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CROSSOVER: Cedillo: Article 38.072 reliability objections are waived unless specifically raised at the outcry hearing

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

Cedillo v. State, 01-24-00972-CR, May 12, 2026.

On appeal from 339th District Court, Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

A party does not preserve an Article 38.072 reliability complaint by litigating only who qualifies as the proper outcry witness. Under Cedillo, the objection must be timely and specific: if counsel wants appellate review of reliability under article 38.072, section 2(b)(2), counsel must expressly challenge reliability based on the time, content, and circumstances of the child’s statement at the outcry hearing.

Relevance to Family Law

Although Cedillo is a criminal appeal, its preservation lesson translates directly into Texas family litigation wherever abuse allegations drive temporary orders, modification suits, SAPCRs, termination cases, or protective-order strategy. In divorce and custody cases, lawyers routinely confront child statements relayed through parents, counselors, forensic interviewers, therapists, teachers, and CPS witnesses; Cedillo is a reminder that a generic hearsay objection, a witness-identity objection, or a complaint about process will not preserve a more refined reliability complaint for appellate review. In practical terms, if your trial theory turns on attacking the trustworthiness of a child’s disclosure, you must say so with precision, build the record around the circumstances of the statement, and obtain a ruling on that exact complaint.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Jonathan Rene Cedillo was convicted in two cause numbers for continuous sexual abuse of a child. The complainants were his daughters, identified in the opinion as Lisa and Erin. Before trial, the court conducted an Article 38.072 hearing to determine admissibility of outcry testimony.

At that hearing, the State presented testimony from the mother, the children’s grandmother, and a school counselor. The mother testified that after being alerted by Lisa’s friend, she questioned Lisa in the car, where Lisa cried and disclosed that Cedillo had touched her vaginal area. The mother then spoke with Erin, who likewise disclosed that Cedillo had touched her private area. The grandmother testified that after learning of Lisa’s disclosure, she asked Erin about abuse, and Erin cried and said Cedillo had touched her. The school counselor testified that Erin disclosed sexual abuse to her, reported that Cedillo had touched her beginning when she was nine, and stated that he had raped her.

The dispute at the hearing centered largely on who qualified as the proper outcry witness. The State argued that a forensic interviewer should serve in that role because she obtained the operative details. Cedillo argued instead that the mother was the first proper adult recipient of the disclosures and therefore was the correct outcry witness. On appeal, however, Cedillo reframed the complaint and argued that the statements to the mother, grandmother, and counselor were unreliable under Article 38.072.

Issues Decided

  • Whether Cedillo preserved appellate review of an Article 38.072 reliability complaint by objecting at the outcry hearing only to who was the proper outcry witness.
  • Whether a generalized reference to unreliability, untethered to the statutory reliability inquiry under article 38.072, section 2(b)(2), was sufficient to preserve error.
  • Whether any assumed error in admitting the outcry testimony was harmless in light of substantially similar evidence admitted elsewhere without objection.

Rules Applied

Article 38.072 permits admission of certain hearsay statements by child victims in prosecutions for sexual offenses, but only if statutory prerequisites are met. Two features of the statute mattered here.

  • The outcry witness must be the first adult, other than the defendant, to whom the child made a statement about the offense. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 38.072, § 2(a)(3).
  • Before the testimony is admitted, the trial court must find in a hearing outside the jury’s presence that the statement is reliable based on the time, content, and circumstances of the statement. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 38.072, § 2(b)(2).

The court also relied on standard preservation principles under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 33.1(a): to preserve a complaint for appeal, the objection must be timely and sufficiently specific to make the trial court aware of the complaint. The opinion cites authority confirming that an appellate complaint about outcry reliability is waived unless the defendant objected on that basis in the trial court, including Duran v. State and the First Court’s own prior memorandum authority.

