Opinion issued June 6, 2023
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
————————————
NO. 01-22-00201-CR
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JOSHUA CURTIS DRYER, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the 10th District Court
Galveston County, Texas
Trial Court Case No. 17-CR-3187
OPINION ON REHEARING
On our own motion, we grant rehearing and withdraw our opinion and
judgment dated April 13, 2023, and our order denying rehearing dated May 18, 2023.
In place of our prior opinion, we substitute this one, in which we replace the names
of two witnesses with initials. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.10(a)–(b) (providing names of
those who were minors at time indicted offense occurred should not appear in court
filings even when, as here, they are adults at time of trial); see, e.g., Ingerson v. State,
559 S.W.3d 501, 503 n.3 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018) (using pseudonym for witness who
was minor when indicted capital murder occurred). Our disposition remains
unchanged. Because we issue this new opinion, we deny all other relief sought by
the State or another on rehearing. We also deny the State’s motion for en banc
reconsideration as moot in light of the withdrawal and substitution of our prior
opinion and judgment. See Giesberg v. State, 945 S.W.2d 120, 128, 131 & n.3 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1997) (supp. op. on reh’g) (granting rehearing, issuing
supplemental opinion, and dismissing motion for en banc reconsideration as moot),
aff’d, 984 S.W.2d 245 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998).
A jury found Joshua Curtis Dryer guilty of the crime of continuous sexual
abuse of a young child and sentenced him to 35 years of imprisonment. Dryer
appeals, arguing his trial lawyer was ineffective in failing to object to the
admissibility of an extraneous sexual act directed toward another who was not a
child at the time. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand for a new trial.
BACKGROUND
Introduction
In 2018, a grand jury indicted Dryer for continuous sexual abuse of a young
child. See TEX. PENAL CODE § 21.02(b). The indictment alleged that between August
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2009 and August 2015 Dryer sexually abused his daughter, I.D., twice or more by
intentionally and knowingly touching her genitals and penetrating her sex organ with
his finger, the former conduct constituting the offense of indecency with a child and
the latter conduct constituting the offense of sexual assault of a child.
Dryer pled not guilty. In February 2022, the case was tried to a jury.
Pretrial Hearing on K.M.’s Testimony
Before trial, the State gave notice that it intended to introduce evidence of an
extraneous offense, specifically that Dryer had committed assault by contact against
a different victim. According to the notice, Dryer had done so by touching and
rubbing the leg of K.M. in August 2017.
At the time of trial, K.M. was 22 years old. She initially took the stand at a
hearing outside the presence of the jury so that the trial court could assess the
admissibility of her proposed trial testimony. During this hearing, K.M. testified that
she had been longtime friends with I.D. in the past. K.M. had spent the night at I.D.’s
house quite a few times back then.
The very last time K.M. spent the night at I.D.’s house was for a slumber party
or sleepover when she was “about 16.” While the other girls were upstairs, K.M.
watched a movie downstairs with Dryer and I.D.’s brother, Z.D. Z.D. had fallen
asleep. K.M. was sitting next to Dryer on the couch. At some point during the movie,
Dryer placed his hand on her upper thigh over her shorts and started moving it toward
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her “private area.” In response, K.M. “shot up off the couch” and “ran upstairs.” She
said she did not think Dryer saw her “run up the stairs crying.”
Once upstairs, K.M. told I.D. what had happened. K.M. said she was crying,
and that I.D. “looked terrified,” as if she was “about to cry.” K.M. said she had not
ever seen I.D. appear so scared. Later that night, I.D. confided that Dryer had done
inappropriate things to her.
K.M spoke to the police about the sleepover incident. She was not sure when
but thought she did so about six months afterward. K.M. sat for this interview with
the police in connection with the allegations of sexual abuse that I.D. had made
against Dryer. K.M. had not gone to the police contemporaneously with the
sleepover incident. Nor had she reviewed the statement she gave to the police before
trial. K.M. acknowledged that she had told the detective who interviewed her that
she had overreacted to the sleepover incident. But K.M. denied that she had told the
detective that Dryer’s touching was non-sexual in nature.
After K.M. testified, the State argued her testimony was admissible under
Article 38.37 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure on the basis that Dryer’s
touching of K.M. was a sex act committed against another child. Among other
things, the State observed that because there was no medical evidence in this case,
the prosecution essentially rested on witness credibility, which made evidence that
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Dryer had made a sexual advance on another child “extremely important” because it
corroborated I.D.’s allegations of abuse.
The defense objected to K.M.’s testimony, but the basis for its objection is not
altogether clear. The basis of the objection appears to have been that because K.M.
had told the detective who interviewed her that Dryer’s touching was non-sexual,
the slumber-party incident was irrelevant or that its relevance was substantially
outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
The trial court ruled that K.M.’s testimony was admissible.
Trial Testimony
State’s Case in Chief
Angela Black, I.D.’s mother, was the first witness. She testified that she
previously had been married to Dryer for about 17 years. Together, Black and Dryer
had two children, a daughter, I.D., and a son, Z.D. At the time of trial, I.D. was 20
years old and Z.D. was 17 years old.
When I.D. was in junior high school—between the ages of 12 and 14—Black
noticed that I.D. had become depressed and started cutting herself. At the time, Black
thought “it was kind of just normal teenage stuff.” She did not notice anything amiss
between Dryer and I.D.
Black first became aware that something was amiss when Child Protective
Services contacted her in August 2017. Afterward, the police removed Dryer from
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the home, and Black filed for separation. The children remained with her. Dryer was
disallowed any further contact with the children due to the nature of I.D.’s
allegations against him.
