AFFIRMED as Modified; Opinion Filed June 30, 2014.
Court of Appeals
S In The
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-12-01703-CR
No. 05-12-01704-CR
JOHN ARTHUR RUIZ, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 1
Dallas County, Texas
Trial Court Cause Nos. F11-31859-H and F11-31315-H
OPINION
Before Justices Lang-Miers, Myers, and Lewis
Opinion by Justice Myers
A jury convicted John Arthur Ruiz of aggravated sexual assault of a child under the age
of fourteen 1 and continuous sexual abuse of a child under the age of fourteen. 2 The trial court
subsequently assessed an agreed punishment of five years in the Texas Department of Criminal
Justice, Institutional Division, for aggravated sexual assault of a child, and thirty-five years’
imprisonment for continuous sexual abuse of a child. In three issues, appellant argues the
evidence is insufficient to support the convictions and that the evidence does not support the trial
court’s order in each case for Ruiz to pay court costs. As modified, we affirm the trial court’s
judgments.
1
Appellate court cause number 05-12-01703-CR (trial court cause number F11-31859-H).
2
Appellate court cause number 05-12-01704-CR (trial court cause number F11-31315-H).
BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
V.R., born March 18, 1997, is appellant’s biological daughter. Fifteen years old at the
time of trial, she testified that she had once lived at the Fox Hollow Apartments in Grand Prairie
with her older half-sister S.P., her mother, and appellant. V.R. testified that appellant started
abusing her when she “was probably nine years old” and continued until she was approximately
twelve years of age, and that he did so at first by touching her vagina and breasts over her clothes
with his hand. She was shocked when appellant did that but feared “what would happen to me or
what would happen to my family if I didn’t do it his way. . . .”
V.R. testified that this abuse usually took place in the front room of the apartment.
Appellant would sit next to her on the sofa while V.R. was watching television and begin
touching her. V.R.’s mother was out of the house when this took place because she was caring
for her parents, and S.P., who had a boyfriend and a child of her own by that point, was also not
at home. V.R. testified that S.P. “was doing her own thing” because she knew “how [appellant]
was” and “didn’t want to be around that no more.”
When V.R. was around ten years old, the abuse started to escalate. Appellant sat next to
her on the sofa and touched her vagina and breasts over her clothes, then removed her shirt and
unbuckled her pants and put his fingers inside her vagina. After that, he took off his pants, put
his penis in her vagina, and he had sexual intercourse with her. V.R. did not say anything to
appellant when he was abusing her because she was in shock and “was so scared.” V.R.
recalled: “It hurt. I just wanted to just cry, and cry all day, but I––I didn’t want to because I
was scared to do that.” Although she tried to “block things out” of her memory, V.R. estimated
she and appellant had sex “[p]robably like” nineteen or twenty times “at least,” and that appellant
put his hand or finger in her vagina “[p]robably” seventeen times. She added that she was “just
estimating a guess, but I know it’s not less a number.” The prosecutor asked, “A lot of times,
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though?”, to which V.R. responded by nodding her head. The incidents typically occurred in the
afternoons, after V.R. returned home from school. On one occasion, appellant went into V.R.’s
bedroom, unzipped his pants, and made her put his penis in her mouth. When appellant
ejaculated, the sperm landed on V.R.’s dresser.
V.R. testified that the abuse stopped when she was sent to Timberlawn Hospital
following a suicide attempt, when she was approximately twelve years of age. She explained
that this first suicide attempt––she testified that she “[p]robably” tried to kill herself twenty-two
times––involved taking pills, and that she felt lost, abandoned, and without hope. She added that
she did not believe she could tell anyone about the abuse she was suffering because she “didn’t
know how to tell somebody,” and feared people either would not believe her or judge her if she
told them what happened. While at Timberlawn, V.R. eventually developed a rapport with her
therapist, Timothy Johnathan Johnson, who was the first person she told about the abuse. After
V.R. outcried, Johnson called V.R.’s mother and relayed what V.R. had told him. V.R. testified
that she was then approximately thirteen years of age. V.R. and her mother contacted the police.
When recalled by the defense, V.R. testified she did not remember writing a letter
referenced in December 10, 2009 therapy notes from Timberlawn. V.R. did not recall telling her
therapist that “she wrote that letter because her father made him [sic] angry & wanted to get back
at him.” The defense also asked V.R. about therapy notes from December 14, 2009, which
indicated V.R. felt “sad because her [father] told her last summer that he wasn’t her father,” and
that she felt he had “chosen his girlfriend over her.” 3 V.R. admitted this statement was true, but
testified on cross-examination she still loved her father because he was her “flesh and blood.”
V.R.’s half-sister, S.P., born June 22, 1990, was twenty-two years old when she testified
at appellant’s trial. She testified that her mother, M.P. (the two girls have the same mother),
3
The therapy notes are part of V.R.’s medical records from Timberlawn, which were admitted at trial.
