OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.
Appellant was convicted of indecency with a child and sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment and a fine of $15,000. On appeal, he argued that the trial court erroneously admitted the hearsay testimony by the complainant’s mother as a victim outcry statement. The court of appeals affirmed appellant’s conviction,
and we granted review to determine if the testimony was properly admitted under Article 38.07 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.
Because the hearsay statements made by complainant’s mother were erroneously admitted, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case for that court to decide whether the admission of that hearsay was harmful error.
I.
Appellant was charged with three counts of indecency with Ashley, a child younger than seventeen years of age.
At trial, the State’s evidence showed that appellant ran Mustang Christian Ranch, a work ranch for troubled teens. The State presented two witnesses to prove these indecency charges: Ashley’s mother and Ashley herself. According to the testimony of her mother, Ashley, who was thirteen years old, was sent to the Mustang Christian Ranch for a two-day period in January of 2001. Ashley’s mother testified that after Ashley came home from the ranch, she was “belligerent” and “angry.” The prosecutor then asked Ashley’s mother to repeat what Ashley had told her about appellant’s actions. Appellant promptly objected to the questioning of Ashley’s mother regarding these hearsay statements. While the trial judge allowed the prosecution to continue its line of questioning, he remarked that he would not allow the admission of hearsay statements. However, as the prosecutor continued to question Ashley’s mother regarding Ashley’s statements — and appellant continued to object to the admission of hearsay evidence — the court . began to overrule appellant’s objections and to allow Ashley’s mother to relate the out-of-court statements made by Ashley.
Finally, the court instructed the jury that while hearsay testimony was generally inadmissible, it was admissible if the statement was the initial outcry of a victim of sexual molestation.
The trial court then allowed Ashley’s mother to testify regarding the content of Ashley’s outcry statement to her. Appellant again objected, stating, “I do not believe it’s permitted under the
rules, under the facts of this case, just for the record.” The trial court again ovei'-ruled appellant’s objection, and asked the witness to repeat what Ashley told her verbatim. Ashley’s mother did so:
She had said that he had come in while she was sleeping. I believe that was Saturday night. And had started running his hand up her blouse. She said she started coughing to try to wake somebody or try to get him to move. And that he finally did later on get up and go out of the x’oom. When I asked her if she knew it was him, she told me that there was a mirror that was standing there, and as he got up, she saw his reflection off of it.... She said the next day Mr. Martinez sent people out — the boys out to go to work. He said he wanted to talk to her about her behavior.... She told me that at that point she was asked to sit on the bed. Mr. Martinez sat on the bed with her, and asked her something to the effect of, would you let a boy do this, and he put his hand underneath her blouse.... And then she said that he got on top of her, or forced her to get on top of him. And she said that the whole time she was wanting to get up, but she couldn’t. He was holding her down and rubbing up against her.
Ashley took the stand immediately after her mother. Her in-court rendition of the events was very similar to the version that Ashley had told her mother. On direct examination, Ashley testified that during the first night of her stay, she awoke to find her “hand was rubbing on [appellant’s] leg,” and later that night she “felt him rubbing inside [her] shirt.” She said that, during the following afternoon, appellant again “put his fingers between the buttons” of her shirt, and asked her if she “would let a guy do that to [her].” Appellant then forced Ashley to lie on the bed, and he “got on top” of her and began “rubbing his genitalia against [her] genitalia.” She stated that appellant then left the room to answer the telephone, but returned and “grabbed [her] and put [her] on top of him.” Ashley stated that appellant continued to hold her on top of him and “move up and down” until he heard his wife walk in the door.
Based upon this evidence, the jury convicted appellant and sentenced him to ten years’ imprisonment. Appellant ai'gued on appeal that the trial court’s admission of Ashley’s hearsay statements made to her mother was improper under Article 38.072 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure
because at the time of the events Ashley was thirteen years old, and Article 38.072 applies only to children twelve years of age or younger.
The court of appeals held that, while appellant was coirect that the statements were inadmissible under Article 38.072, they were admissible under Ar-
tide 38.07.
Conducting that the trial court came to the right conclusion for the wrong reason, the court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment.
In a dissent, Justice Vance stated that these hearsay statements were not admissible under either Article 38.072 or Article 38.07.