Black recalled the sleepover, which was for I.D.’s sixteenth birthday. Black
said that I.D. and K.M. were close friends at the time. K.M. was “a bit older” than
I.D., but Black did not know the exact age difference between the two girls. Black
did not have any contemporaneous awareness of or knowledge about the sleepover
incident involving K.M.
Black knew the general nature of I.D.’s allegations of sexual abuse by Dryer.
But Black did not know the specifics and had not discussed the details with I.D.
Though I.D.’s allegations shocked Black, she testified that she believed her
daughter. According to Black, I.D. did not have a history of lying and she would not
lie about something of this nature.
K.M. then took the stand. She testified she was 22 years old.
According to K.M., she and I.D. were close friends for a long time in their
teens. At one point in time, the two had been best friends. During this period of time,
K.M. also got to know I.D.’s family.
K.M. spent time at I.D.’s home. In doing so, K.M. had the opportunity to
observe I.D. interacting with her father, Dryer. K.M. did not see anything out of the
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ordinary, such as sexual contact or the like. I.D. and Dryer appeared to have a normal
father–daughter relationship.
In August 2017, K.M. spent the night at I.D.’s home with several other girls.
K.M. testified that she was “around 16” at the time.
At one point during the sleepover, I.D. and the other girls were in her room
upstairs while K.M. was in the living room downstairs watching a movie. K.M. was
seated on one of two couches. I.D.’s brother, Z.D., who fell asleep during the movie,
was lying on the other couch. Dryer later joined them, seating himself on the couch
next to K.M.
The State asked K.M. whether something happened between her and Dryer
while watching the movie. The defense then urged its “original objections” to K.M.’s
testimony and asked for a limiting instruction. The trial court overruled the objection
but instructed the jury that K.M.’s testimony concerned a separate offense, which
the trial court was admitting into evidence for any bearing it had on any relevant
matter in the case, including Dryer’s character and acts performed in conformity
with his character.
K.M. then testified that as the credits of the movie were rolling, she noticed
that Dryer’s hand was on her thigh. Dryer then began moving his hand up her thigh,
to where her shorts started covering her thigh, and “towards” her “private area.”
According to K.M., Dryer’s hand never went under her shorts or even over them.
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When Dryer’s hand reached the point where her shorts began to cover her thigh,
K.M. then “stood up.” K.M. said she “jumped off the couch” and briskly walked
upstairs.
K.M. went straight to I.D.’s room and began crying. She told the girls what
happened. In response, I.D. looked scared. K.M. and I.D. then had a conversation
about the incident in the hall.
About a week after the incident, K.M. told her parents about it. Six months or
so after the incident, K.M. spoke with a detective. But K.M. testified that when she
spoke with the detective, she did not describe the incident as seriously as it was
because she was young at the time. Due to her youth, K.M. said she did not
appreciate what had happened.
The State introduced into evidence a video recording of K.M.’s interview. But
it was not played for the jury when it was admitted into evidence.
On cross-examination, K.M. agreed that she told I.D. on the night of the
sleepover that she probably overreacted to the incident with Dryer. K.M. also agreed
that she had told the detective during the subsequent interview that Dryer’s touching
of her leg was not sexual in nature. K.M., however, no longer felt like she had
overreacted at the time. She testified that Dryer’s contact was not accidental or
innocent.
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On the night of the sleepover, I.D. did not disclose any sexual abuse to K.M.
K.M. said I.D. first told her about the abuse afterward.
K.M. said on cross-examination that she was born in November 1999. So, she
was almost 18 years old when Dryer touched her.
Detective W. Higgs of the Friendswood Police Department, who was assigned
to investigate the abuse allegations against Dryer, testified next.
As part of the investigation, I.D. was forensically interviewed at the Child
Advocacy Center in Galveston. This interview was conducted by a non-peace officer
who was trained to interview children in sex abuse cases. Higgs arranged this
interview, but he was not present during it. Instead, he watched a recording of the
interview after it had taken place.
Because the sexual abuse that I.D. alleged had taken place a year or more
beforehand, Higgs did not arrange for a sexual assault examination.
As part of his investigation, Higgs also interviewed K.M. about the sleepover
incident. This interview was recorded on video. The interview took place in October
2017. Higgs had not reviewed the video recording of the interview between then and
the date of the trial.
Higgs also interviewed Black, I.D.’s mother, by telephone.
Finally, I.D. testified. She was 20 years old at trial.
9
I.D. testified that Dryer began sexually abusing her when she was 8 years old.
She had her own bedroom, and that is where she was abused. She slept in a loft bed
at one point, but she later slept in a daybed. All the abuse she recalled took place
when she slept in the latter.
I.D. said the abuse took place late at night while she was trying to sleep. Dryer
would enter her room, kneel by her bed, and move her blankets and clothes aside
and touch her. Specifically, he touched her vagina with his fingers and inserted them
into her vagina. Dryer engaged in this conduct from the time I.D. was 8 years old
until she was 13 years old. She said this happened at least two to five times per month
during this period. I.D.’s memories of the individual instances of abuse during this
period were “kind of blurred together because they were very similar.”
When this happened, I.D. would pretend to be asleep. She did so because she
was afraid and “froze as a trauma response.” She kept her eyes closed but peeked,
which is how she knew it was Dryer.
I.D. said Dryer tried to place her hand on his penis on one occasion. Her hand
grazed his penis, but she pulled away and pretended to stir awake, at which point he
stopped and left her bedroom. I.D. also recalled Dryer touching her buttocks over
her clothes on other occasions. But these incidents occurred while she was awake,
and she and Dryer were watching movies together. I.D. said Dryer would place and
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keep his hand on her buttocks. She testified that one time Dryer also squeezed her
buttocks.
I.D. also recalled Dryer touching himself sometimes. She did not see his penis,
but she could “see his arm moving” and “heard noises.”
