Hammer, Murray

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 2009
DocketPD-0786-08
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Hammer, Murray, (Tex. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. PD-0786-08

MURRAY HAMMER, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS WILSON COUNTY

C OCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.

OPINION

Appellant claims that the court of appeals erred when it held that the trial court did not

abuse its discretion in excluding evidence that the complainant in this prosecution for

indecency with a child had previously made a false accusation of “rape.” 1 We agree with

1 Hammer v. State, 256 S.W.3d 391 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2008). Appellant’s sole ground for review is as follows: The court of appeals incorrectly determined an important issue of state and federal law by deciding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding impeachment evidence of complainant’s previous false allegations of sexual assault and such exclusion violated petitioner’s rights under the Confrontation Hammer Page 2

appellant that the trial judge abused her discretion in excluding some of the evidence

appellant offered to demonstrate the complainant’s motive to falsely accuse him of

molestation. We therefore reverse the judgment and remand this case for further proceedings

in the court of appeals.

I.

The evidence at trial showed that fifteen-year-old P.H. moved to Floresville to live

with her grandmother and her father–appellant–after CPS removed her from her mother’s

home in June 2005. P.H. was a troubled teen-ager who had long been under CPS supervision

because her mother had drug problems. By August of 2005, she was taking the mood-

stabilizing drugs Prozac and Seroquel. The Seroquel made her drowsy, and she “slept hard.”

P.H. testified that, in late August, she and appellant visited a family friend, Shonna

Makuta. According to P.H., all three of them drank vodka. P.H. then took her Seroquel and

fell asleep on the living-room couch with her clothes on. She said that she woke up

sometime during the night to find that her pants and underwear were gone. Appellant was

standing over her. P.H. got up, put her pants back on, and then went to sleep in Shonna’s

bed, which was in the living room. Shonna had “passed out” and was sleeping in an upright

chair next to the couch. P.H. said that she woke up a second time to find appellant in the bed,

Clause of the United States Constitution. The court of appeals’ opinion is in direct contradiction with the First Court of Appeals in its decision in Thomas v. State, 669 S.W.2d 420 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1984, pet. ref’d), in that the fourth court finds the allegations which complainant fabricated are dissimilar to the offenses [with] which petitioner is charged. Hammer Page 3

“kind of spooning me and he had his hands on my crotch.” She got up and moved back to

the couch. The next morning, P.H. “told him that I know what happened and he told me that

he didn’t remember and that he was drunk and he told me he was really sorry.” She didn’t

tell anyone about the molestation because she knew that appellant had been drinking.

P.H. said that, about two weeks later, she was sleeping in her grandmother’s bed with

her clothes on. She woke up to find appellant behind her with his hands down the front of

her pants, rubbing her vagina. When he saw that P.H. was awake, he jumped up and left the

room. He was fully clothed. She fell back asleep. Later that night, the same thing happened

again. She got up and locked the door. The next morning, appellant asked P.H. if she had

slept okay. She said that she woke up several times and that she knew what he had done.

Appellant said that he thought that was what she wanted, and then he stated, “If you ever

change your mind, baby girl, let me know.” About a week later, P.H. told a friend about

these incidents, and that friend told school officials, who called CPS.

On cross-examination, P.H. stated that when she lived with her mother, she “pretty

much” did whatever she wanted to.

It was a lot different when I moved with my dad because it was more structured. I had a curfew. I couldn’t talk on the phone very long, I had to get good grades in school. I had to go to doctor’s appointments and stuff like that.

She got angry at appellant because of these new rules. They had a lot of fights about her

staying out late. P.H. told him that she didn’t like these rules, but denied telling him that if

he didn’t leave her alone, she was going to send him back to prison. She also denied telling Hammer Page 4

anyone that these sexual events didn’t happen.

After P.H.’s testimony, defense counsel requested a hearing outside the jury’s

presence to revisit the trial judge’s pretrial ruling on the State’s motion in limine that

excluded all evidence of P.H.’s previous sexual conduct. Appellant explained that he wanted

to introduce P.H.’s medical records from a sexual-assault examination on July 6, 2005 (one

month after she had come to live with appellant), in which she told the hospital nurse that

Ignacio Talamendez “sexually assaulted” her. She told the nurse that “at first it was kind of

a consensual thing but I told him to stop and he kept going.” According to the medical

records, appellant had taken an unwilling P.H. to the hospital for a sexual-assault

examination after she had run away for two days. P.H. told the nurse, “My dad wants to

prove that I had sexual intercourse with one of the guys that I ran away with.” The records

state that she was angry with her father. Those records also show that P.H. told the nurse of

prior sexual abuse–that her “uncle would put his hands on genital area, at age 13 yrs.” This

is the very same conduct that P.H. accused appellant of committing.

Defense counsel stated that he had another witness (Shonna Makuta) who would say

that P.H. told her, “Well, I really was with someone else that I didn’t want my dad to know

about which is why I blamed Ignacio.” 2 Appellant argued, as he had at the pretrial hearing,

that this evidence was (1) relevant to P.H.’s truthfulness; (2) required under the

2 Shortly after the sexual-assault exam in July, P.H. was admitted to the state hospital after making suicidal threats. The Prozac and Seroquel were prescribed when she was released back into appellant’s care. Hammer Page 5

Confrontation Clause; and (3) admissible under Rule 412 3 to show P.H.’s motive to accuse

her father because her father was trying to stop P.H.’s “wild” conduct. The trial judge stated

that “the prejudicial effect outweighs the probative value” and refused to allow any

impeachment with the medical records.

Appellant then made a bill of exceptions by cross-examining P.H. outside the presence

of the jury. At first she denied telling the hospital nurse that the prior sexual activity was

nonconsensual, but, when shown the medical records, she admitted that she had said that.

She denied telling Shonna that she had had sex with Anthony, not Ignacio, the night that she

ran away. The trial judge stated that her ruling was the same, barring cross-examination of

P.H. and excluding the medical records.

After the jury returned, a CPS caseworker and a CPS investigator testified to

statements that both P.H. and appellant had made to them. P.H. told the CPS investigator

that she has never gotten along with her father because he screamed at her when disciplining

her. She also stated that appellant threatened her and said that if she ever told anyone about

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