He argued that Article 38.07 allows otherwise inadmissible hearsay testimony only when corroboration is required. Because Ashley was thirteen at the time of the offense, corroboration was not required, and therefore her mother’s hearsay statements were inadmissible. In a footnote, the dissent also pointed out that:
Even if corroboration were required [under Article 38.07], only the fact of the crime, and not its details, may be admitted under this exception. When properly admitted, the statement is not hearsay at all, since it is admitted not for the truth of the matter asserted, but only for the fact of its utterance.
See Brown v. State,
649 S.W.2d 160, 162 (Tex.App.Austin 1983, no pet.).
Because of the confusion concerning the appropriate scope and application of Articles 38.072 and 38.07, we granted review.
II.
Article 38.072 is a rule of admissibility of hearsay evidence. Article 38.07 is a rule concerning sufficiency of the evidence.
These statutes serve related but entirely distinct purposes. They are not interchangeable. Indeed, never the twain shall meet.
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OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.
Appellant was convicted of indecency with a child and sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment and a fine of $15,000. On appeal, he argued that the trial court erroneously admitted the hearsay testimony by the complainant’s mother as a victim outcry statement. The court of appeals affirmed appellant’s conviction,
and we granted review to determine if the testimony was properly admitted under Article 38.07 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.
Because the hearsay statements made by complainant’s mother were erroneously admitted, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case for that court to decide whether the admission of that hearsay was harmful error.
I.
Appellant was charged with three counts of indecency with Ashley, a child younger than seventeen years of age.
At trial, the State’s evidence showed that appellant ran Mustang Christian Ranch, a work ranch for troubled teens. The State presented two witnesses to prove these indecency charges: Ashley’s mother and Ashley herself. According to the testimony of her mother, Ashley, who was thirteen years old, was sent to the Mustang Christian Ranch for a two-day period in January of 2001. Ashley’s mother testified that after Ashley came home from the ranch, she was “belligerent” and “angry.” The prosecutor then asked Ashley’s mother to repeat what Ashley had told her about appellant’s actions. Appellant promptly objected to the questioning of Ashley’s mother regarding these hearsay statements. While the trial judge allowed the prosecution to continue its line of questioning, he remarked that he would not allow the admission of hearsay statements. However, as the prosecutor continued to question Ashley’s mother regarding Ashley’s statements — and appellant continued to object to the admission of hearsay evidence — the court . began to overrule appellant’s objections and to allow Ashley’s mother to relate the out-of-court statements made by Ashley.
Finally, the court instructed the jury that while hearsay testimony was generally inadmissible, it was admissible if the statement was the initial outcry of a victim of sexual molestation.
The trial court then allowed Ashley’s mother to testify regarding the content of Ashley’s outcry statement to her. Appellant again objected, stating, “I do not believe it’s permitted under the
rules, under the facts of this case, just for the record.” The trial court again ovei'-ruled appellant’s objection, and asked the witness to repeat what Ashley told her verbatim. Ashley’s mother did so:
She had said that he had come in while she was sleeping. I believe that was Saturday night. And had started running his hand up her blouse. She said she started coughing to try to wake somebody or try to get him to move. And that he finally did later on get up and go out of the x’oom. When I asked her if she knew it was him, she told me that there was a mirror that was standing there, and as he got up, she saw his reflection off of it.... She said the next day Mr. Martinez sent people out — the boys out to go to work. He said he wanted to talk to her about her behavior.... She told me that at that point she was asked to sit on the bed. Mr. Martinez sat on the bed with her, and asked her something to the effect of, would you let a boy do this, and he put his hand underneath her blouse.... And then she said that he got on top of her, or forced her to get on top of him. And she said that the whole time she was wanting to get up, but she couldn’t. He was holding her down and rubbing up against her.
Ashley took the stand immediately after her mother. Her in-court rendition of the events was very similar to the version that Ashley had told her mother. On direct examination, Ashley testified that during the first night of her stay, she awoke to find her “hand was rubbing on [appellant’s] leg,” and later that night she “felt him rubbing inside [her] shirt.” She said that, during the following afternoon, appellant again “put his fingers between the buttons” of her shirt, and asked her if she “would let a guy do that to [her].” Appellant then forced Ashley to lie on the bed, and he “got on top” of her and began “rubbing his genitalia against [her] genitalia.” She stated that appellant then left the room to answer the telephone, but returned and “grabbed [her] and put [her] on top of him.” Ashley stated that appellant continued to hold her on top of him and “move up and down” until he heard his wife walk in the door.