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began dating appellant when S.P. was about four years old. At that point, S.P.’s relationship
with appellant was good. But their relationship began to change when S.P. was approximately
eight years old. One day, while M.P. was at her parents’ house, appellant started to make S.P.
touch him over his clothing. Appellant made it seem like a game, grabbing S.P.’s hand and
putting it over his clothes––on his penis. S.P. testified that this sort of behavior occurred more
times than she could count, and that it went on for “probably about two, three years.” S.P.
testified that appellant threatened he “would, you know, kill us, he would take us away from my
mother, you know, or he would do something to my mother that we wouldn’t see her again.”
S.P. testified that the abuse escalated when she was in the fourth or fifth grade, and about
nine or ten years old. Appellant would put his fingers inside her pants, then inside her vagina.
Appellant would also unzip his pants, pull out his penis, and make S.P. touch it. S.P. testified
that appellant “would make sure that I was always right next to him” as they were watching
television, and that “[h]e wouldn’t let me leave his side.” If S.P. wanted to leave the apartment
she would first have to do “[s]omething sexual, or [appellant] would get mad and like question
me on why I was leaving and who was I leaving with . . . .”
S.P. testified appellant had sexual intercourse with her for the first time in her mother’s
bedroom when S.P. was approximately nine or ten years old, while M.P. was not at home. S.P.
could not recall how it started, but she remembered lying on her mother’s bed with her clothes
removed. She recollected appellant laying on top of her and that “after he was done,” she went
to the restroom and was bleeding from her vagina, and that she “was like scared I was going to
die.” She also recalled that there was “white stuff” on her stomach. Appellant told S.P. to go to
the bathroom and “clean up.” Asked how many times appellant had sexual intercourse with her,
S.P. replied: “More than what I could count. It went on for years.” She testified that the vaginal
intercourse hurt at first, but “then it happened for so many years for so long, I got used to it.”
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S.P. also testified that the abuse usually occurred in her mother’s room, but also in her room or
her sister’s bedroom.
S.P. recalled an occasion when V.R. and appellant’s two sons (who were visiting for the
summer) were at the apartment. While appellant’s two sons were in the living room playing,
appellant took S.P. into her bedroom, rubbed Vaseline on his penis, and had anal intercourse
with her. S.P. recalled that she was nine or ten years old when this happened. Appellant leaned
S.P.’s body against her bedroom door because the door did not lock. She testified that the anal
intercourse “was even scarier” than the vaginal intercourse “because it . . . hurt so bad.” Asked
how many times appellant forced her to engage in anal intercourse, S.P. replied, “Countless
times.”
S.P. testified that appellant “performed oral” on her a number of times––putting “his
mouth on my vagina” and moving “his tongue up and down.” Appellant forced S.P. to perform
oral sex on him “[c]ountless times.” S.P. also recalled an occasion when appellant became angry
with her over the way she had prepared his food––he preferred to eat ham with jalapenos and the
jalapenos had to be sliced “exactly the way he wanted it”––and put his fingers in her vagina with
jalapeno juice on them. S.P. testified that she screamed when appellant did that because “[i]t
burned.”
The abuse continued until S.P. was about fourteen years old. S.P. did not remember the
last time appellant abused her, but she knew when it stopped. She testified: “My best friend
moved into the apartments, and she was my angel. She saved me, because I made sure she was
with me all the time.” S.P. never told her half-sister about the abuse while it was occurring
because S.P. thought V.R. was too young to understand what was going on, and S.P. did not
believe appellant would abuse V.R., his biological daughter.
S.P. learned appellant had been abusing V.R. following one of her half-sister’s suicide
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attempts, during a meeting with Johnathan and V.R. at Timberlawn. S.P. had known that V.R.
attempted suicide several times and was hospitalized, but never knew why. S.P. testified that the
discovery appellant had been abusing V.R. “ripped my heart apart.” She felt guilty for not
reporting the abuse because she thought it might have prevented appellant from abusing V.R.
Asked why she decided to finally come forward, S.P. testified:
Because I started getting flashbacks. I never said nothing. I had dealt with it so
many years my own way because it was something so horrible that I did not want
it to affect my life. I had wanted to put it past me. I did not want nothing to do
with it. And I knew that I had to do this for my sister.
S.P. was voluntarily committed to Timerberlawn on February 20, 2012, after she started hearing
voices that told her she was a “bad person” because she did not “stand up for myself.” S.P. was
on Trazadone at the time of trial for Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome, or PTSD, and Zoloft for
depression. She denied that she suffered from hallucinations or delusions.
M.P., the mother of V.R. and S.P., testified that she and appellant lived together for
“about 12 years or so,” and that they never married. S.P. was five years old when M.P. met
appellant; V.R. was born during the relationship and is appellant’s biological daughter. The
relationship between appellant and M.P. was volatile, and they argued frequently. M.P.
explained that “[a] lot of it was control, control issues, and I didn’t want to be controlled and we
bumped heads with that.” When V.R. was very young, M.P. would occasionally leave her alone
with appellant while she was away caring for her parents. M.P. testified that V.R. was a happy,
friendly child with many friends when she was young, but experienced a drastic change in
behavior when she was nine or ten years old. V.R. was not going to school. She stopped
socializing. She no longer had friends. S.P. went through a similar change in behavior as she
grew older.
