David Wilbanks v. State ( 2018 )


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  •                        COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 02-16-00305-CR
    DAVID WILBANKS                                                  APPELLANT
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                   STATE
    ----------
    FROM THE 16TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY
    TRIAL COURT NO. F16-1258-16
    ----------
    MEMORANDUM OPINION1
    ----------
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Appellant David Wilbanks appeals his convictions and sentences for
    sexual assault and for continuous sexual abuse of a child.   Wilbanks raises
    1
    See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
    seven issues challenging various evidentiary rulings by the trial court.2 Because
    Wilbanks’s complaints are either not preserved for our review or do not raise any
    reversible error, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    II. BRIEF FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    When she was fourteen years old, Gloria3––who had lived with Wilbanks
    from time to time while he financially and emotionally supported her family––told
    her best friend’s mother that Wilbanks had repeatedly performed sexual acts with
    her, beginning with fondling when she was six years old and continuing until the
    time of her outcry. At the urging of her friend’s mother, Gloria told her own
    mother, who contacted the police.
    As part of an investigation by both the police and Child Protective
    Services, Lori Nelson conducted a forensic interview of Gloria.      During the
    interview, Gloria provided details about what Wilbanks had done to her. Gloria
    told Nelson that Wilbanks began digitally penetrating her when she was six and
    that he began having intercourse with her when she was about eight or nine,
    which continued until she was fourteen.
    Ultimately, a grand jury issued a three-count indictment charging Wilbanks
    with (1) indecency with a child by engaging in sexual contact with Gloria when
    Wilbanks’s contentions are sometimes urged under more than one issue;
    2
    we address them and the nuanced variations between them as necessary to
    dispose of all Wilbanks’s issues and overlapping arguments.
    3
    We use a pseudonym to refer to the complainant. See McClendon v.
    State, 
    643 S.W.2d 936
    , 936 n.1 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1982).
    2
    she was younger than seventeen (Count One); (2) continuous sexual abuse of
    Gloria before she turned fourteen (Count Two); and (3) sexually assaulting Gloria
    when she was younger than seventeen (Count Three). See Tex. Penal Code
    Ann. §§ 21.02, 21.11(a)(2), 22.011(a)(2)(C) (West Supp. 2017). After a trial, a
    jury found Wilbanks not guilty of Count One but guilty of Counts Two and Three
    and assessed his punishment at fifty years’ confinement for Count Two and at
    twenty years’ confinement for Count Three. The trial court sentenced Wilbanks
    in accordance with the jury’s assessment and ordered the sentences to run
    consecutively. This appeal followed.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW AND LAW ON PRESERVATION4
    A trial court’s decision concerning the admission or exclusion of evidence
    and concerning the extent of cross-examination is reviewed under an abuse-of-
    discretion standard. Tillman v. State, 
    354 S.W.3d 425
    , 435 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2011) (concerning the admission or exclusion of evidence); Cantu v. State, 
    939 S.W.2d 627
    , 635 (Tex. Crim. App.) (concerning the extent of cross-examination),
    cert. denied, 
    522 U.S. 994
    (1997). A trial court abuses its discretion when its
    decision falls outside the zone of reasonable disagreement. Green v. State, 
    934 S.W.2d 92
    , 102 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996), cert. denied, 
    520 U.S. 1200
    (1997).
    4
    These two standards of review apply to Wilbanks’s issues on appeal—
    because they all challenge evidentiary rulings—and to the State’s numerous
    contentions on appeal that many of Wilbanks’s issues are not preserved for our
    review. Consequently, we set forth these standards once but apply them
    throughout the analysis sections of our opinion.
    3
    To preserve a complaint for our review, a party must have presented to the
    trial court a timely request, objection, or motion that states the specific grounds
    for the desired ruling if they are not apparent from the context of the request,
    objection, or motion. Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1); Douds v. State, 
    472 S.W.3d 670
    , 674 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015), cert. denied, 
    136 S. Ct. 1461
    (2016). The
    proponent also has the responsibility to “at the earliest opportunity, [do]
    everything necessary to bring to the judge’s attention the evidence rule [or
    statute] in question and its precise and proper application to the evidence in
    question.” Bonilla v. State, 
    452 S.W.3d 811
    , 817 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014). A
    complaint is not preserved “if the legal basis of the complaint raised on appeal
    varies from the complaint made at trial.” See Lovill v. State, 
    319 S.W.3d 687
    ,
    691–92 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009). To determine whether a complaint on appeal
    comports with a complaint made at trial, we consider the context in which the
    complaint was made and the parties’ shared understanding at that time. Clark v.
    State, 
    365 S.W.3d 333
    , 339 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012). A reviewing court should
    not address the merits of an issue that has not been preserved for appeal. Ford
    v. State, 
    305 S.W.3d 530
    , 532 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).
