Leonard Farrell Willis v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2019
Docket14-17-00559-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Leonard Farrell Willis v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 30, 2019.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-17-00559-CR

LEONARD FARRELL WILLIS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 405th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 15-CR-1465

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant, Leonard Farrell Willis, of sexual assault. Tex. Penal Code § 22.011. The State also alleged that appellant had been previously convicted of three felony offenses. At the conclusion of the punishment phase of the trial, the trial court found the enhancement paragraphs in the indictment true and assessed appellant’s punishment at forty years in prison. See id. at § 12.42(d). In a single issue on appeal, appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it sustained the State’s objection under Texas Rule of Evidence 412 and excluded evidence of the complainant’s prior sexual behavior. See Tex. R. Evid. 412. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Because appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his sexual assault conviction, we include only those facts necessary to address the single issue he raises in this appeal.

The complainant graduated from High Island High School in May, 2014. She would turn 18 later that summer. One of the complainant’s friends was appellant’s daughter. The complainant knew appellant as a result of the time she spent with his daughter.

On June 22, 2014, appellant began texting the complainant. Appellant’s first text stated: “Hey sexy.” This text was sent at 9:29 p.m. The complainant had never texted appellant before, and she did not know his telephone number. In fact, when appellant’s first text arrived, the complainant did not know who was texting her. Appellant then sent a second text message, asking the complainant, “Wanna come play?” The following exchange then occurred:

Complainant: “Who is this?”

Appellant: “It’s your friend.”

Complainant: “Who?”

Appellant: “You just gave me a hug in the big store yesterday.”

Appellant: “You confused”

Appellant: “Any way just wanted to say hi”

Complainant: “A hug? In the big store? Who is this”

Appellant: “This is [complainant?]” 2 Complainant: “Yea?”

Appellant: “Is this [complainant?]”

Complainant: “Yea?”

Appellant: “This is your bff’s old man”

Appellant: “Lol”

Complainant: “Oh hi lol.”

Appellant: “Hi”

Appellant: “So you wanna come play”

The complainant thought that this exchange was unusual because appellant was texting her, “Want to come play.” Complainant was “a little grossed out” by the text messages. The complainant was not attracted to appellant in any way.

A short time later that same evening, appellant texted the complainant again.

Appellant: “What’s up?”

Appellant: “Wyd”1

Complainant: “I wish I could but I have to work tomorrow and it’s my brother’s first day.”

The complainant did not have to work the next day. This was her way of refusing appellant’s offer to come play with him, which she did not want to do. Appellant then texted, “Oh, ok. We’ll [sic] be good. Where you working.” The complainant responded with the name of a particular bar in Crystal Beach. Appellant then texted the following:

Appellant: “I have to take my father to the heart dr tomorrow”

1 According to the complainant, “wyd” means “what are you doing.”

3 Appellant: “Ok then”

Appellant: “Night”

Appellant: “Didn’t mean no harm. Sorry.”

The complainant did not respond to these final text messages.

This text message exchange frightened the complainant, so she contacted Brian, her ex-boyfriend, to help her block appellant’s telephone number. The complainant texted Brian that appellant’s daughter “gave my number to her dad. He keeps asking me to party with him.” She showed Brian the text messages that appellant had sent to her, and Brian agreed they were inappropriate, and that the complainant should block his number. Brian blocked appellant’s number from again reaching the complainant’s phone.

The complainant then contacted appellant’s daughter and asked if she had given appellant her telephone number. Appellant’s daughter apologized for what appellant had texted to the complainant. Appellant’s daughter told the complainant that appellant was sorry, and that he did not mean it. While this incident did not harm the complainant’s friendship with appellant’s daughter, the complainant did spend less time at appellant’s residence after it occurred. On one occasion, the complainant did go to appellant’s residence so that she could go swimming with appellant’s daughter. On this occasion, when appellant saw the complainant, he told her that she was pretty. This made the complainant feel uncomfortable. Since appellant had apologized for the previous texts he had sent, the complainant brushed the comment off.

Later that year, the complainant and some of her friends were attending the Rice Festival in Winnie. After attending the festival, the group travelled to a cabin in east Texas owned by the family of one member of the group. The group began

4 drinking heavily and the complainant became very intoxicated. The complainant eventually went to the bathroom and vomited for an extended period-of-time. The complainant testified that she had never gotten this intoxicated before. It was also the first time that she got so intoxicated that she did not remember everything that had occurred. Another of the complainant’s friends was helping the complainant in the bathroom when appellant’s daughter got upset because she wanted to be the one to help the complainant. The two friends got into a violent fight as a result of this dispute.

After the fight, a member of the group told appellant’s daughter and her boyfriend, Anthony, that they had to leave the cabin. Appellant’s daughter took the intoxicated complainant with her because they were best friends. Appellant’s daughter got the complainant into the back seat of her car and the complainant fell asleep. The complainant did not know where appellant’s daughter was taking her, but she had assumed that they were driving to appellant’s daughter’s trailer as they had done in the past. But, when they reached their destination, appellant’s daughter got the complainant out of the vehicle and helped her upstairs at appellant’s Crystal Beach residence. Appellant’s daughter told the complainant, “Shhh, my dad is sleeping. I need you to be quiet.” Appellant’s daughter and Anthony got the complainant into a bed in a guest room and she fell asleep. The complainant testified that she did not take her clothes off when she got into bed. The complainant remained very intoxicated.

The next thing the complainant remembered was that she woke up, her clothes were off, and appellant was on top of her. The complainant did not immediately know who was on top of her. Appellant’s penis was inside the complainant’s vagina. The complainant was scared, and she did not say or do anything. After appellant was finished, he went to the bathroom and returned with

5 a wash cloth and told the complainant to wash up. By this time, the complainant realized who her attacker was, and she just wanted to get away. The complainant testified that she did not give appellant consent to enter her room nor to have sex with her. When the complainant was asked if she might have consented as a result of the alcohol she had consumed, she responded, “No, ma’am. He was a friend’s dad. That was just gross.”

After tossing the wash cloth to the complainant, appellant left the room and went into another room. At that point, the complainant grabbed her clothes and put them back on.

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Bluebook (online)
Leonard Farrell Willis v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-farrell-willis-v-state-texapp-2019.