Based upon this evidence, the jury convicted appellant and sentenced him to ten years’ imprisonment. Appellant ai'gued on appeal that the trial court’s admission of Ashley’s hearsay statements made to her mother was improper under Article 38.072 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure
because at the time of the events Ashley was thirteen years old, and Article 38.072 applies only to children twelve years of age or younger.
The court of appeals held that, while appellant was coirect that the statements were inadmissible under Article 38.072, they were admissible under Ar-
tide 38.07.
Conducting that the trial court came to the right conclusion for the wrong reason, the court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment.
In a dissent, Justice Vance stated that these hearsay statements were not admissible under either Article 38.072 or Article 38.07.
He argued that Article 38.07 allows otherwise inadmissible hearsay testimony only when corroboration is required. Because Ashley was thirteen at the time of the offense, corroboration was not required, and therefore her mother’s hearsay statements were inadmissible. In a footnote, the dissent also pointed out that:
Even if corroboration were required [under Article 38.07], only the fact of the crime, and not its details, may be admitted under this exception. When properly admitted, the statement is not hearsay at all, since it is admitted not for the truth of the matter asserted, but only for the fact of its utterance.
See Brown v. State,
649 S.W.2d 160, 162 (Tex.App.Austin 1983, no pet.).
Because of the confusion concerning the appropriate scope and application of Articles 38.072 and 38.07, we granted review.
II.
Article 38.072 is a rule of admissibility of hearsay evidence. Article 38.07 is a rule concerning sufficiency of the evidence.
These statutes serve related but entirely distinct purposes. They are not interchangeable. Indeed, never the twain shall meet.
A. Article 38.072: Hearsay Statement of a Child Abuse Victim.
Hearsay statements, while generally inadmissible, may be admitted under specific conditions when public policy supports their use, and the circumstances surrounding the making of those statements pedigree their reliability.
The enactment of Article 38.072 is a legislative determination that one such specific situation is the outcry statement of a child victim of sexual or physical abuse.
Because it is often
traumatic for children to testify in a courtroom setting, especially about sexual offenses committed against them, the Legislature enacted Article 38.072 to admit the testimony of the first adult a child confides in regarding the abuse.
This witness may recite the child’s out-of-court statements concerning the offense, and that testimony is substantive evidence of the crime.
However, the use of such out-of-court statements is carefully limited. Only those statements made to a person eighteen years of age or older qualify, and then only if the child was twelve or younger when the abuse occurred.
The State must provide adequate pretrial notice to the defendant of its intent to introduce the child outcry statement, and it must provide the name of the outcry witness and a summary of the hearsay statement.
Furthermore, the trial court must first determine, outside the presence of the jury, that the statement is reliable “based on the time, content, and circumstances of the statement.”
And the child must testify at trial or be available to testify.
Thus, Article 38.072 is a rule of evidence admissibility, allowing trial courts to admit some hearsay statements in the prosecution of certain offenses against children when those statements are made under the specified conditions. This statute serves the societal interests of promoting the fair prosecution of child abuse cases and of protecting children in court by allowing the admission of their casual “street corner” confidences to an adult as a supplement to (or sometimes even a substitute for)
what may be halting, incoherent, or traumatic in-court testimony.
B. Article 38.07: Testimony in Corroboration of Victim of Sexual Offenses.
Article 38.07 differs from Article 38.072 in several essential respects. While Article 38.072 assists the prosecution by making certain hearsay outcry statements admissible, Article 38.07 protects the accused by creating a statutory corroboration requirement.
Its purpose is almost exactly opposite to that of Article 38.072: this is a defendant-protecting statute, rather than a child-victim-protecting statute. It limits the circumstances in which the State may obtain a conviction for sexual offenses based on the testimony of a competent adult
to situations in which: (1) the victim made an outcry within one year of the criminal act; or (2) there is other evidence that corroborates the victim’s testimony.
This statute may well be the vestigial tail of an outmoded era, but it had its genesis in early opinions from this Court. As long ago as 1896, this Court stated that, in rape cases,
All of the authorities teach that, where a case of this character rests solely upon the testimony of the prosecutrix, it is the duty of the jury to scrutinize and weigh her testimony very carefully; and in every case it is considered important as corroborative of her evidence that, soon after the alleged rape, she made complaint of the outrage.
By 1936, this judicial and societal scepti-cism — perhaps based on the old adage that “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned” — had evolved into a real “rule”:
a conviction for rape by force will not be sustained on the uncorroborated testimony of a woman who waits too long before announcing her decision that she has been raped, unless the delay is supported by ... cogent reasons[.]