    IV. REFUSAL TO PERMIT QUESTIONING OF GLORIA ABOUT INSTANCES OF SEXUAL
    TOUCHING OR SEXUAL BEHAVIOR BY OTHERS
    In his first issue, Wilbanks contends that the trial court violated his
    Confrontation Clause and Due Process rights under the United States
    Constitution by refusing to permit him to cross-examine Gloria “about other
    4
    instances in which she alleged inappropriate touching and revealed it to her
    family.” Wilbanks contends this allegedly erroneous ruling constitutes reversible
    error because the evidence went to Gloria’s credibility5 and was admissible to
    correct a false impression created by Gloria—that she did not make an earlier
    outcry because she was scared and did not know what to do. The State argues
    that Wilbanks failed to preserve his Confrontation Clause and Due Process
    complaints because he did not raise them in the trial court. We first address the
    State’s lack-of-preservation contentions.
    A. Confrontation Clause Violation and Due Process Complaints
    Not Preserved
    Prior to voir dire, Wilbanks’s counsel informed the trial court that Gloria had
    referenced three incidents involving three other perpetrators during Nelson’s
    forensic interview of her.6 Wilbanks requested permission to voir dire the jury
    “about a credibility issue if someone makes allegations against multiple persons
    versus one person” despite the motion in limine granted for the State concerning
    this issue. The trial court voiced concern that the proposed question would be an
    impermissible commitment question and that it would also violate rule 412. See
    Tex. R. Evid. 412. The trial court told Wilbanks’s counsel that she could ask the
    5
    To the extent that Wilbanks contends the Confrontation Clause was
    violated by his inability to attack Gloria’s credibility concerning whether she knew
    how to report inappropriate touching, we address this credibility argument with
    his false-impression argument.
    6
    The interview was not admitted into evidence.
    5
    panel about credibility in general but not in reference to whether a person had
    made allegations against others in the past.
    Wilbanks requested a bench conference during his cross-examination of
    Gloria; he sought the trial court’s permission to cross-examine Gloria about the
    three incidents involving other alleged perpetrators.      Specifically, Wilbanks
    argued that he wanted to establish for the jury that with those incidents, Gloria
    had told someone right away:
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: . . . I think it’s important that the jury
    know that she has had situations in which she had been -- I mean, I
    know this is tough territory, Your Honor. However, she was not
    hesitant to reveal inappropriate touching in these other three
    instances. And I think the jury needs to hear that.
    THE COURT: For what purpose?
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: Because she’s acted like, I’m scared, I
    didn’t know what to do. Yet she had three other incidences that
    happened even younger than six years of age that she knows how
    to respond to those situations. So she can’t -- and one, under oath,
    she can't say without being confronted about it that she doesn’t
    know what to do about it when she has three previous incidences
    where she reveals right away.
    THE COURT: Isn’t that trying to impeach her as to a collateral
    matter?
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: It’s not a collateral matter, Your Honor.
    She’s testified --
    THE COURT: It’s not in this case. Doesn’t involve this
    Defendant. Doesn’t involve the allegations made in this case.
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: It involves her ability to make claims
    about what happened to her. Because if she’s now just saying that
    all these things happened and she didn’t know what to do, that’s
    dishonest because she does know what to do. And that is not a
    6
    collateral matter here.     That goes straight to the heart of her
    credibility.
    THE COURT: Response?
    [State’s Counsel]: I don’t think that it’s relevant, Your Honor.
    And it is a kind of a way to attack her. As far as these other
    allegations go, at the end of the forensic interview, the forensic
    interviewer usually asks, Oh, and after what we’ve talked about,
    were there any other instances where someone has touched you
    inappropriately. And she revealed other instances.
    Those other instances haven’t been things that haven’t been --
    it’s not that they’re not substantiated. The police investigated this
    certain particular incident. And as far as when she -- in the forensic
    interview she makes claims of telling her mom about [an incident]
    and telling her brother about when another [person] touched her.
    The last situation was when she was a teenager. And the first
    time that she had told the -- it was in the forensic interview, I believe,
    as to that. But this all just seems not relevant. And it just seems to
    prejudice the jury to these other claims made against other
    individuals. It’s not relevant to this Defendant.
    ....
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: Your Honor, this goes directly to this
    witness’s credibility. . . .
    When she’s telling this jury -- and I hate to do this in front of
    her because it feels like child abuse to me. But when she tells this
    jury that she didn’t know what to do or when the first thing
    happened, she ran out and brothers were right there. She says
    nothing. And she acts like she didn’t know what to do. Yet three
    different times she knows what to do. That’s absolutely relevant to
    this case. Completely relevant.
    THE COURT: Prior to that occasion?
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: Yes.
    THE COURT: Well, I thought we just heard that one of them
    was since she’s been a teenager?
    7
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: I’m sorry, one of them was when she
    was a kid before . . . .
    THE COURT: That’s prior to the first incident that happened
    ...?
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: Regardless, we don’t know when the
    actual situation --
    THE COURT: Maybe none of those other people told her not
    to say anything.
    [State’s Counsel]: That’s right.
    THE COURT: I don’t know. I don’t know what the facts are of
    those other instances. And I think it’s going to be -- it’s very
    prejudicial. And I don’t think that it’s proper fodder for impeachment.
    And I’m not going to let you ask her about it. [Emphasis added.]
