Carlos Bernard Lane v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 2022
Docket05-21-01037-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Carlos Bernard Lane v. the State of Texas (Carlos Bernard Lane v. the State of Texas) 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
Carlos Bernard Lane v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed November 4, 2022

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-21-01037-CR

CARLOS BERNARD LANE, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 7 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F18-76576-Y

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Pedersen, III, and Garcia Opinion by Justice Pedersen, III A jury found appellant Carlos Bernard Lane guilty of aggravated sexual

assault of a child, and the trial court assessed his punishment at six years’

confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal

Justice plus a $1500 fine. In this Court, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the

evidence to support the jury’s verdict and the jurisdiction of the trial court to hear

his case; he also complains of errors in the court’s charge to the jury. We affirm. Background

A.S. is the complaining witness in this case. Her mother (“Mother”) testified

at trial as A.S.’s outcry witness. Mother explained that appellant is her father and

that he had been absent from her life for a number of years when she was young.

Mother and appellant reconnected when both were living in Dallas; A.S. was seven

or eight years old at that time. Appellant would often watch A.S. for Mother while

Mother worked.

Mother testified that A.S. wanted to stay over at appellant’s home one night

in October 2018. That was the first time A.S. had spent the night unsupervised with

her grandfather. After appellant dropped A.S. off the next day, she told Mother that

“Papa touched me.” A.S. then described a series of events involving appellant. He

told her she smelled musty, and then he rubbed deodorant under her arms and on her

breasts. He later told her to take a shower, and while she was in the shower, he asked

her if she knew what her virginity was; while she was in the shower, he rubbed her

stomach, her legs, and in between her legs. After the shower, appellant gave A.S. a

big shirt and boxers to wear, and he washed her clothes. Although he knew A.S. was

afraid of the dark, he turned off all the lights and television; she was afraid, so she

went into appellant’s room and initially sat in a chair there. After appellant insisted,

A.S. got in his bed. He removed her underwear and his underwear, touched her on

her stomach and her neck, kissed her, and licked her breasts and between her legs.

Mother called the police, and she and A.S. went to Children’s Hospital, where A.S.

–2– underwent a physical examination. Then they went to the Dallas Children’s

Advocacy Center, where A.S. was forensically interviewed.

A.S. testified that she was nine years old at the time of the events at issue. She

stated that she and Mother both wanted her to stay at appellant’s that night. She liked

her grandfather and had not had any problem with him. She described watching

television in the living room when they arrived at his apartment and getting appellant

a beer at his request. A.S. testified that she took a bath that evening, and while she

was in the bathtub appellant came into the room and put his hand on her vagina. This

scared her, and she told appellant, “My momma said don’t touch me there.”

Afterwards, she went with appellant to his room because all the lights were off, and

she was afraid of the dark. She played a piano there and watched cartoons on the

television while lying on a chest at the foot of the bed. After some time appellant

told her to get on the bed, and she did. Then appellant started to touch her on her

arms and her stomach. He lifted up her shirt and took off the boxers she had put on

after her bath. Then he touched her legs, “put his mouth in [her] private area,” and

was licking her inside her vagina. She testified it felt “[w]eird and nasty,” and she

was scared. She smelled alcohol on appellant’s breath. Appellant tried to make A.S.

put her hand on his penis; while appellant held her hand she touched his penis, and

it was hard. She didn’t say anything to appellant while this was happening because

she was scared. He told her not to tell Mother what happened. He washed the clothes

that she had worn to his apartment, and she wore them back home the next day.

–3– On cross examination, A.S. admitted she had looked through appellant’s

drawers trying to find a cell phone; she said that appellant was “strict” and “mean in

his way.” The testimony on this subject is less than clear, but A.S. did not say that

she was punished for her conduct.

The defense was permitted to ask A.S. about an incident that she described to

the district attorney—for the first time—when preparing for trial: she told the

prosecutor that, when she was seven, a cousin had put his penis on her basketball

shorts and wanted her to touch it. During her initial forensic interview in 2018, A.S.

was asked whether anything like what had happened with appellant had happened to

her before; she said no. A.S. initially agreed with defense counsel that the act she

described involving her cousin was “very similar to the allegations that [she was]

making against Papa.” But on redirect, she testified specifically that no one had ever

licked her vagina before, and that had been her understanding of the question she

was asked in 2018.

Suzanne Dakil, M.D., the medical director of the Referral and Evaluation of

At-Risk Children Clinic at Children’s Medical Center, testified as an expert on child

abuse. She described the examination A.S. underwent at Children’s Hospital, and

she explained that the results were normal. Specifically, she testified that no DNA

evidence was discovered during that exam.

Dallas Police Department Detective Cory Foreman also testified at trial.

Foreman watched A.S.’s forensic interview, and he interviewed appellant after

–4– appellant was arrested. In that interview, appellant repeatedly denied that he had

done anything to A.S., but he told the detective he had consumed a fifteen-pack of

beer and some tequila that night. Foreman testified that, based on his many years of

experience, he believed A.S. and not appellant.

The jury found appellant guilty, and the trial court assessed his punishment at

six years’ confinement plus a $1500 fine. This appeal followed.

Sufficiency of the Evidence

In his first issue, appellant argues that the evidence is insufficient to prove that

appellant committed the offense of sexual assault of a child. Appellant’s indictment

charged that he did “intentionally and knowingly cause the sexual organ of A.S., a

child, to contact and penetrate the mouth of defendant, and at the time of the offense,

the child was younger than fourteen years of age.” See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN.

§ 22.021(a)(2)(B). Appellant argues that the only evidence probative of that indicted

offense is A.S.’s testimony, and he contends that this evidence is “so weak that it

creates only a suspicion of wrongdoing.”

We review appellant’s challenge by examining the evidence in the light most

favorable to the verdict to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have

found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v.

Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979). The jury is the sole judge of the credibility and

weight to attach to witness testimony. Wise v.

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