AFFIRMED and Opinion Filed March 26, 2020
S In The
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-19-01429-CV
IN THE MATTER OF G.O., A JUVENILE
On Appeal from the 417th Judicial District Court
Collin County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 417-70001-2019
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Justices Osborne, Partida-Kipness, and Pedersen, III
Opinion by Justice Osborne
The trial court, sitting as a juvenile court, waived jurisdiction and transferred
G.O. to criminal district court for criminal proceedings. See TEX. FAM. CODE
§ 54.02(j). In two issues, G.O. contends (1) the juvenile court failed to make case-
specific fact findings in support of its decision and (2) the evidence is legally and
factually insufficient to establish that G.O. was more than fourteen years of age at
the time of the offense. Concluding that the juvenile court’s fact findings and the
evidence are sufficient to support its order, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
At the time of the hearing from which this appeal arises, G.O. was 26 years
old. The juvenile court waived its jurisdiction and ordered G.O. to be transferred to
the district court to be prosecuted as an adult for offenses he allegedly committed
when a juvenile.
The offense alleged was sexual assault of B.O., a relative living in G.O.’s
home, who was eight years and nine months younger than G.O. The issue at the
hearing was G.O.’s age at the time of the offenses.
Fernando Robledo, a certified peace officer with the Collin County Sheriff’s
Department, was the first witness at the hearing. He is assigned to the Collin County
Child Abuse Task Force. He observed the forensic interview of B.O. at the Collin
County Child Advocacy Center in late 2018. He explained that G.O.’s parents are
B.O.’s great-aunt and great-uncle, and B.O. was living in their home. In the forensic
interview, B.O. explained that G.O. sexually abused her multiple times when she
was approximately six or seven years old. Robledo testified that B.O.’s 2018
forensic interview was the first report law enforcement received about G.O.’s
alleged sexual abuse of B.O.
Robledo also testified that after B.O.’s interview, G.O. came to the Child
Advocacy Center and spoke with Robledo. Robledo testified that G.O.’s story
“evolved” as the interview proceeded. He first admitted tickling B.O. and touching
her vaginal area. When confronted with B.O.’s outcry of additional sexual abuse,
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G.O. admitted to putting on a condom and rubbing B.O.’s sexual organ over his erect
penis and ejaculating when neither B.O. nor G.O. was wearing any clothes. G.O.
told Robledo that B.O. was probably in the first or second grade when the abuse
occurred, and G.O. was 13 or 14. Robledo testified that in his opinion, there was
probable cause to believe that G.O. committed the offense of aggravated sexual
assault of B.O.
B.O., age 17 at the time of the hearing, testified that CPS placed her with
G.O.’s parents just before her third birthday. B.O. considered them to be her parents
although they did not formally adopt her. She explained that when their parents
would go grocery shopping, G.O. would remove B.O.’s clothes, put on what B.O.
now knows was a condom, and penetrate her sexual organ with his. G.O. referred to
his conduct as “tickling” her, so when she complained of the “tickling” to her
parents, they considered it to be normal conduct between siblings.
B.O. testified that the assaults occurred over a period of about a year, before
and after her seventh birthday. She recalled that her mother had been out shopping
for her birthday dinner and cake when one of the assaults occurred. B.O. also
testified that the assaults occurred before G.O. was able to drive. She said that G.O.
“wasn’t even able to drive yet because they happened up until he got his first
girlfriend, and I still remember our family having to take her home some nights
because [G.O.] wasn’t able to drive her home.”
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B.O. did not make any outcry at the time of the offenses. She told G.O.’s
parents only after G.O. was no longer living in the home but was returning to the
home for overnight visits. She then told a nurse at school, and the school notified
law enforcement.
On cross-examination, B.O. confirmed that she had told the forensic
interviewer that G.O. played “All Star Baseball” around the time the assaults
occurred, and that the assaults stopped after G.O. had started dating his first
girlfriend Courtney and he got a flat-screen TV in his room.
G.O.’s mother (“Mother”) testified that B.O. came to live with them in 2005,
when B.O. was three years old and G.O. was twelve. She confirmed that B.O. did
not make any outcry of abuse by G.O. until many years later. She testified that B.O.
told her “everything stopped when [G.O.] got his first girlfriend Courtney.” She is
“a hundred percent sure” that G.O. began dating Courtney when G.O. was in the
seventh grade, because there is school yearbook picture of them attending a dance
together in 2006. G.O. was thirteen years old at the time of the dance. Mother
brought the yearbook and photograph to trial, and the photograph was admitted into
evidence.
