Court Opinion

ID: 4372955
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-03-02 08:32:23.204147+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:21:49.272522
License: Public Domain

In the
        Court of Appeals
Second Appellate District of Texas
         at Fort Worth
     ___________________________
          No. 02-18-00274-CV
     ___________________________

 IN THE MATTER OF A.B., A JUVENILE

  On Appeal from the 323rd District Court
          Tarrant County, Texas
      Trial Court No. 323-105857-17

 Before Sudderth, C.J.; Kerr and Birdwell, JJ.
   Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr
                           MEMORANDUM OPINION

       Twenty-one years old at the time of the hearing from which this appeal arises,

A.B. contends that the juvenile court abused its discretion by waiving its jurisdiction

and ordering him transferred to the district court to be prosecuted as an adult for an

offense he allegedly committed years earlier when he was a 13-, 14-, or possibly 15-

year-old child. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 54.02. Under the statute governing waivers

and transfers after a respondent in the juvenile court turns 18 years old, the State must

prove, among other factors, that the respondent was at least 14 at the time he

allegedly committed the offense. Id. § 54.02(j)(2)(B). Relying on evidentiary

contradictions and ambiguities, in one issue A.B. challenges the legal and factual

evidentiary sufficiency of the trial court’s finding that he was 14 years old at the time

he allegedly committed the offense and, further, asserts that the trial court abused its

discretion by arbitrarily waiving its jurisdiction and ordering him transferred to a

district court.

       Although the evidence concerning A.B.’s age at the time of the alleged incident

is fuzzy at best, we must analyze this appeal not under a criminal-law, beyond-a-

reasonable-doubt standard but rather under a far less stringent preponderance-of-the-

evidence standard; that, after all, is the only quantum of evidence that a trial court

needs in this kind of proceeding.1 We thus hold that the evidence was both legally and

       1
        We express no opinion about whether someone in A.B.’s position would be
better and more fairly served by a more demanding burden of proof.

                                           2
factually sufficient and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion. As a result, we

overrule A.B.’s contention and affirm the trial court’s waiver and transfer order.

                                      Background

      The Texas Family Code governs proceedings in all cases involving delinquent

conduct engaged in by a person who was a child at the time the alleged conduct

occurred. Id. § 51.04(a); In re D.S., No. 02-17-00050-CV, 2017 WL 3187021, at

*1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth July 27, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.). In such cases, the

juvenile court’s original jurisdiction is exclusive. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 51.04(a); D.S.,

2017 WL 3187021, at *1.

      While the family code vests juvenile courts with exclusive original jurisdiction

over all proceedings involving delinquent children, it also provides that those courts

have no jurisdiction to adjudicate or conduct a disposition hearing on a person who is

18 years old or older. See re N.J.A., 997 S.W.2d 554, 555 (Tex. 1999); D.S.,

2017 WL 3187021, at *1. Rather, after a person has turned 18, the juvenile court’s

authority is generally limited to doing one of two things: it can (1) waive its exclusive

original jurisdiction and transfer the person to the appropriate district or criminal

district court in accordance with § 54.02(j)’s requirements or (2) dismiss the case.

N.J.A., 997 S.W.2d at 556–57; D.S., 2017 WL 3187021, at *1.

                                            3
       Here, the State alleged that A.B. committed the offense of aggravated sexual

assault of a child younger than 14 years of age, a first-degree felony, against Ariana 2

on or about January 1, 2011. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.021(a)(2)(B), (e). Ariana

testified that the offense occurred while she was spending the night at A.B.’s—her

cousin’s—house with his mother and two of his siblings, a sister and a younger

brother. But she could only roughly estimate when the offense allegedly occurred,

initially estimating that she was seven or eight years old; later suggesting that she was

eight or nine; and, by the time she testified in the summer of 2018, expanding the

possibilities to having been eight, nine, or perhaps ten years old. 3

       To properly waive its jurisdiction and transfer the case under the family code,

the juvenile court had to find that (1) the respondent (A.B.) was currently 18 years old

or older; (2) A.B. was between 14 and 17 years old at the time he allegedly committed

the offense; (3) the alleged offense had not been adjudicated or no adjudication

hearing concerning the offense had been conducted; (4) by a preponderance of the

evidence, that for a reason beyond the State’s control it had not been practicable to

proceed in the juvenile court before A.B.’s eighteenth birthday; and (5) there was

probable cause to believe that he committed the alleged offense. Tex. Fam. Code

Ann. § 54.02(j)(1), (2)(B), (3), (4)(A), (5).

