Undra Donnell Cornelious v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 2019
Docket05-18-00274-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Undra Donnell Cornelious v. State (Undra Donnell Cornelious 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
Undra Donnell Cornelious v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

AFFIRMED as MODIFED and Opinion Filed March 18, 2019

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-18-00274-CR

UNDRA DONNELL CORNELIOUS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 6 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F-1576737-X

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Whitehill, Molberg, and Reichek Opinion by Justice Reichek A jury found Undra Donnell Cornelious guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a child and

assessed punishment, enhanced by two prior felony convictions, at ninety-nine years in prison. In

seven issues, appellant complains the trial court abused its discretion by admitting evidence of a

similar extraneous offense and his prior felony convictions. For reasons discussed below, we

overrule appellant’s issues. On our own motion, we modify the judgment to reflect appellant

pleaded true to the enhancement paragraphs and both paragraphs were found to be true. We affirm

the trial court’s judgment as modified.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

For several months in 2015, A.T. lived in a two-bedroom apartment with her mother and

infant brother; her mother’s friend, Cordia Cornelious; Cordia’s’s daughters, N.C. and Z.C.; and Cordia’s father, appellant. Cordia slept in one bedroom, and her daughters slept in the other

bedroom. A.T., her mother, and brother slept on a pallet on the living room floor, and appellant

slept on the couch in that same room. Sometimes, A.T., who was six years old, slept in the

bedroom with N.C. and Z.C., who were about her age. Cordia’s younger sister, L.S., often spent

the night and would also sleep with the other girls.1

Shortly after Thanksgiving, Z.C. told Cordia “something” about A.T. and appellant that

made her “heart stop.” Cordia spoke to A.T., who said “something about sex and Pawpaw,”

meaning appellant. Cordia did not ask for any details. Cordia immediately went to talk to her

grandmother, who is appellant’s mother, and the grandmother called the police. Appellant was

arrested that night. Over the next week, A.T. was interviewed at the Dallas Children’s Advocacy

Center and was examined by a pediatric nurse at Children’s Hospital.

At trial, A.T. testified to two separate incidents involving appellant. In the first incident,

A.T. said she was sleeping in the bed with N.C. and Z.C. when appellant came in, pulled down her

pajama bottoms, and put his “private part” on her “butt” or “booty hole.” She said it hurt. On

another occasion, she said she was in the living room with appellant when he pulled her clothes

down, pulled down his own pants, and then “put his private” in her “butt.” By “private,” A.T.

meant where he “goes pee;” by “booty hole,” she meant where “poop comes out.”

On cross-examination, defense counsel asked A.T. if appellant had ever “punished” her or

told her to do something she did not want to do. A.T. answered “yes,” and said appellant had told

her to “[c]lean up the room.” Counsel asked A.T. if she “ever liked cleaning up the room,” and

A.T. said she did not. Counsel then noted that A.T. had “told a story today or told, I guess we

could say, what happened,” and asked A.T. how many times she had told her story. When A.T.

1 In addition to the charge involving A.T., appellant was indicted on a charge of continuous sexual abuse of a child in connection with the abuse of L.S. The cases were scheduled to be tried together. On the first day of trial, appellant moved to sever the cases, and the trial court granted the motion.

–2– said she did not know, counsel asked if it was more than “ten times.” A.T. said she did not think

so. Counsel then asked if it was more than five times, and A.T. again said she did not think so.

When counsel asked if it was more than three times, A.T. responded, “Kind of.” Counsel then

asked A.T. if she knew “what it means to rehearse,” and A.T. responded, “Like doing a song?”

Counsel replied, “Yeah. Somebody doing a song over and over again until they get it better with

each telling.” He asked A.T. whether she “rehearsed telling the store [sic] about Uncle Undra,”

and A.T. said she had. Counsel asked who was in the room when she rehearsed telling the story,

and A.T. replied, “My mother and my baby brother and Reynie’s partner.” After asking whether

appellant got along with other kids in the house, counsel returned to the earlier issue of cleaning

the room:

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: . . . Okay. Now, the first time what you talked about earlier happened, you said it happened with Uncle Undra, had he told you to clean the room that day?

[A.T.]: Yes.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And you didn’t like that, did you?

[A.T.] No.

On redirect, the prosecutor asked A.T. if anybody told her to lie “about this stuff that

happened,” and A.T. said no. After A.T.’s testimony, an off-the-record discussion was held at the

bench. Nothing was said on the record about this discussion before the State called its next witness,

L.S.

L.S., who was eleven years old at the time of trial,2 testified she sometimes spent the night

with Z.C., N.C., and A.T., and they all slept in the same bed. One night, while N.C. and A.T. were

sleeping, she and Z.C. got up and went to the restroom. When they returned to the bedroom, L.S.

saw appellant, with his clothes off, on top of A.T. Appellant “got up fast,” closed the door, and

2 The trial was held about nineteen months after the allegations of abuse were first reported.

–3– told L.S. and Z.C. to go to Cordia’s room. L.S. said what she saw was “wrong,” but she did not

tell anyone because she was scared. On another occasion, she saw A.T. and appellant on the couch

in the living room; A.T. was sitting on top of appellant. She said it “was not normal.”

On cross-examination, L.S. explained that the way A.T. sat on appellant appeared

“awkward” and “seemed wrong and looked wrong.” Defense counsel then asked the following:

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Now, did you get along with Undra when you were living over there at the apartment?

[L.S.]: Yes.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: You did. Okay. Did he ever do anything to you that got you upset?

[L.S.]: (No response.)

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I mean, when I ask that I mean did he tell you to do some homework or do some housework or anything like that that you didn’t want to do?

[L.S.]: No.

Counsel then asked L.S. if her mother got along with appellant, and L.S. said no. Counsel asked

why not, and L.S. said she did not know.

Following L.S.’s cross-examination, another off-the-record discussion occurred at the

bench after which the trial court had the bailiff take the jury out of the courtroom. On the record,

defense counsel explained he did not intend to “open the door” when he asked L.S. if appellant

had done anything to her that upset her. After the trial court had the court reporter read the question

and answer, the prosecutor argued the exchange, along with questions as to whether L.S. and her

mother got along with appellant, opened the door to “what happened” to L.S. Defense counsel

disagreed, explaining that his “phrasing [the question] as I did at the end gets to how I was asking

the question.” The trial court ruled appellant had opened the door and then overruled his objection

that the evidence was more prejudicial than probative.

–4– After jurors returned to the courtroom, L.S. testified that she spent the night at the

apartment with Z.C. and N.C. During the night, appellant came into the room, took off her clothes,

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