Court Opinion

ID: 2830824
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-08-26 16:15:28.941191+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:31:40.381163
License: Public Domain

Opinion issued August 25, 2015

                                      In The

                              Court of Appeals
                                     For The

                          First District of Texas
                            ————————————
                              NO. 01-14-00400-CR
                            ———————————
                   TIMOTHY WAYNE FISHER, Appellant
                                        V.
                       THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                    On Appeal from the 184th District Court
                            Harris County, Texas
                        Trial Court Case No. 1379925

                          MEMORANDUM OPINION

      A jury found appellant, Timothy Wayne Fisher, guilty of the felony offense

of reckless injury to a child. 1 After finding true the allegation in an enhancement

1
      See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.04(a)(1), (e) (Vernon Supp. 2014).
paragraph that he had previously been convicted of a felony offense, the jury

assessed his punishment at confinement for ninety years and a fine of $10,000. In

his sole issue, appellant contends that the trial court erred in admitting certain

expert testimony.

      We modify the trial court’s judgment and affirm as modified.

                                   Background

      William Dickerson, the complainant’s great-grandfather, testified that

appellant and Tegan Shows, Dickerson’s granddaughter, lived with Shows’s six-

year old son, Lexicon (“Lex”), in a trailer on a piece of agricultural property near

the home of Dickerson and his wife, Graciela Dickerson. Dickerson explained that

on January 24, 2013, Shows, while incarcerated, gave birth to the complainant,

who was released to appellant upon being discharged from the hospital. Dickerson

first met the complainant on February 4, 2013, when appellant “brought the baby

over for [his] wife to watch.” On that day, Dickerson noticed that the complainant

had a scratch under his eye and asked appellant how it had happened. Appellant

“didn’t know.”      The complainant also had, on his face, other scratches that

Dickerson believed were self-inflicted and caused by the baby’s fingernails, but he

did not have any bruising. The complainant stayed at the Dickersons’ house for

approximately “three and a half hours” that day.

                                         2
          Appellant asked Graciela to watch the complainant again on February 6,

2013, and he brought him back to the Dickersons’ house that day. Although the

complainant was supposed to be at the house for only a few hours, appellant called

“around” 5:00 or 6:00 p.m., stating that he was having “car problems.” He then

called again “around” 8:30 or 9:00 p.m., stating that “[h]e was still broke down”

and “wasn’t going to be able to” pick up the complainant. Dickerson told appellant

that he and Graciela would “take care of the kids” for the night, and he later “went

and got Lex[]” from Sherrill Jenkins, who was watching him at her store across the

street.

          Dickerson explained that “things” with the complainant were “[j]ust fine” on

the evening of February 6, 2013. He did not “cry[] more than a baby would

normally,” and there was nothing “out of the ordinary about the baby.” The

complainant did not have any bruises or “bumps on his head,” and Dickerson did

not see him make any “jerking” or “involuntary movements that . . . seem[ed]

abnormal.”

          Before leaving for work on February 7, 2013, Dickerson again did not

“observe anything wrong” with the complainant. He had no bruising that morning,

and he was not “involuntary[ily] jerking” or doing anything “that would stand

out . . . as abnormal.” When Dickerson arrived home from work that evening, the

complainant “was [still] fine” and had no bruising. And, when appellant came to

                                            3
“pick the baby [and Lex] up” around 8:30 or 9:00 p.m., there was nothing

“abnormal” about the complainant. As appellant “headed out the door with him,”

Dickerson did not “notice anything” wrong with the complainant. The next day,

however, Dickerson learned from Jenkins that the complainant “was at the

hospital.”

      Dickerson further testified that, during the entire time that the complainant

was staying at his house, he was “eating fine,” “would finish a bottle,” and was

having “[n]ormal bowel movements.” No one had any “accidents” involving the

complainant; nor did anyone “harm the baby[,] or play rough” with him. And

“[o]ther than th[e] scratch under [his] eye and [the] scratches possibly from

fingernails,” Dickerson did not see “anything wrong” with the complainant while

he was staying at the Dickersons’ home.

      Graciela testified that the first time that she saw the complainant was on

February 4, 2013, when she “took care of him.”             Appellant brought the

complainant to her house so that she could watch him while appellant worked. On

that day, the complainant was “doing very well,” was eating well, and there was

nothing “out of the ordinary” regarding the way his arms and legs moved.

      Graciela next saw the complainant on February 6, 2013, when appellant

brought him to her house again so that appellant could work. Although Graciela

was supposed to watch the complainant only for a few hours, he and Lex, who

                                          4
came over to the Dickersons’ house that evening, ended up spending the night with

her because appellant had “troubles with his truck.” Graciela explained that the

complainant slept in a crib and she stayed in the same room with him, feeding him

“every two hours.” She noted that “he ate [and slept] very well.” The next day,

Graciela stayed at home with the complainant and “took care of [him].” When

appellant arrived “around” 8:00 or 8:30 p.m. to pick up Lex and the complainant,

the baby was “[v]ery well.”

