Samuel Shaw v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 29, 2012
Docket03-10-00790-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Samuel Shaw v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-10-00790-CR

Samuel Shaw, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 390TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-DC-09-302334, THE HONORABLE JULIE H. KOCUREK, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Samuel Shaw of the offense of indecency with a child by

contact and assessed his punishment, enhanced by a prior felony conviction, at confinement for

45 years in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. See Tex. Penal

Code Ann. §§ 12.42(b); 21.11(a)(1) (West 2011). On appeal, appellant challenges the sufficiency

of the evidence and complains about error in the jury charge. We affirm the judgment of conviction.

BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that K.E., the victim in this case, lived with her grandmother,

Theodora Dean, whom she called “Baybay,” and appellant when she was eight years old. They lived

in a two-room house, and K.E. slept with her grandmother and appellant. At trial, K.E. testified

about three occasions when, while she was sleeping in her grandmother’s bed, appellant put his hand inside her underwear, moved his hand around, and touched her “privacy parts.”1 She testified that

during these incidents appellant touched her on the inside of her privacy with his whole hand,

moving it up and down, and it hurt.2 On the first occasion, K.E. was in bed between appellant and

her grandmother. She made appellant stop touching her by snuggling closer to her grandmother.

The second time, K.E.’s grandmother was not in bed with them but was in the kitchen cleaning up.

K.E. made appellant stop touching her by getting up to use the restroom and moving to another

room. On the third occasion, K.E. was sleeping in the bed with appellant while her grandmother

slept on the couch. This time, appellant stopped when K.E. went to lie down with her grandmother.

K.E. told her 11-year-old cousin Arianna what appellant had done to her. The girls

were playing school when Arianna, playing the teacher, asked, “What would you do if someone was

trying to hurt you?” K.E. testified that she told Arianna “something that really happened to

[her]”—that appellant had put his hand in her underwear. Arianna took K.E. to tell Arianna’s aunt

what happened. Andrea Tasby Norwood, known as “Aunt Sue” to K.E., testified at trial as the

outcry witness. She stated that K.E. told her that “Baybay[’s] boyfriend touched me” when she was

asleep in bed. When Norwood asked K.E. where appellant had touched her, K.E. pointed to her

genital area.

Theodora Dean, K.E.’s grandmother, testified that K.E. occasionally lived or stayed

with her and appellant. She stated that K.E. did not have her own room at the house, so she slept

1 K.E. described her “privacy parts” as the place between her legs where she uses the bathroom or urinates. 2 The record reflects that K.E. demonstrated how appellant moved his hand for the jury, making a motion with her hand as if waving goodbye.

2 with them in their bed. Dean testified about a change in K.E.’s behavior. She noticed that K.E.

“wasn’t all bubbly anymore” when appellant would drive up. Dean recalled a particular incident

when she and appellant went to pick up K.E. from her mother and K.E. was crying and screaming

that she did not want to go, and begged Dean not to make her go with them.3 Dean also recalled an

incident when she walked into the bedroom and “it just didn’t look right to [her].” Dean pulled back

the bed covers and saw K.E.’s heel on appellant’s private part. When Dean asked appellant what

he was doing, he “jumped up and started saying, oh, you think I’m messing with your baby.” Dean

replied “I never said that.” Dean testified, crying, that she did not pursue the issue.

A forensic interviewer from the local child advocacy center testified about her

interview of K.E.4 The interviewer testified that when she asked K.E. why she was at the center,

K.E. was hesitant, looked down, covered her face with her hands and cried. Eventually K.E. told her

that she was there because of her grandmother’s boyfriend. She told the interviewer that appellant

put his hand in her “privacy.” Using an anatomically correct female doll, K.E. indicated that her

“privacy” was between her legs.5 K.E. stated that appellant opened her underwear and put his hand

in there. She said he moved his hand up and down and it hurt. K.E. told the interviewer that

3 Katrina Jones, K.E.’s mother, also recalled that K.E.’s attitude and behavior changed “drastically” in the two to three months before K.E. made her outcry. Jones testified that K.E. had “crying outbursts” and had lost interest in going to see her grandmother, which was very unusual. 4 A DVD of the forensic interview was admitted into evidence by agreement of the parties and played for the jury. 5 K.E. pulled up the doll’s dress and pulled down the front part of the panties to show the “privacy” on the doll. She also told the interviewer that she used her privacy to go to the restroom.

3 appellant had touched her privacy more than once and that the touching began when she was

seven years old.

Dr. Beth Nauert, a pediatrician and the medical director for the child assessment

program at the advocacy center, examined K.E. approximately one year after the abuse occurred.

K.E. told Dr. Nauert that she was touched on her private part inside her clothes by her grandmother’s

boyfriend. She put her hands between her legs over her female sexual organ to show the doctor

where she was touched. K.E.’s physical exam was normal, which was consistent with the history

she presented to Dr. Nauert of being touched on her private part. Dr. Nauert testified that most of

the time that type of examination will be normal, especially where it had been a year since the sexual

abuse occurred, and it did not establish whether or not the abuse occurred. Dr. Nauert indicated that

many children do not know the female anatomy and do not know that there are several layers of the

female sexual organ. She explained to the jury the layers of the female sexual organ and how a

person could rub inside a child’s private part but not actually go into her vagina. The State’s other

witnesses included the Austin Police Department detective who investigated the case and Dr.

William Carter, a psychologist, who testified regarding the dynamics of child abuse.

The jury found appellant guilty of indecency with a child by contact as alleged in the

indictment.6 This appeal followed.

6 The record reflects that an additional count of aggravated sexual assault of a child was abandoned by that State at trial due to defects in that count of the indictment.

4 DISCUSSION

Appellant raises three points of error on appeal. The first two points assert that the

evidence was insufficient to support his conviction. In his third point, appellant argues that he

suffered egregious harm due to error in the jury charge. For the reasons that follow, we reject

appellant’s arguments.

Sufficiency of the Evidence

In his first two points of error, appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency

of the evidence to support his conviction for indecency with a child by contact. We no longer

employ distinct legal and factual sufficiency standards when reviewing the sufficiency of the

evidence to sustain a criminal conviction. See Merritt v. State, 368 S.W.3d 516, 525 n.8 (Tex. Crim.

App. 2012); Brooks v.

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