On the substantive side, the court reiterated several established Article 38.072 principles:

  • The trial court’s focus is the reliability of the child’s outcry statement, not the credibility of the outcry witness. Sanchez v. State, 354 S.W.3d 476 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).
  • “Time, content, and circumstances” refers to the timing of the child’s statement, what the child said, and the circumstances surrounding the making of the statement. Broderick v. State, 89 S.W.3d 696 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, pet. ref’d).
  • The trial court has broad discretion in admitting outcry testimony. Garcia v. State, 792 S.W.2d 88 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990).

Finally, the court applied harmless-error principles under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.2(b): the erroneous admission of hearsay is nonconstitutional error and is harmless when the same or substantially similar evidence comes in elsewhere without objection.

Application

The First Court treated preservation as the decisive issue. Cedillo attempted to argue on appeal that the child statements to the mother, grandmother, and counselor were unreliable under Article 38.072 because of deficiencies in their time, content, and circumstances. But the appellate court closely examined what was actually argued at the outcry hearing and concluded that Cedillo had not presented that complaint to the trial court.

Instead, the hearing was litigated as a “who is the proper outcry witness” dispute. The State contended that the forensic interviewer was the proper witness because she obtained the details of the abuse. Cedillo countered that the mother, as the first adult recipient of the disclosure, was the proper witness. That is a distinct issue from whether a given statement is reliable under section 2(b)(2). The court therefore held that litigating witness identity did not preserve a separate reliability challenge.

The opinion also addressed Cedillo’s passing assertion at the hearing that the statements were “unreliable” because the children themselves did not testify during the outcry hearing. The court viewed that remark as insufficient because it did not raise the appellate complaint later advanced—namely, that the statements were unreliable based on the statutory factors of time, content, and circumstances. The court’s point was practical and exacting: saying “unreliable” in the abstract is not enough when the objection at trial does not direct the court to the specific statutory reliability inquiry being asserted on appeal.

Having found waiver, the court nevertheless proceeded to a harmless-error analysis. Even if the outcry testimony should not have been admitted, the court held that the error would not warrant reversal because the complainants themselves later testified in detail, without objection, to the abuse. In addition, CAC medical records containing substantially similar allegations were admitted without objection. That overlap in evidence eliminated any realistic prospect that the complained-of outcry testimony affected the verdict.

Holding

The court held that an Article 38.072 reliability complaint is not preserved for appellate review unless the defendant makes a timely, specific objection directed to reliability under article 38.072, section 2(b)(2). An objection focused only on whether a particular adult was the proper outcry witness does not preserve a different complaint that the child’s statement was unreliable.

The court further held that, even if the reliability complaint had been preserved and even if admission of the outcry testimony had been erroneous, any such error was harmless because substantially similar evidence was admitted elsewhere without objection, including the complainants’ trial testimony and CAC records. The convictions were affirmed.

Practical Application

For Texas family lawyers, Cedillo is less about Article 38.072 itself than about preservation architecture. In many custody and divorce cases, the central evidentiary fight involves child disclosures filtered through adults—parents, grandparents, teachers, counselors, therapists, forensic interviewers, or investigators. If you intend to challenge the trustworthiness of the disclosure, you must isolate that objection from every adjacent complaint. Do not assume that contesting the messenger preserves a complaint about the message.

In a temporary-orders hearing, for example, one side may object that a therapist is not the right witness to recount the child’s statements because the parent heard the disclosure first. Under Cedillo’s logic, that objection does not also preserve a complaint that the child’s statements were elicited through suggestion, made after repeated prompting, temporally remote, internally inconsistent, or otherwise unreliable. Those are separate objections and must be framed separately.

The same is true in jury trials involving conservatorship restrictions, family-violence findings, supervised possession, or termination-related crossover evidence. If a lawyer wants to argue that a child’s statements lack reliability because of coaching, contamination, motive, delay, ambiguity, or method of questioning, the record must say exactly that. The objection should identify the legal basis, reference the relevant reliability factors, request a ruling, and if necessary secure findings or make an offer of proof.