Mother also testified that the summer after G.O. completed seventh grade,
Courtney accompanied the family on a swimming trip to Oklahoma. Mother testified
that Courtney and G.O. stopped dating the following school year. Like B.O., Mother
recalled that G.O. did not have his driver’s license when he dated Courtney, because
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she and her husband would drive G.O. and Courtney back and forth between their
homes.
Mother also testified that G.O. was in All Star Baseball in 2005, and the age
limitation for that league was 14. She identified a newspaper article dated July 15,
2005, with a picture of the team including G.O., and testified that G.O. did not
participate in All Star Baseball in high school. Mother also contradicted B.O.’s
testimony about the flat-screen TV in G.O.’s room, saying that G.O. paid for the TV
with his own money when he was a senior in high school.
After the hearing, the juvenile court made findings of fact, including a finding
that “there is probable cause to believe that [G.O.] was 14 years of age or older and
under 17 years of age at the time he is alleged to have committed the 1st degree
felony offense of Aggravated Sexual Assault of a Child.” The court waived
jurisdiction and ordered transfer of G.O. to the district court “for proper criminal
proceedings.” This appeal followed.
APPLICABLE LAW AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
Title 3 of the Texas Family Code governs proceedings in all cases involving
delinquent conduct engaged in by a person who was a child at the time the alleged
conduct occurred. See TEX. FAM. CODE §§ 51.04(a). The juvenile court has exclusive
original jurisdiction over these proceedings. Id. The juvenile court, however, has no
jurisdiction to adjudicate or conduct a disposition hearing regarding a person who is
18 years old or older. In re N.J.A., 997 S.W.2d 554, 555 (Tex. 1999). Instead, the
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family code allows the juvenile court to waive its exclusive, original jurisdiction and
transfer a person who is 18 years old or older to an appropriate district court for
criminal proceedings if certain criteria are met. Id. at 555–56.
To waive its jurisdiction and transfer the case, the juvenile court must find
that (1) the respondent is currently 18 years of age or older; (2) the respondent was
14 years of age or older and under 17 years old at the time he allegedly committed
the offense; (3) the alleged offense had not been adjudicated or no adjudication
hearing concerning the offense had been conducted; (4) by a preponderance of the
evidence, that for a reason beyond the State’s control, it was not practicable to
proceed in juvenile court before the respondent’s 18th birthday; and (5) there was
probable cause to believe that the respondent committed the offense. TEX. FAM.
CODE ANN. § 54.02(j); In re N.J.A., 997 S.W.2d at 556.
“Our review of a transfer order is two-pronged.” Matter of L.W., No. 05-19-
00966-CV, 2020 WL 728431, at *9 (Tex. App.—Dallas Feb. 13, 2020, no pet. h.)
(mem. op.). First, we review the juvenile court’s specific findings of fact concerning
the section 54.02(j) factors under a traditional sufficiency of the evidence review.
See id. (citing Moon v. State, 451 S.W.3d 28, 47 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014)). In
determining whether legally sufficient evidence supports a finding under review, we
consider evidence favorable to the finding if a reasonable factfinder could and
disregard evidence contrary to the finding unless a reasonable factfinder could not.
Matter of A.B., No. 02-18-00274-CV, 2019 WL 983751, at *2 (Tex. App.—Fort
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Worth Feb. 28, 2019, no pet.) (mem. op.). If more than a scintilla of evidence
supports the finding, a legal sufficiency challenge fails. Id. Under a factual
sufficiency challenge, we consider all the evidence presented to determine if the
court’s finding is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as
to be clearly wrong and unjust. Id. at *3.
Second, we review the juvenile court’s ultimate waiver decision for abuse of
discretion. Matter of L.W., 2020 WL 728431, at *9. A juvenile court abuses its
discretion if it acts without reference to guiding rules and principles. Matter of A.B.,
2019 WL 983751, at *3. The factfinder is the sole judge of the witnesses’ credibility
and the weight to be given their testimony. Id.
