Derwin Dale Livingston v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 2006
Docket01-04-00958-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Derwin Dale Livingston v. State (Derwin Dale Livingston 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
Derwin Dale Livingston v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 23, 2006







In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NOS. 01-04-00955-CR

          01-04-00956-CR

          01-04-00957-CR

          01-04-00958-CR





DERWIN DALE LIVINGSTON, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 56th District Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 03CR0084, 03CR0085, 03CR0086, 03CR0087





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          In two indictments, appellant was charged with sexual assault of a child. In two other indictments, appellant was charged with the aggravated sexual assault of a child. Each indictment contained an enhancement for one prior felony conviction. A jury found appellant guilty as charged in all four indictments, found each enhancement paragraph “true,” and assessed punishment at confinement for life plus a $10,000 fine on each charge. In two issues relating to the guilt–innocence portion of the trial, appellant contends that (1) the trial court erred by admitting expert testimony regarding odors when the witness was not properly qualified and (2) that the evidence was factually insufficient to support the verdicts. In three issues relating to the punishment portion of the trial, appellant contends that the trial court erred by (3) admitting a judgment showing appellant’s prior conviction because it was not properly authenticated, (4) permitting a witness to testify about the witness’s participation in an extraneous offense, and (5) permitting a witness to testify about appellant’s participation in an extraneous offense. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

          Appellant was charged with sexually assaulting his daughter, C.T., who was 14 years old at the time of trial. Michelle Parsons, a case worker for the Department of Family Protective Services, testified that, on December 27, 2002, she initiated an investigation involving the possible sexual abuse of C.T. Parsons went to the Watergate Marina in League City because she had been told that C.T. was living on a boat there with her father, appellant. Parsons determined that appellant had moved his sailboat to the Portofino Marina in Clear Lake Shores, so she went there to question C.T. Officer Nolan of the Kemah Police Department accompanied her to the marina, and the two were soon joined by Chief Skelly of the Clear Lake Shores Police Department. After she located appellant’s boat, Parsons knocked on it and heard movement inside. C.T. opened the hatch and popped her head out. After Parsons identified herself, C.T. went below to get dressed. Appellant then opened the hatch and Parsons again identified herself and told appellant that she needed to speak to C.T. Appellant then went below deck and C.T. came back out.

          Parsons testified that C.T. was shaking, had her head down, and kept looking over at the boat toward appellant. Parsons testified that, at that time, C.T. denied the sexual abuse allegations, but that she was definitely upset.

          To determine the living conditions on the boat, Parsons asked appellant whether she could go aboard, to which he responded affirmatively. Parson testified that the interior of the boat was disheveled and not very clean. She testified that it smelled “like cigarettes, stale beer, and like sweaty sex.” Parsons said that both C.T. and appellant were “very malodorous.”

          Parsons asked appellant if she could look at his computer. After examining the computer for a few moments, Parsons saw the “image of a young child, probably nine years old, with no clothes on, in a river bed. Parsons showed the picture to Chief Skelly, who then seized the computer.

          Parsons told appellant that C.T. would need to stay with someone else, and appellant said that he would make arrangements to have C.T. stay with her adult half sister, Heather O’Dell. Heather picked C.T. up from the police station and agreed to have C.T. stay with her and for C.T. to have no contact with appellant.

          Heather testified that she and C.T. had the same mother, Rhonda, but that appellant was C.T.’s father, not Heather’s. When Heather picked C.T. up from the police station, C.T. was shaking and had been crying. She later admitted to Heather that appellant had been sexually abusing her.

          Heather, accompanied by C.T. and their mother, Rhonda, left the police department to take Rhonda back to appellant’s tattoo shop, where Rhonda lived. Appellant, who had been parked on a side road, pulled in behind them and followed them to the tattoo shop. Appellant and Rhonda decided that Heather should take C.T. to her grandparents’ house in Illinois. Appellant offered his car to Heather for the trip. The next day, Heather and C.T. drove to Neoga, Illinois, where Rhonda’s parents, Jack and Mary Turner, lived. Heather then left C.T. with the Turners and returned to Texas.

          While in Illinois, C.T. talked to Parsons by telephone and told her that the allegations of sexual abuse by appellant were true. C.T. underwent a physical examination and gave a statement to police officers. After C.T.’s statement, Chief Skelly obtained a search warrant for appellant’s boat, from which he retrieved two sexual devices. Appellant was arrested soon thereafter.

          Another of appellant’s adult daughters, Dana Livingston, testified that, while he was in jail, appellant wrote her lots of letters instructing her to do things to help his case. Shortly after he was arrested, he asked Dana to remove a bag of sex toys from his boat and get rid of it. Dana retrieved the bag, but turned it over to the police. Appellant asked Dana to use C.T.’s email address and to send an email to herself, purportedly from C.T., apologizing and saying that she had been lying about the accusations. He also asked Dana to make anonymous calls to child protective services in Illinois, saying that it would help his case if there were other allegations of sexual abuse.

          At trial, C.T. testified that, when she was 10 years old, appellant got drunk and said that he “wanted to show how he kissed people his own age.” C.T. testified that the inappropriate contact with appellant “started advancing,” first to “to sexual contact and oral sex and intercourse.” C.T. testified that she was 12 years old when she first had intercourse with appellant. She stated that at first it did not happen very often because she was not physically mature, but that as she got older, it happened more frequently. C.T.

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Derwin Dale Livingston v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derwin-dale-livingston-v-state-texapp-2006.