State of Tennessee v. Jose Ortiz

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 6, 2018
DocketM2016-02457-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Jose Ortiz (State of Tennessee v. Jose Ortiz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Tennessee v. Jose Ortiz, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

08/06/2018 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 14, 2017 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JOSE ORTIZ

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Montgomery County No. 41301368 Jill Bartee Ayers, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2016-02457-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

The Appellant, Jose Ortiz, was convicted of child abuse and aggravated sexual battery. The trial court imposed a total effective sentence of eight years in the Tennessee Department of Correction. On appeal, the Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence sustaining his convictions and contends that “to enable reasonable appellate review[, this] court must establish a standard of performance for the trial court to satisfy its duty as the thirteenth juror.” Upon review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Circuit Court Affirmed

NORMA MCGEE OGLE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, P.J., and ALAN E. GLENN, J., joined.

Patrick T. McNally, Nashville, Tennessee (on appeal), and Chase Smith, Clarksville, Tennessee (at trial), for the Appellant, Jose Ortiz.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Clark B. Thornton, Senior Counsel; John Wesley Carney, Jr., District Attorney General; and Kimberly Lund, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. Factual Background

A Montgomery County Grand Jury returned a multi-count indictment against the Appellant, charging him with two counts of rape of a child and two counts of aggravated sexual battery. The victim of the offenses was his eleven-year-old stepdaughter, I.Z.1 On

1 It is the policy of this court to refer to minor victims by their initials. the day of trial, the State dismissed one of the rape of a child counts and one of the aggravated sexual battery counts.

At trial, the victim testified that she was born on February 23, 2002, and that she was thirteen years old at the time of her testimony. At the time of the offense, the Appellant was her stepfather, and she had called him “Dad.”

The victim said that on the day of the offense, she, her two younger siblings, and the Appellant took her mother to work at a Mexican restaurant and then returned home. While her younger siblings were in the living room watching television, the victim went into the kitchen to make a sandwich. The Appellant came into the kitchen, stood behind her, and grabbed her “front [private] part and [her] back [private] part” over her clothes. She explained that her private parts were the parts covered by her underwear. She said that being grabbed by the Appellant felt “[w]eird.” After the Appellant grabbed her, he started moving; the victim demonstrated the movements for the jury.2 The Appellant stopped touching her, but the victim did not know why he stopped. She did not recall the Appellant saying anything to her.

The victim then took her sandwich to her room and later returned the empty plate to the kitchen. As she was walking back to her room, the Appellant pushed her into her mother’s bedroom and onto the bed. The victim said that the Appellant got on top of her and kissed and sucked her neck, which caused a “hickey.” He pulled down her sweatpants and underwear, then he grabbed her front private part. The State asked if the Appellant touched the inside or outside of the victim’s front private part, and the victim responded, “Kind of both.” When she was asked to explain further, the victim replied, “Like – like almost there but like not really into there.” The victim stated that “[i]t kinda hurt” on the inside. The victim said that neither she nor the Appellant spoke during the incident. She thought the Appellant stopped because it was almost time to pick up her mother from work.

The victim said the Appellant decided they should go to Walmart to buy something to conceal the hickey on her neck from her mother. The Appellant told the victim not to tell her mother about the hickey but, if her mother noticed the mark, to say her sister hit her with a shoe. Afterward, the victim was afraid of the Appellant and stayed away from him. The victim said that after her mother saw the mark on her neck, she told her mother what the Appellant had done.

On cross-examination, the victim said that she was born in Mexico, that the Appellant brought her and her mother to America, and that she and her mother had lived with the Appellant for several years. The Appellant and the victim’s mother had a son

2 The transcript did not describe the movements. -2- and a daughter together, and the Appellant had two older sons who had lived with them for a while. The victim said she and the Appellant had been close, but she did not know if her mother was jealous of their relationship.

The victim did not recall going to a Hastings store on the day of the offense; however, she recalled that the Appellant took her to Walmart that evening to buy makeup to conceal the mark on her neck. The victim acknowledged that her hair was long and that it was in a ponytail while she was in Walmart, thus exposing the mark on her neck. When she, the other children, and the Appellant returned home, he applied makeup to her neck to conceal the mark. Later, they went to pick up her mother. Her mother worked only on Sundays and got off work around 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. The victim acknowledged that her mother had threatened to send her to Mexico and that she was afraid of her mother. The victim acknowledged that the Appellant taught her to speak English because her mother did not speak English.

The victim thought she may have taken a shower after the incident. She could not recall how she wore her hair to school the next day. She recalled that when she came home from school around 3:00 or 4:00 p.m., her mother told her to remove the scarf she was wearing around her neck. The victim complied, and her mother saw the mark on her neck. The victim’s mother asked about the mark. The victim initially complied with the Appellant’s instructions and told her mother that her sister had hit her with a shoe, causing the mark. However, when her mother said she did not believe her, the victim revealed what the Appellant had done.

The victim remembered seeing a doctor in Nashville after the incident. She denied telling the doctor that her sister had hit her with a shoe. She also denied telling the doctor that she had no complaints or concerns about her body. The victim said she told the doctor that the Appellant “pushed [her] into the kitchen and pinned [her] on the bed.” The victim said that she told the doctor the Appellant pulled down her pants and underwear but acknowledged that she did not tell the doctor the Appellant had penetrated her digitally.

On redirect examination, the victim said she was eleven years old at the time of the incident. The victim stated that in addition to the doctor in Nashville, she talked with another person about the incident. The victim asserted that no one had threatened to deport her to Mexico if she did not testify at trial and that she was telling the truth.

Sue Ross, a pediatric nurse practitioner at the Our Kids Center (Our Kids) in Nashville, testified that at approximately 11:30 p.m. on November 4, 2013, she examined the victim in the emergency room at General Hospital; the victim’s mother was not with the victim at the hospital. A social worker did the intake portion of the victim’s

-3- evaluation. Ross3 reviewed the social worker’s comments on the written report of the evaluation and discerned that the victim was not in any acute distress initially but that she became “somewhat anxious” as the interview progressed.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Jose Ortiz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-jose-ortiz-tenncrimapp-2018.