      Graciela further explained that while the complainant stayed with her, he did

not “have any bruises or marks on his body.”        She noted that there was no

“accident” when she bathed the complainant and he did not “hit his head” on

anything. He was not “struck with anything” or “dropped.” The complainant did

not have trouble eating, and his bowel movements were normal. She did not

“notice anything abnormal or out of the ordinary” with the complainant; he was not

making any “weird jerking” movements. And he did not “get hurt in any way”

while she was watching him. However, on the morning of February 8, 2013, when

Graciela saw appellant walking with the complainant and Lex towards Lex’s

school, she heard the complainant crying.

      Angela Hansen, the counselor at Lex’s elementary school, testified that on

the morning of February 8, 2013, she came “into contact” with appellant, Lex, and

the complainant, as appellant was “drop[ping] Lex off” at the school. She noted

                                        5
that the complainant had “a lot of scratches on [his] eyes, on [his] face”; his lips

“were very dry, [and it] look[ed] like [he] had dirt around [his] mouth.” His skin

was “kind of yellow looking,” and he “had what appeared to be a bruise on the left

side of [his] face.”    Appellant told Hansen that he “didn’t know” how the

complainant “got the bruise,” but said “it was there when he had picked [him] up

from the [Dickersons].” It appeared that appellant was either “sleep depriv[ed]” or

possibly “high.” Hansen’s “interaction” with appellant and her “observations” of

the complainant caused her to be concerned, and after appellant left the school with

the complainant, she contacted law enforcement officials.

      Kathy Otte, a workroom aide at Lex’s elementary school, testified that when

she first saw the complainant about a week prior to February 8, 2013, he was

“[b]eautiful.” She next saw appellant and the complainant a few days later at a gas

station, and she could hear the complainant crying from inside appellant’s truck.

The next week, when she saw appellant and the complainant as appellant was

dropping Lex off at school, the complainant was “screaming and crying,” and he

appeared “[a]wful.” His diaper was “a real yellow mustard color” and his nose and

ears were dirty; however, she did not see any bruises.

      Otte, on February 8, 2013, saw appellant and the complainant in the office of

the school, and the complainant was “not right.” When she picked him up from his

stroller, the complainant “moved as if startled” and “sh[ook] a little bit.” His eyes

                                         6
were “glossy,” and he looked like he was “out of it” and “not coherent.” When

Otte noted that the complainant had a bruise on the side of his head, appellant told

her that the complainant had “rolled off the bed.”     As Otte held the complainant,

his eyes “rolled back in his head,” and he “kept doing [a] startling motion.” At that

time, Otte was concerned that something was “wrong with the [complainant].”

      Jenkins testified that she owns the property on which appellant, Lex, and the

complainant lived in a trailer and a store across the street from that property. In the

afternoon on February 8, 2013, appellant brought the complainant to her store and

said, “I can’t make the baby stop crying. I don’t know what’s wrong.” He

explained that the complainant might have been upset because he had fed the baby

with a different type formula.        Appellant, who appeared “concerned” and

“frustrated,” hoped that Jenkins could “help him get the baby to stop crying.”

According to Jenkins, “[h]e didn’t know what to do with [the complainant].”

When she held the complainant, she noted that he had bruises on both of his cheeks

near his mouth. And appellant told her that he did not know how the complainant

was bruised.

      Jenkins subsequently left appellant and the complainant at her store to go

purchase the correct formula for the complainant. Shortly after she returned to the

store, an “officer” and a “CPS worker” “showed up.” The “CPS worker” “looked

                                          7
at” the complainant and said that he was “seizing.” After a call for emergency

assistance, the complainant was taken to a hospital by an ambulance.

      Amber Dewalt, who was previously employed as an investigator for the

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, testified that on February 8,

2013, she was assigned to investigate the complainant’s case. When she arrived at

Jenkins’ store, Dewalt observed “bruising” on the complainant, “a scratch on his

lip about an inch long,” and that the areas “around his eyes were red.” As she held

the complainant, “his right arm and right leg started to jerk in unison,” which is not

“a normal movement for a newborn.” Dewalt opined that the complainant could

have had a “head injury,” noted that he needed to go to a hospital, and called for

emergency assistance.

      When emergency assistance personnel arrived, they placed the complainant

in the back of an ambulance and removed his clothes. At that time, Dewalt saw

that he had “[p]urple bruises” on his “shoulder area,” his breathing had “slowed,”

and he had “turned gray in color.”

      Dewalt explained that when she spoke to appellant before the arrival of the

ambulance, he did not “mention” that he had had “any problems with the baby”

during the previous night. Appellant did state that the complainant “was fussy

th[e] morning o[f] the 8th” and he had noticed the bruises on the complainant’s

face, but “didn’t know” how they had gotten there. He did not “mention anything

                                          8
about [the Dickersons] or [the] bruising being there when he picked up the

[complainant]” from their care.      At the hospital, Dewalt again spoke with

appellant, notifying him that there was “concern about how the [complainant’s]

injuries were inflicted.” After hearing about her concern, appellant told Dewalt

that he “didn’t cause” the complainant’s injuries.