    Thus, at trial, Wilbanks’s counsel urged the trial court to allow her to
    question Gloria about the incidents involving other perpetrators to show that
    Gloria was being untruthful when she testified that she had not told anyone about
    the sexual abuse by Wilbanks because she was scared and did not know what to
    do.   The trial court’s questions and responses indicate that the trial court
    understood the main focus of Wilbanks’s argument to be Gloria’s credibility,
    which gave rise to the trial court’s concern about proper impeachment. See
    Resendez v. State, c, 315–16 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (analyzing responses of
    trial court and State in context to determine what each understood appellant’s
    complaints to be).
    Wilbanks’s trial objection did not clearly articulate Confrontation Clause or
    Due Process grounds, nor does the context of the exchange indicate that either
    8
    the trial judge or the State understood that Wilbanks’s objection was based on
    Confrontation Clause or Due Process grounds.         Although Wilbanks’s counsel
    referred to “confronting” the witness, it was in the context of arguing that Gloria
    had left a false impression with the jury and should be questioned about whether
    she was telling the truth about being scared and not knowing what to do; that is
    that he should be able to impeach her concerning her truthfulness.        Because
    Wilbanks’s Confrontation-Clause and Due-Process-rights appellate arguments
    were not raised at trial, they were not preserved for our review. See Leza v.
    State, 
    351 S.W.3d 344
    , 360–61 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (holding that appellant
    failed to preserve constitutional argument raised on appeal because “he never
    alerted the trial court in any way that exclusion of the statement would violate any
    federal constitutional right”); Reyna v. State, 
    168 S.W.3d 173
    , 179 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2005) (“Because [appellant] ‘did not clearly articulate’ that the Confrontation
    Clause demanded admission of the evidence, the trial judge ‘never had the
    opportunity to rule upon’ this rationale.”).
    Wilbanks’s evidentiary arguments in the remainder of his first issue—that
    the subject matter is relevant to Gloria’s credibility, is not substantially
    outweighed by a danger of unfair prejudice, and is admissible to correct a false
    impression—comport with the objections he made in the trial court and are
    therefore preserved for our review.
    9
    B. Evidentiary Complaints Were Properly Overruled
    We now review whether the trial court abused its discretion by not
    permitting Wilbanks to question Gloria about the incidents involving other
    perpetrators after she allegedly put her credibility in question and created a false
    impression by testifying that she did not know what to do after Wilbanks sexually
    abused her.
    Specific instances of conduct cannot be used for impeachment “except to
    expose bias, correct any affirmative misrepresentations made on direct
    examination, or demonstrate lack of capacity.” Lagrone v. State, 
    942 S.W.2d 602
    , 613 (Tex. Crim. App.), cert. denied, 
    522 U.S. 917
    (1997). When a witness
    leaves a false impression concerning a matter relating to her credibility, the
    opposing party is allowed to correct that false impression. See Ramirez v. State,
    
    802 S.W.2d 674
    , 676 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990). Courts, however, construe this
    false-impression exception narrowly.     Clay v. State, 
    390 S.W.3d 1
    , 13 (Tex.
    App.—Texarkana 2012, pet. ref’d) (citing James v. State, 
    102 S.W.3d 162
    , 181
    (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, pet. ref’d)).
    Here, on direct examination, Gloria testified that Wilbanks’s sexual abuse
    of her had extended from when she was six years old until the time of her outcry
    when she was fourteen years old. She testified that Wilbanks had told her not to
    tell anyone about what he did and that he had threatened to kill himself if she did
    tell anyone. Gloria said that Wilbanks would make her perform sexual acts in
    exchange for food or other items and that she did not receive spending money
    10
    from her mother. Gloria told her best friend about the abuse because she “was
    just tired of it” and did not want to “deal with it” anymore. Gloria also testified that
    Wilbanks was like a father to her, that she loved him and did not want to get him
    in trouble, and that she was hesitant to tell her mother because Gloria knew her
    mother would be mad. Gloria did not say she was scared to tell an adult about
    sexual abuse in general or that she did not know how to do so.
    Wilbanks’s credibility argument is that Nelson’s testimony—that Gloria told
    her at the end of the interview of three sexual incidents involving other
    perpetrators—was relevant to Gloria’s credibility “because [he, Wilbanks]
    produced evidence that one of these other accusations was false.” Wilbanks
    claims he established this falsity via a defense exhibit admitted for record
    purposes only—a letter from a person against whom Gloria had made an
    accusation during her forensic interview. The letter was written by the father of a
    different friend of Gloria’s, and in it, he admits making an inappropriate comment
    to Gloria but does not admit any sexual acts. Nelson testified on voir dire outside
    the present of the jury essentially that her question to Gloria during the interview
    was a query about other instances of inappropriate looking at Gloria’s body, as
    well as inappropriate sexual acts; specifically, Nelson testified that she always
    asks whether “anyone else has ever looked at or touched their body.” [Emphasis
    added.] Thus, the fact that the letter does not admit to sexual acts with Gloria
    does not establish that Gloria’s identification of this man in answer to Nelson’s
    question—which included the query of whether anyone else had looked at
    11
    Gloria’s body—was false. In the absence of proof of falsity, evidence that Gloria
    made other allegations of abuse is inadmissible. See Puderbaugh v. State, 
    31 S.W.3d 683
    , 687 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2000, pet. ref’d) (holding that trial court
    did not abuse its discretion by preventing appellant from questioning the
    complainant about prior accusation of sexual abuse because there was no
    evidence to support that such accusation, if made, was false); Hughes v. State,
    
    850 S.W.2d 260
    , 262–63 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1993, pet. ref’d) (“When there
    is no evidence that the complainant made false accusations, any evidence
    concerning the accusations is inadmissible.”); cf. Lopez v. State, 
    18 S.W.3d 220
    ,
    225 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (holding that even prior false accusations of abuse
    do not “tend to prove or disprove any of the elements of rape”).
