Bobby Marion Marter v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 15, 2004
Docket01-03-00118-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Bobby Marion Marter v. State (Bobby Marion Marter v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobby Marion Marter v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 15, 2004



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-03-00118-CR





BOBBY MARION MARTER, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 232nd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 829436





MEMORANDUM OPINION


          A jury found appellant Bobby Marion Marter guilty of sexual assault of a child younger than seventeen years of age, and assessed punishment at confinement for twenty years. In four issues, Marter contends that the trial court erred in (1) failing to give the jury a limiting instruction concerning extraneous offenses and (2) denying a request for a mistrial following the State’s improper jury argument. We affirm.

Background

          After her grandmother died, at age six, the complainant began to reside with her mother and Marter. Before then, she lived with her grandmother but spent weekends with her mother and Marter. Marter began inappropriately touching the complainant on weekends. When she was about fourteen, in November 1988, Marter revealed to her that he had been having sex with her for the past two years while she slept.

          As the complainant became aware of Marter’s activities, she tried to remain awake at night and wore extra clothes. The complainant’s last sexual encounter with Marter occurred in December 1998. Despite her protests and attempts to physically push him away, Marter pulled her clothes off and raped her.

          In January 1999, the complainant told a friend’s father that her step-dad was having sex with her. The father called the police, who later arrested Marter.

Limiting Instruction

          Marter contends that the trial court erred in refusing to give the jury a limiting instruction at the time it allowed the State to offer evidence of Marter’s extraneous offenses, namely earlier episodes of sexual contact with the complainant.

          At trial, the following exchange took place after the State began to offer testimony regarding Marter’s extraneous offenses:

                    Counsel:     Excuse me, Judge. I’m going to object under Rule 404(b), and ask that there be a limiting instruction given to the jury before this testimony is admitted.

                    Court:         That will be overruled.

                    Counsel:     Are you also denying the limiting instruction?

                    Court:         Yes.

                    Counsel:     Judge, just to make – along this line of testimony, just for the record, may I have a running objection as to my same objection under Rule 404(b) and also my objection to – request for the Court to give a limiting instruction? May I have a running objection?

                    Court:         Yes.

          The trial court properly overruled Marter’s Rule 404(b) objection, however, because the Code of Criminal Procedure expressly allows admission of extraneous offenses that relate to “acts committed by the defendant against the child who is the victim of the alleged offense” in cases involving child sexual abuse, notwithstanding Rule 404(b). See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.37 § 2 (Vernon 1979). The State filed a notice of its intent to rely upon extraneous offenses in compliance with article 38.37. See id. Thus, the extraneous offense evidence was properly before the jury.

          Marter further contends that the trial court should have provided a limiting instruction pursuant to Rule 105 of the Texas Rules of Evidence. Under Rule 105(a), when evidence is admissible for one purpose, but not another, “the court, upon request, shall restrict the evidence to its proper scope and instruct the jury accordingly.” Tex. R. Evid. 105(a). Marter premised his trial objection on Rule 404(b), but did not state to the trial court the basis for his request for a limiting instruction or the form it should take. In this case, in which the Code of Criminal Procedure allows for the admission of extraneous evidence of other crimes the defendant committed against a complainant child notwithstanding Rule 404(b), a general request for a limiting instruction was not adequate to alert the trial court of the nature of Marter’s complaint. Moreover, given that the trial court ultimately charged the jury with a Rule 404(b) limiting instruction, nothing in the record indicates that a properly stated request would not have been heeded by the trial court. Accordingly, Marter has waived his complaint. Tex. R. App. P. 33.1.

          Closing Argument

          In his second, third, and fourth points of error, Marter contends that the trial court erred in overruling his motion for mistrial during closing argument. Marter maintains that the State commented on his failure to testify, and the comment violated his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, Article I, Section 10 of the Texas Constitution, and Article 38.08 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.

          During closing argument, the State said,

          State:          And if you’ll recall back - - that was awhile back, but if you recall when we were talking about reasonable doubt, I told you that reasonable doubt had to be to an element in the offense. Now what does that mean? It means that in the elements of the offense that I have to prove to you whether or not this man sexually assaulted [the complainant] on December 20, 1998, by having contact with his sexual organ against her sexual organ, without her consent and she was under 17.

[The complainant] testified about the facts of the case. The only person that can testify about what happened are the people that are there. So you heard from [the complainant].


          Marter objected that the State’s argument commented on the right of the defendant not to testify.

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