      Patrick Brockman, a paramedic for Cypress Creek EMS, testified that on

February 8, 2013, he was dispatched to Jenkins’ store. After arriving at the store,

placing the complainant in the back of the ambulance, and removing his clothes,

Brockman saw that he had “bruising . . . underneath [his] armpits, [on] the right

side of [his] chest, underneath [his] earlobes, . . . underneath [his] eyes, [around

his] nose region, and [o]n the back of [his] neck.”       Brockman classified the

bruising as “[e]arly stage” and “abnormal,” explaining that the complainant

“should not have any bruising at all at []his age.” Brockman further noted that the

complainant’s body was “limp,” which indicated a “neurological issue,” and he

was “a bluish grayish color[],” indicating a “lack of oxygen.” On the ride to the

hospital, the complainant had “periods of abdominal respirations, which are

abnormal breathing patterns, characterized by gasps” and “shallow respirations.”

And Brockman described the complainant’s mental status as “very lethargic” and

“postictal.”

                                          9
      Dr. Cara Doughty, a Texas Children’s Hospital (“TCH”) pediatric

emergency room doctor, testified that on February 8, 2013, she “c[a]me into

contact” with the complainant in the hospital’s emergency room.             He was

“recognized as critically ill,” “in danger of dying,” and his “mental status was such

that he was really not able to breathe normally.” It was “immediately noticeable”

to Doughty that the complainant “was extremely pale and had multiple bruises on

his face and his shoulders and upper arms.”         She further explained that the

complainant had bruising on his neck, in his armpit, and across his upper chest and

face. Also, his eyelids were bruised and swollen, and he had an abrasion or scrape

on his bottom eyelid. Doughty noted that the complainant had a skull fracture on

the left side of his head, he suffered from subdural bleeding, and his entire brain

was swelling. And she saw the complainant having seizures, which would have

been caused by his brain injuries.

      Dr. Doughty further testified that the “combination” of the complainant’s

“mental status,” “bruising,” and “very pale state,” along with the results of a “CT

scan,” constituted “a constellation of symptoms that [were] most consistent with

trauma or abuse.” She opined that the complainant’s injuries were caused by blunt

force trauma and “[s]omeone else ha[d] to do this to [him].” He simply could not

have caused his injuries himself. Doughty also explained that the complainant’s

injuries “didn’t occur from everyday handling”—they required “significant direct

                                         10
force to [the] head.”     Moreover, the injuries were not consistent with the

complainant “being dropped one time to the floor,” “with rolling off a bed,” or

with hitting his head on the side of a sink while being bathed. Instead, “the force

that would have caused the[] [complainant’s] injuries would [have to] be greater

than necessary to handle [him] in day-to-day activities.”       “It would require

substantially more force” than changing the complainant’s diaper or feeding,

burping, or rocking the complainant.

      Dr. Marcella Donaruma, a child abuse pediatrician at TCH and an assistant

professor of pediatrics and the fellowship director for the child abuse pediatrics

program at Baylor College of Medicine, testified that child abuse pediatrics is a

recognized subspecialty in the medical community. She explained that “child

abuse pediatrics is a branch of pediatrics that is devoted to the assessment of

children who are suspected victims of child maltreatment in the form of physical

abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, or medical child abuse.”

      On March 28, 2013, Dr. Donaruma saw the complainant, personally

evaluated him, and reviewed the medical records related to his birth.          She

explained that Shows was in labor with the complainant for forty-three hours.

Upon his birth, he had “a sepsis workup” and was “tested for any infection”;

however, “[n]othing was found.”        Although the complainant was born with

“meconium,” or “stool,” in his mouth and “[h]is ability to breathe was not good,”

                                        11
he “perk[ed] up” within five minutes with resuscitation. He was admitted “for

observation” to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, where an ultrasound of his brain

revealed “[n]othing”; he was “fine.” Upon his release from the hospital, the

complainant was considered “a healthy infant,” and nothing about his birth or his

mother’s labor could have caused the injuries and the trauma he suffered on

February 8, 2013.

      Dr. Donaruma also consulted with the neurosurgeons who treated the

complainant on February 8, 2013 and reviewed his pertinent medical records. She

noted that the complainant, who was fifteen-days old at the time of injury, suffered

from “abusive head trauma,” “abusive skeletal trauma,” and “abusive cutaneous

trauma.” He had, on the left side of his head, a skull fracture that caused his brain

to swell and die “inside of [his] skull.” And Donaruma opined that the skull

fracture was the “result of blunt force trauma to his head. Either his head hitting

something very fast and hard, or something hitting his head very fast and hard.”