For the proponent of the evidence, Cedillo is equally useful. When the opposing side objects only to witness sequence, hearsay labels, or the identity of the “proper” narrator, you can argue that a reliability complaint has not been preserved. And if similar evidence comes in through later testimony, records, or admissions without objection, Cedillo provides a clean harmless-error fallback.

Checklists

Preserving a Reliability Objection

  • Object expressly to the reliability of the child’s statement, not merely to the identity of the witness offering it.
  • Cite the governing rule or statute where possible.
  • Tie the objection to the specific reliability factors at issue: time, content, and circumstances.
  • State why the statement is unreliable: suggestive questioning, repeated interviews, inconsistent detail, motive to fabricate, delay, contamination, ambiguity, or lack of spontaneity.
  • Request a ruling on the reliability objection itself.
  • If the court does not clearly rule, press for clarification on the record.
  • Renew the objection when the evidence is offered at trial if necessary to avoid any preservation dispute.

Separating Distinct Evidentiary Complaints

  • Treat “wrong witness” and “unreliable statement” as separate objections.
  • Treat hearsay objections and trustworthiness objections as separate objections.
  • Treat procedural objections and substantive reliability objections as separate objections.
  • Avoid global or shorthand objections that leave the trial court to guess the legal theory.
  • Make sure your appellate issue matches the objection you actually made below.

Building the Record in Abuse-Driven SAPCR or Divorce Litigation

  • Develop testimony about who first heard the statement.
  • Develop testimony about when the statement was made relative to the alleged event.
  • Develop testimony about who asked the questions and how they were phrased.
  • Develop testimony about whether the child was prompted, coached, corrected, or exposed to others’ allegations.
  • Develop testimony about the setting, emotional condition, and spontaneity of the statement.
  • Develop testimony about prior disclosures, omissions, or inconsistent accounts.
  • Mark and admit interview notes, text messages, intake records, and chronology documents when they support or undermine reliability.

Avoiding Harmless-Error Problems

  • Object consistently when the same allegation is repeated through multiple witnesses.
  • Object to overlapping records if they contain the same substance as the challenged testimony.
  • Seek limiting instructions where appropriate, but do not rely on them as a substitute for a substantive objection.
  • If similar evidence is likely to come in later, preserve your objection each time or obtain a running objection.
  • Consider whether your own cross-examination may open the door to cumulative evidence that weakens an appellate harm argument.

Using Cedillo as the Proponent of Child-Disclosure Evidence

  • Argue waiver when the opponent challenged only the witness identity, sequence, or hearsay character of the testimony.
  • Emphasize the absence of a specific reliability objection tied to the governing factors.
  • Make a full evidentiary record on the circumstances of the disclosure anyway, to protect the ruling.
  • Introduce corroborative testimony or records, where admissible, to strengthen a later harmless-error argument.
  • Track repeated admissions of substantially similar evidence throughout trial.

Citation

Cedillo v. State, Nos. 01-24-00960-CR & 01-24-00972-CR, memorandum opinion issued May 12, 2026 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] May 12, 2026, no pet. h.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

Cedillo can be weaponized in family court in two directions. First, for the party resisting abuse-based restrictions on possession or conservatorship, it provides a disciplined preservation template: force the proponent to identify the precise evidentiary pathway for each child disclosure, and if you are attacking reliability, articulate that challenge with specificity rather than hiding it inside a more generic witness or hearsay objection. Second, for the party advancing abuse allegations, Cedillo is a waiver case: if opposing counsel objects only to which adult first heard the statement, or only to whether the witness is the “right” conduit, you can argue they never preserved a true reliability complaint. In high-conflict custody litigation, where appellate posture often matters as much as the immediate evidentiary ruling, that distinction can decide whether a complaint is reviewable at all.

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Tom Daley is a board-certified family law attorney with extensive experience practicing across the United States, primarily in Texas. He represents clients in all aspects of family law, including negotiation, settlement, litigation, trial, and appeals.