Vanessa Ivanova Sada v. State

574 S.W.3d 524
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 2019
Docket01-18-00240-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 574 S.W.3d 524 (Vanessa Ivanova Sada 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
Vanessa Ivanova Sada v. State, 574 S.W.3d 524 (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 12, 2019

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00240-CR ——————————— VANESSA IVANOVA SADA, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 230th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1518516

OPINION

A jury convicted appellant, Vanessa Ivanova Sada, of causing serious bodily

injury to her child, Jack,1 by omission and assessed her punishment at twenty

1 Jack is a pseudonym for J.G., the complainant in this case. We will use pseudonyms for all minor children in the case to protect their identities and for ease of referring to them. years’ confinement.2 In two points of error, appellant contends that: (1) the

evidence is legally insufficient to support her conviction; and (2) the trial court

erred in submitting an instruction on the law of parties to the jury.

We affirm.

Background

Appellant is the biological mother of six children. The four oldest, Angel,

Bella, Ariel, and Jack, were fathered by Jose Garcia. However, after having Jack,

appellant and Garcia broke up, and appellant began a relationship with Javier

Torres. Appellant and Torres have two children together, Sara and Faith, who was

born after these legal proceedings had begun.

Law enforcement’s involvement with appellant and her family began on

November 20, 2015. Lavonda Foreman, a caseworker with the Department of

Family and Protective Services (DFPS), received a referral after Bella appeared at

school with a black eye. As part of her investigation, Foreman arranged with

appellant to visit the home. Upon her arrival on November 20, 2015, Foreman

noticed that the home appeared relatively clean and that the kitchen was well-

stocked with food. She testified that Ariel, who was four years old at that time,

appeared to be wearing several layers of clothing. Foreman stated that this was

“odd” because she believed Ariel was wearing more clothing than was necessary

2 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.04. 2 given that the weather was not very cold. Following DFPS protocol, Foreman

asked permission to check over Ariel without the layers of clothing, and appellant

agreed. Once she had removed the clothing, Foreman noticed that Ariel “appeared

to be very thin. Her bones were protruding from the torso area. Her legs were very

thin. Her kneecaps were kind of rubbing together. Her pelvic bones were

protruding as well. So, she appeared very, very thin.”

Foreman continued her investigation by asking to see the other children in

the home and by asking questions regarding their health and nutrition. Appellant

told her that the children ate “all the time” and that they had recently been to the

pediatrician, who recommended that they drink PediaSure. Appellant did not

appear concerned regarding Ariel’s condition. Appellant then led Foreman to the

bedroom where Jack was waiting. Foreman noticed that Jack, who was nearly three

years old at the time, was “in a fetal position, just balled up laying in the playpen in

the corner.” Foreman further testified that Jack made a sound “as if he were in

pain, like a grunting noise” when appellant moved him, and he did not straighten

his legs or hold his own head up. Foreman testified:

[Jack] appeared to be a little discolored. He had a rash on his abdomen. [Jack] also had some—some bruising or like some rash, like a burn mark look on his forehead. [Jack] was also very, very underweight, very thin. And he wouldn’t stretch out—like any other two-year-old I’ve seen, he wouldn’t stretch his arms or legs out.

3 Foreman was concerned about the children’s condition, so she contacted her

supervisor, who instructed her to escort appellant and the children to the hospital.

Deputy D. Wareham with the Harris County Sheriff’s Office testified that he

was called to investigate an alleged injury to a child at a local hospital. When he

arrived, he first saw Ariel and Jack in the emergency department. He stated that

his initial observation upon seeing the children was “shock”:

The younger—the male, the younger one, obviously very underweight. Sores all over his face. Along with the little girl, was also—I was in shock looking at her because she was obviously underweight. You could see skeletal bone structure in her face.

Wareham testified that Jack kept his legs tucked up to his chest and could not hold

up his own head. Wareham stayed with the children for security purposes while

there were transported to Texas Children’s Hospital. He contacted the officials

who would conduct the investigation and then returned to his normal duties and

was not involved in the subsequent investigation of the case.

Ultimately, Ariel and Jack stayed in the hospital for more than a month

before they were placed with a foster family. Appellant’s other children were also

placed with foster families.

Appellant was eventually charged with “unlawfully while having a statutory

duty to act pursuant to [Jack], intentionally and knowingly by omission caus[ing]

SERIOUS BODILY INJURY to [Jack], hereafter styled the Complainant, a child

younger than fifteen years of age, by FAILING TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE

4 NUTRITION” and by “FAILING TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE MEDICAL

CARE.”

At appellant’s trial, both Foreman and Deputy Wareham testified regarding

their interactions with the family, as set out above. Clemmy Eneas-Varence, a

DFPS investigator, also testified regarding her investigation into the case. She

stated that she first contacted appellant, Ariel, and Jack at Texas Children’s.

Appellant told Eneas-Varence that she was the children’s primary caregiver and

that she was in a “common-law relationship” with Javier Torres. Appellant told

Eneas-Varence that she did not understand why Ariel and Jack were underweight

because she provided medical care and would give them PediaSure. However, she

did not seem concerned about what the children were experiencing at the hospital.

Dr. Lora Torres, a pediatrician who had examined appellant’s children,

testified that she saw Jack on one occasion, on November 25, 2014, just before his

second birthday. He had a fever and was diagnosed with the flu. Dr. Torres also

testified that he was otherwise healthy and no dietary concerns were raised during

the appointment. At that time, his weight was in the 20th percentile for children

his age, and his height was below the fifth percentile. Dr. Torres also saw Ariel on

two occasions—once for a well-child check, in which she treated Ariel for

pinworms but otherwise determined that Ariel was healthy, and once for concerns

regarding significant weight loss. Dr. Torres did testing to seek a reason for

5 Ariel’s significant weight loss, but all of her tests were normal. Appellant did not

come back for any follow-up appointments with Ariel. Dr. Torres also saw Sara—

appellant’s child with Javier Torres—seven times over a nine-month period for

well-child and sick visits.

Dr. Dorothy Lemacha, an ER physician at the hospital where Ariel and Jack

were first taken on November 20, 2015, testified that the children were bought to

her for an evaluation at the recommendation of DFPS based on concerns for their

“overall physical condition.” She testified that when she first saw Ariel and Jack,

they looked unwell, “weak,” and “somewhat dehydrated.” The children were “very

thin.

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