The injury was consistent with someone striking the complainant’s skull “with an

unknown object” or a hand with more force than “necessary to move [him] through

the course of daily activities.” The injury could not have been caused by “roll[ing]

[him] off [a] bed onto the ground,” “hit[ting] [him on] the side of [a] sink,” or

“drop[ping]” him three or four feet.          Donaruma further noted that the

                                         12
complainant’s injuries could not have been caused by a six-year old, like Lex,

because of the force required to inflict them.

      The complainant also suffered from a “scalp hematoma”—“a collection of

blood . . . over the area where the fracture disturbs the bloods vessels running

under the scalp.” Dr. Donaruma opined that the scalp hematoma was also caused

by “[b]lunt force trauma to [the complainant’s] head,” likely inflicted by “striking

an unknown object into the baby or striking the baby against an unknown object.”

And the same event likely caused both the skull fracture and the scalp hematoma.

      Dr. Donaruma also noted that, at the time of his treatment, the complainant’s

“whole brain was swelling and dying.” He had “two different types of bleeding

inside of his head that were fresh.         He had fresh blood on the subdural

space . . . [and] a subarachnoid hemorrhage.” The two types of bleeding could

have been caused by the same trauma “that broke the skull” or “a possible

whiplash sort of acceleration/deceleration activity that the head went through.”

The “whiplash injury . . . could have been caused by grabbing and shaking [the]

child.” The bleeding in the complainant’s head was located in several places—

“the left side of his head underneath the fracture,” “between the two hal[ves] of his

brain,” and “underneath the thinking part of the brain under the cortex and over the

cerebellum.”

                                          13
      The complainant had also suffered from several other injuries, including a

“cervical spine injury,” with “the upper most portion of his spine [dislocated] from

his head.” This injury was consistent “with grabbing and shaking a baby.” He also

had external and internal damage to his eye—his “retinas were full of

hemorrhage”—which was consistent with a “whiplash type of activity.”              The

complainant had a rib fracture, which was “indicative of forceful compression.”

And he had “facial bruising on both eyelids . . . concentrated along [the]

tarsal . . . plate,” “where the eyelashes come out,” his left jaw, in front of his left

ear, and inside of his left ear. The complainant also had bruising in his armpits and

on his shoulders, chest, arm, and neck area, which is often seen with “frustration

with feeding.”

      Dr. Donaruma described the complainant’s condition at the time he was

brought to the hospital on February 8, 2013 as critical and unstable. She noted that

without treatment, he would have died. And, “[g]iven the nature of his injuries

[and] the amount of fresh blood that was seen on his brain and the critical

condition that he was in upon being checked into the hospital at 5:06 p.m.,” the

complainant’s injuries were likely inflicted within the twelve hours prior to his

admission, sometime earlier on February 8, 2013. Donaruma, however, cautioned

that her timeframe estimate was “rough[].”

                                          14
       Finally, Dr. Donaruma opined that the complainant “will never function like

another child of the same age ever. He will be limited not only in his ability to

think . . . but he won’t understand human interaction.” For instance, “when you

smile at somebody and they smile back, that feels good. He won’t have that.” In

her opinion, the complainant was “a victim of physical abuse.” However, although

his injuries were not accidental, she could not say who in fact had caused his

injuries.

       Appellant testified that on the morning of February 4, 2013, he took the

complainant to the Dickersons’ house so that he could go to work. When he

returned in the afternoon to pick him up, the complainant “was a normal baby” and

“nothing was wrong with him.” And, on the morning of February 6, 2013, when

he again dropped the complainant off at the Dickersons’ home, he was “normal”

and “nothing was wrong with him.”

       Because appellant’s “truck broke down” later in the day on February 6,

2013, while he was working, he was not able to pick up the complainant that

evening. When he arrived at the Dickersons’ house at around 9:30 or 9:40 p.m. on

February 7, 2013 to pick up the complainant, the complainant was crying, but

appellant “didn’t think nothing was like wrong with [him] . . . other than the

scratches [he] s[aw] on his face.” The complainant “had a big scratch above his

lip,” which had not yet “scab[bed],” and another scratch under his eye. When

                                        15
appellant asked “how . . . [the complainant] g[o]t the[] scratches,” Dickerson told

him that he had scratched himself. Appellant did not see any bruises on the

complainant at that time.

      After he took the complainant home, appellant tried to feed him “a bit” and

then rocked him until he fell asleep.        Once asleep, appellant “put him in

[appellant’s] bed and went in[to] the living room” to find Lex. After putting Lex

to bed, appellant returned to his room and fell asleep. The complainant “woke

up . . . numerous times” during the night, and appellant rocked him, checked his

diaper, and fed him. Appellant last fed the complainant at approximately 5:45 or

6:00 a.m. He did not see any bruises on the complainant during the night. When

appellant awoke at approximately 8:45 or 9:00 a.m. on February 8, 2013, the

complainant was crying. Although the complainant “wasn’t his normal self” that

morning, appellant did not see any bruises on him.

      Appellant further testified that when he, along with the complainant, walked

Lex to school, Otte “and the other people that were there” asked appellant “how

the baby had got the scratches and what caused him to obtain the scratches.”