Eventually, the abuse ended. I.D. attributed the end of abuse to a change of
residence. Her family moved in with her paternal grandmother and resided there for
about one-and-a-half to two years. During this period, I.D.’s bedroom had a door
that she could lock. When I.D. was 15 years old, her family moved back into their
own home. Dryer did not resume sexually abusing I.D. after they moved back into
their own home.
Even though the abuse ended, I.D. continued to experience its effects. She
testified that she was “extremely depressed,” “extremely anxious,” and “self-
harming.” She was “not coping very well” and did “poorer in school.” I.D. testified
she “was having a really hard time.”
I.D. first told someone—her then boyfriend—about the sexual abuse when
she was 15 years old. She did not tell him all the details. And she asked him not to
tell anyone because she was afraid of what would happen to her family and her
relationships with family members if he did so.
Not long afterward, I.D. indicated to her paternal grandmother that she had
been sexually abused. Her grandmother initially asked I.D. if the abuser was her
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boyfriend, and I.D. told her it was not. Her grandmother then asked if it was her
father, and I.D. “nodded her head” in reply. Once again, I.D. did not divulge details
about the nature of the sexual abuse. Her grandmother asked I.D. if she wanted to
go to the police. I.D. said she did not because she was still afraid to disclose the
abuse to others.
I.D. recalled the sleepover, when K.M. and several other girls spent the night
at her family’s home. This sleepover was for I.D.’s sixteenth birthday. At the
sleepover, I.D. and all the girls other than K.M. were upstairs in her bedroom at one
point while K.M. remained downstairs watching a movie. K.M. later “came upstairs
crying.” K.M. told I.D. that Dryer “had touched her on her upper thigh” and had
moved his hand “up her leg.” I.D. testified that she did not tell K.M. that night that
Dryer had sexually abused her.
The next day, I.D. told a different friend that she had been sexually abused.
I.D. asked her friend not to tell anyone about the abuse.
A little more than a week after the sleepover, I.D. was questioned by an
employee of Child Protective Services about the sexual abuse. This CPS employee
showed up at her home accompanied by a police officer. I.D. was not expecting this
visit. I.D. was asked whether she was being sexually abused and she “nodded.” But
I.D. did not disclose any details about the abuse in her conversation with the CPS
employee.
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During a subsequent interview at the Child Advocacy Center in Galveston,
I.D. disclosed the details of the sexual abuse. I.D. testified that she disclosed the
same details that she had disclosed in her trial testimony.
Defense Witnesses
The first witness called by the defense was Elizabeth Marsalis, who is Dryer’s
stepsister. Her father is married to Dryer’s mother.
Marsalis testified that her children have spent time with Dryer, and Marsalis
has no concerns about allowing Dryer to spend time with her daughter alone. She
has seen Dryer in the presence of young and teenage girls and has never seen him
behave inappropriately with them. Marsalis further testified that she knows Dryer to
be peaceful, law-abiding, and honest.
John Brown then testified. Brown’s partner is Dryer’s brother, and Brown has
known Dryer for about a decade. Brown testified that Dryer is a peaceful, law-
abiding, truthful, and trustworthy person. He has seen Dryer and I.D. together and
never saw anything inappropriate.
Robert Garcia took the stand next. Garcia is Dryer’s stepbrother. Garcia
testified that Dryer is honest, trustworthy, and law-abiding. Garcia described Dryer
as a loving, caring father. Garcia said he had never seen I.D. behave as if she was
scared of Dryer.
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Paula Masone, who has been friends with Dryer for more than two decades,
also testified. Like Garcia, Masone never saw I.D. behave as if she was afraid of
Dryer or behave in an aloof or standoffish manner. As a mother of a young girl,
Masone said she would have noticed such behavior. Masone said that Dryer is
honest, law-abiding, and a perfect gentleman.
Robin Garcia then testified. She is Dryer’s mother, I.D.’s paternal
grandmother. Garcia testified that Dryer had never exhibited behavioral problems as
a child and did not have any problems with the law.
Garcia testified that she has spent quite a bit of time around Dryer, his wife,
and their children. They lived with her for almost two years. And Garcia had a close
relationship with I.D. before these allegations.
Garcia denied ever having a conversation with I.D. in which I.D. said that she
was being sexually abused. According to Garcia, I.D. complained that people came
into her room, including Dryer. But there was no implication of any sexual
impropriety by Dryer. The subject of sexual abuse allegations in general did come
up during this conversation—as part of a discussion of the #metoo movement—and
Garcia then asked if anyone had ever touched I.D. Garcia said that I.D. responded
“no.”
Garcia had seen Dryer around I.D. and other young girls on many occasions.
Garcia said she never saw him behave inappropriately.
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On cross-examination, Garcia conceded that there is nothing I.D. could ever
say that would convince Garcia that Dryer had sexually abused I.D.
Gilbert Garcia, Robin’s husband and Dryer’s stepfather, testified next.
Dryer’s family lived with Garcia and his wife for two years. Garcia testified that he
did not see anything that would have indicated “that there was a lack of love”
between Dryer and I.D. He further testified he never saw anything indicating
something was amiss in their relationship.
After Gilbert Garcia testified, the defense requested that the video recording
of K.M.’s interview with Detective Higgs be played for the jury. Though it had
previously been admitted into evidence, it had not yet been played.
Per the recording’s date-time stamp, the interview took place in October 2017.
K.M. began by stating her name and date of birth, November 16, 1999. So, she was
17 years old at the time of the interview.