M.P. testified that V.R.’s first attempted suicide occurred when the child was ten or
eleven years old––V.R. swallowed a bottle of pills. M.P. brought V.R. to Arlington Memorial
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Hospital, after which she was transferred to Children’s Hospital, and then to Timberlawn. V.R.
was on her fourth visit to Timberlawn––she was hospitalized there nine times––when M.P. found
out about the abuse. M.P. testified that she had been called to a meeting at the hospital with V.R.
and her therapist, Timothy Johnathan Johnson. Expecting a routine consultation about her
daughter’s treatment, M.P. was shocked to learn that V.R.––who was shaking and crying and
reluctant to talk about what happened––had previously made an outcry about sexual abuse
committed by appellant. Shortly after that meeting, M.P. drove V.R. to the police station, where
they spoke to Dallas police detective Christy Martinez.
During a subsequent meeting at Timberlawn with Johnson, at which both of her
daughters were present, M.P. learned S.P. also had been sexually abused by appellant. M.P.
testified, however, that S.P.’s abuse was not immediately reported to the police because she was
afraid. M.P. also noted S.P. was twenty years old when she made her outcry. Eventually, M.P.
persuaded S.P. to talk to the police following a pretrial hearing in V.R.’s case. When S.P. went
to the police, she met with Dallas police detective Aaron Martinez.
M.P. testified that S.P. was very quiet prior to making the outcry, but afterwards her
demeanor changed and “[s]he was more angry, more mad,” and had “flashbacks, nightmares.”
She was hospitalized at Timberlawn for anxiety, depression, and for trying to hurt herself and her
son. M.P. believed both of her daughters suffered from PTSD.
M.P. testified on cross-examination that she initially believed V.R.’s depression and not
wanting to go to school were caused by the child’s kidney problems. V.R. suffered from severe
kidney problems and was, at one point, visiting the hospital emergency room three times a week
because of those ailments. V.R. was homeschooled in the sixth, seventh, and eighth grades in
part because she did not want to go to school. M.P. also testified that V.R. had a problem with
wetting the bed. M.P. denied her daughters suffered from “audio-visual hallucinations.”
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Timothy Johnathan Johnson, V.R.’s mental health therapist and the program director at
Timberlawn Mental Health Systems, has a master’s degree in social work and is a licensed
mental health therapist. He testified that V.R. was referred to him at Timberlawn’s DeSoto
location from the hospital’s main campus in April 2010, following three previous inpatient
hospitalizations at Timberlawn for suicide attempts. V.R. was originally referred to Timberlawn
under the belief she was attempting suicide because of her ongoing medical condition––V.R.
suffered from kidney failure and was awaiting a kidney transplant. Johnson gradually developed
a rapport with V.R. On the day she was discharged, April 16, 2010, V.R. made an outcry of
sexual abuse. Johnson testified that he attempted to extend her stay, but V.R. was not allowed to
stay longer at the hospital “because she had maximized her time at that particular point.” V.R.
returned to the hospital on an outpatient basis in May, approximately one month later, and during
that treatment V.R. “repeated the exact same thing she stated on the last day of her previous
stay.” Johnson reported V.R.’s outcry to CPS.
Johnson testified that V.R. was diagnosed with PTSD and “major depression.” He
explained that V.R. was having flashbacks about what happened, not hallucinating, and that
“because of the prolonged trauma that she endured, she did begin to suffer flashbacks as a result
of the trauma.” He added that in a flashback the person is seeing something that is not
necessarily there, but “it’s something that did happen to you, and you’re basically reliving it in
your mind over and over.” People sometimes “will use the term auditory/visual hallucinations
when they simply mean either flashbacks or some occurrence where the child either expressed
something that actually was not there, whether it be in their mind or thought process or anything
like that.” He testified that children who are victims of sexual abuse sometimes “mix[ ] up” the
details of the abuse:
Mainly because the abuse normally starts at a young age, and as a result of that,
you have what actually occurred, and then you have the mentality of the child
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which tends to create things as well as sort of add stuff to it, because they’re
unclear. Their memory gets mixed up, to be quite honest. They may run things
together. They may also get specific details incorrect, but that doesn’t necessarily
mean that it didn’t happen. Again, it’s hard for them, especially if several years
have gone by.
Regarding S.P., Johnson testified that she participated in one of V.R.’s therapy sessions. During
those discussions, Johnson learned S.P. also had been abused. Because S.P. was an adult when
she made the outcry, he discussed it with M.P. but did not report the outcry to the police.
Dallas police detective Christy Martinez was assigned to investigate the abuse allegations
made by V.R. She testified that the case was assigned to her on May 20, 2010. The following
day, she contacted V.R.’s mother to confirm the information in the offense report. Martinez then
scheduled a forensic interview for V.R. at the Irving Family Advocacy Center. There was also a
referral to the Reach Clinic at the Children’s Hospital of Dallas for a physical exam. Martinez
testified that she did not expect there to be any findings from the physical exam because of the
passage of time: V.R. was fourteen years old at the time of the forensic interview and stated in
the interview she was last abused just before her twelfth birthday. Following the physical exam,
which was inconclusive, 4 Martinez obtained a written statement from Johnson regarding V.R.’s
outcry. Martinez then obtained a warrant for appellant’s arrest. She interviewed appellant for
approximately fifty-seven minutes on August 27, 2010, following his arrest, but did not obtain a
confession. Martinez did not handle the investigation of S.P.’s abuse allegations.
