Eric Vasquez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 1998
Docket03-97-00224-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Eric Vasquez v. State (Eric Vasquez 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
Eric Vasquez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



ON MOTION FOR REHEARING



NO. 03-97-00224-CR
Eric Vasquez, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BASTROP COUNTY, 21ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 8607, HONORABLE HAROLD TOWSLEE, JUDGE PRESIDING

A jury found appellant guilty of sexual assault and assessed punishment at imprisonment for ten years. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011(a)(2)(D) (West Supp. 1998). In his only point of error, appellant contends the district court erroneously permitted the State to adduce expert testimony that the complaining witness's accusations were truthful. (1) In our opinion on original submission, we overruled the point of error on the ground that appellant voiced no contemporaneous objection to the allegedly improper testimony. In his motion for rehearing, appellant for the first time refers us to that portion of the reporter's record at which pertinent objections were made and overruled. Finding that the point of error was preserved, we withdraw our original opinion and judgment. Because we conclude that the district court did not err by admitting the testimony, we will overrule the motion for rehearing and again affirm the judgment of conviction.

The relevant background facts may be briefly stated. Appellant is the complainant's stepfather. Appellant and the complainant's mother were divorced when the complainant was five years old, and thereafter appellant moved alone to California. In 1992, when the complainant was twelve, his mother was killed in an automobile accident. Appellant assumed custody of the complainant and his two younger sisters (appellant's daughters), taking them to live in California for about one year before returning to Texas. In April 1996, when he was sixteen years old, the complainant told his high school counselor that he was being physically abused at home. During a subsequent interview by a child protective services worker, the complainant made his outcry regarding sexual abuse. In his statements to interviewers and in his trial testimony, the complainant described repeated episodes of sexual activity during which appellant would cause the complainant's penis to penetrate appellant's anus.

The witness whose testimony is at issue was Dr. Cecil Reynolds, a psychologist on the faculty at Texas A&M University. Reynolds conducted a psychological evaluation of the complaining witness. This evaluation included a procedure called statement validity assessment. Reynolds explained the procedure as follows:

The statement validity assessment is a process that we go through when we engage in an analysis of what a child has told us in the form of a written transcript to determine whether or not that statement contains certain characteristics that have been shown in research since the 1950's that are present in accounts of real events, versus accounts of events that may be delusional, hallucinatory or just fabricated. The hypothesis is that of things that you have actually experienced in your life, when you describe them you describe them differently than things that you have never experienced, that there are certain elements of that description, certain details of that description that appear if you have really experienced it versus if you have not.



Reynolds testified that statement validity assessment is generally accepted and widely used in the psychological community and that at least two studies have found it to be "near to one hundred percent accurate." Reynolds stated that statement validity assessment is used in therapeutic settings "to determine whether or not in fact a child had been abused or if there were other problems that were causing them to present to you that they had been abused." (2)

With respect to the complainant, Reynolds testified that "there were concerns expressed . . . not only about his emotional state but whether or not he had in fact been sexually assaulted. He had made an outcry about that and there were some concerns expressed to me about whether or not that had happened." After relating the complainant's statement to him describing the alleged assaults, Reynolds analyzed it for the jury:



Some of the things are that he's given me a logical structure for this story, so he's provided that had [sic] already. It just flows in some sense. And he's included some things that are kind of relevant, like he said, "well, me and my sisters and [appellant] had come home from school and we watched TV for a while." That's something you look for when people have actually experienced something. So he placed it into a context. He described something that is logical and possible. He has described some things that typically at his age would not be unheard of for him to know but describing the process of [appellant] putting jelly on him before he penetrated him is something that at his age is something a little more unusual.



. . .



Then he goes on and he tells about something that didn't happen, which is another characteristic that he didn't make up. He's anxious for me to know, because he said he never intruded [sic] me. So that is of significance as well.[ (3)]



Reynolds indicated that it would be "very adverse" to a teenaged boy's normal mental state to "make up a story" involving repeated homosexual experiences. Reynolds added that the complainant exhibited several symptoms consistent with sexual abuse: guilt, restricted affect, hypervigilance, flashbacks and "thought intrusion," dissociation from his feelings, and conduct problems.

Expert testimony that a child exhibits behavioral characteristics that have been empirically shown to be common among children who have been sexually abused is relevant and admissible as substantive evidence under rule 702. Yount v. State, 872 S.W.2d 706, 709 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993); Tex. R. Evid. 702. (4) See also Cohn v. State, 849 S.W.2d 817, 819-21 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (such testimony not objectionable as "bolstering"). On the other hand, an expert witness may not testify directly that a particular witness is truthful, or that a class of persons to which the witness belongs is truthful. Yount, 872 S.W.2d at 711. Reynolds's testimony that the complainant exhibited symptoms consistent with sexual abuse was clearly admissible under the authority of Yount and Cohn, and appellant does not argue otherwise. Appellant contends, however, that Reynolds's testimony regarding the statement validity analysis of the complainant's outcry violated Yount because it constituted direct testimony that the complainant's accusations were true.

Our disposition of this contention is controlled by Schutz v. State, 957 S.W.2d 52 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997).

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Related

Cohn v. State
849 S.W.2d 817 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1993)
Yount v. State
872 S.W.2d 706 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1993)
Kelly v. State
824 S.W.2d 568 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1992)
Kirkpatrick v. State
747 S.W.2d 833 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1987)
Nations v. State
944 S.W.2d 795 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1997)
Schutz v. State
957 S.W.2d 52 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1997)

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Eric Vasquez v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-vasquez-v-state-texapp-1998.