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CROSSOVER: Defense Witness Can Be Excluded After Fifth Amendment Invocation When Cross-Examination Would Be Gutted on Core Facts

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

Paul Coleman v. The State of Texas, 01-24-00679-CR, May 28, 2026.

On appeal from 184th District Court, Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

A trial court may exclude a defense witness entirely when the witness gives favorable direct testimony but then validly invokes the Fifth Amendment on cross-examination as to non-collateral facts arising from the same transaction. Under Keller and Draper, that exclusion is not an abuse of discretion and does not violate compulsory-process or due-process rights.

Relevance to Family Law

This criminal opinion has real force in Texas family litigation because the same witness-dynamics arise in divorces, SAPCRs, and property disputes involving parallel criminal exposure, fraud, hidden assets, family violence, substance issues, trafficking allegations, or third-party misconduct. If a party or aligned witness tries to offer a curated narrative by affidavit, temporary-orders testimony, or trial testimony and then refuses meaningful examination on the same subject matter based on privilege, this case supplies a clean appellate logic for exclusion, striking testimony, or sharply limiting the evidentiary value of that witness’s account.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The defendant was tried for trafficking a child and sexual assault of a child. The complainant testified that she ran away from a group home after reconnecting with Cheryl, who was then associated with the defendant, and that she was taken to a hotel where she was told she would be prostituted and where the defendant sexually assaulted her.

The defense sought to call Cheryl as its key witness. Outside the jury’s presence, the trial court appointed counsel for Cheryl and conducted a hearing to determine whether she would testify or invoke the Fifth Amendment. On direct examination by the defense, Cheryl testified that she was with the defendant at all relevant times, that he was never alone with the complainant, and that he neither sexually assaulted nor trafficked her.

The State then began cross-examination and asked how the complainant arrived at the hotel room. Cheryl, on advice of counsel, invoked the Fifth Amendment. The State had also made clear that Cheryl still faced potential criminal exposure arising from the same incident. The trial court ruled that it would not allow the jury to hear only part of Cheryl’s account while the State was blocked from testing the rest of it on non-collateral matters. Cheryl was therefore excluded as a witness, and the defendant was convicted.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court applied the familiar Texas rule that a witness may not testify favorably on direct examination and then use the Fifth Amendment to block cross-examination on relevant, non-collateral matters within the same subject area.

Key authorities included:

The court also relied on the collateral/non-collateral distinction: if the witness refuses to answer only collateral questions bearing merely on general credibility, exclusion is not necessarily proper; but if the refusal concerns facts central to the transaction at issue, exclusion is permitted.

Application

The First Court treated the State’s cross-examination question—how the complainant arrived at the hotel—as squarely non-collateral. That subject did not go merely to Cheryl’s abstract credibility. It went directly to the same episode about which Cheryl had already testified favorably for the defense: whether the defendant sexually assaulted or trafficked the complainant at the hotel and whether Cheryl’s own role in bringing the complainant there formed part of the same operative transaction.

That mattered because Cheryl’s direct testimony was not peripheral. It was offered as the defense’s only eyewitness account contradicting the complainant. Once Cheryl gave that exculpatory version, the State was entitled to test it with cross-examination on the mechanics of how the complainant got to the hotel and Cheryl’s role in that process. If Cheryl could block that inquiry through a valid Fifth Amendment invocation, the jury would hear a sanitized defense narrative insulated from meaningful adversarial testing.

The court also emphasized process. The trial court did not casually assume privilege. It appointed counsel, conducted a hearing outside the jury’s presence, and recognized that Cheryl still faced potential charges connected to the incident. With a legitimate basis for self-incrimination established, the trial court had discretion to prevent the defense from presenting only the favorable slice of her testimony while foreclosing the State from probing the rest.

Holding

The court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding Cheryl’s testimony after she invoked the Fifth Amendment on cross-examination regarding non-collateral matters related to the same transaction. Under Keller and Draper, a witness may not provide a partial factual account and then refuse to disclose additional relevant facts necessary for fair cross-examination.

The court further held that exclusion of Cheryl’s testimony did not violate the defendant’s Sixth Amendment compulsory-process rights or Fourteenth Amendment due-process rights. Because Texas precedent expressly permits exclusion in this circumstance, and because the cross-examination topic was central rather than collateral, the constitutional challenge failed.

Practical Application

For Texas family lawyers, this opinion is most useful where a spouse, paramour, business partner, adult child, caregiver, or informal fiduciary is expected to help one side with favorable testimony but has independent exposure on the same facts. Think fraudulent transfer allegations in a divorce, concealed-community-property schemes, family-violence incidents with pending criminal risk, drug use around children, staged residence arrangements affecting conservatorship, or third-party handling of trust or business funds relevant to characterization and reimbursement claims.

In those settings, Coleman sharpens several strategic points:

In family court, the practical remedy may vary by posture. At temporary orders, the court may simply discount the testimony or refuse to consider an affidavit. At final trial, the court may strike direct testimony, exclude the witness altogether, or sustain objections that effectively prevent the witness from becoming a one-way conduit for favorable facts. On appeal, the key framing will be whether the unanswered questions concerned the heart of the dispute rather than impeachment trivia.

Checklists

Vet the Fifth Amendment Problem Early

Build the Record for Exclusion or Striking Testimony

Protect Your Own Witness From a Coleman Problem

Apply the Rule in Divorce Property Cases

Apply the Rule in Custody and SAPCR Litigation

Preserve Error and Defend the Judgment on Appeal

Citation

Paul Coleman v. The State of Texas, Nos. 01-24-00647-CR & 01-24-00679-CR, memorandum opinion issued May 28, 2026 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] May 28, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This case can be weaponized effectively in divorce and custody litigation whenever the opposing side relies on a compromised insider witness. Suppose a girlfriend, relative, accountant, business associate, or new spouse wants to testify that a parent was never violent, that a transfer was legitimate, that cash was not hidden, or that a child was never exposed to drugs or unsafe conduct—but that same witness faces criminal or fraud exposure if questioned about the underlying events. Coleman gives you a disciplined framework to argue that the court should not accept a one-sided narrative that cannot be tested on the same subject matter. The strategic value is substantial: you can convert an opponent’s “star witness” into a liability by forcing an early privilege hearing, identifying the non-collateral areas of inquiry, and demonstrating that meaningful examination would be gutted if the witness is allowed to testify selectively.

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