Appellant “told them that the baby had the scratch from the day before when[] [he

had] picked him up from . . . [the] Dickerson[s’] house.” Appellant had not yet

noticed any bruises on the complainant at the time they arrived at the school.

                                        16
However, while at the school, at “roughly 10:30 in the morning,” he first saw the

bruises on the complainant.

      After appellant left the school with the complainant, he became “concerned”

about the complainant’s “fussiness.” He “proceeded to head to [his] house,” where

he fed the complainant and rocked him to sleep. Later, while appellant was outside

working on his truck, he heard the complainant crying. Appellant then changed his

diaper and fed him again. A law enforcement officer then arrived at his house and

“looked over” the complainant. Appellant told the officer that the complainant

“had the scratches on his face the night before when [he] picked him up” from the

Dickersons’ home. The officer told appellant that he thought that “nothing was

wrong” with the complainant; however, the officer only examined the complainant

while he was clothed. After the officer left, appellant took the complainant to

Jenkins’ store because he did not know what was wrong with him, and appellant

thought that she could help.

      At the store, Jenkins “took [the complainant] from [appellant] and asked

[him] how the baby had got[ten] the little bruises on his face.” Appellant told her

“that’s how [the complainant] was the night before” and he “didn’t know how they

got there.” Jenkins then left her store to purchase formula for the complainant, and

upon her return, Dewalt from “CPS” arrived.        Dewalt told appellant that the

complainant needed medical attention because he was having seizures, and

                                        17
appellant “told her she should call 9-1-1 if [his] son was that seriously ill.” He,

however, while at Jenkins’ store, “didn’t really see anything different” about the

complainant that required serious medical intervention.

      Appellant further testified that when the complainant arrived at the hospital,

he was “screaming and crying” and it “wasn’t like a healthy baby scream.” At the

hospital, appellant told a law enforcement officer that when he picked up the

complainant from the Dickersons’ house, he had “scratches on his face,” but

appellant “didn’t believe there was anything else wrong with him.” Appellant also

told a nurse that the complainant had “scratches underneath his eye and above his

lip when [he] picked him up from the [Dickersons’] house.”

      Dr. Leo Hochhauser, an associate professor of radiology, specializing in the

field of neuroradiology at the University of Texas Medical School at Houston,

reviewed the complainant’s medical records and testified for appellant. The brain

imaging, taken on February 8, 2013, showed that the complainant had suffered

from “blunt trauma” to his brain, resulting in swelling and brain damage. Among

other injuries, the complainant had “a depressed skull fracture,” a subdural

hematoma, and subarachnoid hemorrhaging.           Hochhauser estimated that the

injuries were inflicted sometime between three to thirty-six hours prior to the

taking of the brain imaging on February 8, 2013. He opined that it was more likely

that the complainant’s injuries were “pretty, pretty recent” or “very recent” in time

                                         18
to the taking of the brain imagining, “like within [the previous] 12 or 24 hours.”

Further, if the complainant “was eating well throughout the night of . . . Thursday,

February 7th, going into Friday[,] February 8th,” it is likely that the trauma that

caused the complainant’s injuries did not occur until February 8, 2013.

      Dr. Hochhauser further opined that because there was no reported accident,

the complainant’s injuries were non-accidental. He noted that “a 15-day-old infant

[presenting] with retinal hemorrhaging, brain bleeding and swelling, a skull

fracture, possible rib fracture and other cutaneous trauma or bruising” “indicates

child abuse.”    Moreover, the “bleeding all over th[e] baby’s brain . . . [was]

consistent with grabbing and shaking [the] baby,” which could have occurred “at

the same time” as the complainant was “hit into an object.”

      Finally, appellant presented the testimony of John Laughlin, a forensic

engineer practicing in the areas or mechanical, biochemical, and neuro electrical

engineering. He “perform[ed] a biomechanical early childhood analysis of [the

complainant’s] injuries” and opined that “the cause of [the complainant’s] injuries

[was] a blow to the top of the head from a fall in which . . . he hit[] the

ground . . . head first.” Laughlin explained that, in regard to the force needed to

cause the complainant’s injuries, the complainant would have hit the ground

traveling at “8 miles an hour.”

                                        19
                                Standard of Review

      We review a trial court’s ruling on the admissibility of expert testimony for

an abuse of discretion. Lagrone v. State, 942 S.W.2d 602, 616 (Tex. Crim. App.

1997); Hernandez v. State, 53 S.W.3d 742, 750 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]

2001, pet. ref’d). We consider the trial court’s ruling in light of the evidence

presented at the time of its ruling, and we will uphold the ruling if it lies within the

zone of reasonable disagreement. See Weatherred v. State, 15 S.W.3d 540, 542

(Tex. Crim. App. 2000).        We cannot conclude that a trial court abused its

discretion merely because, under the same circumstances, we might have ruled

differently. See Hernandez, 53 S.W.3d at 750. Rather, we gauge an abuse of

discretion by whether the trial court acted without reference to any guiding rules or

principles. Id. Thus, a trial court enjoys wide latitude in determining whether

expert testimony is admissible. Id.