    Concerning his false-impression contention, Wilbanks argues that on direct
    examination, Gloria created a false impression with the jury that she did not know
    how to report sexual abuse when she testified that she was scared and did not
    know what to do. Wilbanks asserts that Gloria’s statement that she did not know
    what to do was false because she had reported other instances of abuse
    immediately. The alleged fact that Gloria immediately told people about one-time
    inappropriate incidents with other alleged perpetrators with whom she did not live
    does not make her testimony that she did not know what to do in this situation—
    involving eight years of ongoing sexual abuse by Wilbanks, a man with whom
    she lived, who was like a father to her, and whom she loved—false or
    12
    misleading.   Thus, there was no false impression to rebut.7        See Ex parte
    Robbins, 
    360 S.W.3d 446
    , 462 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (holding that medical
    examiner’s testimony was not false and did not create a false impression), cert.
    denied, 
    566 U.S. 986
    (2012); Caldwell v. State, 
    356 S.W.3d 42
    , 51–52 (Tex.
    App.—Texarkana 2011, no pet.) (looking at questions within the context of the
    record and determining that answers given by State’s witness during cross-
    examination did not create a false impression about his arrest history and did not
    open door to impeachment).
    Because Gloria’s credibility was not in dispute and because her testimony
    on direct examination that she did not know what to do did not create a false
    impression, the trial court correctly determined that it should not permit Wilbanks
    to question Gloria about the incidents of sexual touching or behavior by other
    perpetrators that she had mentioned during her forensic interview.8 We overrule
    Wilbanks’s first issue.
    7
    Wilbanks makes a one-sentence argument that “even without a showing
    that these accusations were false, they were admissible in evidence under the
    doctrine of chances. See Hammer v. State, 
    296 S.W.3d 555
    , 569–70 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2009).” Wilbanks’s argument based on the doctrine of chances was not
    preserved for our review because he did not object on that ground in the trial
    court. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a); 
    Douds, 472 S.W.3d at 677
    .
    8
    Because we uphold the trial court’s ruling, which implies that questions of
    Gloria about the incidents of sexual touching or behavior by other perpetrators
    were not relevant, we need not address the rule 403 argument that Wilbanks
    includes within his first issue. See McDonald v. State, No. 02-13-00483-CR,
    
    2015 WL 2353307
    , at *4 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 14, 2015, no pet.) (mem.
    op., not designated for publication) (“Evidence that a child has made accusations
    of sexual abuse against another is not relevant or admissible in the absence of
    13
    V. REFUSAL TO PERMIT QUESTIONING OF FORENSIC INTERVIEWER ABOUT THE
    SEXUAL INCIDENTS INVOLVING OTHER PERPETRATORS
    In his second issue, Wilbanks argues that the trial court abused its
    discretion by not permitting him to question Nelson in front of the jury about
    instances in which three other individuals had acted sexually toward Gloria
    because this wrongful limitation of his right to cross-examine witnesses violated
    his Confrontation Clause and Due Process rights under the United States
    Constitution, this testimony was permissible under the rule of optional
    completeness, and the State opened the door to this testimony by eliciting
    testimony about the reliability of Gloria’s forensic interview. The State responds
    that none of these grounds were raised at trial.
    At trial, Wilbanks’s counsel asked to take Nelson on voir dire during cross-
    examination:
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: Your Honor, during the course of the forensic
    interview with this witness, this complaining witness indicated that
    she had three other instances of inappropriate touching throughout
    the course of her life. And as we noted earlier on the record that we
    believe that her reaction to those previous incidences show[s] a
    falsehood for her testifying in front of this jury that she did not know
    how to respond when she’s making the accusations against this
    Defendant.
    And so I want to make a bill with this witness that these
    allegations came forth during the course of this interview and how
    the complaining witness told her she responded to those allegations.
    evidence that those other accusations were false.”). See generally Tex. R. Evid.
    403 (excluding otherwise relevant evidence if probative value is outweighed by
    danger of unfair prejudice).
    14
    THE COURT: Okay. You may do this at this time.
    At the conclusion of the voir dire examination, the trial court stated, “Okay. My
    ruling is still the same regarding those other instances. And I don’t believe that is
    admissible in front of the jury.”
