in the Matter of E. C. S.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 26, 2000
Docket03-99-00867-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
in the Matter of E. C. S., (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-99-00867-CV

In the Matter of E. C. S.



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SAN SABA COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 219, HONORABLE GUILFORD L. JONES, JUDGE PRESIDING


A jury found that appellant, E.C.S., engaged in the delinquent conduct of aggravated sexual assault. The court committed him to the Texas Youth Commission until his twenty-first birthday. E.C.S. challenges both the court's actions in admitting evidence of extraneous conduct and the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury's findings. We will affirm.

BACKGROUND

Undisputedly, sexual contact occurred between the appellant, a fifteen-year-old male from Cherokee, Texas, and the complainant, a sixteen-year-old female from another town. Appellant contends the contact was consensual.

There is no dispute that the appellant and complainant first met on April 5, 1999. The complainant was in town visiting her cousin for Easter. As the two girls drove around Cherokee, they saw appellant sitting outside his house. He waved and they stopped. He got in the car, driven by the complainant, and rode to her cousin's house. They played computer games and talked; appellant tried to get the complainant to smoke, but she declined. Appellant asked for a ride home, and the complainant offered to drive him home. On the way home, appellant asked what the complainant intended to do after dropping him off. When she said that her cousin was going to show her the "major makeout place" in town--a cemetery--he told her that he could show her the place. It is here that their recollections of events diverge.

Appellant testified that the complainant stopped the car at the cemetery. He took a cue from her behavior of stopping at the "major makeout" place and kissed her. He said she returned the kiss, putting her arms around him. He convinced her to perform oral sex on him, which she did, briefly, before deciding that she did not want to continue. He asked her what else she wanted to do; when she did not respond, he kissed her again, and she again returned the kiss. As they kissed, he progressed from rubbing her legs to rubbing her "private" to inserting his fingers into her vagina one at a time. He testified that he asked her if she liked what he was doing and she said "yes," until he inserted a third finger. When she winced, he told her to relax, but when she said, "That's enough," he stopped and returned to his side of the car. As the complainant drove him home, appellant asked if she was okay and she said, "yes." He asked when she would be back in town and whether she would look for him. She told him she would return the next week and agreed to look for him. They kissed again and he got out of the car.

Appellant denied threatening the complainant, grabbing her hair, or forcing her to do anything; he said he might have put his hand on or around her back during their brief foray into oral sex. He did not drive the car, did not take the keys, and she did not relinquish the driver's seat while he was in the car. He testified that he did not know of any rope in the car, did not know of her interest in the murder of James Byrd by dragging in Jasper, Texas, and did not know she claimed that he had threatened her with a similar dragging death until he was arrested and placed in a juvenile detention center.

He admitted that he had previously been adjudicated delinquent for pinching a girl. He said he was released from his probation, though he admitted he did not comply with all the rules of his probation.

The complainant's testimony diverges from the appellant's testimony regarding the circumstances preceding and including their physical contact. She testified that she was uneasy driving appellant to the cemetery, but she took him anyway because he seemed like a cool person. She did not expect to be attacked. She testified that turning off the car at the cemetery to talk was appellant's idea; she says she told him that she wanted to go back to town. His response was to ask for oral sex, which surprised her. She said they argued about it for ten minutes, during which time he threatened to drag her behind the car like James Byrd, Jr. had been dragged.(1) She said he did not show her any rope, but grabbed her arm and used a tone of voice that scared her, made her cry, and made her fear for her life. She testified that he then grabbed her hair and forced her to put her mouth on his penis for about thirty seconds, though she did not remember how it happened or how he got his clothes off. Then, while still holding her hair and her wrist, he told her to lean her seat back; when she refused, he did it for her. She said he started kissing her and refused her request that he stop; as he continued, he moved his hand up her leg and penetrated her vagina with his fingers. She told him it hurt, and he said it would feel better in a little bit. Then he stopped and asked what she wanted to do. When she again said she wanted to go back into town, he said, "You don't want to have sex?" When she said "no," he let go of her hair and wrist and said, "You better not tell anybody." As she drove him to his house, they discussed when she would return to town.

She returned to her cousin's house and told her cousin what had happened, then made the more than two-hour drive home. She said it took a few hours to work up the courage to tell her mother, who then reported the assault. At the suggestion of San Saba County law enforcement, the complainant went to a hospital where she was examined by a nurse and given pain medication to help her sleep. The next day she went to the San Saba courthouse to talk with authorities about the assault.

The complainant testified that the appellant was never behind the wheel of her car. She denied that she made up the dragging threat. She acknowledged that going to see the "major makeout place" was her and her cousin's idea, not appellant's idea.

The complainant's cousin confirmed her role in the events described by the complainant, but conceded that she had no direct knowledge of what occurred between the complainant and appellant. The cousin said that, upon returning from taking appellant home, the complainant went straight to the bathroom, then lay on the cousin's bed for a few minutes. The complainant seemed very upset--she was pale, slightly disheveled, and quiet. The complainant said she wanted to talk to her cousin outside; she started crying and told the cousin she had been attacked. The cousin's retelling of what the complainant told her about the encounter was essentially the same as the complainant's testimony at trial. The cousin conceded that she had not put anything in her written statement about the threat of dragging; she thought that the complainant told her about it over the telephone on the night of the incident. (The complainant testified on rebuttal that she told her about the threat the first time they talked about it.)

The complainant's mother testified that her daughter changed at Easter. She testified that she could tell something was wrong with her daughter when she came home from visiting the cousin. She encouraged her daughter to talk, but her daughter only got more nervous. She asked her daughter to tell her what was wrong regardless of what it was.

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