       2
        We use an alias to protect her identity. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.8(c).
       3
        Obviously, the older Ariana was, the older A.B. was as well.

                                                4
      Complying with § 54.02(j), the trial court found that (1) A.B. was 18 years old

or older; (2) A.B. was 14 years old at the time the alleged acts occurred; (3) no

adjudication hearing had been conducted; (4) for reasons beyond the State’s control, it

was not practicable to proceed in juvenile court before A.B.’s eighteenth birthday

because by the time that Ariana made her outcry, A.B. was already 19 years old; and

(5) based on Ariana’s two forensic interviews, there was probable cause to believe that

A.B. committed the alleged first-degree felony. See id. The only finding that A.B.

disputes is the second one—that he was as old as 14 years when the offense allegedly

occurred.

                                 Standard of Review

      By a preponderance of the evidence, the State bears the burden of persuading

the juvenile court that waiving its jurisdiction is appropriate. Moon v. State, 451 S.W.3d
28, 45 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014); 4 see Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 51.17(a) (“Except . . . for

      4
        Although Moon involved a juvenile issue, the court of criminal appeals decided
the issue based on former article 44.47 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure,
which precluded the respondent from immediately appealing the juvenile court’s
transfer order and which required the respondent to wait until after he had been
convicted in the adult criminal court to complain, on appeal, about any purported
error in the juvenile court’s transfer order. Moon, 451 S.W.3d at 39–40. Effective
September 1, 2015 (shortly after the December 2014 Moon decision), the legislature
repealed article 44.47 and added § 56.01(c)(1)(A) to the family code, thereby allowing
an appeal directly from the juvenile court’s order waiving jurisdiction. See Act of May
12, 2015, 84th Leg., R.S., ch. 74, §§ 3–4, sec. 56.01(c)(1)(A), 2015 Tex. Sess. Law Serv.
1065, 1065 (current version at Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 56.01(c)(1)(A)). Because of this
change, any party appealing our decision no longer goes to the court of criminal
appeals but to the supreme court, which has jurisdiction over juvenile appeals. In re
C.A.P., No. 10-18-00193-CV, 2018 WL 5662131, at *1 n.1 (Tex. App.—Waco Oct.

                                            5
the burden of proof to be borne by the state in adjudicating a child to be delinquent

or in need of supervision . . . or otherwise when in conflict with a provision of this

title, the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure govern proceedings under this title.”). We

thus review a juvenile court’s factual findings supporting its waiver-and-transfer order

under traditional civil evidentiary-sufficiency principles. See Moon, 451 S.W.3d at 47;

D.S., 2017 WL 3187021, at *2.

      In determining whether legally sufficient evidence supports a finding under

review, we consider evidence favorable to the finding if a reasonable factfinder could

and disregard evidence contrary to the finding unless a reasonable factfinder could

not. D.S., 2017 WL 3187021, at *2; see also In re G.B., 524 S.W.3d 906, 914 n.13 (Tex.

App.—Fort Worth 2017, no pet.). If more than a scintilla of evidence supports the

finding, then legally sufficient evidence supports it, and a legal-sufficiency challenge

fails. D.S., 2017 WL 3187021, at *2; G.B., 524 S.W.3d at 914 n.13.

      Under a factual-sufficiency challenge, we consider all the evidence presented to

determine if the court’s finding is so against the great weight and preponderance of

that evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust. D.S., 2017 WL 3187021, at *2. Put

another way, we set the finding aside only if, after considering and weighing all the

evidence pertinent to that finding, we determine that the credible evidence supporting

31, 2018, pet. denied). The supreme court has not addressed the method of review as
Moon explained it, but our analysis will nonetheless accord with Moon. See id.

                                           6
it is so weak or so contrary to the overwhelming weight of all the evidence that it

should be set aside. G.B., 524 S.W.3d at 914 n.13.

