Bobby Wayne Emry v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 16, 2009
Docket01-07-01063-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Bobby Wayne Emry v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 16, 2009



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas



NO. 01-07-01063-CR

NO. 01-07-01064-CR

__________



BOBBY WAYNE EMRY, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee



On Appeal from the 10th District Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 07CR1142 & 07CR1143



MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found, appellant, Bobby Wayne Emry, guilty of the offenses of aggravated sexual assault of a child (1) and indecency with a child (2) and assessed his punishment at confinement for seven and one-half years for the sexual assault offense and ten years, probated for ten years, for the indecency offense. In four issues, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support both of his convictions, the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the complainant's outcry statement offered by her mother, the trial court abused its discretion in admitting a "nurse's interpretation of the [complainant's] gesture as a statement of the child," and the trial court erred in instructing the jury that it "must unanimously agree as to the commission of different aggravated sexual assault statutory provisions."

We affirm. Factual and Procedural Background T.E., the mother of the complainant, testified that on the morning of April 12, 2007, she left the bedroom that she shared with appellant, her husband, and went to look for him. She proceeded to her children's bedroom, in which the complainant, her eleven-year-old daughter, slept, along with T.E.'s other daughter and son. The door to the children's bedroom was open, and T.E. looked toward the bed shared by the complainant and her sister. There, T.E. saw appellant standing next to the complainant's bed with his right hand on his penis and his left hand on the complainant's vagina. Appellant was wearing swimming trunks, which were down around his thighs, and the complainant's underwear had been pulled down to her mid-thigh. T.E. could see appellant's penis, and she thought that he was masturbating. The complainant, who was looking toward the television and lying on her side with her leg raised, started crying immediately when she saw T.E. T.E. then grabbed the complainant, and appellant stated and kept repeating, "It's not what you think." T.E. immediately took the complainant to another room in which Barney Starnes, a family friend, lived and asked the complainant if appellant had "put his private area in [her] private area." The complainant responded, "Yes," and also stated that appellant had been assaulting her for about one month. T.E. then told Starnes to lock the door to the room, and she called for emergency assistance and reported that appellant had assaulted the complainant and had then gone upstairs to the bathroom to clean up and take a shower.

On cross-examination, T.E. testified that appellant had adopted the complainant when she was three-years old and she and appellant had two other children together. T.E. explained that the complainant shared a bed with her sister and that appellant assaulted the complainant while the other daughter, who is a "hard sleeper," was sleeping in the same bed. T.E. conceded that, when she walked into the bedroom, she did not know whether appellant's finger was in the complainant's vagina, but she maintained that appellant's hand was on the complainant's vagina.

The complainant testified that appellant had come into her room while she was watching television, climbed into bed, "pulled his private out," and tried to "stick it in [her]." She explained that as appellant pulled down her panties, his "private" was sticking out of his underwear. The complainant indicated that she referred to her vagina as her "private area" and referred to appellant's penis as his "private area." She noted that when she saw T.E. enter the room, she began crying. The complainant stated that appellant had been assaulting her for about one month, he had told her not to tell anyone, and she did not tell anyone because she was afraid that he would hurt her. On cross-examination, the complainant explained that she did not cry out during the assault because she was afraid that appellant would hurt her. She also explained that, although she had stated in a subsequent interview that appellant had not previously assaulted her, she did not understand the question at the time.

Texas City Police Department Detective P. Edinburgh testified that he was assigned to investigate the allegation that appellant had sexually assaulted the complainant. Edinburgh took a typewritten sworn statement and multiple video-taped statements from appellant. Each time, Edinburgh advised appellant of his legal rights, and appellant indicated that he understood his legal rights and agreed to give the statements. Edinburgh never threatened or coerced appellant or promised appellant anything. In his typewritten statement, appellant admitted that, on the morning at issue, he noticed that the complainant was awake and watching television while the other children were asleep. He walked over to her bed, gave her a hug and kiss, and "felt [her] up," inappropriately touching her.

Appellant further admitted that he touched the complainant on her "butt and on the inside of her thighs," he pulled her panties down in the back, he might have had his "hands in [his] pants," and his penis could have been exposed. Also, while he had his hands in his pants touching his penis, he may have touched the complainant's vagina when she lifted her leg up, but "she had her panties on the whole time." Edinburgh stated that appellant was agitated and frustrated while giving his written statement and that he stood up when he admitted that he "felt up" the complainant.

On cross-examination, Edinburgh agreed that appellant had consistently denied "feeling up" the complainant during his other videotaped statements. Also, Edinburgh observed the complainant's videotaped statement at the Children's Assessment Center and noted that, during the interview, she was not crying and had calmed down from earlier in the day. Edinburgh agreed that the complainant's statement during this interview that she had not been sexually assaulted before did not conform with her other statements that appellant had been assaulting her for about one month.

Texas City Police Officer L. Jackson testified that he responded to a telephone call regarding the sexual assault and met with T.E., who was standing at the front door and was frantic and upset.

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