    As with the colloquy regarding whether defense counsel could question
    Gloria about the instances in which other perpetrators had acted sexually
    towards her, Wilbanks did not raise a constitutional complaint to the limitation of
    the forensic examiner’s testimony in the trial court.            Thus, Wilbanks’s
    Confrontation Clause and Due Process complaints as to excluded testimony of
    the forensic interviewer were not preserved for appeal. See 
    Leza, 351 S.W.3d at 360
    –61; 
    Reyna, 168 S.W.3d at 179
    . Likewise, Wilbanks’s counsel did not argue
    in the trial court that the evidence was admissible under the rule of optional
    completeness or that the evidence was admissible because the State had
    opened the door by eliciting testimony about indicia of reliability regarding
    Gloria’s forensic interview; thus, Wilbanks did not preserve these complaints for
    our review.9 See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a); 
    Douds, 472 S.W.3d at 677
    .
    Accordingly, we overrule Wilbanks’s second issue.
    9
    Similarly, Wilbanks’s one-sentence argument—that the forensic
    interviewer left the jury with a false impression when she testified that she had
    ended Gloria’s interview with “a neutral topic” when in fact she had asked Gloria
    about whether anyone else had ever looked at or had touched her body, eliciting
    information about three other perpetrators—was not preserved at trial. See Tex.
    R. App. P. 33.1(a); 
    Douds, 472 S.W.3d at 677
    .
    15
    VI. OUTCRY TESTIMONY IS ADMISSIBLE
    In his third issue, Wilbanks argues that the trial court reversibly erred by
    admitting Gloria’s statements to her best friend’s mother under the outcry
    statute’s exception to the general inadmissibility of hearsay.    See Tex. Code
    Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.072 (West Supp. 2017). Wilbanks contends that Gloria’s
    outcry was not admissible under article 38.072 because the circumstances of the
    outcry, including Gloria’s age when she made it, do not show that it was reliable.
    Wilbanks also contends within his third issue that the admission of Gloria’s outcry
    constitutes inadmissible bolstering. The State responds that Wilbanks did not
    preserve these complaints for appeal.
    A. Wilbanks’s Timing and Circumstances Complaints Are Not Preserved;
    Wilbanks’s Age Complaints Misconstrue the Statute
    Wilbanks argues that, “based on [Gloria’s] age and the timing and
    circumstances of her statements to [her friend’s mother], the trial court could not
    reasonably have found that the statements were reliable.”
    At trial, Wilbanks objected that article 38.072 requires that a complainant
    be under the age of fourteen before a statement is admissible as an outcry:
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: . . . [M]y reading of that statute indicates that
    the outcry has to be with a child who is under fourteen years of age.
    And the complaining witness’s age at the time of the outcry was
    fourteen. So I don’t know that outcry applies in this situation.
    ....
    [State’s Counsel]: So the statute that we’re talking about is Article
    38.072. And it does say, if you read the statute, the only language
    that it has is in regards to the actual conduct. And it says that this
    16
    article applies to a proceeding in the prosecution of an offense under
    any of the following provisions of the Penal Code. If committed
    against a child younger than fourteen years of age or a person with
    a disability. So it’s actually referring to when the conduct itself was
    committed.
    ....
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: . . . But that should also include that there
    has to be a declaration by the Court that the child is unavailable.
    And that obviously is not part of -- I’m assuming it’s part of the State
    -- the State isn’t saying that the child is unavailable to testify.
    [State’s Counsel]: . . . [W]e actually have the child here to testify.
    ....
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: . . . My argument to the Court would be
    number one, that it’s clear from the legislative intent that they want to
    have this ability by the State for a child who is under the age of
    thirteen. And because they obviously believe that once you get to
    the ages of fourteen and older that the possibility of deceit is higher
    because children of a higher age have more of an understanding of
    the impact of their statements.
    So I would submit to the Court that because the complaining
    witness in this case was over fourteen, fourteen-and-a-half, that this
    is far beyond the scope of what the legislative intent was for 38.072
    as it made it clear in the opening paragraph of the statute. And I
    don’t think that bootstrapping to try to get more evidence in just
    because it’s hearsay doesn’t necessarily indicate that it’s any more
    reliable than if the witness testifies herself.
    So I would just submit to the Court that this is not [sic]
    hearsay, and it does not fall under 38.072. And that any evidence
    that is submitted under that section is both hearsay and bolstering.
    THE COURT: Okay. And response?
    [State’s Counsel]: And my response would be it’s not specifically
    spelled out in the statute any intent as to the age of the child at the
    time that they’re giving -- or making their outcry. What’s specifically
    17
    spelled out is the age of the child at the time the offense is
    committed.
    The Court’s still got to make a determination from our hearing
    whether the outcry testimony is reliable based on time, content[,] and
    circumstances. And with it not specifically spelled out, and with the
    prior Court’s rulings, I think the Court is allowed to make that
    determination.
