Site icon Thomas J. Daley

CROSSOVER: Child-Sex Extraneous-Offense Ruling (Art. 38.37) Offers Playbook for Propensity Evidence and Rule 403 Balancing in Family-Violence/SA-Adjacent Proceedings

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Paredes v. State, 08-24-00383-CR, March 18, 2026.

On appeal from the 290th District Court Bexar County, Texas.

Synopsis

The El Paso Court of Appeals held the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting an unindicted extraneous indecency-by-contact allegation against the same child complainant under Code of Criminal Procedure Article 38.37. The court emphasized Article 38.37’s propensity/character allowance (subject to the statutory gatekeeping hearing and Rule 403), and found the State’s need and the evidence’s probative force were not substantially outweighed by unfair prejudice.

Relevance to Family Law

Although Paredes is a criminal evidentiary decision, it supplies a clean, transferable template for how Texas courts justify admitting “other bad acts” involving sexual misconduct or family violence when credibility is the central battlefield. In SAPCRs, protective orders, and custody-modification trials—where the best-interest analysis invites wide-ranging “relevant” conduct evidence—Paredes’s Rule 403 discussion helps practitioners frame (or attack) propensity-adjacent evidence: closeness in time, same complainant, similarity of conduct, limited trial time, and heightened need when the responding party’s theme is fabrication or coaching.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Joel Paredes was tried for indecency with a child by contact based on an alleged September 18, 2021 incident involving a 14-year-old complainant, A.G.J. The indictment alleged Paredes touched her genitals.

Before the jury heard evidence, the trial court conducted an Article 38.37 hearing outside the jury’s presence. The State sought to introduce an additional, unindicted allegation involving the same complainant: on October 31, 2022, at a party, Paredes allegedly followed A.G.J. near the restroom and again touched her vagina under her clothing, then blamed her clothing when she resisted. Defense counsel objected primarily on prejudice grounds, conceding the evidence “seem[ed] to meet the parameters of the statute.” The trial court overruled the objection, and the jury heard the extraneous-offense testimony.

On appeal, Paredes argued the extraneous incident was irrelevant and, in any event, should have been excluded under Rule 403.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The court’s analysis reads like a step-by-step admission roadmap.

First, it addressed relevance and preservation. The State argued Paredes did not preserve a relevance objection at trial, and the court also noted his appellate briefing did not meaningfully develop the relevance point. But the court went further and explained why relevance was satisfied: Article 38.37 evidence in child-sex cases has probative value on intent and on character/propensity to commit sexual assaults against children—precisely the type of inference the statute authorizes (subject to the gatekeeping hearing and Rule 403).

Second, the court performed a Rule 403 balancing through concrete facts that practitioners can replicate in other contexts. The extraneous incident was close in time (not older than the charged offense), involved the same complainant, and involved the same type of conduct with similar detail. Those similarities reduced the risk of confusing the jury or pulling focus from the charged event. The court also credited trial management facts: the State did not spend an excessive amount of time on the extraneous allegation, and the evidence was not cumulative.

Most importantly, the court highlighted “need.” Because Paredes’s defensive theory attacked A.G.J.’s credibility, the State had a heightened need for evidence that allowed the jury to evaluate consistency across events and statements (including consistency with the SANE report admitted into evidence). In other words, once the defense made credibility the main issue, the extraneous allegation became more than character bolstering—it became the State’s rebuttal architecture.

Finally, the court relied on the procedural safeguard: the trial court held the required Article 38.37 hearing and determined a jury could find the extraneous offense beyond a reasonable doubt. With that predicate and the Rule 403 balance favoring admission, the ruling fell within the zone of reasonable disagreement.

Holding

On the Article 38.37/Rule 403 issue, the court held the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the unindicted extraneous indecency-by-contact evidence. The court concluded the evidence was probative of intent and propensity, the State’s need was significant in light of the credibility-based defense, and the probative value was not substantially outweighed by unfair prejudice, confusion, or delay.

On ineffective assistance, the court rejected relief (as reflected in the excerpt’s posture and disposition), affirming the conviction.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, Paredes is useful less for its criminal holding than for its disciplined, factor-driven justification of high-prejudice conduct evidence—exactly the kind that often decides temporary orders and final conservatorship outcomes.

Checklists

Proponent’s Checklist: Getting “Pattern” Misconduct Evidence Admitted (Family Cases)

Opponent’s Checklist: Excluding or Narrowing Highly Prejudicial Conduct Evidence

Record-Building Checklist: Preserving Error for Appeal

Citation

Paredes v. State, No. 08-24-00383-CR (Tex. App.—El Paso Mar. 18, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Paredes v. State — Full Opinion

Family Law Crossover

Treat Paredes as a playbook for how to sell (or resist) propensity-adjacent evidence in civil family proceedings without ever calling it “propensity.” The opinion shows the persuasive cadence: (1) identify the credibility-centered defense theme; (2) argue heightened “need” for corroborative pattern evidence; (3) emphasize tight similarity and temporal proximity to reduce confusion; and (4) demonstrate disciplined presentation to blunt “unfair prejudice” and “mini-trial” objections. In custody litigation, that translates into a powerful evidentiary posture: when the respondent flatly denies boundary-violating conduct and attacks the child’s or protective parent’s credibility, courts are more receptive to additional incident evidence—especially involving the same child or household—because it assists the factfinder in evaluating consistency, risk, and protective capacity under the best-interest framework, while surviving a Rule 403-style proportionality analysis.

~~1b90f57d-dd3f-4e0a-9dcb-bc32a8f51da4~~

Share this content:

Exit mobile version