       If the juvenile court’s findings are supported by legally and factually sufficient

evidence, then we review the ultimate waiver decision under an abuse-of-discretion

standard. See Moon, 451 S.W.3d at 47; D.S., 2017 WL 3187021, at *3; G.B., 524 S.W.3d

at 916–17. To determine whether the juvenile court abused its discretion, we ask

whether it acted without reference to the guiding rules or principles in reaching its

decision. See Moon, 451 S.W.3d at 47; D.S., 2017 WL 3187021, at *3.

       The factfinder alone judges the witnesses’ credibility and the weight to be given

their testimony and is free to accept all, reject all, or accept only parts of any witness’s

testimony. In re E.P., 963 S.W.2d 191, 193 (Tex. App.—Austin 1998, no pet.). The

factfinder is free to accept or reject any apparent inconsistencies in the testimony and

reconcile them. See Anderson v. Durant, 550 S.W.3d 605, 616 (Tex. 2018); In re T.M.,

No. 04-07-00487-CV, 2008 WL 2115763, at *2 (Tex. App.—San Antonio May 21,

2008, no pet.) (mem. op.). As an appellate court, we must avoid substituting our

judgment for the factfinder’s. T.M., 2008 WL 2115763, at *2.

                                     The Evidence

       A.B. was born in August 1996 and so turned 14 years old in August 2010.

According to a September 2017 “pre-diagnostic study” prepared for the juvenile court

by court intake officer Patsy Paxton, who interviewed A.B. and his parents in January

2017 (when A.B. was 20), A.B. graduated from high school in 2014 with a B average

                                             7
and was on his school’s swim team for three years. He later moved to Austin for

community college, where, at the time of the January 2017 intake interview, he was

one semester away from earning his degree, was living in a dormitory with a

roommate, and was maintaining an A/B average while working two jobs.

      A.B. has no criminal record 5 nor any involvement with gangs or previous

juvenile services. His parents, who have been married for over two decades, reported

to Paxton that A.B. had “no history of behavior problems in the home. He has had

good relationships with all family members. [A.B.] was always respectful and followed

rules in the home.”

      As noted, the sole evidentiary dispute centers on whether Ariana described an

offense committed before or after August 2010, the month in which A.B. turned 14.

Ariana was born in June 2002 and was 16 when she testified in July and August 2018.

      The record indicates that in May 2015, when Ariana was just one month shy of

her thirteenth birthday, she and her father went to the police station to report that

A.B., her cousin, had sexually assaulted her. At the transfer hearing, Ariana’s father

denied having told the police anything and asserted that it was Ariana who spoke to

      5
       Paxton’s September 2017 report reflects a February 2017 arrest in Travis
County for DWI, which would have been roughly three months after the Fort Worth
Police Department arrested A.B. and “referred [him] out of custody” the day before
Thanksgiving 2016, and less than a month after Paxton interviewed A.B. and his
parents.

                                          8
the police. But Ariana remembered things differently, stating that her father had done

all the talking.6

       Ariana’s father explained what had precipitated her outcry. About three days

before going to the police station,7 he had confronted her about being at a friend’s

home where there were boys, alcohol, and marijuana but no adult supervision.

Concerned about the presence of boys, Ariana’s father broached the subject of

whether she was sexually active, and when Ariana denied having had sex, her father—

“kind of playing the bluff game with her”—proposed taking her to the doctor, who—

he asserted—would be able to tell. Ariana responded by making her outcry that A.B.

had sexually assaulted her.

       Ariana’s father had no idea when the alleged offense had occurred and could

not even recall whether Ariana had given him that information, explaining, “I can’t

remember the details because all I heard was—to be honest with you, was my

daughter being violated.” “And after that,” he continued, “it was kind of the just—I

mean, you know, with me being a father, hearing that from your daughter, I just—I

wasn’t looking for details or anything like that. I just immediately was upset.”

       Ariana did not remember, though, the date, the month, or even the year when
       6

she and her father had gone to the police station.
       7
        According to the second detective who worked on the case, the police report
indicated Ariana made her outcry three days earlier. At the hearing, Ariana’s father
could not recall when she told him other than that it was before they went to the
police station.