    THE COURT: The 38.072 subsection 3-C -- I get lost in all those
    different subsections. 3, talks about the child being available to
    testify so the statute contemplates that the child would actually
    testify as well as there being the possibility that an outcry statement
    would be admitted. Isn’t that true . . .?
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: Yes, Your Honor.
    THE COURT:         Okay.    All right.   The Court will overrule that
    objection. . . .
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: May I just make one more argument for the
    record, Your Honor?
    THE COURT: Sure.
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: . . . I believe that the legislative intent is clear
    due to the fact that there is another section in the same part of the
    code which indicates that -- the actual legislative wording is that the
    outcry has to be made within twelve months of the actual offense,
    and that’s for someone who is over seventeen years of age.
    So I believe that this is clear from the external laws and the
    laws that are -- I mean, the procedures that are outlined prior to
    38.072 and subsequent to 38.072, that the legislative intent was not
    to have [the] outcry deemed reliable for anyone over fourteen years
    of age.
    THE COURT: That’s not in 38.072.
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: No, Your Honor. It’s, I think, 071. . . .
    THE COURT: Well, I think that only applies when a child is actually
    unavailable. Isn’t that what 38.071 is applicable to?
    18
    [State’s Counsel]: Recorded testimony, I believe.
    ....
    THE COURT: That would be as if they were going to offer any
    statements, videotape or otherwise[,] and the child was not actually
    here or available for some legal reason.
    [Wilbanks’s Counsel]: Correct. And I’m not referring to that section.
    I’m referring to the other section that says that an outcry of sexual
    assault has to be made within one year of the offense, for a child --
    for a person who is not seventeen years of age or older. In other
    words, I’m saying that the legislature made it clear that there’s
    certain ages that they delineated to have import in the law.
    So that’s what I’m just making clear for the record. . . .
    [Emphasis added.]
    The colloquy above reflects that Wilbanks’s counsel did not object on the
    ground that the timing and circumstances of Gloria’s statement reflect a lack of
    reliability that prevent its admission under article 38.072; instead, she argued that
    article 38.072 itself compels a conclusion that an outcry by a complainant older
    than fourteen is inherently unreliable.        Because Wilbanks’s “timing and
    circumstances” arguments on appeal do not comport with his objection at trial, he
    did not preserve these complaints for appeal. See 
    Lovill, 319 S.W.3d at 691
    –92.
    Moreover, to the extent Wilbanks argues in his brief that the trial court
    abused its discretion by admitting the outcry because Gloria was fourteen years
    old when she made the statement, his “age” argument misconstrues article
    38.072. Article 38.072 applies when the offense is committed while the victim is
    younger than the specified statutory age—younger than fourteen years of age—
    19
    or a person with a disability and the victim makes the outcry before her
    eighteenth birthday. See Eldred v. State, 
    431 S.W.3d 177
    , 183 (Tex. App.—
    Texarkana 2014, pet. ref’d). Although Gloria was fourteen years old when she
    made the outcry to her best friend’s mother, Gloria was under the age of fourteen
    when the offense was committed, and she made the outcry before her eighteenth
    birthday. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting
    Gloria’s outcry statements. See 
    id. (holding that
    outcry made when victim was
    fourteen years old was admissible).
    B. Outcry Did Not Constitute Improper Bolstering
    Wilbanks also complains on appeal that the outcry evidence constitutes
    inadmissible “bolstering.” According to Wilbanks, the only probative value of the
    evidence was “to convince the jury that [Gloria’s] allegations were truthful and
    worthy of credit.” Because Wilbanks’s argument on appeal comports with his
    complaint at trial that the outcry evidence was not any more reliable than Gloria’s
    own testimony, he has preserved this complaint for our review.
    In addressing a bolstering objection in the article 38.072 context, the
    Dallas Court of Appeals has held,
    Although article 38.072 does not mention bolstering, nothing in the
    statute requires that the child complainant first be impeached before
    the outcry statement can be admitted into evidence. To the contrary,
    the statute contemplates testimony from both the child victim and the
    adult witness, regardless of whether the complainant is impeached.
    If bolstering provided a basis for excluding outcry statements that
    otherwise satisfy the requirements of article 38.072, the exception
    would swallow the rule.
    20
    Cantu v. State, 
    830 S.W.2d 166
    , 170–71 (Tex. App.––Dallas 1992, no writ). The
    Cantu court concluded that article 38.072 provides for the admission of outcry
    statements “regardless of their hearsay or bolstering nature.” 
    Id. at 171.
    Because article 38.072 does not prohibit the admission of outcry
    statements based on bolstering, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion by overruling Wilbanks’s bolstering objection. See 
    id. Accordingly, we
    overrule his third issue.
    VII. ADMISSION OF HANDWRITTEN SUMMARY NOT HARMFUL
    In his fourth issue, Wilbanks argues that the trial court abused its discretion
    by admitting over his timely bolstering objection State’s Exhibit 1—a chart listing
    the acts Gloria had testified to, organized by her age at the time of occurrence,
    which the prosecutor handwrote during Gloria’s testimony. Wilbanks contends
    that “writing bits and pieces of [Gloria’s] testimony out for the jury did nothing to
    make [her] testimony more or less probable than it would have been without the
    evidence”; in other words, he complains that it had no independent relevance.