During the interview, K.M. described Dryer as being “handsy” or “into hugs
and all that.” But she thought this was just him “being friendly.” On the night of the
sleepover at I.D.’s home, she began watching a movie with I.D.’s younger brother
and one of his friends in the living room. K.M. sat on the couch next to them. Later,
Dryer joined them and sat down next to K.M. Eventually, she noticed that Dryer had
his hand on her upper thigh, over her pants. In response, K.M. said she “kinda froze”
because it was “strange.” After a while, she “scooted” closer to the two boys, and
15
Dryer then began moving his hand up and down her thigh and rubbing it with his
thumb. He also touched her side (torso) but did not touch her elsewhere.
K.M. told the detective that after a while the two boys went upstairs. She did
not think that they had seen Dryer touching her, as she was sitting under a blanket.
Once it was just K.M. and Dryer in the living room, she did not know what to do
because she was “really freaked out.” But when the movie ended, K.M. “jumped off
the couch” and “ran upstairs” where she then told I.D. what had happened to her.
When K.M. told I.D., I.D. “didn’t really say anything.” K.M. said that I.D.
gave her “this look.” Looking back, K.M. said, this should have cued her in that
“something wasn’t right.” According to K.M., I.D.’s facial expression seemed to
convey a sentiment something along the lines of: “Oh great, this is happening again.”
Finally, Dryer took the stand to testify in his own defense.
About the August 2017 sleepover, Dryer testified that he joined K.M., his son,
Z.D., and his son’s friend in watching a movie out of concern that it would be best
if boys and girls did not mingle at night unsupervised. According to Dryer, there
were two couches in the living room but all four of them were sitting on the same
one during the movie. Dryer sat on one end of the couch next to K.M. He said that
his wife, Black, was also in the living room, on the second couch, while they watched
the movie.
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Dryer denied that he touched K.M.’s inner thigh. He also indicated that he did
not intentionally touch her elsewhere in any manner:
Q. Did you ever touch her at all?
A. Not that I’m aware of.
Q. I mean, is it possible you touched her on the shoulder or something?
A. It—I guess it’s possible, but I don’t recall. I mean, we’re watching a
jump-scary movie. And pretty—you know, everybody would jump
every now and then. I don’t know—I don’t know if I accidentally
bumped her or something.
Dryer said that he had heard K.M.’s testimony about leaving the room crying.
But he said he did not see anything resembling that.
After midnight, Dryer testified, he found K.M. in Z.D.’s room on the floor
“under a blanket” with Z.D.’s friend. Dryer told her to leave Z.D.’s room and stay
separate from the boys the rest of the night. According to Dryer, K.M. “got mad”
and told him “no.” At that point, Dryer went to his wife and asked her to handle the
situation, which his wife then did.
As to I.D.’s allegations, Dryer categorically denied them. Asked why she
would make them, Dryer responded, “I have no idea.”
Dryer maintained that I.D. had a loft bed from the time she was about seven
or eight years old until they moved into his mother’s home. This bed was elevated
off the ground high enough for Dryer to almost stand beneath it. The mattress was
basically at eye-level for him when standing. He said I.D. did not have a daybed
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during this time. Thus, he maintained it was impossible for him to have knelt beside
her.
State’s Rebuttal Witnesses
Quinten Chambers, a friend of Z.D.’s, testified. Chambers stated he had
known Z.D. for 10 or 11 years as of the time of his testimony, had been in Dryer’s
home, and that when he was there I.D. did not have a loft bed. But he conceded that
on Facebook he had seen old photographs, from sometime before he had met Z.D.,
in which I.D. had a loft bed in her bedroom.
Black retook the stand next. Since testifying during the State’s case in chief,
Black had gone through old family photographs to ascertain when I.D. switched
from sleeping in a loft bed to the daybed. The State introduced several of these
photographs, taken between 2012–14, into evidence. Some of these showed I.D. in
a daybed in her bedroom in the family’s home when she was between the ages of 11
and 12 years old. One of the photos showed Dryer and I.D. in her bedroom with a
daybed during the same general timeframe, when she was either in the fifth or sixth
grade. Black said I.D. had the daybed well before these photographs as well.
Black also testified that on the night of the August 2017 sleepover, she did not
watch the movie with the others. She had already gone to bed.
Elizabeth Wethers then testified. Wethers had been Black’s best friend since
at least junior high school. She stated that Black had given her I.D.’s loft bed
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sometime in 2013, when I.D. got a new one. In conjunction with her testimony, the
State introduced a November 2013 Facebook post made by Wethers showing the loft
bed in her home.
Finally, the State called Z.D. Z.D., I.D.’s brother and the defendant’s son, was
17 years old at trial. According to Z.D., I.D. stopped using a loft bed “sometime
before she even went into junior high.”
Z.D. also testified about the sleepover. He testified that his mother, Black, had
gone to bed when he and others watched the movie. According to him, he, his friend,
and K.M. all went upstairs at the same time, before the movie ended. He did not
notice K.M. crying. In addition, Z.D. denied that Dryer caught K.M. with his friend
or that a confrontation between Dryer and K.M. occurred that night.
Jury Verdict and Trial Court’s Judgment
The jury found Dryer guilty as alleged in the indictment and assessed his
punishment at 35 years of confinement. The trial court rendered a judgment of
conviction in accord with the jury’s verdict.
DISCUSSION
The trial court admitted into evidence K.M.’s testimony under Article 38.37
of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. Under this article, in certain prosecutions,
including prosecutions for the continuous sexual abuse of a young child, the trial
court may admit into evidence “for any bearing the evidence has on relevant matters,
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including the character of the defendant and acts performed in conformity with the
character of the defendant,” evidence that the defendant committed any of a number
of enumerated separate offenses. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.37, § 2(a)(1)(B),
2(b). The enumerated separate offenses include sex trafficking of a child, continuous
sexual abuse of a young child or disabled individual, indecency with a child, sexual
assault of a child, aggravated sexual assault of a child, online solicitation of a minor,
sexual performance by a child, possession or promotion of child pornography, and
an attempt or conspiracy to commit any of the preceding offenses. Id. § 2(a).