Autumn Williams of the Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center conducted the July 1, 2010
forensic interview of V.R., who was then thirteen years of age. Williams testified that V.R. told
her that appellant, her biological father, “had sexually abused her from the time that she was very
young up until the time that she was almost 12 years old.” V.R. stated that the abuse happened
4
The REACH physical examination found “no anal or genital trauma noted,” but the report also stated: “Lack of findings does not rule out
the possibility of abuse. Findings are dependent upon the type of genital contact, timing since, assault and genital makeup.”
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“a lot” and that appellant “both digitally penetrated her vagina” and “put his penis inside her
vagina.” V.R. used the word “rape” to describe the penile penetration of her vagina. In addition,
V.R. told Williams there were other kinds of abuse: appellant “rubbed with his fingers on the
outside of her vagina and had asked her to perform oral, but she resisted that.” Williams also
testified that V.R. provided the following sensory details regarding the abuse: “She had
described pain, and it hurt. She had talked about it being rough and talking [sic] about his body
going up and down.” V.R., however, “wasn’t great at providing sequence, and part of that,”
according to Williams, concerned “how many times it had happened, so she would say it was the
same just because the same sexual acts would occur.” Williams testified it was normal for
children V.R.’s age who had been sexually abused over a period of years to mix up details or fail
to recall every single incident.
Williams testified that V.R. stated the abuse first occurred when appellant was sitting at
the computer waiting for it to load, and V.R. was on the couch watching television. Appellant
walked over to V.R. and touched her leg. He tried to touch her vagina, but there was no
penetration. The first instance of penetration occurred later, in the living room of the family’s
Fox Hollow apartment. V.R. stated that appellant had her lay “down flat on the couch where she
was on her back, and that he was on top of her, and . . . his private part touched her private.”
V.R. also described an incident where she was sitting on the toilet with the lid down, talking on
the telephone. Appellant walked into the bathroom, told her to hang up the telephone, took off
her pants, and “opened her legs.” V.R. did not give details, “but she talked about white stuff.”
Dr. William H. Telford, Jr., a psychologist, was the first witness called by the defense.
He testified that he reviewed V.R.’s and S.P.’s medical records and, based on his review of those
records, S.P. had been diagnosed with “psychotic disorder with paranoia” and “some severe
depression.” He added that she had been treated with Haldol, Zoloft, Seroquel, and various
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medications for migraine headaches. He testified that he had reviewed medical records from the
Centro de Mi Salud Clinic from 1990, and that those records contained the earliest diagnosis of
S.P., which “was major depression recurrent, severe, with psychotic features.” On cross-
examination, however, the State pointed out that S.P. was born in 1990, and Dr. Telford
acknowledged that she was not diagnosed with a psychotic disorder as an infant. 5
Dr. Telford testified that V.R.’s diagnosis, a “psychotic disorder not otherwise specified,”
was “very similar to her sister’s,” and that she had been on various medications during her
treatment: Risperdal for schizophrenia and severe bipolar disorder, Celexa for depression,
Topamax to control seizures, Trazodone, a “fairly powerful sleep medication,” and “a half a
dozen different medications to deal with migraine headaches.” She also had suffered from
urinary tract infections since she was a child and had been on various medications to control that.
He acknowledged that the psychological disorders he described could have been caused by years
of traumatizing sexual abuse, although he insisted that was “quite unlikely.” He also testified
that he never met S.P., V.R., or their mother, never treated them, but had spoken with appellant
about the abuse allegations.
Appellant, a truck driver, testified that he met M.P. in approximately 1996 or 1997, and
moved in with her “about three days” after they met. S.P., M.P.’s daughter from a previous
5
The relevant portion of the record reads as follows:
Q. And just to clear something up here, you had said [S.P.’s] disorder, all of these findings came sometime before the
sexual abuse allegations?
A. The ones for [S.P.] go back to 1990, yes.
Q. Dr. Tedford, are you aware that [S.P.] was born in 1990?
A. I didn’t look up her birthday, but the records that I have from the Centro de Mi Salud Clinic say 1990.
Q. Okay. Would you take my word for it if I told you she was actually born in 1990?
A. Certainly.
Q. Okay. So we’re not sitting here saying that she had some psychotic disorder as an infant?
A. No, certainly not.
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relationship, lived with them. When he moved in, appellant noticed that S.P. “was always
talking back to her mom and all that.” M.P. asked for appellant’s help in disciplining the child.
Appellant testified that he disciplined S.P. by rebuking her, telling her not to talk back to her
mother, and by telling her she was not going to play and would have to eat, and do her
homework. Appellant testified that he and M.P. argued frequently about financial matters––M.P.
thought he was not giving her enough money.
