Court Opinion

ID: 4396681
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-05-14 22:50:16.913079+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:52:11.321039
License: Public Domain

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed May 14, 2019.

                                        In The

                     Fourteenth Court of Appeals

                                NO. 14-18-00206-CR

                      CHARLES RAY IRVING, Appellant
                                          V.
                        THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                    On Appeal from the 174th District Court
                            Harris County, Texas
                        Trial Court Cause No. 1464143

                           MEMORANDUM OPINION

      In this appeal from a conviction for continuous sexual abuse of a child, the
sole question presented is whether the trial court abused its discretion when it
admitted certain testimony about a note that was never produced into evidence.

      The note was allegedly written by the complainant, a ten-year-old boy, and it
came to the attention of one of his teachers at school. When the teacher later testified
at appellant’s trial, the following exchange occurred during the prosecutor’s direct
examination:
Q.   Okay. All right. I want to direct your attention to February of
     2014. Do you remember an incident concerning a note [the
     complainant] had made?
A.   Yes. There was a note that was that he wrote—
     DEFENSE: Your Honor, may we approach?
     COURT:       You may. Do you want this on the record?
     DEFENSE: Yes, on the record. I had to ask her a quick question.
     COURT:       All right. We’re on the record.
     DEFENSE: Since they don’t have the note, I have not been privy
              to review the note. [The teacher] doesn’t have the
              note. Anything he testifies about that should be
              inadmissible. It’s hearsay. I have not seen it. I don’t
              know what it is. And I think beyond the question—
     COURT:       Do you intend to ask him what the note said?
     STATE:       No. I actually intend to ask him about his reaction
                  to the note because—
     COURT:       All right. You can proceed in that fashion.
     STATE:       Okay.
     DEFENSE: All right.
Q.   All right, [teacher]. Just to be clear before the jury, this note
     we’re referring to, you don’t have a copy of that note?
A.   No.
Q.   And you’ve never provided me a copy of that note?
A.   No, ma’am.
Q.   Okay. And, in fact, we have talked with the principal—
A.   Yes.
Q.   —at your school and she’s indicated that she’s even looked and
     cannot find this note, correct?
A.   Yes.
Q.   So we won’t get into what exactly what was written on the note,
     but based on your—

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               DEFENSE: Your Honor, I’m going to still renew my objection
                        on this because we don’t know what was contained
                        in that note. And anything—
               COURT:         What is the objection?
               DEFENSE: That it’s all hearsay, Your Honor, because
                        whatever—he can make up whatever he wants to in
                        that note and be extremely prejudicial—
               COURT:         No question has yet been asked what is in the note.
                              If that question is asked, then the objection is
                              sustained. But that question hasn’t been asked.
               DEFENSE: But, your Honor, I’m renewing my objection
                        because I don’t know what’s in the note. I have no
                        idea what to, you know, ask him about it because I
                        have never seen the note and the State has never
                        seen the note.1
               COURT:         What is the specific objection, the legal objection?
               DEFENSE: Irrelevant.
               COURT:         It’s overruled. You may proceed.
               STATE:         Thank you, Your Honor.
       Q.      All right. So again, we don’t have the note, not talking about
               what exactly was on the note, but what was your response to the
               note? What concerns did you have for [the complainant] based
               on that note?
       A.      Okay. Another teacher, which was in ancillary, saw the note first.
               And then she brought it to my attention. And then immediately
               when I saw it, I said, you know what, we need to take it to the
               principal. And we took it to the principal right away. And then
               us—the three of us agreed that hey, there’s something wrong
               with the way this picture looks. In other words, it demonstrated—
       Q.      We can’t get into what exactly is on it, but—

       1
        The court reporter identified this speaker as the prosecutor, but based on the context, the
speaker must be defense counsel.

