Jonathan Paul Sikes v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 2011
Docket02-10-00029-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jonathan Paul Sikes v. State (Jonathan Paul Sikes 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
Jonathan Paul Sikes v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-10-029-CR.PDR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00029-CR

Jonathan Paul Sikes

APPELLANT

V.

The State of Texas

STATE

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FROM THE 297th District Court OF Tarrant COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1] ON APPELLANT’S

PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW

After considering Appellant’s petition for discretionary review, filed August 8, 2011, we withdraw our opinion and judgment of April 7, 2011, and substitute the following.

A jury convicted Appellant Jonathan Paul Sikes of four counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child under fourteen years of age and two counts of indecency with a child by contact.  The jury assessed punishment at twelve years’ confinement for each aggravated sexual assault of a child conviction and five years’ confinement for each indecency with a child by contact conviction.  The trial court sentenced Appellant accordingly and ordered him to serve the sentences consecutively.  Appellant brings twenty-seven issues on appeal, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions; arguing that the jury was allowed to convict on each count with less than a unanimous verdict; contending that his convictions for aggravated sexual assault of a child in count one and indecency with a child in count six violated double jeopardy protections of the Texas Constitution (but making no argument based on the federal constitution); and complaining that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting his letter to his father.  Because the evidence is sufficient to support all the convictions, because no double jeopardy violation is apparent on the face of the record, because the jury charge did not improperly allow a non-unanimous verdict, and because the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the letter, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Statement of Facts

The complainant, K.S., described sexual abuse that began when Appellant, her half-brother, was sixteen years old.  Because Appellant was a juvenile until his seventeenth birthday, the jury was instructed that they could convict only of offenses that Appellant committed on or after his seventeenth birthday.  At trial, K.S. testified that one night when she was ten and Appellant was sixteen, she got up in the middle of the night to get some water from the kitchen, passing the living room on the way, and then returned to her room.  Appellant came into her room and told her to come into the living room with him.  When K.S. went into the living room, she saw that Appellant was watching “porn.”  Appellant left the room for a while, returned, and then eventually moved to sit next to K.S. on the couch.  K.S. testified that Appellant began to “fondle with [her] vagina [sic],”[2] then took off her clothes, and “start[ed] to have intercourse with [her].”

K.S. testified that after that occasion, she had sex with Appellant on “[a]verage two to three times a month.”  When asked if she remembered “any other specific instances of what he would do to [her],” she testified that in addition to vaginal sex, they had anal sex “multiple times” and that with respect to oral sex, “hi[s] contacting his penis to [her] mouth” happened “about five times” and “hi[s] using his mouth on [her] vagina [sic]” happened about the same number of times.

K.S. also testified that she woke up one night with Appellant on top of her and holding a knife to her throat, telling her that if she told anyone what was going on, he would kill her.  When K.S. was thirteen, Appellant moved out of the house.

In the spring of 2005, when K.S. was a freshman in high school, she told her friend L.A. about what had happened, and L.A. told the school counselor.  CPS was contacted, and K.S. gave a statement to CPS in June 2005.

The indictment reveals that Appellant was born September 13, 1984.  The indictment charges (1) that Appellant committed sexual assault by penis-to-female-sexual-organ contact, penis-to-anus contact, mouth-to-female-sexual-organ contact, and penis-to-mouth contact against K.S. and (2) that he committed indecency with a child under the age of seventeen years by touching her breast and “by touching any part of [her] genitals.”  All the indicted acts were alleged to have occurred on or about May 1, 2003.

During trial, over Appellant’s objection, the trial court admitted into evidence a letter that he had written to his father after his arrest.  In the letter, Appellant stated, “I know that I really hurt you in the past,” and “I truely [sic] am sorry.”

Sufficiency of the Evidence

In his first twelve issues, Appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his six convictions.  After the parties briefed this case on appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals held “that there is no meaningful distinction between a Clewis factual sufficiency standard and a Jackson v. Virginia legal-sufficiency standard” and that

the Jackson v. Virginia standard is the only standard that a reviewing court should apply in determining whether the evidence is sufficient to support each element of a criminal offense that the State is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.  All other cases to the contrary, including Clewis, are overruled.[3]

Accordingly, we apply the Jackson

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Jonathan Paul Sikes v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jonathan-paul-sikes-v-state-texapp-2011.