Summary
holding that forensic interviewer was proper outcry witness when she was first adult whom victim told that appellant had penetrated her genitals
Summary of this case from State v. AkteyarleeOpinion
No. 03-04-00508-CR
Filed: September 21, 2006. DO NOT PUBLISH.
Appeal from the District Court of Travis County, 390th Judicial District, No. 9034180, Honorable Julie H. Kocurek, Judge Presiding. Affirmed.
Before Chief Justice LAW, Justices PATTERSON and PURYEAR.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
A jury convicted appellant Richard Gerard Garza of aggravated sexual assault of a child and, after finding two enhancement paragraphs were true, sentenced him to life imprisonment. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 22.021 (West Supp. 2006). On appeal, Garza complains that the trial court erroneously allowed the State to offer character evidence at the guilt/innocence phase of trial, admitted hearsay evidence, and denied his motions for mistrial. We affirm the trial court's judgment.
Factual Background
Garza does not attack the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction. Therefore, only a brief recitation of the facts is necessary to provide context for his complaints. M.C., who was nine at the time of the attack, testified that on February 21, 2004, she walked past a green, four-door car on her way to Zavala Elementary, where she was in third grade. She identified Garza as the driver of the car and said that Garza told her he was looking for his son's school and asked her to get into his car to help him find the school. After M.C. got in the car, Garza told her to get into the back seat and then started rubbing her legs and saying he was not going to hurt her. He parked the car, got into the back seat with her, and locked the doors. He undressed, took off M.C.'s pants and underwear, and got on top of her. M.C. said Garza's "private" went inside her "private" and that he moved up and down. After he stopped, he pulled her pants up and drove her back near her school. She then went to the principal's office and reported that she had been raped. The police were called, and M.C. described her assailant and his car, saying that he had a tattoo of the Texas Capitol on his right arm. Garza has a number of tattoos on both arms and a Texas Capitol tattoo on the right side of his torso. Garza's DNA matched semen found on M.C.'s underpants.Character Evidence
In his first point of error, Garza complains that the trial court erroneously allowed the State to offer bad-character evidence. Specifically, Garza complains that the State's questioning of Detective Scott Ogle raised the specter of "another case" in which the police investigated Garza as a suspect, leaving the jury with the impression that there was unexplained evidence of Garza's bad character. This, he argues, requires reversal of his conviction. We disagree. Detective Ogle was called to testify about an interview he had with Garza on the evening of February 21, the same day M.C. was attacked. Outside the jury's presence, Ogle explained that several days before M.C. was assaulted, he attempted to contact Garza about a different incident that had occurred at Blackshear Elementary School. Ogle testified that the Blackshear matter, involving the possible solicitation of a minor, was being investigated by Child Protective Services, and was not under investigation as a criminal offense. Ogle asked Garza to call to make an appointment, and Garza cooperated and came to Ogle's office for an interview on February 21, the same day that M.C. was attacked. Ogle interviewed Garza and took some photographs of him. Toward the end of their conversation, Garza mentioned that the police had been to his workplace that morning about the Zavala matter; Ogle told Garza that he did not think Garza was a suspect in the Zavala case, and Garza was allowed to leave. Before the jury, Ogle testified that two days before M.C. was attacked, he left his card at Garza's workplace and asked that Garza call him. Garza called the next day and arranged to speak to Ogle on February 21. During their interview, Ogle looked at Garza's car and took photographs of Garza and his car. Ogle testified that at the time of the interview, he knew that M.C. had been assaulted, although he was not the lead investigator on that case, and that she said her attacker had a tattoo of the Texas Capitol on his arm. Ogle testified that he initially ruled Garza out as a suspect because the partial license plate given by witnesses in M.C.'s case was "very different" from Garza's and because Garza did not have a tattoo of the Texas Capitol on either arm. Ogle was asked whether, if he had known that Garza had a tattoo of the Texas Capitol on his stomach, he would have eliminated Garza as a suspect, and Ogle answered, "Not at all." The State asked him to explain, and he said, "When you were asking as a suspect in the Zavala case?" He then explained that "a victim or witness can certainly confuse the position of the tattoo or someone else's physical description and that would be significant." Throughout Ogle's testimony, Garza's attorneys repeatedly objected and moved for a mistrial, arguing that Ogle's testimony implied that Garza was under suspicion for another "bad act" other than M.C.'s attack. The State argued that Ogle's testimony was important because his photographs showed Garza's appearance on the day of M.C.'s assault and because it explained that the police did not initially consider Garza to be a suspect in M.C.'s assault because he did not have a tattoo of the Texas Capitol on his arm; the police did not learn that Garza had such a tattoo on his stomach until about a week after the attack. Garza's attorneys argued that "when [Ogle] mentions the Zavala case, it naturally presupposes there's another case" and that:essentially what has been done is to put in an extraneous offense without calling it an extraneous offense by the [fact that a] detective of child abuse goes to his work. Then after he goes to his work, he