Eduardo Saldivar-Lopez A/K/A Eduardo Saldivar v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 14, 2023
Docket13-22-00242-CR
StatusPublished

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Eduardo Saldivar-Lopez A/K/A Eduardo Saldivar v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-22-00242-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

EDUARDO SALDIVAR-LOPEZ A/K/A EDUARDO SALDIVAR, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 197th District Court of Cameron County, Texas.

OPINION

Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Longoria Opinion by Chief Justice Contreras

Appellant Eduardo Saldivar-Lopez a/k/a Eduardo Saldivar challenges his

conviction of continuous sexual abuse of a young child, a first-degree felony for which he

was sentenced to twenty-five years’ imprisonment. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.02(b). On appeal, Saldivar argues the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion for

mistrial after the child’s mother gave allegedly inadmissible testimony. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

On February 3, 2021, Saldivar was indicted for committing two or more acts of

sexual abuse against his daughter, B.A.S., 1 a child under the age of fourteen, from on or

about June 1, 2019, through April 20, 2020. Saldivar pleaded not guilty. A jury trial

commenced on May 10, 2022.

A. Trial

Saldivar married Brenda Ruelas in 2004 and the couple had four children together,

including B.A.S. The couple separated in 2017 and Saldivar moved out of the family home

and moved in with his sister, Nancy Saldivar-Villano. 2 Saldivar and Ruelas continued to

have a cordial relationship after their separation. Their four children would often see

Saldivar at their family’s home or spend time with him at his sister’s house.

Ruelas testified that she first learned of Saldivar’s abuse of B.A.S. from her eldest

son in August 2020. Immediately after that conversation, Ruelas talked with B.A.S. about

the alleged abuse. B.A.S. started to cry and told Ruelas that Saldivar “had been touching

her” and it had “been going on for about a year.” Ruelas testified that B.A.S. told her that

Saldivar would touch her, smell her, kiss her on the neck and ear, and touch her private

area over her clothes. According to Ruelas, B.A.S. said this happened about six or seven

1 To protect the identity of the minor child, we refer to her by her initials. See TEX. CONST. art. I,

§ 30(a)(1) (providing that a crime victim has “the right to be treated . . . with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy throughout the criminal justice process”). 2 The couple did not formally divorce until around the time of Saldivar’s arrest.

2 times from June 2019 until April 2020 and would always occur at night when Saldivar was

drunk. Ruelas stated that B.A.S. was thirteen at the time of this outcry.

B.A.S. testified that the abuse began at Villano’s house when she was twelve or

thirteen years old. Villano’s home had four bedrooms, which were all occupied by different

family members. When the children spent the night there, all four children would sleep in

Saldivar’s bedroom, or two of B.A.S.’s brothers would sleep on the couches in the living

room. B.A.S. would always sleep in Saldivar’s bed with him and her youngest brother. 3

B.A.S. described two incidents of abuse happening at night in Saldivar’s bedroom.

She described one incident where she woke up from feeling Saldivar’s breath on her neck

and his arm around her with his hand on her stomach. His hand went lower, and he began

to touch her “private area,” or vagina, over her clothes. She tried to move his arm but he

“just kept his hand on [her]” and would not move. She turned to her other side so “that he

could move,” but “he kept turning [her] back.” After some time, he stopped. B.A.S. said

her youngest brother was in the bed when this occurred, but no testimony showed that

he was aware of it.

During the second incident, B.A.S. described waking up to the sound of Saldivar

entering the bedroom. He got into the bed and started “touching [her] shoulder.” He then

“put [her] on top of him” and put his arms around her back. B.A.S. testified that she “could

feel his private area” on her stomach. She tried to get off of him but found she could not

move. Eventually she “ended up getting off of him,” and “he was just there touching on

[her] stomach” until he got up and left.

3 There was conflicting testimony about whether B.A.S. would occasionally sleep in bed with her

aunt or grandmother and whether there was an air mattress in the bedroom.

3 The other incidents of abuse occurred when Saldivar stayed at the family home in

2020. From September 2019 to June 2020, Ruelas began working in another city and

would spend weeks at a time out of town. She invited Saldivar to stay at the family home

to take care of the children. Like the sleeping arrangement at her aunt’s house, B.A.S.

and her youngest brother would sleep with Saldivar in his bed in the master bedroom.

According to B.A.S.’s testimony, though she had her own room at her house, “my dad

would always want me to sleep in the room with him.”

B.A.S. described the last incident of abuse happening in the family home’s master

bedroom in April of 2020. She was in bed and Saldivar came into the bedroom from the

garage. He laid down next to her and put his arm around her and his hand on her stomach

and again moved his hand down and started touching her “private area.” B.A.S. got up

crying and went into her eldest brother’s room. When her brother asked her what was

wrong, she told him that Saldivar had “touched” her. B.A.S.’s eldest brother confirmed at

trial that B.A.S. came into his room that night crying and told him that Saldivar had touched

her. B.A.S.’s twin brother testified that he saw B.A.S. go into the eldest brother’s bedroom

crying that night but did not learn why she was crying until the following day. Sometime

after B.A.S. left the room, Saldivar called for B.A.S. and they talked in the garage. B.A.S.

testified that Saldivar told her he was sorry and begged her not to tell anyone. He cried

and told her that he would shoot himself if she told anyone.

The State introduced testimony from Sonja Eddleman, a coordinator with the Child

to Adult Abuse Response Team (CAART). Eddleman attested to B.A.S.’s interview with

a medical examiner that took place the day after her outcry to Ruelas. Eddleman did not

interview B.A.S. but testified that her exam records showed that B.A.S. said Saldivar

4 “would come and lay next to [her]” when she was asleep, and he would touch her stomach

and “would go down and touch [her] private area.” Eddleman indicated that B.A.S.

reported that he always touched her over her clothes, and she would turn around to stop

him from touching her. B.A.S. also said that the incidents of abuse happened six times

and had been going on for about a year. According to Detective Jose Martinez, B.A.S.

generally repeated these same details during her interview with a forensic investigator.

The jury also heard from the defense’s witnesses—Saldivar, Villano, and Maria

Teresa Lopez, Saldivar’s mother. Villano testified that B.A.S. made an initial outcry to her

about a year before her outcry to her mother, but Villano did not tell Ruelas because she

did not believe B.A.S., saying that it was “not the first serious lie” that B.A.S. has told.

Similarly, Lopez testified that she talked with B.A.S. after her outcry to Villano. She

similarly did not believe her because B.A.S. had told “big lies” in the past. She also said

that B.A.S.

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