                                            9
       The first detective assigned to the case arranged a forensic interview in July

2015, and at that interview Ariana, who identified A.B. by name, asserted that the

offense had occurred when she was seven or eight years old.8 The assigned detective

apparently later lost the DVD recording of this first interview, so the interviewer’s

notes were the only record of it.

       Ariana’s case then encountered an unexpected delay when the detective

handling the case came under administrative investigation. Although the record does

not reflect exactly when, the State’s Brady 9 notice shows that detective was ultimately

“terminated for neglect of duty in violation of General Order of the Fort Worth

Police Department General Orders/Code of Conduct 429.02 and for violation of

General Order 704.00(F)(1).” General Order 704.00(F)(1) states that “[e]mployees

shall be truthful at all times in their dealing with co-workers, supervisors, managers

and other law enforcement personnel. Any statement or omission of pertinent or

material information which misrepresents or misleads others will be considered a false

statement.” The record before us contains no other details about the original

detective’s apparent misrepresentation(s) that led to his termination, and no witness at

the hearing referred to the State’s Brady notice.

      8
       If Ariana was seven when the offense occurred, that would have placed it
sometime between June 2009 (when Ariana turned seven) and June 2010 (when she
turned eight). If she was seven, A.B. was necessarily under the age of 14. But if Ariana
was eight when the offense occurred, A.B. could have been either 13 or 14.
      9
       Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87, 83 S. Ct. 1194, 1196–97 (1963).

                                            10
      In any event, more than a year after Ariana and her father had first made a

report, the case was reassigned to a second detective, Samantha Horner, who sent

Ariana for a second forensic interview—this time in August 2016—with the same

forensic interviewer. At this second interview, Ariana asserted that she was eight or

nine when the offense occurred but was unsure of her attacker’s name, that is,

whether it was A.B. or Alex,10 one of A.B.’s brothers.

      Although the paperwork for both forensic interviews showed that the offense

allegedly occurred in 2011, the interviewer said that the first detective, not Ariana,

provided that information; the interviewer had no idea where the first detective had

gotten it. The same 2011 date appeared on the form for the second interview, but the

interviewer thought that the second detective had simply copied that information

from the first form.

      Supplying a possible reason for the 2011 date’s appearance, Detective Horner

testified that the May 2015 police report made by an Officer Pelton indicated that the

alleged offense occurred while Ariana was spending the night at A.B.’s “sometime in

the year 2011.” The police report, however, was not admitted into evidence.

      In addition to sending Ariana for a second forensic interview, Detective

Horner also sent her in August 2016 to Cook Children’s Hospital to be seen by a

      10
        An alias. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.8(c). We use aliases in this opinion for other
family members as well.

                                          11
CARE 11 nurse. At the 2018 transfer hearing, Ariana could not recall having gone to

Cook Children’s Hospital. Regardless, the CARE nurse who saw her stated that

Ariana had told her that the incident occurred when Ariana was about eight years old.

       But Ariana testified in 2018 that she thought it had happened when she was

nine or ten and did not remember ever saying that she had been seven or eight; she

added that it could have occurred when she was eight, nine, or ten.

       Another piece of evidence arguably anchored the alleged offense as having

occurred before rather than after A.B.’s fourteenth birthday. A.B.’s pre-diagnostic

study, which was admitted at the transfer hearing, showed that A.B. had two brothers,

with the younger of the two—Bryan—having been born in March 2010. But when

A.B.’s counsel asked Ariana if she knew Bryan, she was unaware that A.B. even had a

second brother and denied ever having met him. She also denied that a baby was there

the night of the alleged incident. Ariana testified that after this incident, she never

went back to spend the night at A.B.’s home.

       During argument, A.B.’s counsel emphasized that the offense must therefore

have taken place before Bryan was born in March 2010 because Ariana had no idea

who he was; and if the alleged offense occurred before March 2010, it necessarily

happened before A.B.’s fourteenth birthday, which would have been five months

later, in August.

       Child-advocacy resources and evaluation. See Wells v. State, 558 S.W.3d 661,
       11

665 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2017, pet. ref’d).

