Hammons v. State

239 S.W.3d 798, 2007 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1632, 2007 WL 3375262
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 2007
DocketPD-0307-07
StatusPublished
Cited by133 cases

This text of 239 S.W.3d 798 (Hammons v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammons v. State, 239 S.W.3d 798, 2007 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1632, 2007 WL 3375262 (Tex. 2007).

Opinion

*799 OPINION

COCHRAN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.

Appellant was charged with sexual assault and indecency with a child for having consensual sexual relations with Nailah, a minor. Appellant did not deny having such a relationship, but his defense was that Nailah was at least seventeen years old at the time. The trial court admitted, over appellant’s objection, several out-of-court statements made by Nailah to two different witnesses as prior consistent statements under Tex.R. Evid. 801(e)(1)(B). After appellant was convicted, he appealed and claimed that the trial court erred in admitting these statements. The court of appeals agreed. 1 We granted review to clarify that, under Rule 803(e)(1)(B), a charge of recent fabrication or improper motive may be subtly implied through tone, tenor, and demeanor during the entirety of the cross-examination; such an attack may not be immediately apparent from the specific wording of the questions asked, but becomes obvious only during the attorney’s final argument. 2 We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence as a prior consistent statement.

I.

Nailah, who was twenty-seven at the time of trial, testified that she was born on October 12, 1977. When she was twelve and in middle school, she joined the adult choir at her church. Her grandfather was an elder in that church and her grandmother was a district missionary. Tina Hammons, who was related to Nailah’s family, was the state choir director. Nai-lah met appellant, Tina’s husband, through her choir activities. Appellant, who was in his late 20’s or early 30’s at the time, became her counselor. He counseled her by phone.

Nailah testified that she was almost fifteen when she started high school at Business Careers High School, a magnet school for the gifted. She talked with appellant every week or two on the phone for five to fifteen minutes, but shortly after starting high school, he would call more frequently. Nailah was self-conscious because she was “hairy,” but appellant said “not to worry, that later on in life, [she] would find out that that was sexy and that a lot of men liked that.” Nailah testified that appellant would tell her things like “how pretty I was and how smart I was and how special I was. How special I was to him.”

Appellant told Nailah that he wanted to pick her up at school and take her out to lunch to celebrate her 15th birthday in October of her freshman year. She signed out from school for a dentist appointment and was supposed to meet him in the school parking lot, but she did not go. She stayed inside with her best friend, Yvonne Sanders, who was a sophomore. She told *800 Yvonne that she was supposed to go out for lunch with her counselor, but she didn’t feel “good” about it, so she did not want to go. The two girls just stood and looked at appellant sitting in his car in the parking lot. She had told Yvonne bits and pieces about her relationship with appellant, but “I didn’t give her intimate details because I didn’t have any Mends so I didn’t know, really, if I could tell anybody. So I just kind of told her that there was an older man I thought liked me.”

Appellant made arrangements to see her again about a week later. This time Nai-lah went out for lunch with him. They went to the Hampton Inn on 1-35. Appellant said that he had gotten a room there for an earlier business meeting and to take a shower and freshen up. She wanted to stay in the car, but appellant talked her into going to the motel room with him. He went into the bathroom and then came back out clad only in a towel and asked Nailah to give him a massage with lotion. She did. Things progressed, and eventually he penetrated her, first with his finger, then with his penis. It hurt, and she tried to resist. Then they each took a shower, and he drove her back to school.

Appellant called Nailah about a month or two later and asked her to go out for lunch again. This time they went to the Scotsman’s Inn on 1-35, and appellant repeated his prior conduct. Nailah hadn’t told anybody because, she said, “I was scared. I was ashamed. I was confused.” According to Nailah, their third act of intercourse took place at a Motel 6 in early 1993, while Nailah was still a freshman in high school. This time appellant’s car wouldn’t start when they were ready to leave; appellant was “panicky,” and Nailah “freaked” out. He called a cab for her to get back to school.

The only person that Nailah told about these sexual interludes was Yvonne. She told Yvonne the details when the girls had a “sleep-over” at Nailah’s house sometime after Christmas during Nailah’s freshman year. The next fall, right after her 16th birthday, Nailah transferred to Judson High School because her mother became pregnant and did not want Nailah going to school so far away. Yvonne was still at Business Careers.

The fourth time appellant picked her up at school, this time from Judson High School, he took her to a “really nasty” motel, and she refused to get out of the car. The fifth time, they went to the Ruby Inn, and Nailah told appellant that she had a boyfriend. Appellant was a little upset and told her, “I’m the only person that loves you and so you better not be having sex with anyone else.” They had their usual sexual activity, but appellant was rough and angry, “real rude, real obnoxious.” This was their last encounter.

Nailah eventually told her mother about the liaison with appellant in mid-1997, when she was nineteen. There was a meeting with Nailah, her mother and father, her grandparents, appellant and his wife. Nailah told everyone that it started when she was a freshman at Business Careers High School. Appellant said it was true, and he cried. Nailah and her family decided to have another meeting with appellant and his wife, which was held at the church with Bishop Iglehart and several elders in attendance. Appellant again admitted the sexual affair; he apologized to his wife and the bishop. The elders told Nailah that the church would handle the matter, so neither she nor her family reported it to the police.

Around 2002, Nailah received a bag of clothes containing a T-shirt that had appellant’s name on it as the vice-president of the youth department. Nailah then realized that appellant was still pastoring children, so she filed a police report. She also *801 filed a civil lawsuit against the church and appellant, but it was dismissed shortly before the criminal trial because the statute of limitations had run.

Appellant’s attorney cross-examined Nailah vigorously concerning her memory of dates, the specific motels she and appellant had gone to at which times, and her age during which year of high school. Both became confused. Appellant’s attorney also cross-examined Nailah about how she had given different dates during her deposition in the civil lawsuit. Nailah said that she was incorrect in her former testimony because her lawyer had suggested those dates and he was wrong.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 S.W.3d 798, 2007 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1632, 2007 WL 3375262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammons-v-state-texcrimapp-2007.