THOMAS McQUARRIE v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 2011
Docket13-09-00233-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
THOMAS McQUARRIE v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-09-00233-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

THOMAS McQUARRIE, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 2nd 25th District Court of Gonzales County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Benavides Memorandum Opinion by Justice Benavides Appellant, Thomas McQuarrie, was convicted by a jury of sexual assault against

L.C., an adult. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.011 (Vernon 2003). The court

sentenced McQuarrie to four years’ confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas

Department of Criminal Justice. By five issues, which we renumber as three, McQuarrie contends that: (1) the evidence was insufficient to establish the

non-consensual element of sexual assault; (2) the trial court erred in excluding the

affidavits and testimony of two jurors at the hearing on his motion for new trial; and (3) he

was deprived of his right to a fair trial under both the United States and the Texas

constitutions. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

McQuarrie and L.C. knew each other for a number of years and became related

by marriage when McQuarrie’s brother married L.C.’s mother. They considered each

other to be ―buddies,‖ and they ―hung out‖ regularly.

Both McQuarrie and L.C. testified that L.C. was homosexual, not bisexual. At

the time of trial, L.C. was twenty-one years old and testified that she had been dating the

same woman, K.G., for four years. L.C. testified that she had not had a romantic

interest in a male in ten years; she had not had a relationship with a male since she was

fourteen or fifteen years old; she did not have a romantic interest in McQuarrie, nor did

she flirt with him; and before the sexual intercourse with McQuarrie, she had never had

sexual intercourse with a man. L.C. testified that the thought of sexual intercourse with

a man was ―disgusting; nasty; just uncomfortable.‖

In April 2006, McQuarrie and L.C. met at the home of Michelle Vega, L.C.’s aunt,

along with several other friends and family members. The testimony indicated that the

group was barbecuing and drinking alcohol. McQuarrie invited L.C. to his parents’

former house where he and his friend, Troy Parea, were staying while in town.

McQuarrie testified that he, Troy, and L.C. returned to his house at about 10 p.m. where

they all played drinking games, drank shots of liquor, smoked marihuana, and used

2 cocaine. L.C. testified that Troy and McQuarrie were drinking and using cocaine, but

that when offered, she refused. In her statement to the police, however, L.C. admitted

that she drank ―a little bit of beer‖ and did not mention any cocaine use by the others.

She testified that she shared one marihuana joint with McQuarrie, Troy, and her friend

Joseph—who was at McQuarrie’s house for the first couple hours of the night.

McQuarrie and Troy both testified that no one was at the house except the two of them

and L.C.

L.C. testified that at around 12:30 or 1 o’clock in the morning, she asked

McQuarrie for a drink, and he brought her a glass of water. She testified that after she

drank the water, she did not feel well and that her ―stomach just felt real light.‖ She sat

down on McQuarrie’s blow up mattress—which was the only furniture in the house—and

the others moved around her and went outside to smoke while she stayed sitting down.

Around 2 a.m., L.C. decided she would spend the night. According to K.G., L.C.

telephoned her briefly to tell her that she was going to stay at McQuarrie’s house

because she did not feel well. L.C. testified that they brought a second mattress into

the living room, but it was later moved back to another room because L.C. did not feel

comfortable sleeping in the same room with Troy because she did not know him. In her

statement to police, L.C. noted the moving of mattresses around as causing her unease,

but she did not mention that she did not feel well at that time.

McQuarrie testified that L.C. showered, redressed, and returned to the living room

where he and Troy were, and that when Troy was ready to go to bed, they moved one of

the mattresses into the bedroom for him and that McQuarrie and L.C. shared the

mattress in the living room. Troy testified that after she showered, L.C. and McQuarrie

3 were flirting and began a ―hands-on thing,‖ so he went to bed in order to leave them

alone. When asked if he knew L.C. was homosexual, Troy noted that ―once I saw her

with [McQuarrie], I thought she was straight.‖

L.C. testified that she had not taken a shower that night, and that after she laid

down, McQuarrie did not join her in the bed until after she was asleep. L.C. denied:

(1) giving McQuarrie permission to have sex with her; (2) wanting to experiment; (3)

getting ―touchy-feely‖ with McQuarrie; (4) flirting; (5) ―fooling around‖ whatsoever; (6)

kissing him; and (7) any memory of McQuarrie kissing her or taking off his clothes.

McQuarrie testified that after they laid down, they shut their eyes and he ―felt a

hand go to [his] stomach and kind of do this (indicating) a little bit, and one thing lead to

another.‖ He testified that he kissed L.C. once or twice on the mouth, and that after ten

minutes of rubbing each other with their clothes on, he removed his shorts and retrieved

a condom out of his bag. McQuarrie testified that he did not take L.C.’s clothes off and

that no words were exchanged but that she was looking directly at him during the

encounter. He testified that L.C. never said ―no‖ or ―stop‖ and did not try to push him

away. He was sure she knew what was happening because they had ―partied like that

many, many times: the cocaine, the weed, and the alcohol.‖ McQuarrie specifically

denied giving L.C. any date rape drugs.

L.C. testified that when she woke up in the morning, she ―just didn’t feel . . . right‖

and that she ―felt dirty.‖ She testified that McQuarrie was on the other side of the

air-mattress, appeared to be awake and watched her gather her things, but she simply

left without speaking to him. In her statement to police, however, L.C. said that she

awoke to McQuarrie standing at the end of the bed, but she pretended to be asleep

4 because she ―didn’t know if . . . he was going to hurt [her] again,‖ and that when he got

back into bed, she waited for him to go back to sleep before she got up and left. On

cross-examination, L.C. testified that this was the ―first time‖ she woke up, and that

McQuarrie was in bed when she left. McQuarrie testified that when L.C. got up, she

told him she was going to her aunt’s house, and he acknowledged her.

L.C. testified that after leaving McQuarrie’s house, she went to her aunt’s house

and took a shower. She testified that she ―really didn’t know what happened,‖ but that

she ―knew something was wrong.‖ L.C. called K.G. and told her that she did not know

what happened; K.G. told L.C. that she needed to tell somebody. K.G. testified that

L.C. was ―real quiet and upset,‖ and that she was crying. K.G. testified that if L.C. had

consented to having sex with McQuarrie, she would have been mad.

Following discussions with friends and family, Lieutenant West of the Gonzales

Police Department spoke with L.C. L.C. told Lieutenant West that when she woke up,

―her shorts and her boxer shorts were . . . turned different than what they were when she

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