Sammie Caston v. State

549 S.W.3d 601
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 3, 2017
Docket01-16-00260-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 549 S.W.3d 601 (Sammie Caston 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
Sammie Caston v. State, 549 S.W.3d 601 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 3, 2017

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-16-00260-CR ——————————— SAMMIE CASTON, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 209th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1319352

OPINION

A jury convicted appellant, Sammie Caston, of the first-degree felony offense

of continuous sexual abuse of a child and assessed his punishment at confinement for life.1 In two issues, appellant contends that (1) Code of Criminal Procedure

article 38.37, section 2(b), which permits the introduction of evidence of a

defendant’s extraneous bad acts involving children other than the complainant in the

charged case, violates due process and is unconstitutional, and (2) the State failed to

present sufficient evidence that he was at least seventeen years old at the time of the

charged offense.

We affirm.

Background

A. Factual Background

L.J. first met appellant when she was twelve or thirteen and appellant was

around fifteen, and they started dating. They drifted apart, and L.J. had four children

with another man, including the complainant T.H., who was born in 2003. L.J. and

appellant reconnected in 2010, and they started dating again. Appellant moved in

with L.J. and her children, and they lived in two different apartments during the time

they were dating—the first on North Houston Rosslyn Road and the second on West

Sunforest. L.J. testified that they moved to the West Sunforest address in December

2010. The apartment on West Sunforest had two bedrooms: L.J.’s children shared

the master bedroom, and L.J. and appellant shared the smaller bedroom. The

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.02(b) (West Supp. 2016). 2 apartment had one bathroom, which had entrances from the hall and the master

bedroom.

On the evening of March 6, 2011, L.J. was sitting at her computer while one

of her sons and T.H., who was eight years old at the time, were asleep in their

bedroom. Appellant announced that he was going to use the restroom. When he had

not returned to the living room after about forty-five minutes, L.J. began to feel as

though something was not right and she got up to investigate. Standing in the

hallway, L.J. could see the shadow of feet moving from the children’s bedroom into

the bathroom. L.J. knocked on the bathroom door and called appellant’s name, but

he did not answer. L.J. knelt down and looked under the bathroom door, and she

could see appellant’s slippers sitting perfectly still in front of the toilet. L.J. started

banging on the door, and when appellant finally answered, he was sitting on the

toilet. L.J. questioned him about why he did not answer when she called his name

and told him that she had seen him walking from the children’s bedroom into the

bathroom. Appellant told L.J. that he had been in the bedroom because T.H. had

had a bad dream. L.J. did not believe appellant, but she decided to wait and talk to

T.H. before she accused him of anything.

The next morning, L.J. drove T.H. and her son to school. Her son got out of

the car and headed into the building, but when T.H. started to climb out, L.J. asked

her to stay inside. L.J. drove around the corner, parked her car, and told T.H. that

3 she felt uncomfortable about some things that had happened the previous night. L.J.

asked T.H. if appellant had ever touched her in an inappropriate way, and T.H.

started crying and said that appellant had been inappropriately touching her. T.H.

told L.J. that appellant had taken her into the closet of the master bedroom, undressed

her, and touched her vagina with his fingers and his mouth. T.H. also said that

appellant had told her that “he would have to wait until she [got] a little bit older

because she was too tight.”

L.J. contacted the police that day, and she also took T.H. to be examined at

Texas Children’s Hospital. The trial court admitted a copy of T.H.’s medical

records. These records reflected that appellant lived with L.J. and T.H., that he was

born in 1977, and that he was L.J.’s “live-in boyfriend of 6 months.” T.H. reported

to medical personnel that on the night before, appellant had “touched her private

with his hand and tried to get on top of her.” She also reported that appellant had

“forced her to perform oral sex on him and tried to put his private in her private on

multiple occasions[,] and it ha[d] been going on since he moved in with [her]

mother.”

T.H. was thirteen years old at the time of appellant’s trial. T.H. testified that

appellant abused her on more than one occasion, and she described three specific

instances. She testified that, on one occasion, appellant woke her up, took her into

her closet, and started touching her vagina with his fingers. Appellant told her that

4 she “was too tight down there, so he [had] to wait until [she got] older.” On another

occasion, T.H. was in her mother’s bedroom looking for a phone charger when she

found a picture of a woman performing oral sex on a man. When appellant came

into the room, T.H. asked him what the people in the picture were doing, and he said,

“I’ll show you.” Appellant then forced T.H. to perform oral sex on him. T.H. also

testified that when her family was living in a different apartment, appellant came

into the bedroom where she was sleeping with two of her siblings and attempted to

have anal intercourse with her. T.H. could not provide specific dates for when each

of these acts occurred, nor could she state how much time passed between each act,

other than to say that they occurred on different days and they started when appellant

moved in with her family.

B. Admission of Extraneous Sexual Offense

Pursuant to Code of Criminal Procedure article 38.37, section 2(b), the State

sought to introduce evidence during the guilt-innocence phase that appellant had also

sexually abused his daughter, S.C., who was twelve years old at the time of

appellant’s trial. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 38.37, § 2(b) (West Supp.

2016). Article 38.37, section 2(b) provides that, in trials for certain offenses

including continuous sexual abuse of a child, notwithstanding Rule of Evidence 404,

evidence that the defendant has committed a separate sexual offense against a child

other than the complainant in the charged case may be admitted “for any bearing the

5 evidence has on relevant matters, including the character of the defendant and acts

performed in conformity with the character of the defendant.” Id. Defense counsel

objected to any evidence admitted under this statute, arguing that the statute violated

due process and due course of law guarantees and that any testimony concerning an

extraneous offense against S.C. also violated Rule of Evidence 403.

As required by the statute, the trial court held a hearing to determine whether

the evidence likely to be admitted at trial concerning this separate offense against

S.C. would be adequate to support a jury finding that the defendant committed the

separate offense beyond a reasonable doubt. See id. art. 38.37, § 2-a. The trial court

heard testimony from S.C. and her mother, N.M., and made a finding on the record

that testimony concerning appellant’s alleged abuse of S.C. was admissible under

article 38.37, section 2.

Before the jury, N.M.

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