Wooten v. Texas (Original)
Annotate this CaseA jury rejected Appellant Codiem Wooten's self-defense claim and convicted him of murder, for which he was sentenced to sixty years' confinement. At the punishment phase of trial, appellant requested a "sudden passion" jury instruction. The trial court denied that request. The Court of Appeals affirmed appellant's conviction, but reversed with respect to punishment, holding the trial court erred by not giving the sudden passion instruction. The State appealed. The Supreme Court reversed, finding the appellate court erred in finding "some harm" simply because appellant was subjected to a greater range of punishment than he would had the jury been instructed on sudden passion.
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