Oscar Pena De La Paz v. State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 2007
Docket11-06-00146-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Oscar Pena De La Paz v. State of Texas (Oscar Pena De La Paz v. State of Texas) 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
Oscar Pena De La Paz v. State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion filed June 14, 2007

Opinion filed June 14, 2007

                                                                        In The

    Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                 ____________

                                                          No. 11-06-00146-CR

                                                    __________

                                 OSCAR PENA DELAPAZ, Appellant

                                                             V.

                                        STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                                          On Appeal from the 32nd District Court

                                                          Nolan County, Texas

                                                  Trial Court Cause No. 10194-B

                                                                   O P I N I O N

The jury convicted Oscar Pena Delapaz of two counts of aggravated sexual assault and one count of injury to a child and assessed his punishment at seventy-five years confinement for each of the aggravated sexual assault counts and twenty years confinement for the injury to a child count. A $10,000 fine was assessed for each count.  We affirm.

                                                             I.  Background Facts


Angie Medina and Delapaz lived together and had five children, including their seven-year-old daughter K.D.  One afternoon, Medina went shopping with her mother and niece and left Delapaz with the children.  When she returned home, the kids were playing outside, and Delapaz was inside with the door locked.  He unlocked the door for her and told her that K.D. was bleeding at her Amiddle spot.@  Delapaz had blood on his fingers, and K.D. had bloodstained toilet paper in her vagina.  Delapaz did not want Medina to take K.D. to the hospital because he was concerned that CPS would become involved and take their children away, but Medina took K.D. to the Sweetwater hospital=s emergency room anyway.  Medina called Delapaz from the hospital to update him on K.D.=s condition.  He then told her that K.D. had complained that a black boy injured her.  He also put K.D.=s sister on the phone.  In the background, Delapaz could be heard telling the child to say that K.D. injured herself when she fell out of a tree.

Sweetwater law enforcement officials were contacted.  They interviewed Medina at the hospital.  She consented to a search of her apartment.  There they found damp, bloodstained clothing in the bathroom; bloodstains on the toilet seat; and bloodstained toilet paper in a trash can.  The police asked Delapaz to come to the police station for an interview.  He complied and provided them with a written statement in which he blamed K.D.=s injuries on an unknown black boy.

Meanwhile, K.D. was transferred to Hendrick Medical Center for further treatment.  She was diagnosed with a second degree laceration that went approximately one inch into her vagina and that required surgical intervention to repair.  Hospital personnel suspected sexual abuse, and two days after her surgery, K.D. told a hospital social worker and a hospital nurse that her father had injured her.  Delapaz was subsequently arrested.  He gave a second statement in jail.  This time he claimed that he accidentally cut K.D. while bathing her.

                                                                       II.  Issues

Delapaz challenges his conviction with four issues.  Delapaz argues that his rights under the confrontation clause were violated, that portions of the victim=s medical records were inadmissible hearsay, that the trial court abused its discretion by excluding a witness pursuant to Tex. R. Evid. 614, and that he received ineffective assistance of counsel.

                                                                     III. Analysis

A.  Confrontation Clause.


The State offered medical records from Hendrick Medical Center and Rolling Plains Memorial Hospital that were filed under affidavit.  Delapaz objected, contending that the records included inadmissible hearsay and that their admission violated his rights under the confrontation clause.[1]  Specifically, Delapaz objected to notes made by Melissa Foss, a social worker employed by Hendrick Medical Center, and Casey Wasson, a hospital nurse.  The challenged notes reflect that Foss interviewed K.D. in her hospital room and asked her what happened.  K.D. told Foss that her dad had poked her with his Apee-pee@ and with his fingers.  Foss asked Wasson to come into K.D.=s room, and K.D. repeated her accusation.  Foss and Wasson made separate notes of their conversation with K.D. and included them in K.D.=s medical records.

The trial court sustained Delapaz=s objection in part.  The court allowed the State to introduce records containing statements made by K.D. and the questions to which she responded but ordered the State to redact any other third party statements.  Delapaz argues on appeal that the trial court erred because the medical records contain K.D.

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Oscar Pena De La Paz v. State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oscar-pena-de-la-paz-v-state-of-texas-texapp-2007.