DISCUSSION
A. Specificity of findings
In his first issue, G.O. complains that the juvenile court abused its discretion
by transferring the case to district court without making the necessary case-specific
findings of fact. Because G.O. was over the age of 18 at the time of the transfer
hearing, subsection (j) of family code section 54.02 applied to the proceeding. See
TEX. FAM. CODE § 54.02(j)(1) (waiver of jurisdiction for person 18 years of age or
older at time of transfer hearing). G.O. argues that the juvenile court’s findings
numbered two, four, and five lack the specificity required under subsection (h) of
section 54.02. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 54.02(h) (juvenile court “shall state
specifically in the order its reasons for waiver”); Moon, 451 S.W.3d at 49–50
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(appellate court must limit its sufficiency review to facts that juvenile court expressly
relied upon as required to be explicitly set out in transfer order under § 54.02(h)). In
Moon, the court explained that the purpose of section 54.02(h) “is not well served
by a transfer order so lacking in specifics that the appellate court is forced to
speculate as to the juvenile court’s reasons for finding transfer to be appropriate or
the facts the juvenile court found to substantiate those reasons.” Moon, 451 S.W.3d
at 49.
The State argues that Moon addressed orders under subsection (h) of section
54.02, not subsection (j), and in any event, the juvenile court’s order in this case
included case-specific findings from which a reviewing court may determine that
the ruling was appropriately guided by statutory criteria.
The juvenile court found that G.O. is “a person 18 years of age or older,” a
fact that G.O. does not dispute, although the juvenile court’s first finding of fact also
misstates G.O.’s birth date as November 15, 1995, instead of the correct date of
September 21, 1992. Even under the incorrect date, G.O. was older than 18 at the
time of the hearing on June 27, 2019. The juvenile court also found:
2. That there is probable cause to believe that [G.O.] was 14 years of
age or older and under 17 years of age at the time he is alleged to have
committed the 1st degree felony offense of Aggravated Sexual Assault
of a Child.
...
4. The [C]ourt finds from a preponderance of the evidence that after
due diligence of the [S]tate it was not practicable to proceed in juvenile
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court before the 18th birthday of [G.O.] because the State did not have
probable cause to proceed in juvenile court and new evidence has been
found since the 18[th] birthday of the person.
5. The Court finds there is probable cause to believe that the
Respondent committed the alleged offense.
The evidence supporting the juvenile court’s fourth and fifth findings is
undisputed. As to the fourth finding, the only evidence in the record is that B.O.
made no outcry until November 2018, after G.O.’s 26th birthday. As to the fifth
finding, B.O. testified to G.O.’s sexual assaults, and Robledo testified that G.O.
admitted his own conduct constituting the offenses.1 There was no evidence to the
contrary. See Matter of D.L.C., No. 06-16-00058-CV, 2017 WL 1055680, at *6
(Tex. App.—Texarkana Mar. 21, 2017, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“In fact, there may be
no reversible error even when the juvenile court’s order seemingly restates the
factors contained in Section 54.02, as long as the enumerated reasons were supported
by the evidence.”).
The only disputed fact was G.O.’s age at the time of the offenses. In Matter
of D.L.C., a finding that “D.L.C. was sixteen years of age at the time the alleged
offense(s) occurred” was sufficiently specific to provide a definite basis for the
appellate court to determine that the juvenile court’s decision was “‘appropriately
guided by the statutory criteria, principled, and reason[able].’” Id. at *7 (quoting
1
See TEX. PENAL CODE § 22.021(a)(1)(B) (defining aggravated sexual assault of a child to include
intentionally or knowingly causing the sexual organ of a child to contact or penetrate the sexual organ of
another person, including the actor, if the victim is younger than 14 years of age). The juvenile court’s order
included a specific finding tracking the statutory language.
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Moon, 451 S.W.3d at 49). Here, the juvenile court found that G.O. was “was 14
years of age or older and under 17 years of age” at the time of the offense, a finding
that tracks the applicable statutory language. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 54.02(j)(2)(B).
