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CROSSOVER: Outcry, SANE-Testimony, and Child-Abuse Timeline Sufficiency Make This Criminal Appeal Useful to Texas Family Litigators

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

Jose Luis Espinoza v. The State of Texas, 13-24-00173-CR, April 23, 2026.

On appeal from 103rd District Court of Cameron County, Texas

Synopsis

The Thirteenth Court of Appeals affirmed Espinoza’s convictions for continuous sexual abuse of a young child and two counts of indecency with a child. For Texas family-law litigators, the opinion is useful because it shows how appellate courts evaluate child-abuse timeline proof, outcry testimony, SANE-related evidence, and overlap between charged conduct and other counts—issues that regularly migrate into SAPCRs, divorces, protective-order litigation, and property disputes involving credibility attacks and alleged fabrication.

Relevance to Family Law

Although this is a criminal appeal, its practical significance for family lawyers is substantial. Allegations of sexual abuse routinely drive temporary-orders hearings, emergency possession restrictions, supervised access disputes, termination and modification cases, and even property-related litigation where one side claims that abuse allegations were fabricated to gain leverage over the home, inheritance expectations, or overall control of the family narrative. Espinoza reinforces that Texas courts will not require child complainants to supply date-specific precision when the abuse is described as repeated conduct over an identifiable span, and that principle matters in custody litigation where the opposing party often argues that a child’s inability to pinpoint dates defeats credibility. The opinion also highlights how outcry and forensic-medical testimony can become central to corroboration battles, while fabrication theories tied to family feuds remain fact questions rather than automatic appellate escape hatches.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Espinoza was the complainants’ step-grandfather. The State alleged one count of continuous sexual abuse of a young child and two counts of indecency with a child by sexual contact involving breast touching. The indictment alleged that, during a period of thirty or more days, Espinoza committed two or more acts of sexual abuse against one or both child complainants, B.H. and P.P.

At trial, B.H. testified that the abuse began when she was about nine or ten years old and occurred when she frequently visited her grandmother’s home. She described an escalation from non-overt touching to groping of her chest, vagina, and buttocks over clothing. Critically, she testified that over the span of a year Espinoza touched those areas twenty to thirty times.

P.P. testified that she lived with her grandmother and Espinoza and described multiple sexual encounters beginning when she was around seven or eight. Her account included rubbing of Espinoza’s penis against her vagina over clothing and against her bare vagina, at least one breast-touching incident, and an instance in which he made her touch his penis over his underwear. Unlike B.H., P.P. could not clearly place the abuse on a timeline longer than “more than four times,” and she expressly said she did not remember whether the conduct extended over more than a month.

The State also presented outcry witnesses, a school counselor, and two sexual assault nurse examiners. The defense responded with a familiar cluster of themes that family lawyers will recognize immediately: generalized good-character testimony, lack-of-opportunity evidence, and a fabrication theory grounded in an intra-family feud over the grandmother’s estate and residence. There was also testimony that before her death the grandmother did not believe the allegations and accused the children of lying. The jury convicted on all counts, and Espinoza appealed on sufficiency, double-jeopardy, evidentiary, expert-testimony, and cumulative-error grounds.

Issues Decided

The court addressed and rejected the following appellate complaints:

  • Whether the evidence was legally sufficient to prove the thirty-or-more-day duration element for continuous sexual abuse of a young child.
  • Whether the indecency-with-a-child convictions violated double-jeopardy principles because they allegedly duplicated predicate acts supporting the continuous-sexual-abuse count.
  • Whether the trial court reversibly erred in admitting certain outcry testimony.
  • Whether the trial court reversibly erred in admitting extraneous-offense and bad-act evidence.
  • Whether the trial court reversibly erred in admitting the complainants’ medical records.
  • Whether the trial court improperly allowed expert testimony that commented on the complainants’ credibility.
  • Whether cumulative error required reversal even if no single complained-of ruling independently justified it.

