Mario Antonio Rivera Rivera v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 7, 2018
Docket01-17-00418-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Mario Antonio Rivera Rivera v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 7, 2018

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-17-00418-CR ——————————— MARIO ANTONIO RIVERA RIVERA, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 184th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1487231

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant, Mario Antonio Rivera Rivera, guilty of the offense

of continuous sexual abuse of a child,1 and the trial court assessed his punishment

at confinement for thirty years. In two issues, appellant contends that the trial

court erred in denying his request for a jury instruction on the lesser-included

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.02 (Vernon Supp. 2017). offense of aggravated sexual assault2 and in instructing the jury about other

matters.

We affirm.

Background

M.P., the complainant, testified that appellant, who was dating her mother,

would watch her and her younger siblings while her mother worked at night. Over

the course of a year, when she was nine or ten years old, he, on numerous

occasions, made her “have sex with him,” penetrating her vagina with his penis.

Although the complainant could not remember the exact number of times that

appellant did this, she knew it was “definitely more” than five and “likely more”

than fifteen times. The complainant explained that she did not tell her mother

about the abuse until she was thirteen years old, at which point her mother took her

to file a report with law enforcement authorities and then for a physical exam by a

doctor.

Anna Guerrero, the complainant’s mother, testified that the complainant was

born on May 13, 2000. She began a relationship with appellant several months

before her son was born on March 13, 2011, when the complainant was ten years

old. While she worked overnight at a “taco truck,” appellant would frequently stay

at her apartment to watch her children. When her son was a few months old,

2 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.021 (Vernon Supp. 2017). 2 Guerrero stopped asking appellant to watch her children at night because the

complainant told her that he “was knocking on the door” while Guerrero was gone

on occasions where she had not asked him to watch her children.

Guerrero further testified that, while she dated appellant, she noticed that the

complainant “became very reserved” and “isolated.” As time went on, she would

not let her mother hug her and did not “want anyone to get near her.” She refused

to bathe with her brothers as she had done in the past. And she “became

disobedient,” did not want to go to school, and would “leave with her friends”

without permission.

When the complainant was thirteen years old, Guerrero asked her “if

something had happened to her.” The complainant told Guerrero that appellant,

between May 2010 and May 2011 “when she was ten years old,” had “sexually

abused her” “several times” while Guerrero was at work. After the complainant

told Guerrero about the abuse, they went to a police station to report appellant’s

conduct to law enforcement authorities.

Sergeant M. Suarez, a child abuse investigator with the Houston Police

Department, testified that, in March 2014, she was assigned to the complainant’s

case. The complainant, who was then thirteen years old, told Suarez that appellant

had sexually abused her. Suarez referred the complainant for a medical assessment

and continued to investigate the allegations against appellant. In October 2015,

3 Suarez interviewed appellant, and he admitted to having had “sexual relations”

with the complainant by penetrating her vagina with his penis on three separate

occasions while she was under the age of fourteen years.

Dr. Rohit Shenoi, an emergency medicine physician with Texas Children’s

Hospital, testified that, on June 17, 2014, he performed a sexual abuse assessment

examination of the complainant, who was fourteen years old at the time. As part of

his assessment, Shenoi asked the complainant a series of open-ended questions.

She answered “yes” when he asked her if anyone had touched “a part of [her] body

that [she] did not want to be touched.” She then said that appellant had touched

her “breast, . . . lips, . . . vagina, and . . . butt.” And she explained that he used his

“penis” to touch her “vagina” and his hands to touch her “breast and bottom[].”

When Shenoi asked how often appellant had touched her, the complainant

responded that “he touched [her] every Saturday” for “one and a half years,” and

on “alternate weeks” thereafter. Shenoi further explained that although his

“physical exam and [an] ano-genital exam” of the complainant revealed “no

bod[il]y or genital injuries seen,” this was not inconsistent with her allegations

because the abuse had occurred several years before the exam. Thus, any injuries

that she may have suffered would likely have healed by the time of the exam.

Appellant testified that he met Guerrero through a mutual friend, and that

they were in an on-and-off relationship for approximately one year. During that

4 time, she asked him for financial assistance and to watch her children while she

worked. Appellant stated that he watched Guerrero’s children for her

approximately 15 times and never sexually abused the complainant. About four

years after appellant had stopped dating Guerrero, he received a telephone call

from Sergeant Suarez, who asked him to meet her at a police station for an

interview. During the interview, she asked about his relationships with Guerrero

and the complainant. Appellant explained that he initially denied engaging in

sexual relations with the complainant, but later admitted to doing so because he

“felt pressured.” He also testified that he was born in 1985; therefore, he was older

than seventeen years at the time of the abuse.

Lesser-Included Offense

In his first issue, appellant argues that the trial court erred in denying his

request for the jury to be charged on the lesser-included offense of aggravated

sexual assault because “[a]t trial, there were various accounts of how many times

[he] and [the complainant] had sex.”

We review a trial court’s decision not to submit a lesser-included offense

instruction for an abuse of discretion. Jackson v. State, 160 S.W.3d 568, 574–75

(Tex. Crim. App. 2005); Threadgill v. State, 146 S.W.3d 654, 665–66 (Tex. Crim.

App. 2004). And courts use a two-step analysis to determine whether a defendant

is entitled to a lesser-included offense instruction. Hall v. State, 225 S.W.3d 524,

5 528, 535–36 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007); Rousseau v. State, 855 S.W.2d 666, 672–73

(Tex. Crim. App. 1993).

First, we determine whether the requested offense is a lesser-included

offense by comparing the elements of the two offenses. Hall, 225 S.W.3d at 535–

36; Young v. State, 428 S.W.3d 172, 175–76 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]

2014, pet. ref’d). Second, we determine whether some evidence exists in the

record that would permit a rational jury to find that the defendant is guilty only of

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