On appeal, Dryer argues that his trial lawyer provided ineffective assistance
by failing to object that K.M.’s testimony was inadmissible under Article 38.37
because she was 17 years old when Dryer allegedly touched her upper thigh. Because
K.M. was not a child at the time and Article 38.37 only allows for the admission of
certain sex-related offenses committed against children, Dryer maintains that the
trial court would have had no choice but to sustain such an objection. Thus, had his
trial lawyer made this objection, the jury would never have heard K.M.’s testimony,
which was damning evidence from a second accuser in what otherwise would have
been a trial that boiled down to Dryer’s word versus his daughter’s. But for K.M.’s
testimony, Dryer urges, the jury might not have found him guilty.
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Law Applicable to Ineffective-Assistance Claims
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the right
to counsel in criminal prosecutions. Cannon v. State, 252 S.W.3d 342, 348 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2008). This guarantee entails the right to effective assistance. Id.
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must
prove that his trial lawyer’s performance was deficient and this deficiency
prejudiced the defense. Miller v. State, 548 S.W.3d 497, 499 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018).
The defendant bears the burden of proving deficient performance and prejudice by
a preponderance of the evidence. Perez v. State, 310 S.W.3d 890, 893 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2010). Unless the defendant proves both deficient performance and prejudice,
we cannot sustain his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Lopez v. State, 343
S.W.3d 137, 142 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011). The purpose of this test for ineffective
assistance is to ascertain whether defense counsel’s conduct so undermined the
proper functioning of the adversarial process that it calls into question the reliability
of the jury’s verdict. Villa v. State, 417 S.W.3d 455, 463 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013).
Defense counsel’s performance is deficient if it falls below an objective
standard of reasonableness. Prine v. State, 537 S.W.3d 113, 117 (Tex. Crim. App.
2017). Judicial scrutiny of counsel’s performance is highly deferential. Mata v.
State, 226 S.W.3d 425, 428 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). There is a strong presumption
that counsel’s performance was reasonable, and the defendant must overcome this
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strong presumption to prevail on an ineffective-assistance claim. Prine, 537 S.W.3d
at 117. Therefore, any deficiency in counsel’s performance must be firmly founded
in the record. Id. It is not enough that counsel’s performance may seem questionable
in hindsight. Id. We cannot find that counsel’s performance was deficient based on
conjecture. Scheanette v. State, 144 S.W.3d 503, 510 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004). Nor
can we infer that counsel’s performance was deficient based on portions of the record
that are unclear. Mata, 226 S.W.3d at 432. Rather, the record must affirmatively
show that counsel’s performance was deficient. Prine, 537 S.W.3d at 117.
It is rare that the trial record, standing alone, is sufficient to show deficient
performance by counsel. Nava v. State, 415 S.W.3d 289, 308 (Tex. Crim. App.
2013). The reasonableness of counsel’s decisions often depends on facts that do not
appear in the record. Mitchell v. State, 68 S.W.3d 640, 642 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
Hence, counsel ordinarily should be afforded the opportunity to explain his conduct
before we find that his performance was deficient. Nava, 415 S.W.3d at 308. When
counsel has not been given this opportunity, we cannot find counsel’s performance
deficient unless his conduct was so outrageous that no competent lawyer would have
engaged in it. Menefield v. State, 363 S.W.3d 591, 593 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012). That
is, the record must show that counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard
of reasonableness as a matter of law and that no reasonable trial strategy could justify
his deficient performance. Lopez, 343 S.W.3d at 143. We generally will assume that
22
counsel had a reasonable strategic motive if any reasonable trial strategy can be
imagined. Okonkwo v. State, 398 S.W.3d 689, 693 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013).
Deficient performance by defense counsel prejudices the defendant when
there is a reasonable probability that but for counsel’s deficient performance the
trial’s outcome would have differed. Nava, 415 S.W.3d at 308. A reasonable
probability is one that undermines our confidence in the trial’s outcome. Id.
A defendant is not entitled to errorless representation. Frangias v. State, 450
S.W.3d 125, 136 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). We therefore must review an ineffective-
assistance claim with an eye toward the totality of the representation. Id. A single
error will seldom suffice to prove ineffective assistance. Villa, 417 S.W.3d at 463.
A single error does so only if it is both egregious and had a seriously deleterious
impact on counsel’s representation as a whole. Frangias, 450 S.W.3d at 136.
Analysis
Deficient Performance
The record shows K.M. was 17 years old when Dryer allegedly touched her
thigh at the sleepover. At the beginning of her recorded interview, K.M. stated she
was born on November 16, 1999. Uncontradicted testimony shows that the sleepover
took place in August 2017. Together, these facts establish that K.M. was not a child
for purposes of any of the separate sex offenses that conceivably could apply to
Dryer’s touching of K.M. that could make her testimony admissible under Article
23
38.37 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art.
38.37, § 2 (rendering admissible certain enumerated separate offenses, including
continuous sexual abuse of young child, indecency with child, sexual assault of
child, and aggravated sexual assault of child); PENAL §§ 21.02(a)(1), 21.11(a),
22.011(c)(1), 22.021(b)(1) (defining “child” for purposes of preceding offenses or
otherwise limiting their applicability to those “younger than 17 years of age”).
Consequently, K.M.’s testimony was not admissible under Article 38.37.1
Thus, the question is whether Dryer’s trial lawyer was deficient in failing to
object that K.M.’s testimony was categorically inadmissible under Article 38.37.
