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Article 38.371 Rule 403 Balancing When Evidence in Question is Probative of Threshold Issue of Violence | Rothlis v. State (2025)

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

Rothlis v. State, 02-25-00282-CR, May 28, 2026.

On appeal from 432nd District Court, Tarrant County, Texas

Synopsis

Article 38.371 does not displace Rule 403. In Rothlis v. State, the Fort Worth Court of Appeals held that a threatening 47-minute video was admissible in a family-violence prosecution because it was highly probative of the parties’ relationship dynamics, coercive control, and witness credibility, and the defendant did not show that unfair prejudice substantially outweighed that probative value.

Relevance to Family Law

Although Rothlis is a criminal appeal, Texas family lawyers should pay close attention to its treatment of relationship evidence. The opinion reinforces a point that routinely matters in divorce, SAPCR, protective-order, and conservatorship litigation: evidence of threats, domination, intimidation, and coercive conduct often carries substantial probative force because it explains the actual functioning of the relationship, the credibility of the parties, delayed reporting, recantation, and why one party remained in or returned to the relationship. In custody disputes, that same logic can inform best-interest arguments, family-violence findings, restrictions on possession, and supervised access. In divorce and property cases, the evidentiary theme also matters when one party’s threats or coercion affected financial control, document execution, concealment, or the circumstances surrounding settlement discussions and agreed orders.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The defendant and complainant began a romantic relationship in March 2024 and moved in together about two months later. According to the record summarized by the court, the relationship quickly became volatile and then violent. The complainant described repeated assaults over several months, including hair-pulling, choking, biting, stabbing, beatings, and an incident in which a knife was held to her throat.

One incident occurred during a November 2024 drive. The defendant stopped the car in a residential area, dragged the complainant out, and pushed her into a mud puddle. The assault ended only when a nearby resident came outside armed and intervened. The couple then went to a Target parking lot, where the complainant fled into the store. When police later asked about marks on her neck, she minimized them as “hickeys.”

Shortly after that, during what the opinion describes as a long, aimless drive, the defendant used the complainant’s phone to record a 47-minute video. In that recording, he yelled at her and threatened to kill her, kill her father, and then kill himself. Later that same week, he allegedly attacked her over a four-day span because he believed she had been unfaithful. The complainant testified that he repeatedly hit and bit her, choked her to the point that she could not breathe, tied her to a chair with a tow strap, and struck her with it.

The complainant eventually escaped during another trip to Target, found an employee, contacted her father, and left with him. At the hospital and in her subsequent police interview, her injuries included extensive bruising and three broken ribs. The State prosecuted the case as aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, assault by impeding breath or circulation, and unlawful restraint. At trial, the defendant objected to the admission of the threatening video, arguing that even if Article 38.371 made the recording relevant relationship evidence, Rule 403 required exclusion because the video was unfairly prejudicial. The trial court admitted it, and the jury convicted on several counts.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court worked from a familiar framework for family-violence prosecutions.

First, it relied on Article 38.371(b) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, which permits admission of “all relevant facts and circumstances” that would assist the factfinder in deciding whether the actor committed the charged offense, including evidence regarding the nature of the relationship between the accused and the complainant. The court reiterated that this provision expressly supports admission of extraneous relationship evidence in domestic-violence cases.

Second, the court emphasized that Article 38.371 is not a bypass around the Rules of Evidence. Even relevant relationship evidence remains subject to Texas Rule of Evidence 403. Citing Fort Worth authority such as Wells v. State, Martin v. State, and James v. State, the court noted that Rule 403 favors admissibility and presumes relevant evidence is more probative than prejudicial. The burden remains on the opponent to show that unfair prejudice substantially outweighs probative value.

Third, the court applied the Gigliobianco balancing factors:

  1. the inherent probative force of the evidence;
  2. the proponent’s need for the evidence;
  3. any tendency to suggest decision on an improper basis;
  4. any tendency to confuse or distract from the main issues;
  5. any tendency that the jury may give the evidence undue weight; and
  6. the likelihood the evidence will consume undue time or merely repeat other proof.

Finally, the court reviewed the ruling under abuse-of-discretion principles. As the opinion makes clear, an evidentiary ruling will stand if it falls within the zone of reasonable disagreement.

