Johnny Martinez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 2013
Docket08-11-00311-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Johnny Martinez v. State (Johnny 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
Johnny Martinez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

JOHNNY MARTINEZ,

                            Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,

                            Appellee.

  '

                  No. 08-11-00311-CR

Appeal from the

16th District Court

of Denton County, Texas

(TC# F-2010-0137-A)

                                                                  O P I N I O N

Johnny Martinez appeals his conviction of one count of sexual assault of a child, for which he was sentenced to ninety-nine (99) years’ confinement.  In three issues, Appellant argues:  (1) the trial court erred in allowing the State to revise the enhancement paragraphs; (2) the evidence was legally insufficient to prove that Appellant committed the offense in Denton County, Texas; and (3) the jury charge permitted a less-than unanimous verdict, resulting in egregious harm.  For the reasons that follow, we affirm.[1]

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

            Appellant was indicted on one count of sexual assault of a child in violation of Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 22.011.  The indictment included two enhancement paragraphs, each pertaining to a conviction for a felony offense of burglary of a habitation.  Appellant entered a plea of not guilty.  A jury found Appellant guilty of the offense charged.  During the punishment phase, Appellant pled true to both enhancement paragraphs.  The jury assessed punishment of ninety-nine years’ confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.  Judgment was entered on August 24, 2011, and Appellant timely appealed.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

            Appellant first became friends with J.C. when she was twelve years old.  Because J.C.’s father was an abusive alcoholic, she ultimately moved in with Appellant and his family.  Soon afterward, Appellant made sexual contact with her by caressing her breasts and placing his fingertips inside the top of her pants.  They first had sexual intercourse when she was thirteen.  During that time period, they had intercourse daily and sometimes multiple times each day.  At this point, the family lived on Sunridge Drive in Dallas County.  In 2004, they moved into a home on Steenson Drive in Denton County, but J.C. moved back into her father’s apartment in Carrollton.  Carrollton is spread across Denton, Dallas and Collin Counties.  In 2005, Appellant moved to a home on Palisades Drive in Denton County.

            On July 29, 2006, J.C. gave birth to a son, Ja.C., that she had carried full term.  Ja.C. was conceived when J.C. was sixteen and born when she was seventeen.  J.C. initially testified that she conceived during intercourse at the Steenson house, but later stated that she believed the child was conceived at the Palisades home.  J.C. testified that she and Appellant were having sex once or twice a week at the Steenson house, various hotels, and her father’s home.  When she discovered she was pregnant, she moved into the Palisades house with Appellant and his family.

            In August 2009, J.C. reported her underage sexual activity to Michelle Grigg, a child abuse investigator with the Carrollton Police Department.  J.C. told Grigg that she believed her son was conceived on Halloween night when Appellant’s younger children were out trick-or-treating.  Grigg obtained DNA samples from J.C., her son, and following his arrest, Appellant.  Paternity testing established that Appellant is the child’s father.  Grigg testified that J.C. recorded a conversation she had with Appellant in which he stated his belief that the first time he had sex with J.C. was in 2004, although it might have been in 2003.  J.C. told Grigg that she and Appellant had sex at a variety of locations in both Dallas and Denton Counties around the time of conception.  Following his arrest, Appellant telephoned J.C. from the jail requesting that she tell the police that she did not want to press charges.  Appellant also kept insisting to J.C. that he never had sex with her in Denton County before she turned seventeen.  In one recorded jail call, Appellant is heard asking J.C. to write Appellant’s attorney and say that she and Appellant did not begin having sexual relations in Denton County until J.C. was seventeen.

            At trial, Appellant admitted that he had sex with J.C. when he was forty-three years old and she was sixteen, but he insisted that sexual relations occurred only in Dallas County.  He denied having intercourse with J.C. before she was sixteen.  Around the time of Halloween 2005, their sexual liaisons were always at J.C.’s father’s apartment or at a hotel in Dallas County, but never at the Palisades home.

The State included two enhancement paragraphs in the indictment.  The initial paragraphs read:

And it is further presented in and to said Court that before the commission of the offense alleged above, on the 14th day of January, 1986, in cause number 34603, in Bell County, Texas, the defendant was convicted of the felony offense of Burglary of a Habitation in the 27th District Court;

And it is further presented in and to said Court that before the commission of the offense alleged in the first paragraph above and after the conviction in cause number 34603 was final, the defendant committed the felony offense of Burglary of a Habitation and was convicted on the 8th day of July, 1994, in Bell County, Texas, in cause number 43832, in the 146th Judicial District Court . . . .

            The State delivered a Notice of State’s Intention to Enhance Punishment Range to defense counsel on August 17, 2011, which was five days prior to the commencement of the voir dire, six days before the trial on the merits began, and seven days before the punishment hearing.  The notice amended the first enhancement paragraph to reflect a conviction date of May 30, 1986, and amended the conviction date in the second enhancement paragraph to May 23, 1994. 

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Johnny Martinez v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnny-martinez-v-state-texapp-2013.