Julio Guia, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 20, 2000
Docket03-99-00190-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Julio Guia, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-99-00190-CR



Julio Guia, Jr., Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF HAYS COUNTY, 22ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. CR-97-0319, HONORABLE GARY L. STEEL, JUDGE PRESIDING



Appellant Julio Guia, Jr. appeals his conviction for the offense of aggravated sexual assault of a child. (1) The jury found appellant guilty, and after determining that allegations of a prior conviction for indecency with a child were true, the jury assessed appellant's punishment at sixty years' imprisonment.



Issues

Appellant advances three issues. First, he contends that he was denied the effective assistance of trial counsel as counsel did not object to the introduction of a videotaped statement of the child victim. Second and third, appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction. Appellant claims the evidence was insufficient to establish that he penetrated the complainant's female sexual organ with his finger as alleged in the indictment. We will affirm the judgment of conviction.

After a recitation of the facts, we shall initially discuss the sufficiency issues in order to place the first issue in proper perspective.



Facts

M.F., the complainant, testified at the February 1999 trial that she was eight years old; that the incident with "Uncle Julio" happened in the "summer" one afternoon at his house in San Marcos. Other evidence indicated the date of the offense was June 20, 1997.

M.F. explained that appellant, Uncle Julio, invited her into his bedroom to watch "Rescue 911" on television; that they both lay on the bed, each wearing a shirt and shorts; and that the door was closed. She stated that appellant "started doing it to me"; that appellant "put his hand up the back" and under her shorts and underwear and put his hand between her legs; and that he "went between my legs." The record reflects:



Q: Okay. What could you tell that he was doing down there?



A: He was just like touching me, I think.



Q: What did he do with his hand?



A: It was just like touching and everything, and grabbing and everything.



M.F. told the jury that appellant took her hand and placed it on his penis. M.F. related that appellant stopped when someone outside walked by the windows to the bedroom. Appellant then "started again" and reached under her shorts a second time. Later, M.F. left the bedroom and her grandparents came and picked her up. M.F. told her older sister, Vivian, what happened. "I just told her how he did it to me and that's it." Vivian was under eighteen years of age and was not an outcry witness.

M.F. revealed that a similar incident happened before, when she was living with her mother. Another uncle, Miguel from Mexico, did the same thing to her on a previous occasion at night time.

Leslie Ontiveros, an employee with the Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services, was called by the State as an outcry witness. Ontiveros explained that she was conducting an investigation into physical abuse by M.F.'s stepfather against others when she came into contact with M.F. The complainant made an outcry to her about Uncle Julio's actions. Ontiveros testified that M.F. told her that on the occasion in question appellant had licked her neck, kissed her on the lips, rubbed her breasts, and "had touched her thing." M.F. also told Ontiveros that appellant put his hand on her "middle part" (her term for vagina) for a long time. Ontiveros related that M.F. then motioned with her index finger--"a poking." M.F. revealed that what appellant did hurt her and she told him to stop. M.F. also told Ontiveros that another person, an uncle named Miguel, on an earlier occasion, had poked her in her middle part (vagina) and in her "butt."

Kimberly Norris Burke, an employee of Roxanne's House, a child advocacy center, made a videotape of her interview with M.F. M.F. told Burke that appellant had kissed her (M.F.) and that "doing it" meant "kissing and everything." M.F. then got up and grabbed her private parts with her hand. She told Burke that appellant pulled up her shorts and touched her. Burke then displayed anatomically correct dolls to M.F. and asked her to explain what happened. M.F. took the female doll and placed her fingers inside the doll between the legs.

The videotape was introduced. It supported Burke's testimony and showed M.F. grabbing her vaginal area in response to a question. The tape also showed M.F. aggressively using her fingers in pushing between the legs of the female doll. M.F. then took the hand of the female doll and placed it on the front of the male doll's pants indicating appellant made her touch his penis.

Dr. Emilie Becker, an Austin psychiatrist, did an evaluation of M.F. and found her depressed and somewhat demoralized. She recommended treatment for depression. Dr. Becker related that it was normal for a child to have some gaps in recollection after a traumatic event. It was stipulated that there had been no medical examination of M.F.

Ethel Wright, appellant's common-law wife, testified as a defense witness. She related that the grandparents brought M.F. and her two sisters to the house on the date in question about 5:30 p.m.; that she was cooking in the kitchen and appellant was in the master bedroom with the door open; that M.F. and her younger sister, Olga, went into the bedroom on their own; that she (Ethel) went to the bedroom from time to time to watch the television although there was a television set in the living room where the other sister (Vivian) stayed; and that when M.F. and Olga began jumping on appellant's bed she stopped them for fear they would fall. Wright fed the children supper and then drove them to an aunt's house at 7:00 p.m. According to Wright, M.F. made no outcry and there was nothing out of the ordinary about her behavior or clothing at the time.

Maria Villarreal, M.F.'s grandmother, testified that she and her husband took M.F., her sister Olga, and two boys, Oscar and Joseph, to appellant's house on the date in question. They later picked up the children at the house. Still later, her husband picked up Vivian "at work." She denied M. F. made an outcry to her.

Sandy Lara testified that at about 6:00 p.m. on the date in question Ethel Wright brought M.F., Olga, and Vivian to her house. Later, Vivian walked the children back to appellant's house which was not far away.

There was some conflict in the evidence about Vivian's presence in appellant's house at the time. Vivian was not a witness, and the issue does not appear material.



Legal Sufficiency

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