Pete Duran Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 2003
Docket03-02-00253-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Pete Duran Jr. v. State (Pete Duran Jr. 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
Pete Duran Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-02-00253-CR
Pete Duran, Jr., Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 403RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 005915, HONORABLE FRANK W. BRYAN, JR., JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


Pete Duran, Jr., appeals from judgments of conviction for aggravated sexual assault of a child, indecency with a child by contact, and indecency with a child by exposure. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. §§ 21.11, 22.021 (West Supp. 2003). For these offenses, the jury assessed prison terms of life, twenty years, and ten years, respectively. By four points of error, appellant complains that the district court failed to require a timely election by the State, asserts that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the conviction for indecency with a child by contact, and raises two double jeopardy claims. We overrule these contentions and affirm the judgments of conviction.



Factual Background

The complaining witness, N. N., testified that she was born in March 1982. Her parents were divorced when she was in the first or second grade, and she thereafter lived with her mother. During the summer before N. N. entered the fifth grade, she and her mother and brother moved into a house in Austin that was also occupied by appellant, his mother and father, and his nephew. The witnesses generally agreed that this was the summer of 1994, when N. N. was twelve years old. On her first night in this new house, N. N. was awakened by appellant, who took her to the bathroom and gave her a shower. Both she and appellant were naked. During the shower, appellant "touched me down there on my vagina." Appellant then took N. N. to an unoccupied bedroom, where "he was drying me off and he was touching me." Appellant laid on his back and asked N. N. to sit on his stomach and "massage" him. She refused and began to cry. She left the bedroom and went to sleep with her brother.

N. N. spent two weeks that summer at a camp. Soon after she returned to Austin, appellant came to the room where she was sleeping, took off her nightgown, and touched her "on my chest." He then took off his clothes and got in bed with her. Appellant got on top of N. N. and "tried to move on me, but I held my legs together real tight." Appellant tried to "pry my legs apart." N. N. said that appellant's "private part" touched her vagina during this incident, which ended when she began to cry.

N. N. could not remember when appellant first penetrated her vagina with his penis. She testified, however, that appellant did not engage in further sexually abusive activities with her until she was in the sixth grade. During that school year, appellant began having sexual intercourse with her on a regular basis. N. N. testified that appellant used the term "job" to refer to sexual intercourse, and that he gave her alcoholic drinks "so I could help him better on the job."

N. N., her mother, and her brother moved to another house in September of the year she began the ninth grade. The following March, appellant picked N. N. up from school and returned her to his house, where she thereafter lived apart from her family for about one year. During this time, she slept with appellant in his bed and had sexual intercourse with him. Appellant began giving her pills and other drugs. Appellant also began to regularly take N. N. to a motel, where they would engage in sexual intercourse.

In February 2000, just before her eighteenth birthday and while she was in the eleventh grade, N. N. left appellant's house and moved in with her aunt. Soon thereafter, she made her first outcry regarding appellant's conduct.



Procedural Background

The indictment contained three counts, two of which were subdivided into paragraphs. Count one contained three paragraphs accusing appellant of aggravated sexual assault of a child.



  • •Count one, paragraph one alleged that appellant penetrated N. N.'s female sexual organ with his penis. Id. § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(i), (2)(B).


  • •Count one, paragraph two alleged that appellant penetrated N. N.'s female sexual organ with his finger. Id.


  • •Count one, paragraph three alleged that appellant caused N. N.'s female sexual organ to contact his penis. Id. § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(iii), (2)(B).


Count two contained three paragraphs accusing appellant of indecency with a child by contact.



  • •Count two, paragraph one alleged that appellant touched N. N.'s breast. Id. § 21.11(a)(1).


  • •Count two, paragraph two alleged that appellant touched N. N.'s genitals. Id.


  • •Count two, paragraph three alleged that appellant caused N. N. to touch appellant's genitals. Id.


Count three alleged that appellant exposed his genitals to N. N. Id. § 21.11(a)(2)(A). All of these offenses were alleged to have been committed on or about June 15, 1994. (1)

After the State rested and outside the jury's presence, appellant moved that the State elect "which acts of sexual contact, sexual intercourse and exposure it is relying on for conviction in this case." In response to questions by the court, appellant made it clear that he was not asking that the State be required to elect among the various paragraphs contained in the indictment, but among the various acts in evidence. The prosecutor argued that the motion for election was premature since the State might offer rebuttal witnesses. The court withheld a ruling to give both parties an opportunity to research the election issue, the jury was returned to the courtroom, and the defense began presenting its case.

The following morning, again outside the jury's presence, the court granted the motion to elect after considering the case law. In response, the prosecutor announced the State's elections as follows:



  • •Count one, paragraph one: "[W]e are electing to proceed on an act that occurred at the defendant's house when the victim was in sixth grade where he had sexual intercourse with her and penetrated her vagina with his penis."


  • •Count one, paragraph two: "The State is going to abandon that paragraph."


  • •Count one, paragraph three: "[W]e elect to proceed on an act that occurred at the defendant's house in the summer before the victim was in fifth grade where he contacted her sexual organ with his sexual organ."


  • •Count two, paragraph one: "[W]e are proceeding on an act that happened at the defendant's house where he touched her breast the summer before fifth grade."


  • •Count two, paragraph two: "We are going to proceed on an act . . . touching the victim's genitals that occurred at the defendant's house the summer before the victim was in fifth grade."


  • •Count two, paragraph three: "[W]e are proceeding on an act that occurred at the defendant's house the summer before the victim was in fifth grade."

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