Appellant described his on-and-off relationship with M.P. Appellant lived with M.P.,
S.P., and V.R. until May 2001, when he moved out of the apartment they shared and moved into
his mother’s house in Uvalde, Texas. In October 2001, appellant moved back in with M.P. and
the girls, but moved out again in February 2002. Appellant would stay with them occasionally––
dropping by to do laundry, pick up clean clothes, and give M.P. money––but mostly lived with
friends in Richardson, Texas, from February 2002 until May 2003, when he moved to Decatur,
Texas. He lived there until March 2005, at which point he moved back in with M.P. and the
girls. At that time, they lived at the Fox Hollow Apartments in Grand Prairie. In June 2005,
appellant moved out of the apartment and moved into the Tourist Court Motel in Grand Prairie.
Asked by defense counsel if, during this time, he saw S.P. or V.R. regularly, appellant replied,
“No, no, not at all.” He testified that he did not live at the Fox Hollow apartment again until
January 2008, when he briefly reconciled with M.P. He moved out again in May 2008, spending
a couple of weeks at the motel then moving to an apartment on Beltline, where he stayed until
November 2008. Appellant testified that he did not see the children during this time because
they did not know where he lived. In September 2008, however, M.P. and the two children
found out where he was living and visited him at the apartment complex. Appellant testified that
they never spent the night at the Beltline apartment and that V.R. was never alone with him at the
apartment because there “was always somebody there.”
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In October 2008, appellant had what he called “the work crisis” and suffered a significant
loss of income––his income dropped from approximately $1200 per week to $200 per week. He
moved back in with his mother in Uvalde, where he lived from November 2008 until September
2009. During that time, according to appellant’s testimony, V.R. never visited him. Appellant
testified that M.P. and V.R. called him in March 2009 and asked if V.R. could spend Spring
Break with him, but appellant told M.P. that was not a good idea because he was never home and
his job hauling asphalt required him to drive “all over Texas.” Appellant returned to Dallas in
September 2009 and moved in with his new girlfriend, Bridget Prieto. Appellant testified that
M.P. and the girls knew he was back in Dallas because of their telephone conversations.
Appellant saw V.R. at M.P.’s apartment after he moved back to Dallas, and his relationship with
V.R. was good, but he did not tell the girls about his new girlfriend because he did not want to
hurt them. Appellant explained: “I didn’t want to hurt my daughter. I didn’t want to tell her that
I had somebody else and I wasn’t going to love her.” Appellant testified that from September
2009 until May of 2010, both V.R. and her mother asked appellant “to come home and to live
with them again.”
In March of 2010, appellant attended a birthday party for V.R. at the Fox Hollow
apartment. He was also at the apartment in March for an Easter egg hunt. That same month he
and M.P. went to family court in Dallas to assure the continuation of M.P.’s housing and food
assistance. Appellant testified that he signed over his parental rights to V.R. in May 2010, after
he had a fight with M.P. over the telephone regarding whether V.R. should be dating. The
argument ended with appellant telling M.P. he was “out of your life” and that he had a new
girlfriend who loved him. That was the last time he talked to her. Appellant testified that V.R.
and S.P. overheard the argument and heard him telling M.P. that he was “done” with her and out
of her life.
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Appellant was arrested at his mother’s house in Uvalde in August 2010, where he had
recently moved with his new girlfriend. Appellant denied sexually assaulting S.P. and denied
doing any of the things she testified about. Appellant testified that he did not even learn about
S.P.’s allegations until November 2011, shortly before V.R.’s case was set for trial. Appellant
admitted he had not been a “good dad” to V.R., but he denied sexually assaulting her, and
appellant pointed out that he did not live at the Grand Prairie apartment from June 2005 through
January 2008.
Appellant testified on cross-examination that he thought V.R. fabricated the allegations
“[b]ecause I told her I was done with her, and I told her that, and she felt I wasn’t going to love
her no more, and I had somebody else.” Appellant also believed V.R. fabricated the allegations
because he had signed away his parental rights. Appellant denied that he had ever been alone
with V.R. He testified that when M.P. was out of the house taking care of her parents, it was
during school hours, so V.R. and S.P. were either at school or with M.P. Appellant insisted S.P
was lying when she testified that she distanced herself from appellant when she grew older, and
appellant denied telling the police detective that M.P would sometimes drop V.R. off at his
apartment and give him a plate of food. Appellant also testified that the detectives never gave
him a chance to explain why V.R. would fabricate the allegations. He insisted the detectives
“weren’t even giving me a chance to answer anything” and kept telling him “you’re guilty” and
“you did it.”
Appellant’s mother, Aurora Ruiz, testified that she knew both V.R. and S.P. because they
would visit her on holidays. She also spoke to them over the telephone. S.P. called her “Lala”
and V.R. referred to her as “Abuela,” the Spanish word for grandmother. Ruiz described a
telephone call she received in January 2012, between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m., from an unknown
number (the caller ID showed the caller as “unknown”) in which the person identified herself as
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S.P. The caller referred to Ruiz as “Abuela,” and said “their mother was making them lie and
that she was sorry.” This led Ruiz to conclude the caller must have been V.R. because “Abuela”
was V.R.’s nickname for Ruiz. 6 Ruiz believed V.R. was lying when she testified that appellant
sexually abused her.