G.O. also argues that the juvenile court’s findings do not include the findings
required under subsections (a) and (f) of section 54.02. But because G.O. was “18
years of age or older” at the time of the hearing, subsection (j) applied to establish
the required findings. Compare TEX. FAM. CODE §§ 54.02(a) (applying to transfer of
“child”) and 54.02(f) (factors to consider “in making the determination required by
Subsection (a)”) with TEX. FAM. CODE § 54.02(j) (required findings for transfer of
person 18 years of age or older). Findings under subsection (a) and (f) were not
required. See Matter of D.L.C., 2017 WL 1055680, at *5 (because D.L.C. was 18
years of age at time of hearing on State’s petition for discretionary transfer, factors
in subsection (j) of § 54.02 applied, not factors in subsections (a) and (f)).
We conclude that the juvenile court’s order contained sufficiently specific
findings on subsection 54.02(j)’s factors. See id. at 6–7. We decide G.O.’s first issue
against him.
B. Sufficiency of the evidence
In his second issue, G.O. argues that the evidence is legally and factually
insufficient to establish that G.O. was 14 years of age or older at the time of the
alleged offenses. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 54.02(j)(2)(B). Although there was
conflicting evidence regarding G.O.’s age at the time of the offense, the record
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contains some evidence that the incidents occurred around B.O.’s seventh birthday
in July 2008, when G.O. was 15 years old. Consequently, there is more than a
scintilla of evidence to support the juvenile court’s finding that G.O. was 14 years
of age or older and under 17 years of age at the time of the alleged offense. See
Matter of A.B., 2019 WL 983751, at *6. We conclude the evidence is legally
sufficient to support the juvenile court’s finding. See id.
As G.O. argues, there is also evidence to support a contrary finding. B.O.
testified that the abuse “happened up until [G.O.] got his first girlfriend,” and Mother
testified that G.O. took Courtney to a dance in February 2006 and on a trip in the
summer of that year, when G.O. was thirteen years old and B.O. was four or five.
But B.O. also testified unequivocally about the abuse before and after her seventh
birthday. G.O. also cites B.O.’s testimony that G.O. was playing baseball at the time
of the abuse, and relies on Mother’s testimony that he played All Star Baseball in
2005. The State replies that B.O. clarified on cross-examination that she meant G.O.
“was a really good baseball player” and did not make a specific reference to an exact
date when G.O. was playing on the All Star Baseball team. These factual
discrepancies were for the juvenile court to resolve. Matter of A.B., 2019 WL
983751, at *6. The juvenile court was free to accept or reject any or all of any
witness’s testimony, and to reconcile any apparent inconsistencies in the testimony.
See id. B.O. testified that G.O. assaulted her on at least 20 occasions before and after
her seventh birthday. She had specific recollection of the date because she
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remembered decorating her cake and her mother going to the store to buy things for
the party. On B.O.’s seventh birthday, G.O. was fifteen. We conclude the juvenile
court’s findings are not so against the great weight and preponderance of the
evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust. Id. at *3.
Next, we consider whether the juvenile court abused its discretion by waiving
its jurisdiction and transferring G.O.’s case. See Moon, 451 S.W.2d at 47. The
court’s order reflects its findings that all of section 54.02(j)’s criteria were met. See
TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 54.02(j)(1)–(5); Matter of D.S., No. 02-17-00050-CV, 2017
WL 3187021, at *4 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth July 27, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.).
G.O. argues that the great weight and preponderance of the evidence shows
otherwise, but we have concluded there is factually sufficient evidence to support
the juvenile court’s findings. We conclude the juvenile court did not abuse its
discretion by waiving its jurisdiction and transferring G.O.’s case to criminal district
court on the ground that all five of section 54.02(j)’s criteria were met. See id. We
decide G.O.’s second issue against him.
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CONCLUSION
We affirm the juvenile court’s order waiving its jurisdiction and transferring
G.O.’s case to criminal district court.
/Leslie Osborne/
LESLIE OSBORNE
JUSTICE
191429F.P05
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S
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
JUDGMENT
IN THE MATTER OF G.O., A On Appeal from the 417th Judicial
JUVENILE District Court, sitting as Juvenile
Court, Collin County, Texas
No. 05-19-01429-CV Trial Court Cause No. 417-70001-
2019.
Opinion delivered by Justice
Osborne. Justices Partida-Kipness
and Pedersen, III participating.
In accordance with this Court’s opinion of this date, the November 8, 2019
order of the trial court, sitting as juvenile court, waiving jurisdiction and transferring
respondent to district court is AFFIRMED.
Judgment entered March 26, 2020
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