State v. Moreno

297 S.W.3d 512, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 7642, 2009 WL 3126607
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 1, 2009
Docket14-08-00556-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 297 S.W.3d 512 (State v. Moreno) 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
State v. Moreno, 297 S.W.3d 512, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 7642, 2009 WL 3126607 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

LESLIE B. YATES, Justice.

Appellee Bobby Lee Moreno was convicted of two counts of aggravated sexual assault and sentenced to five years’ community service for each count. Appellee filed a motion for new trial, which the trial court granted. In one issue, the State contends the trial court abused its discretion in granting a new trial. We affirm.

I. Factual and ProceduRal Background

The complainant and appellee are half brother and sister. Both share the same father, Alfredo Moreno. Appellee lives with his father, his grandparents, two aunts, his father’s girlfriend, and two older brothers in a small two bedroom house. When the complainant’s mother and father were divorced, the complainant visited her father on alternating weekends, alternating spring breaks from school, and one month during the summer. When the complainant visited her father, she would sleep on a living room couch while her father and his girlfriend slept on an air mattress placed on the floor abutting the couch.

On March 31, 2007, the complainant told her mother, Stacie Estes, that she had vaginal blisters. The complainant was twelve years old at the time. Estes questioned the complainant about whether she had ever had sexual intercourse, which the complainant denied. Estes told the complainant that if she had contracted a sexually transmitted disease, she could die if the disease went untreated. The complainant retreated to her bedroom, and a few minutes later, she returned and told Estes that appellee had sexually assaulted her and forced her to have intercourse the last time she visited her father’s house. Estes testified that the complainant was last at her father’s house on March 17, 2007.

After reporting the assault to her mother, an emergency room physician examined the complainant and found no physical evidence of abuse. The physician testified, however, that the lack of physical evidence was not indicative of the truth or falsity of the complainant’s accusation. The vaginal blisters were a result of an infection and were not caused by sexual activity. The admitting nurse at the hospital noted that the complainant reported the assault had occurred two months prior to the outcry to her mother.

The complainant was subsequently interviewed by a caseworker at the Child Advocacy Center (“CAC”). She told the *516 caseworker that appellee had assaulted her twice, once when she was eleven years old and the last time when she was twelve years old. She said the assault occurred the last time she was at her father’s house, which was six months prior to the outcry to her mother. She first told the interviewer that appellee woke her while she was lying on the living room couch and her father and his girlfriend were lying on the air mattress next to the couch. After he woke her, appellee began to kiss her and put his private part in her private part. She said appellee only stopped because she pushed and kicked him. During the same interview, the complainant said appellee stopped because he saw the lights of a blue van drive up. When the interviewer asked who was driving the van, the complainant said it was her father. The interviewer then asked whether the complainant’s father was sleeping on the air mattress or driving the van. The complainant said her father had been sleeping on the air mattress, but had left early in the morning to drive her aunt to work. The complainant also reported another assault in which she alleged appellee forced her to perform oral sex on him, and another instance when appellee kissed her when she was in the first grade.

At trial, the complainant testified that appellee assaulted her in the living room of her father’s house two weeks before she made outcry to her mother. She testified that no one in the house witnessed the assault because appellee would stop and pretend to look out of the window when someone in the house awakened. She further testified that appellee kissed her in a back yard shed when no one else was there. During that incident, she said her father came home from the store, which caused appellee to stop. The complainant testified that at other times appellee would force her to perform oral sex on him and that appellee kissed her while she was at her mother’s house. The complainant testified that appellee began kissing her when she was in kindergarten, kissed her chest in first grade, kissed her private part in second grade, and put his private part in her private part in third grade. She said that when she was in fourth and fifth grade, he put his private part in her bottom, and in sixth grade, “he would start putting it all together; and he would start kissing me more on my private part.” She also testified that she went with her father and appellee to her father’s medical appointment, and appellee assaulted her in the van either going to or from the medical appointment.

The complainant’s brother was the only witness who observed the abuse. He testified that he saw appellee put his hand in the complainant’s pants while they were on the living room couch and that he saw appellee touch the complainant’s private parts while they were in a shed in the back yard of them father’s home.

In his defense, appellee presented the testimony of his two older brothers, his father, and two neighbors. Appellee’s brothers, Michael and Freddie Moreno, testified that they were living with appel-lee at their father’s house at the time the complainant alleged the sexual assault occurred. Both brothers testified that the complainant did not visit their home at all during 2006 or 2007. They further testified that when she and her brother visited, they were never left alone and the complainant always slept in the living room and the complainant’s brother always slept in appellee’s room. Michael testified that when he was fifteen or sixteen years old, Estes and her sister took him to an adult nightclub. He further testified that he had seen Estes show the complainant pornography on the internet. Michael testified that the complainant’s brother never went to the shed at their father’s house *517 and that it was so full of tools, boxes, and gardening implements that appellee and the complainant could not have been in the shed at the time the complainant alleges she was assaulted there.

Alfredo Moreno, the complainant’s and appellee’s father, testified that neither the complainant nor her brother visited his house after March 2005. He remembered the time because he was sick and could not take care of the children during spring break that year. He testified that because he could not take the children at spring break, Estes became angry with him and denied him visitation after that time. He witnessed Estes showing pornographic pictures to the complainant. Each of the brothers and Alfredo testified that appel-lee never went to Estes’s home. They also testified that the complainant never accompanied appellee and Alfredo to a medical appointment.

On rebuttal, the State called Estes, who testified that the complainant had not been to her father’s house on October 31, 2006, six months prior to her outcry. She denied showing pornographic material to her children. Estes testified that she did not deny Alfredo Moreno visitation with the complainant or her brother and that the last time the complainant visited her father was on March 17, 2007.

The jury found appellee guilty on two counts of aggravated sexual assault.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 S.W.3d 512, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 7642, 2009 WL 3126607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moreno-texapp-2009.