leaves the card and he asks him to come visit him at the child abuse unit. Then he says it's not in connection with the Zavala case. And then he talks about the car, the idea of taking pictures of the car, which then goes further to put in the jury's mind without saying that he's being looked at in another deal, which is exactly what the purpose was in going it.The court cautioned the State to avoid any reference to Blackshear Elementary, "another matter," or "another incident," asking the State to instruct Ogle only to say that he wanted to speak to Garza, but not to try to explain why. The court overruled Garza's motions for a mistrial. On appeal, Garza specifically complains about Ogle's reference to "the Zavala case," which Garza contends "pollute[d] the trial with reference to the existence of another `case.'" The rules of evidence provide that "[e]vidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith." Tex. R. Evid. 404(b). However, such evidence may be admissible to show motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, identity, knowledge, or absence of mistake or accident. Id. Generally, a defendant objecting to the improper admission of evidence should first object, then request an instruction to disregard, and, finally, move for a mistrial if he believes the instruction to disregard was not sufficient. Young v. State, 137 S.W.3d 65, 69 (Tex.Crim.App. 2004). We will not reverse for evidentiary error that could have been prevented by timely objection or cured by a jury instruction when the complaining party did not seek those lesser remedies from the trial court. Id. at 70. That sequence is not absolutely necessary, however, and a defendant may still complain on appeal that he should have been granted a mistrial due to the improper admission of evidence to which he did not object or for which he did not seek an instruction to disregard. Id. at 69-70. In such a case, our review "is limited to the question whether the trial court erred in not taking the most serious action of ending the trial." Id. at 70. "Mistrial is a remedy appropriate for a narrow class of highly prejudicial and incurable errors," and is necessary only if the evidence clearly prejudices the defendant and "is of such character as to suggest the impossibility of withdrawing the impression produced on the minds of the jurors." Wood v. State, 18 S.W.3d 642, 648 (Tex.Crim.App. 2000) (quoting Ladd v. State, 3 S.W.3d 547, 567 (Tex.Crim.App. 1999)). We review a trial court's refusal to grant a mistrial under an abuse of discretion standard. Id. Garza did not seek an instruction to disregard Ogle's reference to "the Zavala case"; he asked only for a mistrial. The court was careful with Ogle's testimony, frequently excusing the jury and seeking clarification outside the jury's hearing, cautioning Ogle and the State to avoid any reference to Blackshear or other matters or incidents. The substance of Ogle's testimony before the jury is not of such a nature that a mistrial was required. Ogle testified only that he interviewed Garza the day of M.C.'s assault and did not believe him to be a suspect because Garza did not have a tattoo of the Texas Capitol on either arm. Any inference of other bad acts raised by the phrase "the Zavala case" is slight, and Garza has not shown that an instruction to disregard would not have been effective to cure any error. See Kemp v. State, 846 S.W.2d 289, 308 (Tex.Crim.App. 1992) ("It is well-settled that testimony referring to or implying extraneous offenses can be rendered harmless by an instruction to disregard by the trial judge, unless it appears the evidence was so clearly calculated to inflame the minds of the jury or is of such damning character as to suggest it would be impossible to remove the harmful impression from the jury's mind."). The trial court did not err in refusing Garza's motions for a mistrial in response to Ogle's testimony. We overrule Garza's first point of error. In his second point of error, Garza argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for mistrial made after a police witness stated that he interviewed Garza in jail. He argues that the reference to his status as a prisoner "impugned [Garza's] character." Police detective and forensic artist Gary Zumwalt testified that he met with M.C. and drew a sketch of her attacker based on her description. She told him that her assailant had a tattoo of "a capitol and a dome" on his arm. Later that day, an officer with the school district's police department contacted Zumwalt and said that M.C.'s parents had provided Garza's name as a possible suspect. Zumwalt went to see Garza and took photographs of the tattoos on Garza's arms, then asked if Garza had other tattoos elsewhere. Garza said he was tattooed on his back and stomach and raised his shirt to show Zumwalt those tattoos, at which time Zumwalt saw a tattoo of the Texas Capitol dome on the right side of Garza's stomach. At the conclusion of Zumwalt's testimony, the State asked, "Detective Zumwalt, just for the record, is the person who you went to see in the jail, will you point him out for the record, please?" Garza's attorney asked to approach the bench, where he pointed out the "in the jail" comment and moved for a mistrial "because now they're wondering why is he in jail." The court denied the motion for a mistrial and instead instructed the jury to disregard the State's comment. Garza argues that the State's question injected a suggestion that Garza was "a person of bad character, one who had to be held in custody pending his trial," and infringed on his right to be presumed innocent. We disagree. Garza has not shown that any error in the question was not cured by the trial court's instruction to disregard. See Kemp, 846 S.W.2d at 308. Nor was the State's error of such magnitude that it was "highly prejudicial and incurable." See Wood, 18 S.W.3d at 648. Therefore, the trial court did not err in refusing to grant a mistrial based on the State's remark. We overrule Garza's second point of error.