Application

The Fort Worth court treated the video as powerful relationship evidence, not merely inflammatory bad-act material. That distinction drove the analysis. The recording captured threats, domination, and emotional coercion in real time, and the court viewed that content as directly illuminating the nature of the parties’ relationship. In a prosecution arising from repeated domestic abuse, that relational context was not collateral; it was central to understanding both the charged conduct and the complainant’s behavior.

The court also found that the State had a substantial need for the video. The complainant was effectively the only direct witness to the charged assaults. In that setting, credibility became a central trial issue. Evidence that helped the jury assess whether the complainant’s account fit the actual dynamics of the relationship carried unusual force. The recording did exactly that. It also helped explain conduct that defense counsel often attacks in family-violence cases, including minimization to police, delay in escape, and continued contact with the abuser.

On the prejudice side of the scale, the court did not ignore the obvious fact that the video was damaging. But Rule 403 does not exclude evidence simply because it is harmful to the opponent. The question is whether it invites decision on an improper basis. The court concluded that this recording did not cross that line. Its impact flowed from its legitimate evidentiary value: it showed threats, fear, and control in the relationship. In other words, the evidence was persuasive because it was probative, not because it encouraged irrational punishment untethered to the issues the jury had to decide.

The court’s treatment of the first two Gigliobianco factors was especially important. It described the video’s inherent probative force as “very high” and the State’s need as “strong.” Once those two factors were weighted heavily in favor of admission, the defense faced a difficult Rule 403 argument. On this record, the court held that the trial judge acted well within the permissible range of discretion by admitting the recording.

Holding

The court held that Article 38.371 permits admission of relevant evidence showing the nature of the relationship between the defendant and the complainant in a family-violence prosecution, including threatening and coercive conduct. That statutory permission, however, remains subject to Rule 403.

The court further held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the 47-minute threatening video. The video had substantial probative value because it demonstrated the abusive dynamics of the relationship and bore directly on witness credibility in a case where the complainant’s testimony was central. The defendant failed to show that any danger of unfair prejudice substantially outweighed that value.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, Rothlis is a useful appellate analogue when the evidentiary fight concerns relational context rather than a single isolated event. In protective-order hearings, modification suits, custody trials, and divorces involving family violence, lawyers often confront the argument that threats, recordings, prior incidents, controlling behavior, financial domination, stalking, or verbal degradation are “too prejudicial” or “not the issue.” Rothlis helps frame the response: where the relationship itself is part of the disputed landscape, pattern evidence may be highly probative because it explains fear, submission, minimization, inconsistent reporting, delayed disclosure, and ongoing contact.

The case is particularly useful when the other side seeks to atomize the facts. Family cases are frequently litigated as though each text, threat, bank restriction, tracking incident, or confrontation stands alone. Rothlis supports the broader theory that the factfinder should be allowed to see the dynamics of coercive control as a system, especially when credibility is central. In custody litigation, that matters when a parent argues that the other parent is exaggerating, fabricating, or strategically raising abuse claims to gain conservatorship leverage. In divorce litigation, it matters when coercion explains why one spouse signed documents, surrendered access to accounts, failed to report abuse earlier, or remained in the home despite danger.

At the same time, Rothlis is also a warning to practitioners offering emotionally potent evidence. The evidence must still be framed through probative value, necessity, and disciplined presentation. If the proponent cannot articulate why the exhibit matters beyond shock value, or if the presentation becomes cumulative and sprawling, a Rule 403 objection becomes more dangerous. Family lawyers should therefore build a record that ties each threatening communication, recording, or prior incident to a live issue: best interest, family violence, coercive control, credibility, explanation of delay, impairment of free consent, or the reasonableness of a party’s conduct.

For the opponent of such evidence, Rothlis shows that generic complaints about “prejudice” will usually fail. The better strategy is to attack the proponent’s need, narrow the temporal and factual scope, challenge cumulative proof, propose redactions, and identify specific ways the exhibit invites an improper decision. In other words, if exclusion is unlikely, containment becomes the next best objective.

Checklists

Proffering Relationship Evidence in a Family Case

Responding to a Rule 403 Objection

Opposing Threatening or Highly Charged Evidence

Using Rothlis in Custody and Protective-Order Litigation

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Mistake

Citation

Rothlis v. State, No. 02-25-00282-CR, ___ S.W.3d ___, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 28, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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