Ronald Shawn Watkins v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1999
Docket03-99-00145-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ronald Shawn Watkins v. State (Ronald Shawn Watkins 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
Ronald Shawn Watkins v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-99-00145-CR
Ronald Shawn Watkins, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 27TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 48,760, HONORABLE C. W. DUNCAN, JR., JUDGE PRESIDING

A jury convicted Ronald Shawn Watkins of aggravated sexual assault of a child. The jury assessed punishment at eight years in prison. Watkins raises three points of error on appeal, challenging the admission of hearsay evidence, the allowance of a leading question, and the submission of a portion of the jury charge. We will affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

Kay, (1) the complaining witness, testified that Watkins assaulted her at a slumber party at her friend Heather's house. Kay was eleven years old at the time of the assault and twelve by the time of trial. Watkins was nineteen at the time of the assault and twenty by the time of trial. Watkins was the boyfriend of Heather's sister, Melissa, at the time of the assault; Watkins and Melissa were married by time of trial. Kay testified that she and Watkins were teammates in a game of hide-and-seek. While they were "seekers" and counting down in a bedroom while others went to hide, Watkins asked if she had seen a boy's private part. When Kay said no, he asked her if she wanted to see one; though she said no, he then pulled down her pajama shorts. When she turned around, she saw he had pulled down his jeans, exposing his penis. She turned away from him, pulled up her shorts, and continued with the hide-and-seek game. She testified that the next time it was their turn to count, he pulled her pants down and put two of his fingers inside her vagina. She told him to stop because it hurt. He stopped when she told him a second time that it hurt. She went to the bathroom, wiped herself, and found spots of blood.

Kay testified that she stopped playing hide-and-seek, ending the game, and started playing puzzles with Heather. She told Heather what Watkins had done. While Heather went to get Melissa, Watkins walked in the room and told Kay not to tell anybody. Kay started crying, so Melissa told Watkins to leave the room; when he left, Kay told Melissa about the assault. Melissa told her the blood on the tissue might indicate that she had started her first menstruation. Kay testified that Watkins returned to the room and offered her $100 per month not to tell anyone. Kay said Melissa then warned her not to tell anyone because it would end Kay's friendship with Heather and Kay's mother's friendship with Melissa.

Kay telephoned her mother because she was upset and did not want to stay at the party; during the call, however, Kay decided to stay because she was afraid she would not get to see Heather again. Kay did not tell her mother about the assault during the call, and testified she did not call her mother again.

Kay's mother, Dee, testified that Kay became troubled after the party. Contrary to Kay's testimony, Dee said Kay called her crying on more than one occasion the night of the party. She said that the day after the party, when Kay complained of vaginal pain but no further bleeding, she investigated and saw a small, new-looking scratch inside Kay's vagina. When she asked Kay what had happened, Kay said she did not know. Kay began having nightmares, resumed wetting the bed, requested a night light, and became moody--all behavioral changes after the party. Dee testified that, though Kay had wet her bed before, she had been treated medically and had ceased for several months before the party.

Dee testified that, about a week after the party, Kay came to her, nervous and wringing her hands. Kay opined that she had resumed wetting the bed because Watkins had touched her. Over numerous objections, Dee testified that Kay related a sequence of events describing the assault at the party almost identical to those about which Kay had testified at trial. After confronting Melissa and Watkins, Dee went to the police. The police report indicates Dee told them that Kay told her that Watkins stopped touching her because another child's parents came to pick up that child from the party. Dee did not seek a medical examination of Kay until about a month after the incident. Dee testified that Kay had not had a menstrual period in the eleven months between the party and the trial.

The doctor who examined Kay a month after the incident testified that she believed that Kay had not yet menstruated. She also testified that she found no physical evidence of sexual assault, but that the amount of time that passed before she examined Kay could account for that.

The police officer assigned to investigate the incident testified that Watkins called her and told her that Kay's family had told him that they would not file charges if he went to counseling; she was not completely certain that the caller was Watkins.

Heather testified that Kay acted like Watkins was Kay's best friend, but Watkins acted like they were just friends. Kay flirted with Watkins and, when he did not respond, she became upset. One of the party games they played was Truth or Dare. Heather testified that, while other dares were for someone to cluck like a chicken or bark like a dog, Kay dared Shawn to kiss her two or three times. She said Kay insisted on being Watkins's partner in the hide-and-seek game. She testified that the seekers stayed in the bathroom (contrary to Kay's testimony that they counted in a bedroom) and counted to twenty so that the hiders could hear them; she said she heard Kay and Watkins counting. Heather also denied that Kay became upset or ended the game.

Heather confirmed that, while they were playing puzzles, Kay became upset when Watkins walked through the room. Heather testified Kay told her that Watkins had done something to her and that she was scared. Heather said she took Kay to tell Melissa, and that Kay started telling Melissa the story while Watkins was in the room; Heather said that Melissa then told her and Watkins to leave the room. Heather also confirmed that Kay called her mom once. She said that Kay seemed pleased that Melissa would not speak to Watkins for the rest of the evening, and that Kay wanted them to end their relationship. Heather said that later, in a game where the girls pretended to be married, Kay pretended that Watkins was her husband. Heather also testified that during the night she found Kay standing at the foot of Melissa and Watkins's bed, looking at them.

Heather said she noticed no change in Kay's behavior after the party. She said that Kay expressed disappointment the next day that Melissa and Watkins had resumed talking. Heather said she encouraged Kay to tell her mother about the alleged assault, that no one threatened that Heather would stop being her friend, and that no one offered to buy her silence. She talked to Kay only a few times after the party, and not about the incident.

On cross-examination, Heather testified that Shawn said at the party, "If I did this, I'm sorry." The State also introduced her statement to police that "Shawn said what [Kay] said was true.

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Ronald Shawn Watkins v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronald-shawn-watkins-v-state-texapp-1999.