Roland R. Fernandez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 19, 2010
Docket13-09-00168-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Roland R. Fernandez v. State (Roland R. Fernandez 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
Roland R. Fernandez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-09-168-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

ROLAND R. FERNANDEZ, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 187th District Court of Bexar County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Justices Rodriguez, Benavides, and Vela Memorandum Opinion by Justice Vela

A jury convicted appellant, Roland R. Fernandez, of twelve counts of aggravated

sexual assault of a child, see TEX . PENAL CODE ANN . § 22.021 (Vernon Supp. 2009), and

two counts of indecency with a child by exposure. See id. § 21.11(a)(2)(A). The jury

assessed punishment at twenty-five years’ imprisonment for each count of aggravated sexual assault of a child and five years’ imprisonment for each count of indecency with a

child. All of the sentences are to run concurrently. In five issues, appellant challenges the

factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions and complains that this Court

lacks jurisdiction to hear this appeal. We affirm.1

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. State’s Evidence

When S.A.2 was four or five years old, her parents divorced, and she began living

in San Antonio with her mother, G.A. Because G.A. worked, S.A. spent every other

weekend at the home of G.A.’s sister-in-law, Salina Fernandez, and Salina’s husband,

appellant. S.A. testified appellant sexually abused her numerous times during the

weekends she spent with Salina and appellant. She did not remember the dates that the

abuse occurred; however, she testified the abuse happened when she was between five

and six years old in 1999 and 2000. When S.A. was twelve years old, she told her mother

some of the details about what appellant had done to her.

In May 2006, G.A. called the San Antonio Police Department to report a “sexual

assault” of S.A. Afterwards, Officer Gina Flores went to G.A.’s house and interviewed S.A.

Officer Flores testified that S.A. told her that the first incident of sexual abuse occurred:

when the aunt [Salina Fernandez] left, she [S.A.] was called to the bed. She went to the bed and the suspect [appellant] took her shorts off. And I asked, “What happened after that?” And she said . . . “That he started to touch me and he put his finger down there.’” And I asked her, “Where down there?” And she said, “In my vagina.”

1 This appeal was transferred to this Court from the Fourth Court of Appeals by order of the Texas Suprem e Court. See T EX . G O V ’T C OD E A N N . § 22.220 (Vernon 2004) (delineating the jurisdiction of appellate courts); T EX . G O V ’T C OD E A N N . § 73.001 (Vernon 2005) (granting the suprem e court the authority to transfer cases from one court of appeals to another at any tim e that there is “good cause” for the transfer).

2 Because the com plainant, S.A., is a m inor, we will refer to her by her initials. W e will also refer to her m other by her initials to protect her privacy. 2 Officer Flores testified that S.A. told her about another incident when appellant “laid her on

the bed and he showed her his penis. . . . [H]e took her shorts off and that’s when he held

her down on her shoulders, and . . . he stuck his penis . . . in her vagina.” S.A. told Officer

Flores that the sexual abuse stopped when Salina divorced appellant.

After Detective Jeffrey Lowder obtained statements from S.A. and G.A., he referred

both of them to the Children’s Advocacy Center for ChildSafe (“ChildSafe”). At some point,

appellant spoke to Detective Lowder about the allegations. With respect to this

conversation, Detective Lowder testified that:

after I had read the allegations set forth by the victim, I allowed Mr. Fernandez [appellant] to tell me if he could explain to me the allegations themselves. And he basically told me he had no explanation why she was coming forward and making such allegations in regards to the sexual nature of the case.

During this conversation, appellant never said anything derogatory about S.A., and he

never tried to tell Detective Lowder why he thought S.A. would make these allegations.

Salina Fernandez testified that appellant permanently moved out of the house in

December 2000 and that she and appellant divorced in 2001. She testified that for the

period of time that S.A. was spending the weekends with them, appellant would stay home

when she left the house for an errand. On cross-examination, she testified that appellant

did not want to “stay home in charge of the kids.”

Dr. Nancy Kellogg, a professor of pediatrics who served as ChildSafe’s medical

director, reviewed S.A.’s sexual assault exam,3 which was performed on June 7, 2006 by

Shirley Menard.4 When the prosecutor asked Dr. Kellogg to read what S.A. “told the

3 The trial court adm itted S.A.’s sexual-exam ination report into evidence as State’s exhibit 3.

4 Dr. Nancy Kellogg testified that Shirley Menard, a nurse practitioner, worked at ChildSafe for about eight years and retired in 2007 “with m edical issues.” Menard did not testify in this case. 3 examiner under the history portion” of the exam, she stated:

Because they’re going to check my privates, my uncle molested me. He stuck his finger in my privates. He didn’t do it once. He did it a lot, like when my aunt would leave. Wear shorts and he would take them off and my underwear. He would unzip his pants and show himself. He would hold me down. Sometimes he would lick me on the front private. He would stick his penis in me, but not all the way in.

When the prosecutor asked Dr. Kellogg if S.A. “indicate[d] where he [appellant] would stick

his penis in her?”, she said, “Her front and back privates.” Dr. Kellogg stated that the

physical findings of S.A.’s sexual-assault exam were “normal.” However, she testified that

“in cases where we have history of penetration, we have somewhere in the neighborhood

of 85 to 90 percent of those exams are normal.” On cross-examination, when defense

counsel asked Dr. Kellogg, “[Y]our findings are consistent with the allegations. In other

words, they could have happened?”, she said, “The allegations could have happened.

Yes, that’s the medical opinion.”

B. Defense Evidence

Detective Lowder testified for the defense that S.A. told him “that the first time that

anything happened inappropriately, she was on her aunt’s [Salina’s] bed while her aunt

was taking a shower[.]” In that incident, appellant picked her up, placed her down, held her

down on the bed, took off her shorts and underwear, placed one of his fingers in her

vagina, and licked her vagina. Detective Lowder stated that the “second thing” S.A.

mentioned to him was an instance when she was in her cousins’ room, and appellant was

sitting in a chair. At that time, appellant exposed himself and told S.A. to kiss his penis.

When Detective Lowder asked S.A. whether anything happened in her cousins’ presence,

she responded with two separate incidents. First, while she and her cousins wrestled with

appellant, appellant placed one of his fingers inside of her vagina. Second, “while they

4 would sit next to each other on the couch in the living room, he [appellant] would place his

hand inside her shorts and digitally penetrate her [S.A.].” She did tell him that appellant

“penetrated her bottom[.]” On cross-examination, he stated that S.A. never “deviate[d]

from the fact that she told [him] that [appellant] abused her with his penis and with his

finger and with his mouth[.]”

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