Joshua Curtis Dryer v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 2023
Docket01-22-00201-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Joshua Curtis Dryer v. the State of Texas (Joshua Curtis Dryer v. the State of Texas) 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
Joshua Curtis Dryer v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 13, 2023

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-22-00201-CR ——————————— JOSHUA CURTIS DRYER, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 10th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 17-CR-3187

O P I N I O N

A jury found Joshua Curtis Dryer guilty of the crime of continuous sexual

abuse of a young child and sentenced him to 35 years of imprisonment. Dryer

appeals, arguing his trial lawyer was ineffective in failing to object to the admissibility of an extraneous sexual act directed toward another who was not a

child at the time. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand for a new trial.

BACKGROUND

Introduction

In 2018, a grand jury indicted Dryer for continuous sexual abuse of a young

child. See TEX. PENAL CODE § 21.02(b). The indictment alleged that between August

2009 and August 2015 Dryer sexually abused his daughter, I.D., twice or more by

intentionally and knowingly touching her genitals and penetrating her sex organ with

his finger, the former conduct constituting the offense of indecency with a child and

the latter conduct constituting the offense of sexual assault of a child.

Dryer pled not guilty. In February 2022, the case was tried to a jury.

Pretrial Hearing on Kaitlyn Medlin’s Testimony

Before trial, the State gave notice that it intended to introduce evidence of an

extraneous offense, specifically that Dryer had committed assault by contact against

a different victim. According to the notice, Dryer had done so by touching and

rubbing the leg of Kaitlyn Medlin in August 2017.

At the time of trial, Medlin was 22 years old. She initially took the stand at a

hearing outside the presence of the jury so that the trial court could assess the

admissibility of her proposed trial testimony. During this hearing, Medlin testified

2 that she had been longtime friends with I.D. in the past. Medlin had spent the night

at I.D.’s house quite a few times back then.

The very last time Medlin spent the night at I.D.’s house was for a slumber

party or sleepover when she was “about 16.” While the other girls were upstairs,

Medlin watched a movie downstairs with Dryer and I.D.’s brother, Zeke. Zeke had

fallen asleep. Medlin was sitting next to Dryer on the couch. At some point during

the movie, Dryer placed his hand on her upper thigh over her shorts and started

moving it toward her “private area.” In response, Medlin “shot up off the couch” and

“ran upstairs.” She said she did not think Dryer saw her “run up the stairs crying.”

Once upstairs, Medlin told I.D. what had happened. Medlin said she was

crying, and that I.D. “looked terrified,” as if she was “about to cry.” Medlin said she

had not ever seen I.D. appear so scared. Later that night, I.D. confided that Dryer

had done inappropriate things to her.

Medlin spoke to the police about the sleepover incident. She was not sure

when but thought she did so about six months afterward. Medlin sat for this interview

with the police in connection with the allegations of sexual abuse that I.D. had made

against Dryer. Medlin had not gone to the police contemporaneously with the

sleepover incident. Nor had she reviewed the statement she gave to the police before

trial. Medlin acknowledged that she had told the detective who interviewed her that

3 she had overreacted to the sleepover incident. But Medlin denied that she had told

the detective that Dryer’s touching was non-sexual in nature.

After Medlin testified, the State argued her testimony was admissible under

Article 38.37 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure on the basis that Dryer’s

touching of Medlin was a sex act committed against another child. Among other

things, the State observed that because there was no medical evidence in this case,

the prosecution essentially rested on witness credibility, which made evidence that

Dryer had made a sexual advance on another child “extremely important” because it

corroborated I.D.’s allegations of abuse.

The defense objected to Medlin’s testimony, but the basis for its objection is

not altogether clear. The basis of the objection appears to have been that because

Medlin had told the detective who interviewed her that Dryer’s touching was non-

sexual, the slumber-party incident was irrelevant or that its relevance was

substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.

The trial court ruled that Medlin’s testimony was admissible.

Trial Testimony

State’s Case in Chief

Angela Black, I.D.’s mother, was the first witness. She testified that she

previously had been married to Dryer for about 17 years. Together, Black and Dryer

4 had two children, a daughter, I.D., and a son, Zeke. At the time of trial, I.D. was 20

years old and Zeke was 17 years old.

When I.D. was in junior high school—between the ages of 12 and 14—Black

noticed that I.D. had become depressed and started cutting herself. At the time, Black

thought “it was kind of just normal teenage stuff.” She did not notice anything amiss

between Dryer and I.D.

Black first became aware that something was amiss when Child Protective

Services contacted her in August 2017. Afterward, the police removed Dryer from

the home, and Black filed for separation. The children remained with her. Dryer was

disallowed any further contact with the children due to the nature of I.D.’s

allegations against him.

Black recalled the sleepover, which was for I.D.’s sixteenth birthday. Black

said that I.D. and Medlin were close friends at the time. Medlin was “a bit older”

than I.D., but Black did not know the exact age difference between the two girls.

Black did not have any contemporaneous awareness of or knowledge about the

sleepover incident involving Medlin.

Black knew the general nature of I.D.’s allegations of sexual abuse by Dryer.

But Black did not know the specifics and had not discussed the details with I.D.

Though I.D.’s allegations shocked Black, she testified that she believed her

5 daughter. According to Black, I.D. did not have a history of lying and she would not

lie about something of this nature.

Medlin then took the stand. She testified she was 22 years old.

According to Medlin, she and I.D. were close friends for a long time in their

teens. At one point in time, the two had been best friends. During this period of time,

Medlin also got to know I.D.’s family.

Medlin spent time at I.D.’s home. In doing so, Medlin had the opportunity to

observe I.D. interacting with her father, Dryer. Medlin did not see anything out of

the ordinary, such as sexual contact or the like. I.D. and Dryer appeared to have a

normal father–daughter relationship.

In August 2017, Medlin spent the night at I.D.’s home with several other girls.

Medlin testified that she was “around 16” at the time.

At one point during the sleepover, I.D. and the other girls were in her room

upstairs while Medlin was in the living room downstairs watching a movie. Medlin

was seated on one of two couches. I.D.’s brother, Zeke, who fell asleep during the

movie, was lying on the other couch. Dryer later joined them, seating himself on the

couch next to Medlin.

The State asked Medlin whether something happened between her and Dryer

while watching the movie. The defense then urged its “original objections” to

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