    The State responds that Wilbanks did not preserve this complaint because his
    bolstering objection at trial was too ambiguous; alternatively, the State argues
    that the admission of the summary in State’s Exhibit 1 does not constitute
    bolstering because it cannot be said that its sole purpose was to convince the
    jury that Gloria was worthy of credit.
    After Wilbanks’s counsel objected to the admission of State’s Exhibit 1 on
    the grounds of “bolstering,” the trial court asked the prosecutor why Gloria’s
    21
    testimony alone would not be sufficient. The prosecutor then tried to ask Gloria if
    she thought the exhibit would assist the jury, but Wilbanks objected to that
    question as leading and invading the province of the jury.             The trial court
    sustained Wilbanks’s objection to the second question but then immediately
    overruled Wilbanks’s objection to State’s Exhibit 1 and admitted it.
    Here, the trial judge’s question indicates that she understood Wilbanks’s
    objection to be that State’s Exhibit 1 was not relevant for any purpose other than
    to enhance Gloria’s credibility. See Cohn v. State, 
    849 S.W.2d 817
    , 819–20
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (“‘Bolstering’ may perhaps be understood . . . to be any
    evidence the sole purpose of which is to convince the factfinder that a particular
    witness or source of evidence is worthy of credit, without substantively
    contributing ‘to make the existence of [a] fact that is of consequence to the
    determination of the action more or less probable than it would be without the
    evidence.’”). Because Wilbanks’s issue on appeal is consistent with his objection
    at trial, we hold that he preserved his bolstering complaint.
    But regardless of whether Wilbanks preserved this complaint for appeal,
    we nevertheless hold that any error is not reversible.          Even if the trial court
    abused its discretion by admitting the exhibit, the error is harmless because
    Wilbanks does not complain, nor has he shown, that the prosecutor misled the
    jury or that the summary was an inaccurate recitation of Gloria’s testimony. See
    Wheatfall v. State, 
    882 S.W.2d 829
    , 838–40 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994) (holding that
    although trial court erred by admitting five-page handwritten summary of
    22
    appellant’s violent criminal history, error was harmless because summary was
    duplicative of other evidence of his criminal history and because jury had access
    to summarized exhibits), cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 1086
    (1995); Markey v. State,
    
    996 S.W.2d 226
    , 232 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1999, no pet.) (holding
    that error in admitting prosecutor’s handwritten list of symptoms of intoxication
    made during witness’s testimony was harmless when appellant did not argue that
    list was erroneous or misleading and “jury was able to accept or reject the
    prosecutor’s characterization of the testimony as it occurred”). See generally
    Coble v. State, 
    330 S.W.3d 253
    , 282 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (noting general
    principle that trial court’s erroneous admission of evidence will not result in
    reversal when same evidence was admitted elsewhere without objection either
    before or after complained-of ruling), cert. denied, 
    564 U.S. 1020
    (2011).
    Accordingly, we overrule Wilbanks’s fourth issue.
    VIII. OBJECTION TO “IMPRESSION” NOT SUFFICIENT TO PRESERVE COMPLAINT
    In his fifth issue, Wilbanks contends that the trial court abused its
    discretion by allowing a police detective to testify that her impression of text
    messages between Wilbanks and Gloria “came across more as being boyfriend-
    girlfriend[] texts.” The State responds that this complaint was not adequately
    preserved because Wilbanks’s trial objection was too general.
    On cross-examination, Wilbanks’s counsel asked the detective whether
    she had found “anything sexual” in the text messages on Gloria’s phone, to
    which the detective responded, “No.” When the State asked the detective on
    23
    redirect, “The texts that were exchanged I believe you said they weren’t sexual;
    is that true,” she answered, “That’s correct.” The prosecutor then asked, “Did
    they appear, just in your experience -- I think the defense counsel asked you
    about telling a niece or nephew that you love them. Did the communications in
    those texts appear like normal?” Wilbanks’s counsel objected that “normal and
    not normal . . . invades the province of the jury,” and the trial court sustained the
    objection. The prosecutor then asked the detective, “The texts that you read in
    that communication between the individuals, what was your impression?”
    Wilbanks’s counsel objected: “Objection to impression.” The trial court overruled
    the objection, and the witness answered, “Kind of from my years of experience, it
    came across more as being boyfriend-girlfriend, texts.”
    On appeal, Wilbanks argues, “Impressions that are primary and for which
    no substituted proof is conceivable can be put in evidence, but an impression
    that is merely a secondary idea of that of which a more accurate idea is
    obtainable cannot be received.” We cannot determine from the context of the
    exchange that this is the objection asserted by Wilbanks in the trial court or that
    this is what the trial court understood Wilbanks’s trial objection to be. Thus, this
    complaint is not preserved for our review. See 
    Lovill, 319 S.W.3d at 691
    –92.
    We therefore overrule Wilbanks’s fifth issue.