Rules Applied

The court relied on standard Texas criminal sufficiency principles and on the statutory structure of continuous sexual abuse:

  • Constitutional sufficiency is measured under Jackson v. Virginia, asking whether a rational jury could find each essential element beyond a reasonable doubt.
  • Sufficiency is measured against the hypothetically correct jury charge under Malik v. State.
  • Under Texas Penal Code § 21.02(b), continuous sexual abuse requires proof that the defendant committed at least two acts of sexual abuse during a period of thirty or more days.
  • Under Texas Penal Code § 21.02(d), jurors need not unanimously agree on the exact acts or exact dates.
  • Texas cases construing the duration element treat the statute as requiring proof of at least twenty-eight days between the first and last act. The opinion cited authorities including Ramos v. State, Perez v. State, Pelcastre v. State, Turner v. State, and Smith v. State.
  • Under Code of Criminal Procedure article 38.07(b)(1), the uncorroborated testimony of a child victim can legally support a sexual-offense conviction.
  • On double jeopardy, the court noted the Legislature’s intent under Penal Code § 21.02(e) to bar dual convictions when the same conduct serves both as the continuous-sexual-abuse offense and as separately punished predicate sexual offenses.

Application

On the sufficiency question, the court did what family lawyers should expect appellate courts to do in abuse cases: it focused on whether the testimony supplied a rational basis to infer the statutory duration, not on whether the child could provide calendar specificity. Espinoza argued that the record was too incomplete on dates and lacked contextual markers sufficient to prove the thirty-day requirement. The court rejected that framing because the statute does not require exact dates. B.H.’s testimony that Espinoza groped her vagina over clothing twenty to thirty times over the span of a year was enough by itself. Once that testimony is credited—as an appellate court must when viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict—the duration element is satisfied.

That reasoning matters because P.P.’s timeline testimony was comparatively weaker; she could not clearly remember whether the abuse lasted more than a month. But the indictment and proof allowed reliance on conduct against one or both complainants, and B.H.’s testimony independently supplied the required temporal span. The court thus treated the State’s proof as legally sufficient without demanding date-by-date parsing of every event.

On the remaining issues, the court adhered to the same deferential, verdict-sustaining approach. The opinion indicates that Espinoza’s double-jeopardy challenge failed, as did his attacks on outcry testimony, medical records, extraneous-act evidence, and SANE-related testimony. The defense tried to convert family conflict, inheritance friction, and perceived inconsistencies into legal error; the court treated those matters as trial-level credibility disputes and evidentiary complaints that did not justify reversal. In practical terms, the panel declined to let impeachment themes eclipse the jury’s prerogative to accept the complainants’ accounts and the State’s corroborative witnesses.

Holding

The court held that the evidence was legally sufficient to support the conviction for continuous sexual abuse of a young child. B.H.’s testimony that Espinoza touched her genitals over clothing twenty to thirty times over the span of a year, beginning when she was nine or ten, was enough to prove at least two acts of sexual abuse separated by the required duration. The State was not required to prove exact dates.

The court also rejected Espinoza’s remaining appellate challenges, including his double-jeopardy complaint and his evidentiary attacks concerning outcry testimony, extraneous acts, medical records, and expert testimony. The court therefore affirmed all convictions and left the concurrent sentences intact.

Practical Application

For family-law practitioners, Espinoza is not a criminal-law curiosity; it is a roadmap for how appellate courts think about child-abuse proof when memory is developmental, fragmented, and repetitive rather than date-stamped. In custody litigation, the parent defending against abuse allegations often presses the same argument raised here: the child cannot identify precise dates, so the allegation is too vague to be reliable. Espinoza undercuts that strategy where the child can describe recurring conduct over an identifiable span. In temporary-orders practice, that can support restrictions on possession even when the child cannot anchor each event to a calendar.

The case is equally useful when the opposing side advances a motive-to-fabricate theory tied to divorce leverage, family inheritance conflict, or control of the residence. Here, the defense developed a feud-over-estate narrative and still lost on appeal. That does not make motive evidence irrelevant, but it confirms that courts treat such theories as competing inferences, not as legally dispositive rebuttals to abuse proof.

SANE and outcry issues also carry obvious crossover value. In SAPCRs and protective-order cases, lawyers frequently litigate whether a counselor, forensic interviewer, nurse examiner, or other professional crossed the line from reporting to vouching. Espinoza reminds practitioners that these fights must be preserved carefully and framed precisely; broad complaints about “credibility bolstering” or “inconsistent prior statements” may not move the needle on appeal if the child’s own testimony independently supports the material finding.