DISCUSSION
Continuous Sexual Abuse of a Child
In his first issue, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
conviction for continuous sexual abuse of a child in 05–12–01704–CR. In reviewing a challenge
to the sufficiency of the evidence, we examine all of the evidence in the light most favorable to
the verdict and determine whether a rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements
of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979); Lucio
v. State, 351 S.W.3d 878, 894–95 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011); Brooks v. State, 323 S.W.3d 893, 895
(Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (plurality op.). We must defer to the jury’s credibility and weight
determinations because the jury is the sole judge of the witnesses’ credibility and the weight to
be given their testimony. See Jackson, 443 U.S. at 326.
The indictment in the continuous sexual abuse of a child case alleged that on or about
September 1, 2007, in Dallas County, appellant did:
Then and there, intentionally and knowingly, during a period that was 30 or more
days in duration, when the defendant was 17 years of age or older, commit two or
more acts of sexual abuse against [V.R.], a child younger than 14 years of age,
hereinafter called complainant, namely by the contact and penetration of the
complainant’s female sexual organ by the defendant’s sexual organ, and by the
contact between defendant’s hand and complainant’s genitals with the intent to
arouse and gratify the sexual desire of defendant, and by the penetration of the
complainant’s female sexual organ by the defendant’s finger[.]
To obtain a conviction for this offense, the State needed to prove beyond a reasonable
6
V.R. denied making that telephone call to Aurora Ruiz.
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doubt that, “during a period that is 30 or more days in duration,” appellant committed “two or
more acts of sexual abuse, regardless of whether the acts of sexual abuse are committed against
one or more victims,” and that, at the time of the commission of each of the acts of sexual abuse,
he was seventeen years of age or older and V.R. was a child younger than fourteen years of age.
See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.02(b)(1), (2). An “act of sexual abuse” is an act that violates
one or more specified penal laws, including aggravated sexual assault of a child under section
22.021. Id. § 21.02(c)(4). The jury need not unanimously agree on which specific acts of sexual
abuse the defendant committed or the exact date that the acts were committed. Id. § 21.02(d).
The jury, however, must agree unanimously that the defendant committed two or more acts of
sexual abuse during a period of thirty or more days. Id.
The testimony of a child victim alone is sufficient to support a conviction for continuous
sexual abuse of a child. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 38.07(a); Lee v. State, 186
S.W.3d 649, 655 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, pet. ref’d); Vasquez v. State, Nos. 05–12–00548–CR
& 00549–CR, 2013 WL 5614300, at *5 (Tex. App.—Dallas Oct. 14, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.,
not designated for publication). A child victim is not required to be specific about the dates the
abuse occurred. See Dixon v. State, 201 S.W.3d 731, 736 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (“Especially
where young children are involved, we have cautioned that courts cannot impose unrealistic
expectations regarding proof of when an offense actually occurred[.]”); Sledge v. State, 953
S.W.2d 253, 256 n.8 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (“[I]t is not often that a child knows, even within a
few days, the date that she was sexually assaulted.”); Vasquez, 2013 WL 5614300, at *5.
Appellant argues the evidence is insufficient because V.R. was unable to describe any
acts of sexual abuse in detail, her testimony was inconsistent and improbable, she had a history
of kidney disease, she had a history of depression, was taking numerous medications, attempted
suicide a number of times, and was angry with appellant for terminating his parental rights to
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V.R. These arguments, however, are based on the weight and credibility of the evidence. As the
trier of fact, the jury was the exclusive judge of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their
testimony.
The State presented evidence that appellant sexually abused V.R. a number of times over
a period of several years, beginning when V.R. was nine years old and continuing until she was
twelve. V.R. testified that she had difficulty recalling precise details of most of the incidents and
that she had tried to block out the memories. She did, however, testify about the first time
appellant put his fingers and penis in her vagina, which occurred when V.R. was approximately
ten years old. She testified that the incident occurred in the living room of the Fox Hollow
apartment while V.R.’s mother was away. Appellant sat next to V.R. on the couch, started
touching her breasts and vagina over her clothes, then made V.R. take her clothes off and put
fingers in her vagina. He forced her to lie down, took off his pants, and put his penis in her
vagina. V.R. testified that it hurt when appellant did that and that she wanted to cry, but was too
scared to cry. V.R. also testified that appellant put his penis in her vagina on approximately
eighteen other occasions, and that he put his hand or fingers in her vagina approximately
seventeen times. The last incident occurred just before V.R. was sent to the Timberlawn hospital
following her first suicide attempt. V.R.’s testimony alone is sufficient to support the conviction.
See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 38.07(a); Lee, 186 S.W.3d at 655.
Appellant testified in his defense that he did not live with V.R. during some of the time
periods when the abuse allegedly took place, he was never alone with V.R., and that she
fabricated the allegations because she was angry appellant had terminated his parental rights. The
jury, however, was the judge of the credibility of the witnesses and was free to believe or
disbelieve any portion of a witness’s testimony. See Tran v. State, 221 S.W.3d 79, 88 (Tex.