Because Dryer’s counsel has not been afforded the opportunity to explain his failure
to object on this ground and the record does not otherwise disclose counsel’s
thinking on the subject, we can only answer this question in the affirmative if
counsel’s failure to make this objection was so outrageous that no competent lawyer
would have failed to object on this ground. See Menefield, 363 S.W.3d at 593.
1
We note that “child” is not universally defined as one younger than 17 years of age for
purposes of sex-related offenses against children. For example, online solicitation of a
minor defines “minor” as one “who is younger than 17 years of age” or “whom the
actor believes to be younger than 17 years of age.” PENAL § 33.021(a)(1). And several
sex-related offenses, including sex trafficking, sexual performance by a child, and
possession or promotion of child pornography, all apply to victims who are “younger
than 18 years of age.” PENAL §§ 20A.01(a), 43.25(a)(1), 43.26(a)(1). But none of these
offenses—online solicitation of a minor, sex trafficking, sexual performance by a child,
and possession or promotion of child pornography—are even arguably applicable here.
24
We hold that no competent lawyer would have failed to make this objection
because the inadmissibility of K.M.’s testimony is plain on the face of the record
and no reasonable counsel could have decided that the defense would be better
served by its admission than its exclusion. That is, we cannot imagine any reasonable
trial strategy that would excuse or explain trial counsel’s failure to object to K.M.’s
testimony, which was categorically inadmissible and unfavorable to the defense.
Ineffective-assistance claims must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. See
Okonkwo, 398 S.W.3d at 693 (stating that judicial evaluation of ineffective-
assistance claims turns on “all the circumstances” and observing that act or omission
by counsel that is unreasonable in one case may be reasonable in another one). Thus,
while we do not lay down a rule of universal application, we think it will be a rare
situation in which failing to object to evidence categorically inadmissible under
Article 38.37 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure is not deficient performance.
To explain why, we must briefly consider Article 38.37’s purpose and effect.
Ordinarily, our rules of evidence make separate offenses that a defendant
committed against others inadmissible during the guilt-innocence phase of a criminal
trial, at least for purposes of proving the defendant’s character to show he acted in
accord with his character on a particular occasion. See TEX. R. EVID. 404(a)(1),
(b)(1) (disallowing evidence of crimes, wrongs, and other acts for this purpose and
also disallowing evidence of character to prove that person acted in accord with his
25
character); Casey v. State, 215 S.W.3d 870, 879 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (extraneous-
offense evidence inadmissible when it has no relevance apart from character
conformity); see also TEX. R. EVID. 405 (limiting manner in which person’s
character may be proved in limited circumstances in which such evidence is
allowed). Article 38.37 upends this result by making evidence of certain enumerated
separate offenses admissible in prosecutions of sex-related crimes committed against
children. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.37, § 2(b) (making this evidence
admissible notwithstanding Rules 404 and 405 of Texas Rules of Evidence).
Our court has previously recognized that Article 38.37 makes this evidence
admissible because prosecuting sex crimes committed against children is especially
difficult due to the trauma visited on young victims. Cox v. State, 495 S.W.3d 898,
904 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2016, pet. ref’d). This can lead to delays in the
reporting or discovery of these crimes, during which evidence disappears. Id. Often
the only significant evidence at trial may be the child’s uncorroborated testimony,
and children are often targeted for these crimes in part because they tend to be poor
witnesses. Id. Article 38.37 remedies these evidentiary obstacles by allowing
prosecutors to introduce evidence of similar sex-related offenses committed against
other children that would otherwise be inadmissible. See id.; see also Caston v. State,
549 S.W.3d 601, 610 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2017, no pet.) (noting that
Article 38.37 arms prosecutors with additional evidence due to tendency of child’s
26
credibility to become focal issue when prosecution turns on child’s uncorroborated
testimony or boils down to credibility battle between accused and child). This
evidence is admissible for any relevant purpose, including as proof of the
defendant’s character and propensity to act in conformity with his character. TEX.
CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.37, § 2(b); Castillo v. State, 573 S.W.3d 869, 880 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2019, pet. ref’d). In other words, the State can offer
evidence of these separate crimes to prove the defendant is guilty of the crime
charged. As we have previously observed, perhaps with a degree of understatement,
this kind of “testimony of another child victim is damning evidence.” Id. at 883.
In this particular case, the lone testimony the jury heard about Dryer’s sexual
abuse of I.D. came from I.D. herself. There was no other testimony or physical
evidence as to Dryer’s commission of the charged offense, continuous sexual abuse
of a young child. Without K.M.’s testimony about the sleepover incident, the jury
would have had to reach a verdict based on either I.D.’s uncorroborated testimony
or the jury’s evaluation of her credibility relative to Dryer, assuming he would have
chosen to testify in a trial that did not include K.M.’s additional allegations. Under
these circumstances, a defense lawyer could not reasonably forego an objection that
would bar the jury from hearing the damning testimony of a second accuser in
corroboration of the charged offense. There is no reasonable trial strategy that would
allow counsel to let a jury hear this highly prejudicial inadmissible evidence. See
27
Robertson v. State, 187 S.W.3d 475, 484 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (observing that
when defense principally rests on defendant’s credibility weight of authority
supports holding that his trial lawyer performs deficiently by allowing jury to hear
prejudicial and clearly inadmissible evidence, like prior convictions, during trial’s
guilt-innocence phase because doing so could serve no strategic purpose); Agbogwe
v. State, 414 S.W.3d 820, 833 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2013, no pet.) (same).