                                 Expert Testimony

      In his sole issue, appellant argues that because Dr. Donaruma’s conclusions

were based on an “unreliable methodology,” the trial court erred in allowing her to

testify as an expert “regarding the timing of the [complainant’s] injuries, the

amount of force . . . used to injure the complainant, and whether the complainant’s

injuries were caused intentionally or accidentally.”

                                          20
      “If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of

fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified

as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify

thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise.” TEX. R. EVID. 702, 61 TEX. B.J.

374, 392 (Tex. & Tex. Crim. App. 1998, amended 2015). 2 Before admitting expert

testimony, a trial court must determine that (1) the witness qualifies as an expert by

reason of his knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, (2) the subject

matter of the testimony is an appropriate one for expert testimony, and (3)

admitting the expert testimony will actually assist the fact-finder in deciding the

case. Rodgers v. State, 205 S.W.3d 525, 527 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006). Thus, the

trial court must determine that the expert is qualified to testify and the proffered

testimony is relevant and reliable. Vela v. State, 209 S.W.3d 128, 131 (Tex. Crim.

App. 2006). The proponent of the expert testimony bears the burden of showing

by clear and convincing evidence that the expert’s testimony is relevant and

reliable. State v. Smith, 335 S.W.3d 706, 711–12 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th

Dist.] 2011, pet ref’d).

       “‘[R]eliability depends upon whether the evidence has its basis in sound

scientific methodology,’” which “‘demands a certain technical showing.’” Vela,

2
      Effective April 1, 2015, the Texas Supreme Court has adopted amendments to the
      Texas Rules of Evidence. See 78 TEX. B.J. 42, 42 (Tex. 2015). The Amendments
      to rule 702 were stylistic in nature. Id.

                                          21
209 S.W.3d at 133 (alteration in original) (quoting Jordan v. State, 928 S.W.2d
550, 555 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996)). Such a showing allows a trial court to “‘weed

out testimony pertaining to so-called junk science.’” Id. (quoting Jordan, 928

S.W.2d at 555). “Thus, just because ‘junk science or otherwise inadequately tested

scientific theories might be shown to relate to the facts of a case,’ it will not always

have a sufficiently reliable basis.” Id. (quoting Jordan, 928 S.W.2d at 555). If a

court determines that underlying facts or data do not provide a sufficient basis for

an expert’s opinion, the opinion is inadmissible. TEX. R. EVID. 705(c); Vela, 209
S.W.3d at 133.

      Appellant asserts that Dr. Donaruma’s conclusions, “in regard[] to the time

frame of [the complainant’s] injuries” and “the amount of force used to inflict [the

complainant’s]    injuries,” “do[]   not   rely   on    established   principles    and

methodology” in the “medical field of determining the age of blood” or in the

“medical or biomechanical engineering fields.”             He also challenges the

methodology used to support Donaruma’s conclusion that the complainant’s

“injuries were caused by intentional physical abuse.”

      We need not decide whether the trial court erred in admitting Dr.

Donaruma’s testimony on these issues because, even were we to conclude that the

trial court erred in admitting the evidence, appellant has not shown that he was

harmed by the testimony.       See Ex parte Henderson, 384 S.W.3d 833, 860–61

                                           22
(Tex. Crim. App. 2012) (relief may not be granted unless “the admission of

unreliable testimony was harmful”).

      The erroneous admission of evidence constitutes nonconstitutional error.

Coble v. State, 330 S.W.3d 253, 280 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010); Solomon v. State, 49
S.W.3d 356, 365 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001).           Non-constitutional error requires

reversal only if it affects the substantial rights of the accused. See TEX. R. APP. P.

44.2(b); Barshaw v. State, 342 S.W.3d 91, 93 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).                A

substantial right is affected when the error had a substantial and injurious effect or

influence in determining the jury’s verdict. King v. State, 953 S.W.2d 266, 271

(Tex. Crim. App. 1997). We will not overturn a criminal conviction for non-

constitutional error if, after examining the record, we have fair assurance that the

error did not influence the jury, or had but a slight effect. Barshaw, 342 S.W.3d at

93.

      We review the entire record to ascertain the effect or influence on the verdict

of the wrongfully admitted evidence. Id. In assessing the likelihood that the jury’s

decision was improperly influenced, we consider the record as a whole, including

testimony and physical evidence, the nature of the evidence supporting the verdict,

and the character of the alleged error and how it might be considered in connection

with other evidence in case. Id. at 94; see also Motilla v. State, 78 S.W.3d 352,

355–56 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002). Error in the admission of evidence may be

                                         23
rendered harmless when substantially the same evidence is admitted elsewhere

without objection. See Leday v. State, 983 S.W.2d 713, 717–18 (Tex. Crim. App.

1998); Anderson v. State, 717 S.W.2d 622, 627–68 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986).