                                          12
      After the fact, Ariana’s mother also tried to determine when the alleged offense

occurred. She testified that she noticed a difference in Ariana’s behavior when Ariana

was about eight years old, and she recalled that the only time Ariana went to her

cousins’ home by herself—without her older sister, Barbara—was when Ariana was

about eight. Although Ariana testified that Barbara was not with her that night, Ariana

also indicated that she had spent the night at A.B.’s home on other occasions but did

not remember—one way or the other—whether Barbara was with her.

      Detective Horner added more timing-related information: “[G]oing off of my

memory, [Ariana] remembered that she was on winter break from school, and that’s

where we came [up] with approximately January of 2011.” But Detective Horner

admitted that nothing in writing supported her recollection. (Detective Horner might

not have documented this information because she placed no importance on A.B.’s

age at the time the offense allegedly occurred, asserting her belief that the State could

prosecute A.B. even if he had committed the offense when he was 12 or 13 years old.)

      Ariana herself testified that she did not remember the date, the month, the

year, or even the time of year. In a similar manner, she did not remember the year that

she made her outcry to her parents, although she remembered that she was 12 or

13 years old and that it was while she was attending middle school.

                                      Discussion

      Despite the uncertainty surrounding A.B.’s age at the time of the alleged

offense and the possibility that he was under 14, and despite Ariana’s incomplete and

                                           13
contradictory recollections, the record contains some evidence, as we have recounted

it above, that the alleged incident occurred after August 2010 and therefore after A.B.

turned 14. We hold that there is more than a scintilla of evidence supporting the trial

court’s finding and thus that the evidence is legally sufficient. See D.S.,

2017 WL 3187021, at *2; G.B., 524 S.W.3d at 914 n.13.

      Although A.B. correctly asserts that the evidence is contradictory and inexact,

the trial court as the factfinder was free to accept or reject any or all of any witness’s

testimony. See E.P., 963 S.W.2d at 193. As the factfinder, the trial court was also free

to reconcile any apparent inconsistencies in the testimony. See Anderson, 550 S.W.3d at

616. This means that the trial court was free to discount both Ariana’s not knowing

Bryan and the forensic interviewer’s note that Ariana told her during the first

interview that the offense occurred when Ariana was seven or eight; it also means that

the trial court was free to give greater weight to the testimony suggesting that the

offense occurred when she was eight—or even older, for that matter—and was

consequently more likely to have occurred after A.B. had turned 14 years old. See id.

      Moreover, the trial court was free to rely on Horner’s testimony that she was

able to determine that the offense most likely happened around January 1,

2011 “[f]rom the outcries” and because Ariana was “pretty sure it happened around

2011.” That 2011 timeframe, coupled with Horner’s explanation that Ariana

“remembered that she was on winter break from school,” provides some evidence

that the offense likely occurred in the winter of 2011. Because A.B. turned 14 in the

                                           14
summer of 2010, the trial court’s finding is supported by sufficient evidence. Thus, we

hold that the evidence was not so against the great weight and preponderance of the

evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust and was thus factually sufficient. See D.S.,

2017 WL 3187021, at *2; G.B., 524 S.W.3d at 914 n.13.

         Having concluded that the trial court’s finding is supported by legally and

factually sufficient evidence, we now consider whether the juvenile court abused its

discretion by waiving its jurisdiction and transferring A.B.’s case. See Moon, 451 S.W.3d

at 47; D.S., 2017 WL 3187021, at *4. The juvenile court’s waiver and transfer order

shows that it based its decision on its conclusion that the State had met all five of

§ 54.02(j)’s criteria. A.B. does not contest that the State met four of the five criteria,

and we have held the evidence legally and factually sufficient to support the final

criterion—his age—that he did contest. We now further hold that the trial court did

not abuse its discretion by waiving its jurisdiction and transferring A.B.’s case because

the record shows that it acted with reference to both the evidence and the guiding

rules and principles in reaching its decision. See Moon, 451 S.W.3d at 47; D.S., 2017
WL 3187021, at *4.

         Because our standard of review is not one that calls for proof beyond a

reasonable doubt but simply a preponderance of the evidence, we overrule A.B.’s

issue.

                                        Conclusion

         Having overruled A.B.’s sole contention, we affirm the trial court’s order.

                                             15
                                    /s/ Elizabeth Kerr
                                    Elizabeth Kerr
                                    Justice

Delivered: February 28, 2019

                               16