Thus, Dryer’s trial lawyer’s performance was deficient in this respect as a matter of
law. See Lopez, 343 S.W.3d at 143; see also Rodriguez v. State, No. 14-17-00388-
CR, 2018 WL 6493880, at *4 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Dec. 11, 2018, no
pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (assuming, without deciding, that
defense counsel’s failure to object that TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.37, § 2 did
not apply to extraneous offense because victim against whom it was committed was
adult constitutes conduct so outrageous that no competent lawyer would have
engaged in this conduct).
The State argues that the record was less clear as to K.M.’s age than Dryer
suggests, noting that during the pretrial hearing on the admissibility of K.M.’s
testimony she said that she was about 16 years old at the time of the sleepover. Thus,
the State maintains that it would not have been immediately clear to Dryer’s lawyer,
or any reasonable defense lawyer, that she was in fact 17 years old at the time.
28
The flaw in the State’s argument is that the clerk’s record establishes that
Dryer’s trial lawyer reviewed or received a copy of K.M.’s October 2017
videorecorded interview in October 2018—more than three years before the
February 2022 pretrial hearing on the admissibility of her testimony. In the
interview, K.M. stated her date of birth—November 16, 1999—at the outset. Later
during the interview, which only lasted about eight-and-a-half minutes, both K.M.
and Detective Higgs acknowledged that she was not a child at the time of the August
2017 sleepover. Higgs at one point asked K.M. for her date of birth a second time,
which she again told him. Higgs responded, “So you are 17, you’ll be 18 in
November?” K.M. nodded her head affirmatively and answered, “Yes, sir.” K.M.
then said that she understood she was “technically an adult.” Though Higgs opined
that Dryer’s conduct could still be criminal, he too agreed that she was “not a child,”
given that she was 17 years old. Hence, Dryer’s counsel either was aware or should
have been aware before trial of K.M.’s age and recognized the corresponding
inadmissibility of her testimony.
The State further argues that K.M.’s testimony was admissible on a ground
independent from Article 38.37 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.
Specifically, the State posits that K.M.’s testimony was admissible to rebut the
defense’s “claim that I.D. had fabricated her allegations.” See, e.g., Bass v. State,
270 S.W.3d 557, 563 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (holding defensive theory of
29
fabrication raised in opening statement opened door to extraneous offenses). Thus,
the State reasons, Dryer’s lawyer was not deficient in failing to object to the
admissibility of K.M.’s testimony under Article 38.37 because it was admissible on
a different basis—to rebut the contention that I.D. lied about Dryer’s abuse.
But the State presented K.M. as its second witness during its case in chief,
before the defense had put on any evidence of its own and before the defense had
engaged in cross-examination of a prosecution witness that was sufficient to raise a
defense of fabrication. In addition, the defense had reserved its right to make an
opening statement. Thus, when K.M. testified, the defense had not yet suggested
before the jury that I.D. had fabricated her allegations of sexual abuse.
Under these circumstances, K.M.’s testimony about Dryer touching her thigh
during the sleepover was not admissible as rebuttal evidence because the State
cannot rebut a defensive theory of fabrication with evidence of extraneous offenses
before the defensive theory is actually raised by the defense. That is, Texas law does
not allow the State to introduce evidence of extraneous offenses in prebuttal of
anticipated but as yet unraised defensive theories like fabrication. See Smith v. State,
420 S.W.3d 207, 219–20 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2013, pet. ref’d) (noting
that extraneous-offense evidence is admissible to rebut defensive theory raised in
opening statement or through cross-examination of prosecution witnesses but that
defense must have genuinely raised theory before rebuttal may occur); see also De
30
La Paz v. State, 279 S.W.3d 336, 343 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (agreeing mere denial
of guilt does not open door to admission of extraneous offenses, as otherwise simple
fact that defendant insisted on right to trial would make this evidence admissible).
In sum, we reject the State’s arguments that defense counsel’s failure to object
to the admissibility of K.M.’s testimony under Article 38.37 was not deficient. Thus,
we must next decide whether counsel’s deficiency prejudiced the defense.
Prejudice
A single error is not prejudicial for purposes of ineffective assistance unless
it was both egregious and had a seriously deleterious impact on counsel’s
representation as a whole. Frangias, 450 S.W.3d at 136. Here, defense counsel’s
error—failing to object that K.M.’s testimony that Dryer touched her thigh at the
sleepover was inadmissible under Article 38.37 because she was not a child—was
both egregious and had a seriously deleterious impact on counsel’s representation.
The inadmissibility of K.M.’s testimony is straightforward. K.M.’s
videorecorded interview established that she was 17 years old at the time of the
sleepover, and her age rendered her testimony inadmissible under Article 38.37.
The admission of this inadmissible testimony transformed the trial from a he
said, she said dispute turning almost entirely on the jury’s evaluation of I.D.’s and
Dryer’s credibility to a contest in which Dryer faced two separate accusers. K.M.’s
allegation that Dryer touched her inappropriately at the sleepover ultimately
31
occupied at least as much time at trial as I.D.’s allegations of sexual abuse. The
sleepover was discussed repeatedly and by multiple witnesses. During its case in
chief, the State called four witnesses: Black, K.M., Higgs, and I.D. All four testified
about the sleepover or K.M.’s allegations. In addition, two of the State’s four rebuttal
witnesses testified about the sleepover. Thus, while defense counsel’s error was
singular, the error occurred at the outset, during a pretrial hearing about the
admissibility of the evidence at issue and impacted the trial from start to finish. Had
defense counsel objected, the trial would have fundamentally differed.
As we have noted, testimony about separate alleged sex-related offenses
admitted under Article 38.37 is damning evidence. K.M.’s testimony is no exception.
