Calderon, Ex Parte Domingo Iii

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 2010
DocketAP-76,160
StatusPublished

This text of Calderon, Ex Parte Domingo Iii (Calderon, Ex Parte Domingo Iii) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calderon, Ex Parte Domingo Iii, (Tex. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. AP-76,160

EX PARTE DOMINGO CALDERON III, Applicant

ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS CAUSE NO. 04-11-0244-CRA IN THE 218 TH DISTRICT COURT ATASCOSA COUNTY

HERVEY , J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

OPINION

Applicant pled no contest to indecency with a child. He claims that newly discovered

evidence establishes that he is actually innocent of this offense and that he falsely pled no contest

at the request of his mother.1 We filed and set this case to determine, among other things, whether

applicant has established that he is actually innocent. The State concedes and the convicting court

has consistently made findings that applicant is actually innocent, and this Court has decided to

In its May 11, 2007, findings, the convicting court found that applicant’s mother testified “that she pressured [applicant] to plead” because she believed that her husband “would divorce her and seek custody of [their] children if she continued to persist in claiming [applicant’s] innocence.” Applicant also claimed in an affidavit that this is why he pled no contest. Calderon--2

accept these findings.2 It is necessary, however, for us to determine whether we should grant

applicant habeas corpus relief and set aside his conviction because, over the course of four remands

and two live hearings, the convicting court has made supported-by-the-record but contradictory

findings on whether applicant’s actual-innocence claim is based on newly discovered or newly

available evidence. See Ex parte Brown, 205 S.W.3d 538, 545 (Tex.Cr.App. 2006) (“Not only must

the habeas applicant make a truly persuasive showing of innocence, he must also prove that the

evidence he relies upon is ‘newly discovered’ or ‘newly available.’ The term ‘newly discovered

evidence’ refers to evidence that was not known to the applicant at the time of trial and could not

be known to him even with the exercise of due diligence.”).

We first set out the facts that are not in dispute. In November 2004, applicant was charged

with aggravated sexual assault of his sister Elaine (born on May 18, 1987) and his other sister Janie

(born on September 1, 1993). On July 5, 2005, pursuant to a plea bargain, applicant pled no contest

to a reduced charge of indecency involving Janie. The convicting court deferred an adjudication of

guilt and placed applicant on community supervision (“probation”) for seven years. On May 31,

2006, applicant was sentenced to ten years in prison after his probation was revoked because, among

other things, he refused to admit in sex-offender therapy that he had molested Janie. On September

29, 2006, applicant filed a habeas corpus application in which he claimed, among other things, that

See Ex parte Tuley, 109 S.W.3d 388, 395-97 (Tex.Cr.App. 2002) (granting habeas corpus relief on guilty-pleading applicant’s actual-innocence claim based primarily on complainant’s recantation and convicting court’s findings that this recantation was credible and that the applicant’s guilty plea was not “accurate”) and at 393 n.2 (a person could be pressured to plead guilty to something that he did not do “in order to protect someone else, whom he loves or fears”); Article 27.02(5), TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. (no-contest plea or plea of nolo contendere has same legal effect as a guilty plea in a criminal case). Calderon--3

he is actually innocent of the indecency offense involving Janie. This application was supported by

Janie’s July 8, 2006, affidavit recanting her prior allegations that applicant committed this offense

(“Janie’s July 8, 2006, recantation affidavit”).3

The undisputed evidence also shows that in April 2005, while the aggravated-sexual-assault

charges involving Elaine and Janie were pending against applicant, Elaine and Janie approached their

mother (“the mother”) and told her that they had falsely accused applicant of molesting them. The

mother informed applicant’s lawyer (Futrell) of this. After interviewing Elaine and Janie and

confirming that they had recanted their allegations that applicant had molested them, Futrell set up

a meeting with the prosecuting attorney (Hudson). When the mother and the girls went to Hudson’s

office, the mother’s husband, who was Janie’s father (“the father”), was also there waiting for them.

When Hudson interviewed Elaine, she again recanted, which caused Hudson to decide to

dismiss the charges involving Elaine. While Elaine was meeting with Hudson, the father told Janie

not to recant. When Janie met with Hudson, she did not recant, which caused Hudson to decide not

to dismiss the charges involving Janie.4 Evidence was presented at a writ hearing that the then 11-

year-old Janie feared her father and was afraid that he would throw her out of the house, as he did

to Elaine, if she recanted.

Q. [APPLICANT’S COUNSEL]: Okay. Stop just a minute. So [the father], he was outside the D.A.’s office?

This application was also supported by two affidavits (dated July 8, 2006, and July 11, 2005) from Elaine, and an affidavit (dated July 8, 2006) from the mother of applicant, Elaine and Janie. 4

Futrell testified that he did not speak to Janie after the meeting with Hudson because “bouncing these kids back and forth between the lawyer and the D.A. and [the father] and the mother” gets them “so emotionally distraught.” Calderon--4

A. [THE MOTHER]: Yes, he was.

Q. Did y’all jointly go into the District Attorney’s Office?

A. My daughters and I walked in and he walked in.
Q. Who went in first to meet with [Hudson]?
A. It was Elaine.
Q. And then what happened after Elaine came out?
A. After she came out?
Q. Yes, what was the next thing that happened?
A. Janie went in.

Q. What was [the father’s] demeanor as you were waiting? Was it in a lobby? Were you in a lobby there?

A. When Elaine was in conferring with [Hudson], Janie, myself, and [the father] were sitting out in the lobby and she didn’t want to sit next to him. She wanted to sit next to me because she was afraid and she was shaking because she wanted to tell the truth and she was reluctant at that point because he was sitting there. He didn’t want her to change the story. He didn’t want her to. He had told her.

Q. [Applicant] is not the first child [the father] has thrown out of your home, correct?

A. No, sir.
Q. He has thrown other children out of your house?

A. Yes, sir, he threw Gabe out my number three son, and then after Elaine–after he found out that Elaine had recanted, outside of the office the D.A.’s office he told her to pack her bags and move out of the house. She was only 17.

Q. How would you describe [the father’s] discipline as a parent?

A. This is my house and if you don’t do what I say you need to leave. *** Q. [APPLICANT’S COUNSEL]: So did [the father] actually show up at the District Attorney’s Office? Calderon--5

A. [JANIE]: Yes, sir.
Q. And how did you feel when he showed up?

A. I felt nervous and I felt scared that he was going to know that I had made it all up.

Q. Why were you scared of [the father]?

A.

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Related

Ex Parte Zapata
235 S.W.3d 794 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2007)
Ex Parte Tuley
109 S.W.3d 388 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2003)
Ex Parte Reed
271 S.W.3d 698 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2008)
Ex Parte Brown
205 S.W.3d 538 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2006)

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