This rule apparently evolved as a reflection of “judicial concern that the victim had actually consented and thus was in some sense an accomplice or akin to one.”
In 1975, the Texas Legislature set out to abolish the judicially created corroboration requirement, but instead ended up enshrining it in Article 38.07.
Nonetheless, the general legislative purpose, both in 1975 and in later amendments, was to make conviction in rape cases easier to obtain by reducing the impact of the traditional, judicially created corroboration requirement.
Thus, Article 38.07 requires the State to offer some
corroborative evidence, such as eyewitness testimony, a defendant’s admissions, medical testimony, or other circumstantial proof, if the competent adult complainant in a sexual assault prosecution has not informed any adult, other than the defendant, of the alleged offense within a year of its commission.
Of course, if the victim’s statements to that witness are oth
erwise admissible under the hearsay rule, then the witness may recount the victim’s outcry. But Article 38.07 is not itself an exception to the hearsay rule.
In sum, Article 38.07 deals with the
sufficiency
of evidence required to sustain a conviction for sexual assault but does not act as a hearsay exception, while Article 38.072 deals with the
admissibility
of evidence that would otherwise be barred by the hearsay rule.
III.
In the present case, the trial court found that the testimony of Ashley’s mother reciting Ashley’s outcry statement was admissible under Article 38.072.
There is no dispute that Ashiey was thirteen years old when the offense occurred and that Article 38.072 applies only if the victim is twelve years of age or younger at the time of the offense. Thus, the court of appeals was correct in finding that the statement was inadmissible under Article 38.072.
However, the court of appeals then stated that Ashley’s mother’s testimony “was admissible under the general outcry statute, Code of Criminal Procedure Article 38.07, and the trial court strictly limited the testimony to its proper scope.”
This conclusion is mistaken. First, because Ashley fits into one of the Article 38.07(b) exceptions—she was under seventeen at the time of the offense—the State was not required to prove that Ashley made any outcry statement. Therefore, Ashley’s mother’s statement was neither necessary nor admissible under Article 38.07. However, as the dissent noted,
even if Article 38.07 did apply, this testimony went well beyond establishing that Ashley had in fact made an outcry statement to her mother regarding appellant’s criminal acts. Ashley’s mother recounted exactly what Ashley said to her.
The State argues that even if the testimony were inadmissible under Article 38.07, Ashley’s statement to her mother fits within the excited utterance hearsay exception.
Of course, evidence that is otherwise admissible under a hearsay exception or exemption is not barred by Article 38.07, but the record fails to support the State’s position. Ashley’s mother testified that Ashley cried the evening she returned from appellant’s ranch, and that the following day she was angry. However, this alone is not sufficient to prove that Ashley “was still dominated by the emotions, excitement, fear or pain of the event” when she told her mother about the
alleged acts.
She had not been near appellant for over two days,
and there is no evidence in the record that she was “in the instant grip of violent emotion, excitement or pain” immediately before or during her recount of the events.
Without further evidence that Ashley had no time or opportunity to calm herself and reflect upon the two-day-old events, we cannot conclude that her statements to her mother fit the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule.
The State also argues that even if the statements should not have been admitted under Article 38.07, the appellant did not make the appropriate objection, and therefore waived his right to complain on appeal. However, the record reflects that appellant made numerous objections to the introduction of the outcry evidence.
While it is true that appellant never stated the actual rule the judge was apparently using to allow the statements into evidence,
his objections were certainly sufficient.
Appellant objected to the testimony as hearsay; it was hearsay, and thus his objection was both proper and sufficient.
If the testimony fit some exception or exemption to the hearsay rule (or if the evidence was not being offered for the truth of the matter asserted) the State, as the proponent of the evidence, had the burden of demonstrating the applicability of that exemption or exception.
Finally, the State argues that even if the testimony was improperly admitted, it was harmless error. Because the court of appeals found that the admission of the testimony was not error, it did not conduct a
harm analysis. Despite the fact that both the appellant and the State discuss the issue of harm at length, that issue is not. before us. We will therefore defer to the court of appeals to determine whether the admission of the outcry statement was harmless error.
In sum,'the trial judge erred in admitting Ashley’s outcry statement to her mother under either Article 38.072 or Article 38.07. Her statement was not an excited utterance, and no other grounds for admitting it were offered. Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals, and remand the case to that court to conduct a harm analysis.