Cody Braggs v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 4, 2024
Docket02-23-00166-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Cody Braggs v. the State of Texas (Cody Braggs 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
Cody Braggs v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-23-00166-CR ___________________________

CODY BRAGGS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from Criminal District Court No. 2 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1676970

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Birdwell and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Cody Braggs was convicted of (1) continuously sexually abusing his

two former stepdaughters, K.S. (Kim) and T.D. (Tina),1 and (2) committing indecency

with a child by touching Kim’s breasts.2 See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 21.02(b),

.11(a)(1). The jury charge submitted in his case was seriously flawed, but Braggs

challenges only two of those errors on appeal. Despite the flawed nature of the

charge, because it is extremely unlikely that either challenged error caused Braggs

egregious harm, we will affirm.

I. Background

Braggs sexually abused Kim for more than a year before he inappropriately

touched Tina, who informed their mother (Mother). Both girls testified at Braggs’s

trial.

Tina told the jury how, in mid-2019, when she was five years old, Braggs

touched her vagina over her clothes. She had just returned home from preschool

when it happened; Braggs directed her to go to her room, and then he followed her,

touched her, and told her not to tell Mother. But Tina soon reported the incident to

To protect the minor complainants’ identities, pseudonyms are used for the 1

girls and for their mother. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.10(a)(3); 2d Tex. App. (Fort Worth) Loc. R. 7; Stephenson v. State, 673 S.W.3d 370, 375 n.1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2023, pet. ref’d).

Braggs was sentenced to 30 years’ confinement for continuous sexual abuse 2

and 4 years’ confinement for indecency with a child.

2 Mother anyway, 3 prompting her to kick Braggs out of the home and, later, to divorce

him.

After Tina’s outcry and Braggs’s banishment from the home, Kim—the older

of the two girls—revealed that Braggs had been sexually abusing her for quite a while,

from the time she was about 10 or 11 years old until Mother kicked Braggs out of the

home when Kim was around 12.4 Kim later recalled that the abuse had started while

Mother was recovering from her 2017 open-heart surgery and told her forensic

interviewer that, by the time Braggs moved out, the touching “was happening on a

constant basis, . . . every other day.”

Kim described multiple, specific instances of abuse for the jury, including

Braggs’s “slapp[ing her] on the butt,” his “forcefully push[ing her] up against things”

like walls or appliances and “touch[ing] on” her breasts and vagina over her clothes,

his “tak[ing] the long way” to school and touching her vagina over her clothes en

route, his “grinding” on her “pelvic area” on the living-room floor, and his putting his

penis in her mouth while she slept. 5

In her forensic interview and at trial, Tina confirmed that Braggs had not 3

touched her private parts on any other occasions.

By the time of trial, Kim was 16 years old, and Tina was 9 years old. 4

Kim explained that, because she felt something in her mouth, she woke up. 5

When she did, she found Braggs in her room and “white stuff”—which she later understood to be semen—in her mouth.

3 In addition to the two girls’ testimony at Braggs’s trial, the State presented

testimony from Mother, from the detective who had worked on the case, from the

sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE) who had examined Kim, from the forensic

interviewer who had spoken with the girls in late 2020 and early 2021, and from

Tina’s therapist. The State also offered copies of the girls’ videotaped forensic

interviews in which they described their abuse and a copy of Braggs’s videotaped

interview with police regarding a separate crime—online solicitation of a minor—for

which he had been arrested in early 2020.6 Braggs denied committing any of the

sexual abuse alleged, and although he did not call any witnesses in his defense, he used

his cross-examinations and jury arguments to attack Kim’s and Tina’s credibility.

After the evidence closed, the trial court charged the jury on six offenses: one

count of continuous sexual abuse of a child, four lesser-included counts—two of

aggravated sexual assault and two of indecency with a child—and one separate count

of indecency with a child by touching Kim’s breast. Braggs did not raise any

objections to the jury charge. But the charge did not mention breast-touching as a

method for committing indecency with a child, it did not reference the fact that such

6 The State offered evidence that, after Mother and Braggs separated, in late 2019 and early 2020, he had used a homosexual-dating app to solicit a male whom he believed to be a 15-year-old boy. The boy’s profile, however, had been created by the police. In his post-arrest interview, Braggs admitted having sexual conversations with three underage boys on the dating app, but he claimed that he had been drunk and that he had been attempting to entertain the boys to protect them from harmful predators on the app.

4 breast-touching could not serve as a predicate offense for purposes of continuous

sexual abuse, and despite reciting the nuances of the unanimity requirement as applied

to the offense of continuous sexual abuse, it did not contain more than a generic

unanimity instruction for the remaining counts.

During the jury’s deliberations, it sent out a note inquiring whether the separate

count of indecency by breast-touching “require[d] a unanimous vote for a guilty

verdict.”7 The trial court responded by referring the jury to the generic unanimity

instruction in the charge, which stated that the “verdict must be by a unanimous

verdict of all members of the jury.”

In the end, the jury found Braggs guilty of continuous sexual abuse and of

indecency with a child by touching Kim’s breast. See id. §§ 21.02(b), .11(a)(1). It set

Braggs’s punishment at confinement for 30 years and 4 years respectively, and the trial

court sentenced Braggs accordingly.

II. Discussion

Braggs raises two unpreserved 8 jury-charge issues on appeal: (1) the trial

court’s failure to instruct the jury that breast-touching did not qualify as a predicate

“act of sexual abuse” for purposes of continuous sexual abuse, see id. § 21.02(c); and

(2) the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury that, to convict him of the separate

7 Although the appellate record does not contain a copy of the jury note or the trial court’s response, the trial court read both documents into the record. 8 It is undisputed that Braggs did not preserve his challenges to the jury charge.

5 count of indecency with a child, the jury was required to be unanimous on the

particular act of breast-touching that had occurred. Each, Braggs contends, resulted

in egregious harm.

A. Governing Law

To prove continuous sexual abuse of a child, the State must offer evidence of

two or more predicate offenses that, in addition to meeting certain parameters not

relevant here, qualify as “acts of sexual abuse.” Id. § 21.02(b). The definition of

continuous sexual abuse is thus interwoven with the definitions of the pleaded

predicate offenses. See id. § 21.02(c) (defining “act of sexual abuse” by referencing

definitions of predicate offenses).

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