      Appellant argues that he was harmed by Dr. Donaruma’s testimony because

the entire case against him was based on circumstantial evidence and he, at trial,

established that the complainant’s injuries could have had other possible causes,

which “had the potential to create a reasonable doubt.”            Further, “the two

unreliable conclusions that . . . Donaruma reached regarding the amount of force

used and the timing of [the complainant’s] injur[ies] were used by the State to

pinpoint . . . [a]ppellant as the only potential source of [the complainant’s]

injuries.” The State asserts that “[a]ppellant was not harmed by [the admission of

Donaruma’s testimony] . . . because substantially similar testimony was admitted

through . . . other [witnesses] without objection by appellant.”

      As noted above, Dr. Donaruma testified that, “[g]iven the nature of [the

complainant’s] injuries [and] the amount of fresh blood that was seen on his brain

and the critical condition that he was in upon being checked into the hospital at

5:06 p.m.” on February 8, 2013, the complainant’s injuries were likely inflicted

within twelve hours prior to his admission. In other words, it was likely that the

complainant’s injuries were inflicted “sometime on February 8, 2013.” However,

Donaruma also explained that her timeframe estimate was “rough[].”

                                         24
      In regard to the amount of force required to cause the complainant’s injuries,

Dr. Donaruma testified that “the type of force that [was] require[d] to result in th[e]

type of damage [sustained by the complainant was] more than necessary to move a

child through the course of daily activities.” Donaruma also described the force

needed to bruise a fifteen-day-old baby’s neck as “excessive” and stated that the

complainant’s “whiplash injury” required “a forceful and violent acceleration and

deceleration.” According to Donaruma, “a 6-year-old [could not] have caused [the

complainant’s] injuries” because he “would not have the strength and coordination

to sustain th[e] kind of force” necessary.

      As to the cause of the complainant’s injuries, Dr. Donaruma testified that the

injuries were not accidental but the “result of blunt force trauma to [the] head,”

such as the complainant’s “head hitting something very fast and hard, or something

hitting [the complainant’s] head very fast and hard.” According to Donaruma, the

complainant’s injuries were consistent with someone striking the complainant’s

skull “with an unknown object” or a hand. Donaruma also explained that some of

the complainant’s injuries could have been the result of a “whiplash injury,”

“caused by grabbing and shaking” the complainant.               In her opinion, the

complainant was “a victim of physical abuse” and “child abuse.” And nothing

about the complainant’s birth or his mother’s labor caused the injuries and trauma

that he suffered on February 8, 2013.

                                             25
      Notably, our review of the record reveals that Dr. Donaruma was not the

only witness to testify to these conclusions at trial. For instance, Dr. Hochhauser,

one of appellant’s expert witnesses, testified, without objection, that the

complainant’s injuries could have occurred anytime within “three hours to . . . 36

hours” of the taking of his brain imagining at the hospital. He also described the

complainant’s injuries as “pretty, pretty recent.” And when asked what “time

frame” he “put on [the complainant’s] injuries from the time of [his brain

imaging]” at the hospital, Hochhauser opined that the injuries were “very recent”

and likely occurred “within [the preceding] 12 or 24 hours.”                  At “most,”

Hochhauser stated that he “would go back . . . 36 hours” but he qualified this

opinion, noting that the complainant’s injuries “seem[ed] rather recent.” And,

when asked if he would have expected the trauma to have occurred on February 8,

2013 “if somebody [had] reported to the hospital that the [the complainant] was

eating well throughout the night of . . . Thursday, February 7th, going into

Friday[,] February 8th,” Hochhauser agreed. 3

      Dr. Hochhauser also testified that the complainant sustained injuries due to a

“blunt force trauma,” and he opined that the complainant’s injuries were not

3
      We note that the complainant’s medical records, which were admitted into
      evidence at trial, without objection, place the time of the complainant’s injuries as
      February 8, 2013. See Duncan v. State, 95 S.W.3d 669, 671–72 (Tex. App.—
      Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, pet. ref’d) (improper admission of testimony harmless
      because similar testimony admitted through complainant, pediatrician, and
      medical records).

                                           26
accidental.   According to Hochhauser, “a 15-day-old infant with retinal

hemorrhaging, brain bleeding and swelling, a skull fracture, possible rib fracture

and other cutaneous trauma or bruising” “indicates child abuse.”               And the

“bleeding all over th[e] [complainant’s] brain . . . [was] consistent with [someone]

grabbing and shaking [the] baby,” which could have occurred “at the same time”

as the complainant was “hit into an object.”

      In regard to the amount of force necessary to cause the complainant’s

injuries, Dr. Doughty, the emergency room doctor who treated the complainant,

testified, without objection, that his injuries “didn’t occur from everyday

handling,” and they required “significant direct force to [the complainant’s] head.”

Doughty also explained that “the force that would have caused the[] injuries would

be greater than necessary to handle [the complainant] in day-to-day activities.”