In property litigation, especially where one spouse claims the other manufactured abuse allegations to gain exclusive use of the marital residence or influence broader settlement dynamics, the opinion is a cautionary marker. Fabrication themes can be powerful, but unless counsel can tie them to concrete impeachment, exclusionary rulings, or legally significant contradictions, appellate courts are unlikely to disturb fact findings simply because the family system was already fractured.

Checklists

Building a Child-Abuse Timeline That Will Survive Appellate Review

  • Identify testimony that establishes repetition over an identifiable span, even if exact dates are unavailable.
  • Tie the conduct to age markers, school years, living arrangements, holidays, moves, or other contextual anchors.
  • Elicit whether the conduct occurred “over months,” “during a year,” “while living in a particular home,” or “during a grade level.”
  • Make sure at least one witness supplies evidence from which the court can infer the required duration.
  • Do not assume that lack of exact dates is fatal; focus instead on legally sufficient temporal context.

Defending Against the “Too Vague to Believe” Argument

  • Emphasize that child complainants are not required to identify exact dates of repeated abuse.
  • Distinguish between evidentiary weight and legal sufficiency.
  • Argue that developmental memory limitations are consistent with repeated abuse, not necessarily inconsistent with truthfulness.
  • Use contextual facts to bolster sequence and duration even if the child cannot provide a calendar timeline.
  • Preserve the record by making clear which testimony independently satisfies the required time element.

Handling Outcry and Forensic-Medical Witnesses

  • Define the purpose of each witness before trial: outcry, treatment, forensic examination, records custodian, or expert explanation.
  • Anticipate Rule 403 and bolstering objections and prepare narrow admissibility arguments.
  • Avoid eliciting direct opinions that the child is truthful.
  • Use SANE testimony to explain findings, history-taking, and consistency, not to substitute for the factfinder’s credibility determination.
  • Make a clean record on objections, rulings, and limiting instructions.

Using or Countering Fabrication Theories in Family Court

  • Investigate whether there is a parallel property, inheritance, or possession dispute that might be used as a motive theory.
  • If asserting fabrication, connect the theory to specific facts, statements, inconsistencies, or coaching evidence.
  • If opposing fabrication claims, frame the family conflict as a credibility issue for the court rather than a legal bar to relief.
  • Do not overstate ancillary motives; courts may still credit the child’s core account.
  • Remember that a preexisting feud may explain accusation timing without disproving the accusation itself.

Preserving Appellate Error in Abuse-Driven Family Litigation

  • Object specifically and contemporaneously to outcry, hearsay, Rule 403, expert-vouching, and cumulation problems.
  • Request limiting instructions where evidence is admitted for a restricted purpose.
  • Obtain definitive rulings on overlapping-conduct arguments, especially where multiple theories of abuse are in play.
  • Make offers of proof when testimony is excluded.
  • Separate sufficiency arguments from admissibility arguments; both must be preserved and briefed distinctly.

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Strategic Problems

  • Do not rely solely on generalized attacks about inconsistent statements without showing why the inconsistency matters legally.
  • Do not assume a family-property feud will automatically create reasonable doubt or defeat a conservatorship restriction.
  • Do not neglect one complainant’s stronger timeline evidence simply because another witness is less precise.
  • Do not frame expert complaints too broadly; identify the exact testimony that allegedly invaded the factfinder’s role.
  • Do not wait until appeal to sharpen a double-counting or overlapping-conduct theory.

Citation

Jose Luis Espinoza v. The State of Texas, No. 13-24-00173-CR, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg Apr. 23, 2026, mem. op., not designated for publication).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This opinion can be weaponized in Texas divorce and custody cases in several disciplined ways. If you represent the parent seeking protective restrictions, use Espinoza to rebut the argument that abuse evidence fails because a child cannot identify exact dates; repeated conduct over an identifiable span can be enough. If you represent the accused parent, the case is still instructive because it shows where the real battlefield is: not abstract complaints about vagueness, but targeted attacks on the reliability of timeline anchors, the scope of outcry testimony, and whether a professional witness crossed into impermissible credibility endorsement. And if the abuse allegation sits inside a larger fight over the marital residence, inheritance expectations, or possession of a grandparent’s home, Espinoza is a reminder that courts will not treat a property-motive theory as a silver bullet. The better strategic use is to integrate motive evidence into a broader credibility framework while building or attacking the timeline with precision.

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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.