Hector Martinez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 16, 2008
Docket01-07-00983-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Hector Martinez v. State (Hector Martinez 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
Hector Martinez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 16, 2008 






In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

____________


NO. 01-07-00983-CR


HECTOR ESTEBAN MARTINEZ, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from 400th District Court

Fort Bend County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 43333A




MEMORANDUM OPINION


          A jury convicted appellant, Hector Esteban Martinez, of first-degree felony sexual assault, enhanced by a prior California felony conviction for driving under the influence, and the court, having found the enhancement true, assessed punishment at 45 years in prison. We determine whether the evidence is legally and factually sufficient and whether appellant was denied due process of the law when the trial judge assessed appellant’s punishment. We affirm.

Facts

          The complainant, appellant’s 18-year-old daughter, was raised by her single mother and grew up without any regular contact with appellant. She moved into appellant’s house in September 2005, hoping to develop a father-daughter relationship with him. In late October or early November 2005, appellant took the complainant to stay with him in a one-bedroom unit at a Studio 6 extended-stay hotel in Stafford. They stayed there for almost a week, sharing a bed, and during that time appellant physically and verbally abused the complainant, threatened her, deprived her of sleep, and forced her to submit to sexual activity with him. If she submitted to him, he “wouldn’t do anything,” but if she did not submit, he would start hitting her. Sometimes she acquiesced to his sexual demands “so it wouldn’t be so bad.” She did not want her father to engage in the sexual acts with her and would not have participated if he had not hurt her and if she had not been in fear that he would beat her more. Appellant penetrated the complainant’s anus and vagina with his penis and his finger and made her perform oral sex on him. The sexual activity occurred daily, sometimes multiple times a day, including on the day alleged in the indictment.

          Appellant did not let the complainant leave the hotel room on her own. When they left the hotel together on occasion to eat out, or to bring back food, and or to apply for her passport, he never let her out of his sight. He did leave her alone once while he went to get a television.

          One night, they went to a nightclub, where they argued over a man who had approached her at the club. After the argument, appellant left the club, driving away in his van and leaving the complainant in the club parking lot. He returned for her some 15 or 30 minutes later. On their way back to the hotel, appellant called the complainant names, grabbed her shirt, and threatened that she “was going to get it.” The complainant understood this to mean that he was going to abuse her sexually and physically, decided that she could not take it any more, and determined that she had to do something. When they arrived at the hotel parking lot, after appellant had given her permission to open the van door, the complainant ran from the van and into an IHOP restaurant, where she borrowed a phone and called her mother to come and get her. There were several police officers at the IHOP, but she did not speak to them. While waiting for her mother, the complainant spoke with appellant, who was still in the parking lot, crying, begging her to return and to not “do this,” and telling her that he was scared of her. She assured him that she would call him the next day and return to him, pretending to care and trying to gain his trust. When the complainant’s mother arrived, she left with her mother, but she began crying uncontrollably and subsequently explained to her mother what had happened. They went to a hospital, where the complainant underwent a forensic sexual assault examination and spoke with the police.

          The police secured a search warrant for the hotel room and collected towels and bedding from it. They also obtained and executed a warrant for buccal swabs and body hair from appellant. The medical examination of the complainant revealed bruising and point tenderness in her genital area, point tenderness and two bleeding tears in her anal area, and numerous bruises on other parts of her body, including her left shoulder, right hip, left leg, and right nipple. The complainant told the nurse examiner that appellant had sexually assaulted her rectally and vaginally with his penis and had also penetrated her mouth. Oral, anal, and vaginal swabs and smears, along with hair combings, were recovered from the complainant as part of the examination.

          DNA testing established that appellant’s sperm was on a towel and pillowcase recovered from the hotel room, and a mixture of appellant’s and the complainant’s cells was identified on the same towel. A single sperm was located on an anal smear slide from the complainant, but it could not be matched because a minimum of 30 to 40 sperm was necessary for a full male DNA profile.

Legal Sufficiency


          The indictment against appellant alleged, in relevant part, that appellant penetrated the complainant’s female sexual organ or anus, without the complainant’s consent, and that appellant “compelled complainant to submit and participate by the use of physical force and violence or by threatening to use force and violence against complainant, and complainant believed that the [appellant] had the ability to execute the threat.”

           In his first issue, appellant contends that (1) the lack of physical evidence indicates that he did not commit the offense and (2) the State failed to prove that the penetration was without the complainant’s consent. Appellant specifically asserts that the record does not show that the complainant sustained any injuries, arguing that the bruises and abrasions noted on the medical records could not be confirmed to have arisen from the alleged offense.

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Hector Martinez v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hector-martinez-v-state-texapp-2008.