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      A.     It was obvious to us that something was wrong. We immediately
             called Children’s Protective Services. We followed through with
             the process.
             DEFENSE: I’m renewing my objection, Your Honor. It’s
                      prejudicial and outweighs any probative value. I
                      have not seen this note. We don’t know what it is.
             COURT:       The objection is overruled. Do you have anything
                          else of this witness?
             STATE:       Very briefly, Your Honor.
      Q.     So after conferencing with the other teacher and principal, you
             said you contacted CPS. So is it fair to say that this note gave you
             concern about something possibly going on with [the
             complainant] that needed to be addressed?
      A.     Yes. It gave us—it gave us a red light, a flag, we would say hey—
             DEFENSE: Again, Your Honor, I renew my objection.
             COURT:       The objection is sustained to that response and that
                          question. You may ask your next.
      Q.     And so what happened next?
      A.     The next thing, we called CPS, we informed them, we informed
             the grandmother as well, and we did due process in a situation
             like that. We got him to see, I believe, a counselor or social
             worker. And we did the best that we can with the situation, we
             worked with him, and that’s what we did from there.
      Q.     All right. And earlier the jury heard from [the complainant’s]
             grandmother. After you conferenced with the principal, the
             teachers, and CPS was called in, to your knowledge, was [the
             grandmother] brought in on the concerns that you had at the
             school?
      A.     As far as I know, the principal took over from thereon because
             she communicated with the grandmother.
             STATE:       Pass the witness, Your Honor.
      Based on this passage, appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion
because it allowed the teacher to testify about inadmissible hearsay. This argument
fails because no hearsay was admitted at all.
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      Hearsay is an out-of-court statement that is offered into evidence for the truth
of the matter asserted. See Tex. R. Evid. 801(d). There were no such statements in
this case because the teacher never testified about the contents of the note. Instead,
the teacher testified about the effect of the note, explaining that the note was so
alarming to him that he reported it to the principal and to CPS. That testimony does
not amount to hearsay. See Dinkins v. State, 894 S.W.2d 330, 347 (Tex. Crim. App.
1995) (documents were not hearsay because they were offered to show how the
defendant became a suspect in the investigation).

      Appellant argues that the opposite conclusion is required by Sandoval v. State,
409 S.W.3d 259 (Tex. App.—Austin 2013, no pet.), but the facts of that case are
remarkably different. The witness there testified about the substance of the victim’s
written statements, which provided “a complete account” of the offense with
“specific details.” Id. at 283. By contrast, the teacher here did not testify about the
substance of the complainant’s note, nor did the teacher provide any details about
the charged offense.

      Appellant also complains that the teacher testified about “backdoor hearsay”
when he said that “there’s something wrong with the way this picture looks” and “it
was obvious to us that something was wrong.”

      Backdoor hearsay refers to an artful method of question and answer that “does
not produce hearsay in the classic or textbook sense,” but that nevertheless violates
the hearsay rule because it creates “an inescapable conclusion that a piece of
evidence is being offered to prove statements made outside the courtroom.” See
Schaffer v. State, 777 S.W.2d 111, 113–14 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989). The test for
backdoor hearsay “necessarily turns on how strongly the content of the out-of-court
statement can be inferred from the context.” See Head v. State, 4 S.W.3d 258, 261
(Tex. Crim. App. 1999). When the context is “ambiguous” and there is no

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“inescapable conclusion” about the content of the out-of-court statement, the trial
court has the discretion to admit the disputed testimony. Id. at 262.

      Appellant argues that the teacher’s testimony qualifies as backdoor hearsay
because it “caused the jury to believe that [the complainant] had drawn something
on paper or written something on paper that showed that Appellant had indeed
committed the crimes alleged in the indictment.” But the context did not require that
conclusion. The note may have described physical abuse (which was not alleged in
the indictment), instead of sexual abuse (which was).

      Even if the note had described sexual abuse, there was nothing from the
context that identified any specific details of the sexual abuse, which had taken
various forms in this case. For example, by the time the teacher had testified, the
evidence established that appellant had touched the complainant’s penis, that
appellant had put his own penis in the complainant’s mouth, and that appellant had
ejaculated into the complainant’s mouth, among other illicit acts. There was no
indication which, if any, of these acts were revealed in the complainant’s note. Nor
was there any indication that the complainant presented his note in the form of a
drawing or a written statement, or perhaps even a combination of both. Because no
inescapable conclusion could be reached as to the contents of the note, the trial court
could have reasonably determined that the prosecutor’s questions did not call for
backdoor hearsay, and that the teacher could therefore testify about his reactions to
the note. Id. (holding that testimony did not violate the rule against backdoor hearsay
because the testimony did not reveal the substance of the out-of-court statements).

      In one final and related complaint, appellant argues that the teacher’s
testimony about a “red flag” amounted to backdoor hearsay. But the trial court
sustained appellant’s objection to this testimony, and appellant did not ask for any

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additional relief. Accordingly, no error has been shown. See Weedon v. State, 501
S.W.2d 336, 338 (Tex. Crim. App. 1973).

      The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

                                      /s/       Tracy Christopher
                                                Justice

Panel consists of Justices Christopher, Hassan, and Poissant.
Do Not Publish — Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b).

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