Victor Cisneros v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 2021
Docket13-18-00652-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Victor Cisneros v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-18-00652-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

VICTOR CISNEROS, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 377th District Court of Victoria County, Texas.

OPINION ON REMAND Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Longoria Opinion on Remand by Chief Justice Contreras

We handed down our memorandum opinion and judgment in this cause on August

6, 2020. Appellant filed a motion for rehearing in which he requested, among other things,

that we (1) change the notation in our memorandum opinion from “do not publish” to

“publish” and (2) change the designation from a memorandum opinion to an opinion. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(a), (b). Pursuant to our request, the State filed a response stating in

part that it does not object to the modified notation and designation. We denied the motion

for rehearing but withdrew our earlier memorandum opinion and judgment and issued a

substitute opinion and judgment on October 15, 2020.

On February 3, 2021, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals vacated our judgment

and remanded to us to clarify which convictions are to be vacated. Cisneros v. State, No.

PD-1156-20, 2021 WL 359483, at *1 (Tex. Crim. App. Feb. 3, 2021) (per curiam) (noting

that, though our opinion states that we would vacate the convictions for aggravated sexual

assault of a child, the conclusion of our opinion purports to vacate the convictions in

Counts 1, 14, and 24, and Count 1 is a conviction for continuous sexual abuse).

Accordingly, we now withdraw our opinion of October 15, 2020, and substitute the

following opinion along with an accompanying judgment.

A jury convicted appellant Victor Cisneros of eleven sex offenses: two counts of

continuous sexual abuse of a young child or children, a first degree felony; three counts

of aggravated sexual assault, a first degree felony; and six counts of indecency with a

child, a second degree felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 21.02, 21.021, 21.11. The

trial court set punishment at ninety-nine years’ imprisonment for each of the five first

degree felonies, and it ordered those sentences to run consecutively. For each of the

indecency convictions, appellant was sentenced to concurrent terms of ten years’

imprisonment. Appellant contends: (1) the three aggravated sexual assault convictions

violated his right against double jeopardy; (2) the two continuous sexual abuse

convictions violated his right against double jeopardy; (3) the sentences for the two

continuous sexual abuse convictions were cruel and unusual; (4) the indictment did not

give him sufficient notice of the offense dates; and (5) the jury charge contained error.

2 The State concedes appellant’s first issue. We will reverse and render the three

aggravated sexual assault convictions and affirm the remaining convictions.

I. BACKGROUND

Appellant was charged by indictment with forty-three sex offenses, including

continuous sexual abuse of a child (Counts 1 and 2), aggravated sexual assault of a child

(Counts 3 through 26), indecency with a child by sexual contact (Counts 27, 28, and 29),

and indecency with a child by exposure (Counts 30 through 43). The victims alleged in

the indictment are appellant’s former stepdaughters C.S. and M.S., who were ten and

eleven years old, respectively, at the time of trial in August 2018. 1

At trial, S.S.C. testified she is the mother of C.S. and M.S. and that she was once

married to appellant. Appellant lived with the family in Victoria, first in a house on Wheeler

Street and later in a house on Virginia Street. S.S.C. said there were many times when

she went out for errands and appellant was alone with the children. S.S.C. stated that, on

February 23, 2017, C.S. told her that appellant “put his thing on my thing” and he put “his

middle on her middle.” That evening, she confronted appellant, and according to S.S.C.,

appellant replied by saying “they hug me in that area,” but S.S.C. told him that was not

what she was referring to. At that point, appellant “stood there for maybe a couple of

seconds, and he said, ‘But what am I going to tell my mom? What am I going to tell my

daughters?’” S.S.C. testified that appellant said: “‘What if I go to prison?’” She said she

told appellant to leave the apartment, and he left.

S.S.C. later made a report to Child Protective Services. C.S. was interviewed at

the Children’s Advocacy Center (CAC) the following day. About three days later, M.S. told

1 We refer to the minor victims and their mother by initials to protect their identities.

3 S.S.C. that “he did to me what he did to [C.S.]” M.S. was then also interviewed at CAC,

and both C.S. and M.S. submitted to sexual assault nurse examinations (SANE) on March

16, 2017.

S.S.C. stated she noticed a “drastic change” in the “attitude” of the girls when the

family lived in the Wheeler Street house, and their “attitude and behavior” became worse

as time progressed. She said M.S. had been admitted into a mental hospital four times in

the three months preceding trial.

Detective Christina Tate of the Victoria Police Department testified that she met

with S.S.C. and C.S. on February 28, 2017. She observed the CAC interviews. According

to Tate, C.S. “appeared sad” and “scared” and “buried her head in the arm of the chair”

during her interview; M.S. “appeared very—just sad, ashamed” and “covered her face a

lot when talking.”

Tate interviewed appellant on April 3, 2017. Appellant said that S.S.C. left the

children with him on several occasions, even though he had asked her to take them with

her. According to Tate, when appellant was asked for an explanation as to why his penis

would have touched his stepdaughters, he said: “I don’t know. They hug me every day.

You know, I walk in my pajamas. I’m cooking. They’re hugging me. I’m laying down.

They’re right beside me, seeing TV; or they’re sitting on my lap.” Tate said appellant was

cooperative with law enforcement.

C.S. testified appellant “put his middle part to [her] middle part” while her mother

was out shopping and her brothers were in another room playing video games. She said

this happened “[m]ore than one time” and that it first happened during the daytime at the

Wheeler Street house. C.S. said she was lying down and facing up on her mother’s bed,

while appellant was lying down “[o]n top of [her]” and facing down. She said appellant told

4 her to get on the bed, “pulled . . . down” her underwear, pulled up her dress, and took off

his clothes. C.S. agreed with the prosecutor that “[s]kin to skin” contact was made, and

that appellant also touched her “middle part” with his hand, but C.S. could not remember

whether “his middle part went into [her] middle part.” She said that, once in the Wheeler

Street house, appellant “told [her] to put [her] mouth onto his middle part” and she did so.

C.S. said this also happened in the Virginia Street house and that she told her mother

about it “immediately” after the last time it happened. She denied that appellant told her

not to tell anyone.

M.S. testified that, at Wheeler Street house, while her mother and brothers were

out shopping, appellant asked her to come into her mother’s bedroom, pulled down her

pants and underwear, and “was going . . . up and down on top of me.” M.S. said

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