Santos Raul Alvarez v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 2025
Docket02-24-00182-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Santos Raul Alvarez v. the State of Texas (Santos Raul Alvarez v. the State of Texas) 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
Santos Raul Alvarez v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-24-00182-CR ___________________________

SANTOS RAUL ALVAREZ, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from the 396th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1772509

Before Kerr, Womack, and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr MEMORANDUM OPINION

When a man grabs his twelve-year-old son, drags him against his will across

concrete, and refuses to let go even after being told, “Stop, you’re hurting him,” a

rational jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that the man was aware that his

conduct was reasonably certain to cause his son physical pain—and thus, bodily

injury.

I. Introduction

Appellant Santos Raul Alvarez appeals his conviction for injury to a child and

sentence of three years’ confinement. 1 He raises only one appellate point: that the

evidence at trial was insufficient to show that he intentionally caused bodily injury to

the complainant, his son. In response, the State argues that “the jury was not required

to find that Appellant acted with an intent to injure his son. It was only required to

find he acted ‘knowingly,’ and there was legally sufficient evidence to prove that

element of the offense of injury to a child.” We agree with the State, overrule

Alvarez’s only point, and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

II. Background/Facts of the Offense

Alvarez and Hannah 2 were never married to each other but had two children

Alvarez’s sentence was probated. 1

To protect the identities of the minor children involved in this case, see Tex. R. 2

App. P. 9.10(a)(3), we refer to them and their relatives—except for Alvarez—by pseudonyms.

2 together. In November 2022, the children—James, who was twelve years old at the

time, and Amanda—were living with Hannah and her fiancé in Fort Worth, but

Alvarez had rights of possession and access to the children. On November 10, 2022,

pursuant to a custody agreement, Alvarez arrived at Hannah’s house to pick up the

children.

What happened next was captured on video. Alvarez came to Hannah’s front

door. Amanda walked out and hugged him and then got in his car, but James did not

want to go with Alvarez. After questioning James about his school progress report,

Alvarez asked him for a hug. James stepped outside the front door, onto the front

porch, and hugged Alvarez. Alvarez then offered him the “option” of coming with

him. James declined, and Alvarez took him by the hand and told him, “You don’t --

you don’t have a choice. I have physical possession of you now.” James then tried to

pull away from Alvarez, but Alvarez pulled James’s left arm by the wrist. A scuffle

quickly ensued as James tried to get back into the house, but Alvarez would not let go

of him. Hannah grabbed James around his midsection and started pulling him back

into the house, away from Alvarez, but Alvarez grabbed James’s left leg and dragged

him away from the front door. She yelled at Alvarez, “Stop, you’re hurting him!”

James, too, pleaded with his father to stop, but Alvarez held onto him and repeatedly

said that he was “not letting go” and that he had “physical possession of [his] son.”

3 Eventually, James broke free and ran back into the house. 3 Hannah also went back

inside, and Alvarez left in his car with Amanda.

III. Events Between the Offense and Trial

Both Alvarez and Hannah called the police, who dispatched officers to

Hannah’s address that night. Later that night, Alvarez’s wife, Maureen, dropped

Amanda back off at Hannah’s house. Weeks later, Detective Chavez of the Fort

Worth Police Department spoke to Alvarez over the phone. He invited Alvarez to

come in for an in-person interview, but Alvarez never did. Ultimately, Detective

Chavez concluded that the offense of injury to a child had been committed and

obtained a warrant for Alvarez’s arrest. Alvarez was indicted for injury to a child.

IV. Trial

Hannah, James, Detective Chavez, and one of the officers who had come out

to Hannah’s house on November 10, 2022, all testified at Alvarez’s trial. Hannah

testified that James had gone willingly to visit his father in the past but that he

expressed hesitancy and “didn’t feel comfortable” going with his father after an earlier

incident in April 2022. Hannah testified that James had come home after that incident

with bruises on the back of his legs and told her that Alvarez had spanked him with a

belt. James testified that he and Amanda had been playing in the kitchen, he had put

3 It is not clear from the video evidence how or at exactly what point James was freed from his father’s grasp, but near the end of one of the videos, Hannah can be heard shouting, “Go inside, [James]!” James testified at trial that his mother “removed [Alvarez’s] hand off [his] leg, and [he] ran into the house.”

4 his foot in her face, and she had told their father, who then spanked James on his

bottom and legs with a belt. 4 After that, James testified, he did not want to go over to

his father’s house anymore because he was “scared of him.”

James testified that he was scared when his father grabbed his wrist on

November 10, 2022, and that it “[f]elt like [Alvarez] was going to snatch” him. He

averred that he had never threatened his father or raised a hand to him because he

was “just scared of him.” He testified that when he was pulling away, his father

tightened his grip on his wrist, hurting him and causing him physical pain. He

explained that he fell to the ground when his father grabbed his leg and pulled it out

from under him. He remembered loudly telling his father, “Dad, please stop.” He

recalled his father’s still pulling on his leg when he was on the ground.

Videos from different cameras at Hannah’s house were admitted into evidence

and played before the jury at Alvarez’s trial, as were two separate videos that Alvarez

had recorded on his phone. Photographs of James’s injuries were also admitted into

evidence; James testified that the marks, scrapes, and bruises on his body depicted in

the photographs were not there before the incident with his father. Hannah also

testified that the injuries shown in the photographs were inflicted on the night of

This comports with Hannah’s testimony that Amanda had told her “[t]hat they 4

were wrestling, and his foot went in her face and she got upset. And that was overheard, so their dad intervened.”

5 November 10, 2022, and that James did not have those marks on him before Alvarez

grabbed him by his wrist and dragged him out the door.

Alvarez testified in his defense. Regarding the April spanking incident, he

testified that he had seen that Amanda was on the floor and that James’s foot was on

her. He then saw Amanda “get up off the floor and hit back away from her.”

According to Alvarez, Amanda told him that James’s foot had been on her neck, and

then James admitted to it. He claimed that he told James that “he could have

collapsed her throat, her air passage,” and that he would “like to think that” James

took that seriously but was “not sure” that he did. He said that things went back to

normal the next day; James played soccer with Amanda and two other girls. Alvarez

believed that Amanda had forgiven James.

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Laster v. State
275 S.W.3d 512 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2009)
Patterson v. State
46 S.W.3d 294 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2001)
Payton v. State
106 S.W.3d 326 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2003)
Brooks v. State
323 S.W.3d 893 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2010)
Queeman v. State
520 S.W.3d 616 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2017)

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