Thomas Alton Taylor, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 10, 2002
Docket03-00-00783-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas Alton Taylor, Jr. v. State (Thomas Alton Taylor, Jr. 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
Thomas Alton Taylor, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

444444444444444 NO. 03-00-00783-CR 444444444444444

Thomas Alton Taylor, Jr., Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BURNET COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 8957, HONORABLE GUILFORD L. JONES III, JUDGE PRESIDING 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444

Appellant Thomas Alton Taylor, Jr. was convicted of the offenses of aggravated

sexual assault and nine counts of prohibited sexual conduct. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann.

§§ 22.021(a)(1)(A)(i), (2)(A)(ii) (West Supp. 2002), 25.02(a)(1) (West 1994). Appellant’s

punishment was assessed by the jury at life imprisonment for aggravated sexual assault and

imprisonment for ten years for each count of prohibited sexual conduct. Appellant asserts that the

trial court erred in admitting in evidence two extraneous offenses. The judgment will be affirmed.

Summary of Facts and Appellant’s Complaints

In summary, appellant had non-consensual sexual relations with his biological

daughter, T.J.L., from the time she was fifteen until she was thirty-five years old. The two moved

frequently from state to state, and appellant held T.J.L. out to be his wife. They had two children

before moving to Burnet County in 1998. On September 7, 1998, appellant terrorized T.J.L. by putting a shotgun in her mouth and pulling the trigger of the unloaded weapon, and then sexually

assaulting her. Appellant was also charged with engaging in incestuous sexual intercourse with T.J.L.

during 1999. The State established through expert testimony that DNA evidence proved T.J.L. is

appellant’s biological daughter and that appellant is the biological father of her two children.

In the State’s case-in-chief, the trial court, over objection, admitted evidence of two

extraneous offenses—evidence that appellant assaulted T.J.L. twenty years earlier at her mother’s

grave site, and that appellant sexually assaulted another woman, K.R., in 1992.

Appellant insists that these offenses were nothing more than evidence of appellant’s

bad character and propensity for sexual assault, and that they were inadmissible under the Rules of

Evidence. See Tex. R. Evid. 401, 402, 403, 404. Appellant argues that the two extraneous offenses

furnished no evidence of probative value apart from propensity, but had great prejudicial effect on

the jury. Furthermore, appellant argues that even though this was an “emotionally combustive case”

the error in admitting the extraneous offenses should not be considered harmless, because to do so

would encourage the use of such evidence in future cases.

Additional Facts

To determine whether the admission of the complained of evidence was error, and if

error, whether it was reversible error, requires a more comprehensive examination of the evidence.

T.J.L.’s mother died when T.J.L. was too young to have a remembrance of her. T.J.L.’s maternal

grandparents adopted her and she lived with them until she was almost sixteen years old. T.J.L. could

not remember ever seeing her father until he came to see her just before her sixteenth birthday.

Appellant came to see T.J.L. and then took her to visit his mother. Appellant had a recreational

2 vehicle parked on his mother’s property. Appellant took T.J.L. into the R.V. and instructed her to

sit on the bed. Appellant then pulled T.J.L.’s dress up and removed her panties. T.J.L. cried and told

him his conduct was not appropriate for a father. Appellant told her he wanted to see how she had

grown over the years he had not seen her. Appellant then forcibly and against her will raped her.

Appellant warned T.J.L. not to tell anyone or she would not see her grandmother and sister again.

T.J.L. told her grandmother and her sister that appellant had raped her but they did nothing.

Appellant took T.J.L. to live with him and without her consent continued to have sexual relations

with her.

T.J.L. kept asking about her mother and wanted to go and see her mother’s grave.

Appellant took her to her mother’s grave site one evening. There appellant bent her over her

mother’s tombstone and against her will forcibly raped her. Appellant told T.J.L. he wanted her

mother to see what he did and he assured T.J.L. that her mother would not be waiting for her in

heaven.

T.J.L. started to attend high school but she was soon accused of taking clothing

belonging to another girl. Appellant went to the school to discuss the matter with the principal.

While doing so, appellant physically attacked the principal. Soon thereafter, appellant took T.J.L.

to Colorado. Appellant later took T.J.L. on an extended trek through Wyoming, Oregon, California,

Arizona, and New Mexico. During their travels, appellant instructed T.J.L. not to talk much and not

to look into the eyes of men. If appellant thought T.J.L. had violated his instructions, he beat her,

kicked her, and pulled her hair. Because of appellant’s bad treatment of T.J.L., she suffered black

eyes, bruises, wounds, and scars. On some occasions, she had cuts on her body that either appellant

3 or she would close by sewing them shut with a needle and thread. Appellant obtained jobs for T.J.L.

as a waitress in cafes and bars. Appellant would stay near at hand to watch her when she was

working, and he took the money that she earned. Also, appellant forced T.J.L. to work as a topless

dancer.

Eventually, they returned to Texas and lived in various places. Appellant continued

his sexual relationship with T.J.L. She gave birth to a daughter and a son. Appellant required T.J.L.

to have two abortions and finally required her to have her fallopian tubes tied so that she would not

have more children. Over a period of years, appellant continued to beat, intimidate and totally control

T.J.L.’s life. He seldom allowed her out of his presence; at times, he even required her to accompany

him when he used the toilet. Appellant was seldom employed, but he obtained housecleaning jobs

for T.J.L. and took the money that she earned. Appellant would not allow T.J.L. to celebrate her real

birthday; instead, appellant allowed her to celebrate her birthday on Halloween.

While appellant and T.J.L. were living in a trailer park in 1992, T.J.L. became

acquainted with K.R. who lived nearby. One day soon after they met, K.R. called and said that the

man she was living with was “overmedicated” and she was afraid he would kill her. Appellant

allowed K.R. to come to his trailer home and stay for the night. The next day K.R. wanted to return

to the man she had been living with. When he came to get her, appellant sent T.J.L. outside to talk

with that man. K.R. gathered her belongings, hugged appellant, and thanked him for letting her stay

and protecting her the previous night. Appellant hugged and kissed K.R. in such an inappropriate

manner that she admonished him that she was “not like that” and told him to “f___ off.” Appellant

became angry, grabbed her hand and inflicted great pain by squeezing the flesh between her thumb

4 and forefinger. Appellant told K.R. that he took what he wanted and that people didn’t tell him “no.”

K.R. became very frightened. Appellant told her to take off her clothes. She was afraid not to do

so. So she turned away from him and started to remove her clothes. He struck her, knocking her on

to the bed. He then raped her and told her not to tell anyone.

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