Douglas Warren v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 2006
Docket03-04-00194-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Douglas Warren v. State (Douglas Warren 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
Douglas Warren v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-04-00194-CR

Douglas Warren, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 403RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 3012146, HONORABLE BRENDA KENNEDY, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Douglas Warren appeals his convictions for aggravated sexual assault of

a child, indecency with a child by contact, and indecency with a child by exposure. See Tex. Pen.

Code Ann. § 21.11 (West 2003), § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(ii) (West Supp. 2005). Warren contends in four

issues that (1) the trial court erred by designating the CPS worker, rather than the victim’s mother,

as the outcry witness, and (2) his counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to file a sworn

motion for probation, (3) by failing to present mitigating evidence, and (4) by generally rendering

legal services below a reasonable standard. We will overrule these contentions, but we will

nevertheless reverse the indecency convictions because they violate the constitutional guarantee

against double jeopardy. BACKGROUND

Warren was accused of molesting his seven-year-old niece, A.W., on or about August

10, 2000. A jury trial was conducted in November 2003. Warren pled “not guilty” to all three

counts and, in “sticking to his not guilty” plea, Warren “instructed” his counsel to not negotiate a

plea bargain with the State. Similarly, no motion for probation was filed. During voir dire, Warren’s

counsel told the potential jurors, “let me make this very, very clear. . . . Douglas Warren is not

asking you for probation. That is not what this trial is about. Douglas Warren is asking you to find

him not guilty.” Counsel went on to explain to the panel that, although Warren was eligible for

probation due to his lack of prior felony convictions, “we have not filed that application for

probation. Why? [Because] he is asking to be found not guilty.” Warren subsequently confirmed

that this was his personal decision.

The State called A.W., who was ten years old at the time of trial, as its first witness.

A.W. began by testifying about her family structure. She explained that her parents were divorced

and that she lived primarily with her mother and stepfather but also had extended periods of

visitation with her father and stepmother. Frequently, those visits would occur at her paternal

grandparents’ residence; they owned property on which a main house and several mobile homes were

located. Many members of A.W.’s father’s family resided there, including Warren, an aunt (Brenda)

and her son, and another uncle (Mark), along with his wife and their three children.

Next, A.W. testified about an incident that occurred between her and a male

classmate, Andy, when she was in kindergarten. She said that, one day on the playground, “[h]e

asked me to put my mouth on his private.” A.W. told her mother what happened and, as indicated

2 by the other witnesses’ testimony, the Warren family members were all aware of this incident. A.W.

was thereafter placed in a different class, and no further events with Andy were alleged.

A.W. then testified about the allegations against Warren. She explained that the

incident occurred one night during a visitation period at her grandparents’ property. She knew it was

shortly before her grandmother passed away, making it sometime in August 2000. A.W. was

sleeping in the living room of the main house on a couch that she remembered was “orange,”

wearing a nightgown that “had purple sleeves with a little girl on it.” She testified that Warren was

sleeping on a mattress on the floor and, after everyone else had gone to bed, he asked her about what

she had done with Andy. A.W. testified that “[h]e asked me to show him how,” then “[h]e got on

his knees” in front of her and “took his private out of his shorts,” and “I stuck my mouth on his

private.” She testified that they stopped because her father entered the room.1 A.W. demonstrated

this incident with two anatomically correct dolls.2

A.W. testified that she first talked to her mother about this incident and that her

mother “just started crying.” A.W. agreed that CPS investigator Linda Berrera was “the first adult

that [she] really talked to in detail about what happened with [Warren].”

1 A.W.’s father did not testify. 2 A.W. also testified about a second incident with Warren, which occurred on a later date in a mobile home on her grandparents’ property. She testified that Warren unzipped his pants, and had her unbutton her shorts and sit on his lap, straddling him and facing him, with his hands on her bottom. When someone knocked on the door, they stopped. Warren told A.W. “[n]ot to talk about it.” A.W. testified that both she and Warren were wearing underwear and that his penis was not exposed. Warren’s conduct on this occasion, as described by A.W., did not constitute either sexual assault or sexual contact.

3 The State called A.W.’s mother, Angela, as its second witness. Before Angela took

the stand, the prosecutor said, “I am not offering the mom as the outcry witness. . . . But I know

[defense counsel] thought she was, so I wanted to bring it [up].” Upon Warren’s challenge, the trial

court conducted a hearing outside the jury’s presence to determine whether Angela should be

designated as the outcry witness. During the hearing, Angela testified that she asked A.W. if anyone

had “messed with her sexually,” and A.W. responded “yes.” Angela then named several of A.W.’s

male relatives, and A.W. responded “no” to each name. The last name Angela questioned was

“Douglas [Warren].” Although A.W. initially said “no,” she put her head down and appeared upset

when she answered, prompting Angela to repeat appellant’s name. At that point, A.W. said “yes”

and told her mother that Warren had asked her to perform the act that she did with Andy at school.

Without providing her mother any further details or confirming whether she and Warren had actually

engaged in this act, the discussion between A.W. and Angela ended, and they both cried.

At the conclusion of this hearing, Warren’s counsel re-urged that Angela was the

proper outcry witness but acquiesced that he had no authority beyond “the plain language of article

38.072(2)” to support his position. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.072, § 2 (West 2005)

(permitting hearsay testimony by first adult to whom child made statement about offense). The court

recessed to consider the issue and ultimately ruled that Angela was not the outcry witness. At that

time, the court also stated that “there is no objection from the defense as to whether or not this

witness was the outcry witness.” The record does not reflect what occurred during the recess to

result in the court’s statement that there was no live objection by Warren as to the outcry witness,

but Warren did not challenge the court’s statement.

4 The State proceeded to call Angela, who testified generally about her discussion with

A.W. Before beginning his cross-examination, Warren approached the bench and requested that he

be permitted to question Angela about the specifics of A.W.’s responses. The State had no objection

“as long as he is not attempting to confuse who the true outcry witness is,” and the court confirmed

that the issue had already been ruled on. Warren then elicited Angela’s testimony about what A.W.

told her, just as she had previously testified outside the jury’s presence.

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