Laurence Lee Cano v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 4, 2007
Docket14-06-00377-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Laurence Lee Cano v. State (Laurence Lee Cano 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
Laurence Lee Cano v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion of July 17, 2007 Withdrawn; Affirmed and Substitute Memorandum Opinion filed October 4, 2007

Opinion of July 17, 2007 Withdrawn; Affirmed and Substitute Memorandum Opinion filed October 4, 2007.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-00377-CR

LAURENCE LEE CANO, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 149th District Court

Brazoria County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 42,716-1

S U B S T I T U T E   M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

We withdraw the opinion issued July 17, 2007 and substitute the following opinion.

A jury convicted appellant Laurence Lee Cano of sexual assault and sentenced him to ten years= probation and a $10,000 fine.  Appellant thereafter filed an application for writ of habeas corpus, alleging he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial, which the trial court denied.  In a single issue, appellant challenges the denial of his application for writ of habeas corpus.


Background

At appellant=s trial, the State called five witnesses.  The complainant testified that between 9:30 and 10:00 a.m. on the morning of Tuesday, May 22, 2001, as she parked in front of her apartment in Sweeny, Texas, appellant, a bread truck driver who also owned and managed her apartment complex, parked behind her and told her he needed to speak with her.  After the complainant went inside her apartment and changed clothes, she let appellant inside.  The complainant showed appellant painting she had done in the apartment, a rotting board in her bathroom, and mildew on a wall in her bedroom.  She claimed appellant then threw her on the bed, sat on top of her legs, and told her he Ahad a rubber,@ to which she replied that she did not care.  Despite her pleas to stop, appellant then pulled her shorts to the side and penetrated her vagina with two of his fingers.  As appellant stood up to undress himself, the complainant went to the front door.  Appellant told her Anot to tell anybody,@ and she then left for her parents= house.  According to the complainant, appellant came by her parents= house a week later and asked whether she had told anyone about the incident and if she was mad at him.  She said no, and he left.  She further testified that, at the direction of Chief Gary Stroud of the Sweeny Police Department, she informed appellant=s wife about the incident.


On cross-examination, as part of the defense=s theory that the complainant falsely accused appellant of sexual assault because she was angry with him for evicting her, appellant=s trial counsel asked the complainant if she was ever served with an eviction notice or told to move out.  She responded negatively.  In voir dire examination outside the presence of the jury, counsel also attempted to impeach the complainant with questions regarding prior false accusations of sexual misconduct she allegedly made against three other men:  her brother, a man named Joshua Dudley Roberts, and an unnamed man she encountered at a convenience store in Sweeny.  The complainant maintained that the allegations against her brother were true, that she remembered the incident with Roberts and he may have received a Acitation,@[1] and that she did not recall making the allegation about the third man.  The trial court precluded counsel from cross-examining the complainant about the allegations because counsel failed to prove their falsity.  Trial counsel did not further pursue these allegations.

The State thereafter called the complainant=s mother and husband to establish that the complainant was upset both after the alleged incident and after speaking with appellant a week later and to confirm that no eviction notice was ever issued to the complainant.  The State also called Miranda Ballard, who testified over objection that, in the early morning hours of October or November 2001, after she stopped on the side of the road in response to his flashing headlights, appellant improperly touched her breast and asked to perform sex acts on her in the back of his bread truck.  On cross-examination, Ballard stated that she filed a police report regarding the incident but did not file charges because she wanted to avoid the Ahassle.@  Appellant=s counsel did not attempt to elicit a motive or bias or otherwise impeach Ballard.[2]  The State finally called Constable Willie Howell, appellant=s relative by marriage, who testified that appellant told him the complainant approached him sexually while he performed maintenance on her bathroom and that he digitally penetrated her vagina with consent.  Appellant responded that Constable Howell must have misunderstood his statements and that he simply told the constable about the allegation and that it was false. 


Appellant=s counsel called a number of witnesses, each supporting the defense=s theories that the complainant fabricated her story as revenge for her eviction and that appellant was on his bread route at the time of the incident.  Appellant testified that he left an eviction notice with the complainant the last week of May 2001 when she was not home.  He also denied sexually assaulting the complainant and claimed he was at work at the time of the incident.  However, appellant later stated that he could not recall where he was at the time of the incident.  Appellant recalled discussing the complainant=s painting in her apartment in early May 2001, but could not recall whether he observed or repaired a mildewed wall or rotten board there.  Appellant also offered a different version of his encounter with Ballard.  He denied assaulting her, claiming that he flashed his lights at her while on his bread route because he thought she was driving drunk and then agreed to follow her home.  Appellant further testified that, before the time of the alleged incident, he visited the complainant=

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