App.––Houston [14th Dist.] 2005, pet. ref’d). Additionally, appellant testified that he lived with
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M.P. and V.R. from January 2008 until May 2008. V.R., who was born on March 18, 1997,
would have been ten years old during that time period. Thus, the jury could have reasonably
concluded the first incident of abuse involving penetration occurred at that time. The jury was
also free to accept V.R.’s testimony that the abuse continued until she was approximately twelve
years of age, and that the years of traumatizing sexual abuse V.R. suffered caused (or at least
contributed to) her psychological difficulties and suicide attempts. “It was within the sole
province of the jury to reconcile conflicts, contradictions, and inconsistencies in the evidence.”
Id. at 88 (citing Bowden v. State, 628 S.W.2d 782, 784 (Tex. Crim. App. 1982)). We also note
that the jury heard testimony regarding the difficulty child sexual abuse victims have in recalling
specific dates or sequences of events when the abuse occurs at a young age and continues for an
extended period of time. See, e.g., Dixon , 201 S.W.3d at 736. Viewing the evidence in the light
most favorable to the verdict, we therefore conclude the evidence is sufficient to support
appellant’s conviction for continuous sexual abuse of a child. We overrule appellant’s first issue.
Aggravated Sexual Assault of a Child
Appellant’s second issue challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his
conviction for aggravated sexual assault of a child in 05–12–01703–CR. The indictment in the
aggravated sexual assault of a child case alleged that on or about August 1, 2000, in Dallas
County, appellant did:
[U]nlawfully then and there intentionally and knowingly cause the contact and
penetration of the female sexual organ of [S.P.], a child, who was not then the
spouse of defendant, by an object, towit: the sexual organ, of said defendant, and,
at the time of the offense, the child was younger than 14 years of age[.]
A person commits the offense of aggravated sexual assault, in relevant part, if he
intentionally or knowingly “causes the penetration of the anus or sexual organ of a child by any
means,” or “causes the sexual organ of the child to contact or penetrate the mouth, anus, or
sexual organ of another person, including the actor,” and “the victim is younger than 14 years of
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age.” TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(i), (a)(1)(B)(iii), (2)(B). The testimony of a
child sexual abuse victim alone is sufficient to support a conviction for aggravated sexual
assault. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 38.07(a); Bargas v. State, 252 S.W.3d 876, 888 (Tex.
App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2008, no pet.); Benton v. State, 237 S.W.3d 400, 404 (Tex. App.––
Waco 2007, pet. ref’d); Tear v. State, 74 S.W.3d 555, 560 (Tex. App.––Dallas 2002, pet. ref’d).
In addition, the victim need not inform another person of the alleged offense if, at the time of the
offense, the victim was seventeen years of age or younger. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN.
art. 38.07(b)(1); Benton, 237 S.W.3d at 404; Tear, 74 S.W.3d at 560.
Appellant argues the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction in the aggravated
sexual assault of child case because S.P. testified she suffered multiple acts of abuse but could
specifically recall only one incident, her testimony was inconsistent, she delayed coming forward
for more than a year after V.R. made her outcry, and she had a history of mental illness. These
arguments, however, like appellant’s arguments regarding V.R.’s testimony, concern the weight
and credibility of the evidence. S.P. testified that the abuse started when she nine or ten years
old and in the fourth or fifth grade, and continued until she was fourteen years old. S.P.
described several instances of abuse. She testified that the first time appellant had vaginal
intercourse with her was in her mother’s room at the Donna Lynn Apartments. S.P. recalled
laying down on her mother’s bed with her clothes off and having “intercourse” with appellant.
She testified that it hurt. When appellant was finished, there was “white stuff” on her stomach
and she was bleeding from her vagina. S.P. testified that appellant made her go to the restroom
afterwards and clean herself up. S.P. also testified regarding two other incidents involving anal
sexual intercourse and digital penetration. S.P. testified that appellant forced her to have vaginal
and anal intercourse with him on numerous occasions over the years––too many times to count,
according to her testimony. The abuse stopped only when S.P. was about fourteen years old and
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her best friend moved into the apartment complex.
S.P.’s testimony alone is sufficient to support the conviction for aggravated sexual assault
of a child. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 38.07(a); Tear, 74 S.W.3d at 560. Although
appellant attacks S.P.’s credibility, it was within the province of the jury to reconcile conflicts,
contradictions, and inconsistencies in the evidence. See Tran, 221 S.W.3d at 88. Furthermore,
as we noted earlier, the jury was the sole judge of the weight and credibility of the evidence and
was free to believe or disbelieve any portion of a witness’s testimony. Id. Viewing the evidence
in the light most favorable to the verdict, we thus conclude the evidence is sufficient to support
appellant’s conviction for aggravated sexual assault of a child. We overrule appellant’s second
issue.
Costs
In his third issue, appellant argues the evidence is insufficient to support the trial court’s
order for him to pay $242.25 in court costs in cause 05–12–01703–CR, and $306 in court costs
in 05–12–01704–CR. He requests that we reform the trial court’s judgments to delete the
requirement that he pay court costs because the clerk’s records filed in each case do not contain
an itemized bill of costs.