And “[i]t would require substantially more force” than necessary to change the

complainant’s diaper or feed, burp, or rock the complainant. 4

      As to the cause of the complainant’s injuries, Dr. Doughty explained that the

“constellation of [the complainant’s] symptoms . . . [were] most consistent with

trauma or abuse.” And she opined that the complainant’s injuries were caused by

4
      Further, even though Laughlin, appellant’s own forensics expert, opined that the
      complainant’s injuries resulted from a fall, rather than a blunt force trauma, he
      also testified, without objection, that “a very good rate” of force was required to
      cause the complainant’s injuries. Specifically, Laughlin testified that the
      complainant would have been traveling at “8 miles an hour” when he hit the
      ground in order to sustain his injuries.

                                          27
“blunt trauma” and “shaking,” and “[s]omeone else ha[d] to do this” to the

complainant.     According to Doughty, the complainant’s injuries were not

“accidental”; for instance, they were not the result of “an accidental single fall” or

caused by “accidental mishandling.” Instead, “there could [have] be[en] kind of a

combination of a shaking force as well as an impact where the head . . . hit[]

something, hit[] a surface.” Further, Doughty explained that “[t]here is no way”

that the complainant’s injuries were sustained during his birth. 5

      It has long been the rule that any error in the admission of evidence is

harmless where other evidence that is substantially similar was admitted without

objection, either before or after the complained-of ruling, regardless of whether the

other evidence was introduced by the defendant or the State. See Leday, 983
S.W.2d at 717–18; Anderson, 717 S.W.2d at 627–28; Johnson v. State, 425 S.W.3d
344, 346 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2011, pet. ref’d). Here, other witnesses,

without any objection from appellant, proffered the same or substantially similar

opinions as those of Dr. Donaruma about the timing of the complainant’s injuries,

the amount of force needed to cause the complainant’s injuries, and the intentional,

5
      We also note that Dr. Curtis Kennedy, a TCH pediatric intensive care physician,
      who testified for appellant, stated, without objection, that the complainant’s
      injuries were “consistent with” “a physical beating, a violent beating.” And the
      written “Physician’s Statement,” admitted into evidence, without objection, states
      that the complainant’s condition was consistent with abuse and his injuries were
      caused by a “significant and direct force to his head.” See Duncan, 95 S.W.3d at
      671–72 (improper admission of testimony harmless because similar testimony
      admitted through complainant, pediatrician, and medical records).

                                          28
rather than accidental, nature of the complainant’s injuries. Accordingly, we hold

that any error of the trial court in admitting the complained-of portions of

Donaruma’s expert testimony was harmless.

      We overrule appellant’s sole issue.

                           Modification of Judgment

      We note that the trial court’s written judgment does not accurately comport

with the record in this case in that the judgment reflects that appellant pleaded

“[t]rue” to the allegation in an enhancement paragraph that he had previously been

convicted of a felony offense. The record reflects that appellant pleaded “[n]ot

true” to the allegation. Further, the judgment erroneously reflects that appellant

“knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived the right to representation by

counsel in writing in open court.” In fact, the record reflects that he actually

“appeared in person with [c]ounsel.”

      “[A]ppellate court[s] ha[ve] the power to correct and reform a trial court

judgment ‘to make the record speak the truth when [they] ha[ve] the necessary data

and information to do so, or make any appropriate order as the law and nature of

the case may require.’” Nolan v. State, 39 S.W.3d 697, 698 (Tex. App.—Houston

[1st Dist.] 2001, no pet.) (quoting Asberry v. State, 813 S.W.2d 526, 529 (Tex.

App.—Dallas 1991, pet. ref’d)).        Although neither party has addressed the

inconsistencies between the trial court’s written judgment and the record, we,

                                         29
based on our review, conclude that portions of the judgment do not accurately

comport with the record. See Asberry, 813 S.W.2d at 529–30 (authority to correct

incorrect judgment not dependent upon request of party).

      Accordingly, we modify the trial court’s judgment to state that appellant

pleaded “not true” to the allegation in the enhancement paragraph. See Torres v.

State, 391 S.W.3d 179, 185 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, pet. ref’d)

(modifying judgment to state defendant pleaded “true” to allegations in

enhancement paragraphs); see also TEX. R. APP. P. 43.2(b). We further modify the

judgment to uncheck the box next to the statement that reads, “Defendant

knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived the right to representation by

counsel in writing in open court,” and check the box next to the statement that

reads, “Defendant appeared in person with Counsel.” See Haynes v. State, No. 01-

09-00380-CR, 2010 WL 5250881, at *7 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Dec. 9,

2010, pet. ref’d) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (reforming judgment,

which incorrectly stated “Defendant appeared in person with Counsel” rather than

“Defendant knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived the right” to counsel

(internal quotations omitted)); see also TEX. R. APP. P. 43.2(b).

                                         30
                                   Conclusion

      We affirm the judgment of the trial court as modified.

                                             Terry Jennings
                                             Justice

Panel consists of Justices Jennings, Bland, and Brown.

Do not publish. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b).

                                        31