While her testimony differed somewhat from I.D.’s, both witnesses testified to
touching alone. K.M. testified that Dryer had touched her thigh and moved toward
her “private area,” which is where I.D. said he routinely touched her. I.D. also
testified to other episodes of touching—these involving her buttocks—that occurred
when she and Dryer were watching movies. K.M. likewise said Dryer touched her
while they were watching a movie. Hence, K.M.’s testimony resembled I.D.’s
testimony enough to corroborate I.D.’s allegations of sexual abuse against Dryer.
K.M.’s testimony was substantial additional evidence of guilt.
Indeed, the State argued for the admission of K.M.’s testimony in part on this
basis. The prosecutor asserted that K.M.’s testimony was “extremely important and
32
necessary for the State because the entire case rests on the testimony of the
complaining witness.” The prosecutor observed that there were “no other
eyewitnesses” or “forensic evidence” or “medical evidence.” Thus, the prosecutor
reasoned, “having a second witness who can testify that the Defendant did something
similar to her is incredibly corroborating.” Later, in closing argument, the State
pitched the same interpretation of the evidence to the jury, arguing that K.M.’s
testimony “tells you everything that you need to know about the Defendant.” The
prosecutor elaborated that this was so because:
[T]he defense raises that question. Who in the world would molest their
daughter when the wall right there that you’re looking at, on the other
side of that is your sleeping wife? Who in the world would be so bold
to do that? The same man that would sit on the couch and rub up on a
girl’s leg with two boys, including his son, in the same room.
Furthermore, K.M. was demonstrably emotional on the stand. The trial
transcript twice notes that she cried during her testimony. On the second occasion,
K.M. was so tearful that the trial court recessed proceedings after advising K.M. to
“take a couple of deep breaths and calm down” and asking if K.M. needed some
water. In closing, the State argued that K.M.’s emotion was a sign of veracity. The
prosecutor rhetorically asked the members of the jury: “Do you really think that I
brought in an Oscar-worthy actress to have a visceral, emotional reaction to the point
that we had to take breaks?” The prosecutor further advocated that K.M.’s “emotions
33
tells [sic] you everything that you need to know about what happened in [I.D.’s]
room at night.”
In sum, K.M.’s testimony played a critical role at trial, with the subject of the
sleepover and her allegations repeatedly resurfacing during the testimony of multiple
witnesses. The State argued in part that the jury should believe both K.M. and I.D.
based on the emotional character of K.M.’s testimony, which defense counsel could
have readily kept the jury from hearing by making a simple objection before trial
based on facts that either were known to counsel or should have been known to him.
Counsel’s failure to make this objection changed the course of the entire trial to
Dryer’s detriment without any conceivable strategic or tactical benefit to the defense.
This is precisely the sort of situation in which a single error by counsel is both so
egregious and has such a deleterious impact on the representation as a whole that it
supports a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal.
On this record, defense counsel’s error undermines our confidence in the
trial’s outcome. Evidence of extraneous offenses is inherently prejudicial and harms
a defendant, in part because it forces the defendant to defend himself against charges
that are not part of the present prosecution and also because it encourages the jury
to convict based on bad character instead of proof of the specific crime charged.
Sims v. State, 273 S.W.3d 291, 294–95 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008); Daggett v. State,
187 S.W.3d 444, 450–51 & n.12 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). Here, the outcome of the
34
trial essentially depended on the jury’s evaluation of the credibility of Dryer and his
accuser, whose testimony was significantly corroborated by K.M.’s inadmissible
testimony about her own similar encounter with Dryer. K.M.’s testimony therefore
harmed the defense both by diminishing Dryer’s credibility and bolstering I.D.’s
testimony about the abuse. Furthermore, K.M.’s account of her encounter with Dryer
pervaded the trial from start to finish, such that defense counsel’s singular error had
a significant impact on the representation as a whole. Under these circumstances,
had the jury not heard from or about K.M., there is a reasonable probability that the
outcome of the trial would have differed. See Ex parte Menchaca, 854 S.W.2d 128,
132–33 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (holding that lawyer’s failure to prevent admission
of inadmissible prior conviction for rape in drug prosecution was both deficient and
prejudicial in significant part because it permeated entire guilt-innocence phase of
trial, outcome rested entirely on credibility of witnesses, and prior conviction
undermined defendant’s credibility and thus heart of his defense); see also Garcia
v. State, 308 S.W.3d 62, 66–69, 75–76 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2009, no pet.)
(holding that lawyer’s opening of door to rebuttal evidence of defendant’s sexual
assault of second victim in prosecution for sexual assault was, among other failings,
deficient and prejudicial given that sole viable defense depended on defendant’s
credibility); Stone v. State, 17 S.W.3d 348, 352–54 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi
2000, pet. ref’d) (holding lawyer’s introduction of otherwise inadmissible murder
35
conviction during trial’s guilt-innocence phase in drug prosecution was both
deficient and prejudicial because it diminished defendant’s credibility, which was
critical to his defense, and corroborated prosecution evidence about his behavior);
Ramirez v. State, 873 S.W.2d 757, 762–63 (Tex. App.—El Paso 1994, pet. ref’d)
(holding lawyer’s failure to prevent admission of evidence of remote murder
conviction during trial’s guilt-innocence phase was deficient and prejudicial in that
defendant claimed self-defense and his prior conviction both harmed his credibility
and was used by prosecutor to argue that he had propensity to commit murder).
CONCLUSION
We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand for a new trial. See Ex parte
Stamnitz, 768 S.W.2d 461, 462 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1989, no pet.)
(holding correct remedy when reversing judgment of conviction due to ineffective
assistance of trial counsel is to remand cause for new trial); see also Lopez v. State,
462 S.W.3d 180, 190 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2015, no pet.) (remanding for
new punishment hearing due to ineffective assistance during sentencing stage).
Gordon Goodman
Justice
Panel consists of Justices Goodman, Hightower, and Guerra.
Publish. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b).
36