After appellant filed his brief, the clerk’s record in each case was supplemented and now
contains an itemized bill of costs. Specifically, each supplemental clerk’s record contains a
computer printout itemizing the costs assessed in each case and showing the total costs, and an
explanation of the abbreviations used in the itemization. The supplemental clerk’s record also
includes a bill of costs certification signed by the deputy district clerk and certified by the district
clerk. Because each clerk’s record now contains a cost bill that supports the costs assessed in
each judgment, appellant’s complaint that the evidence is insufficient to support the imposition
of costs because the records do not contain a cost bill is, therefore, moot. See Johnson v. State,
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423 S.W.3d 385, 391–92 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014); Coronel v. State, 416 S.W.3d 550, 555 (Tex.
App.––Dallas 2013, pet. ref’d). Accordingly we overrule appellant’s third issue.
Modification of Judgments
The judgments incorrectly state that the “Sex Offender Registration Requirements do not
apply to the Defendant,” and state “N/A” for the age of the victim at the time of the offense.
Appellant’s convictions for aggravated sexual assault of a child and continuous sexual abuse of a
child are among those defined as a “[r]eportable conviction or adjudication” for purposes of the
sex offender registration statute. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 62.001(5)(A). As a
person who has a reportable conviction or adjudication, appellant is subject to the registration
requirements of that program. See id. art. 62.051.
As alleged in the indictments and proven in this case, the victims were younger than
fourteen years of age on the dates of the offenses. Because we have concluded the evidence is
sufficient to support the convictions in each case, and because the offenses in each case required
a showing that the age of the victim was younger than fourteen, on our own motion we modify
the judgment in 05–12–01703–CR and the judgment 05–12–01704–CR to show the sex offender
registration requirements apply and that the age of the victim at the time of the offense was
younger than fourteen years of age. See TEX. R. APP. P. 43.2(b); Asberry v. State, 813 S.W.2d
526, 529–30 (Tex. App.––Dallas 1991, pet. ref’d) (appellate court has the authority to modify
incorrect judgments sua sponte when the necessary information is available to do so); see also
Tyler v. State, 137 S.W.3d 261, 267–68 (Tex. App.––Houston [1st Dist.] 2004, no pet.)
(authority to modify judgment is not dependent upon a party’s request); Jackson v. State, Nos.
05–12–00041, 00042, & 00043–CR, 2012 WL 5359513, at *2 (Tex. App.––Dallas Oct. 31, 2012,
no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (modifying judgments to show applicability
of the sex offender registration requirements and age of the victim); Medlock v. State, No. 05–
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11–00668–CR, 2012 WL 4125922, *1–2 (Tex. App.––Dallas Sept. 20, 2012, no pet.) (mem. op.,
not designated for publication) (same); Johnson v. State, No. 05–06–00037–CR, 2007 WL
60775, at *7 (Tex. App.––Dallas Jan. 10, 2007, no pet.) (modifying judgments to show
applicability of sex offender registration requirements and that age of victim at time of offense
was “younger than 14 years of age” because evidence was sufficient to support convictions in
each of the counts, which required a showing that the age of victim was younger than fourteen
years of age).
As modified, we affirm the trial court’s judgments.
/Lana Myers/
LANA MYERS
JUSTICE
Do Not Publish
TEX. R. APP. P. 47
121703F.U05
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S
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
JUDGMENT
JOHN ARTHUR RUIZ, Appellant On Appeal from the Criminal District Court
No. 1, Dallas County, Texas
No. 05-12-01703-CR V. Trial Court Cause No. F11-31859-H.
Opinion delivered by Justice Myers.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee Justices Lang-Miers and Lewis participating.
Based on the Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial court is MODIFIED
as follows:
“Sex Offender Registration Requirements do not apply to the Defendant. TEX.
CODE CRIM. PROC. chapter 62” should be changed to “Sex Offender Registration
Requirements apply to the Defendant. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. chapter 62”
“The age of the victim at the time of the offense was N/A” should be changed to
“The age of the victim at the time of the offense was younger than 14 years of
age”
As MODIFIED, the judgment is AFFIRMED. We direct the trial court to prepare a new
judgment that reflects these modifications.
Judgment entered this 30th day of June, 2014.
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S
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
JUDGMENT
JOHN ARTHUR RUIZ, Appellant On Appeal from the Criminal District Court
No. 1, Dallas County, Texas
No. 05-12-01704-CR V. Trial Court Cause No. F11-31315-H
Opinion delivered by Justice Myers.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee Justices Lang-Miers and Lewis participating.
Based on the Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial court is MODIFIED
as follows:
“Sex Offender Registration Requirements do not apply to the Defendant. TEX.
CODE CRIM. PROC. chapter 62” should be changed to “Sex Offender Registration
Requirements apply to the Defendant. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. chapter 62”
“The age of the victim at the time of the offense was N/A” should be changed to
“The age of the victim at the time of the offense was younger than 14 years of
age”
As MODIFIED, the judgment is AFFIRMED. We direct the trial court to prepare a new
judgment that reflects these modifications.
Judgment entered this 30th day of June, 2014.
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