    IX. EX-WIFE’S TESTIMONY WAS NOT HARMFUL
    In his sixth issue, Wilbanks argues that the trial court abused its discretion
    by allowing his ex-wife to testify “that she ‘thought it was a little paranoid’ that [he]
    24
    ‘didn’t want any young girls in the house’ because he did not want to get accused
    of anything and did not want anybody in the house when he was alone.”
    Wilbanks argues that his ex-wife’s statement was not relevant and was not
    admissible as a lay opinion.10 The State responds that the evidence is relevant
    to Wilbanks’s state of mind—whether he was interested in young girls or had a
    guilty conscience—and that it helped the jury understand his ex-wife’s testimony
    because it showed that she thought there was no reason for Wilbanks to fear
    having young girls in the house; alternatively, the State argues that any error in
    the admission of Wilbanks’s ex-wife’s opinion was harmless “in light of the whole”
    of her testimony and when compared to the direct evidence of his offenses.
    Assuming that the admission of Wilbanks’s ex-wife’s opinion was an abuse
    of discretion, we address whether such error is harmless. See Tex. R. App. P.
    44.2(b); Motilla v. State, 
    78 S.W.3d 352
    , 355–56 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002)
    (requiring court that performs harmless-error analysis to review the record as a
    whole, including any testimony or physical evidence admitted for the jury’s
    consideration, the nature of the evidence supporting the verdict, and the
    character of the alleged error and how it might be considered in connection with
    other evidence in the case). In reviewing the record as a whole, Wilbanks’s ex-
    wife’s opinion—that she “thought it was a little paranoid” that Wilbanks did not
    10
    See generally Tex. R. Evid. 701 (“If a witness is not testifying as an
    expert, testimony in the form of an opinion is limited to one that is: (a) rationally
    based on the witness’s perception; and (b) helpful to clearly understanding the
    witness’s testimony or to determining a fact in issue.”).
    25
    want young girls in the house when he was home alone—is not any more
    prejudicial than the rest of her testimony, and it is not significant in light of the
    other evidence of Wilbanks’s guilt. Moreover, although the State emphasized in
    its closing argument that Wilbanks’s ex-wife’s testimony corroborated Gloria’s
    testimony with respect to the family’s living arrangements and Wilbanks’s
    supervision of Gloria, the State did not mention Wilbanks’s ex-wife’s opinion
    about his reluctance to have young girls at the house when he was home alone.
    We conclude that in the context of the entire case against Wilbanks, the trial
    court’s error, if any, in admitting his ex-wife’s opinion testimony did not have a
    substantial or injurious effect on the jury’s verdict and did not affect Wilbanks’s
    substantial rights. See Solomon v. State, 
    49 S.W.3d 356
    , 365 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2001) (“Under the circumstances, we have a fair assurance that the evidence in
    question did not influence the jury or had but slight effect.”); Ellison v. State, 
    494 S.W.3d 316
    , 330 (Tex. App.—Eastland 2015, pet. ref’d) (“To the extent that the
    trial court may have erroneously admitted reputation evidence, it paled in
    comparison to the direct evidence of Appellant’s egregious conduct.”). Thus, we
    disregard the error and overrule Wilbanks’s sixth issue. See Tex. R. App. P.
    44.2(b); 
    Solomon, 49 S.W.3d at 365
    ; 
    Ellison, 494 S.W.3d at 330
    .
    X. NO CUMULATIVE ERROR REQUIRING REVERSAL
    In his seventh issue, Wilbanks argues that even if this court does not
    determine that any of the complaints in his first six issues constitute reversible
    error, we should still reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the case
    26
    based on the cumulative effect of multiple harmless errors. Even assuming that
    the trial court erred by admitting the prosecutor’s handwritten summary of
    Gloria’s testimony and Wilbanks’s ex-wife’s testimony about his reluctance to
    have girls at the house, we do not believe that the cumulative effect of the
    admission of this evidence requires reversal. See Chamberlain v. State, 
    998 S.W.2d 230
    , 238 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (“It is conceivable that a number of
    errors may be found harmful in their cumulative effect.”), cert. denied, 
    528 U.S. 1082
    (2000); Flores v. State, 
    513 S.W.3d 146
    , 174–75 (Tex. App.—Houston
    [14th Dist.] 2016, pet. ref’d). Nothing in the record indicates that the State used
    the evidence to an unfair advantage or that the admission of the evidence
    deprived Wilbanks of any constitutional rights or rendered the trial fundamentally
    unfair. See 
    Flores, 513 S.W.3d at 175
    ; see also U.S. v. Stephens, 
    571 F.3d 401
    ,
    412 (5th Cir. 2009) (noting that cumulative-error doctrine compels relief only
    when constitutional errors “fatally infect the trial,” depriving a defendant of
    fundamental fairness). We overrule Wilbanks’s seventh issue.
    XI. CONCLUSION
    Having overruled Wilbanks’s seven issues, we affirm the trial court’s
    judgment.
    PER CURIAM
    PANEL: WALKER, MEIER, and GABRIEL, JJ.
    DO NOT PUBLISH
    Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b)
    27
    DELIVERED: January 18, 2018
    28