislation has extended a limitations period, such as the claim presented here by

Heilman. See Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507-08; Proctor, 967 S.W.2d at 844.

                                       III. Conclusion

       Because I am unpersuaded by the majority opinion’s determination that it is necessary

to overrule Phillips’s ex post facto analysis in order to resolve the present appeal, I would

adhere to stare decisis with respect to that holding until this Court is properly called upon to

consider it in a future case. I would more narrowly limit the holding in this case to overrule

only the “pure law” discussion in Phillips, and I would accordingly reverse the court of

appeals’ determination that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over Heilman’s case. Because

the majority opinion addresses matters that are beyond the scope of proper review and

resolves Heilman’s claim on the basis of an unwarranted rehashing of ex post facto

principles, I respectfully dissent.




Filed: March 18, 2015

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