OPINION
This is an appeal from a conviction for the offense of indecency with a child. The jury assessed punishment at 10 years confinement in the Texas Department of Corrections, probated, and a $10,000 fine.
Appellant was indicted for engaging in sexual contact with D.M. and C.M., both minors. Appellant was acquitted of the offense with D.M. and convicted of the offense with C.M.
In point of error one, appellant argues that the trial court erred by admitting at the punishment stage, over appellant’s timely objection, evidence of an extraneous offense involving D.T.
At the punishment phase, the State called D.T. as its first witness. Appellant had not testified at trial, nor did he testify at the punishment phase. When the prosecutor asked D.T. if anything had ever happened to him in relation to appellant, appellant’s attorney properly objected to the question as going into an extraneous offense that was not a final conviction. The objection was overruled, and D.T. testified that appellant had placed his hand in D.T.’s pants during the previous year when D.T. and his parents were visiting appellant.
Appellant cites
Murphy v. State,
The cases relied on by the State are exceptions to the general rule and are not applicable to this case. In
Davis v. State,
*390 [t]he context of the case makes it clear that the key phrase in this passage is ‘fair determination’, and the key word ‘fair’. It would not be fair to allow a defendant to mislead the jury about the merits of his application for probation. If the State must bring in extraneous offenses to dispel the false impression, then the necessity of a ‘fair’ determination on the application for a probation allows it to do so. But in the present case, there is no contention that appellant misled the jury and that the introduction of the extraneous offenses was necessary to dispel the false impression.
Similarly in
Helwig v. State,
Also, in
Baxter v. State,
In
Cleveland v. State,
The State’s authority is distinguishable from this case. Murphy v. State is on point, since appellant did not mislead the jury and create a false impression. Appellant fits within the general rule that evidence of an unadjudicated extraneous offenses is inadmissible. The trial court committed reversible error in admitting the testimony of D.T.
Appellant’s first point of error is sustained.
Because we reverse appellant’s conviction because of the erroneous admission of D.T.’s testimony, we need not decide if it was error to admit evidence of the offense against D.M., for which appellant was acquitted. However, in the event of retrial, we invite the trial court’s attention to
Stuart v. State,
Likewise, we need not decide whether it was error for the trial court to refuse to allow the impeachment of R.M. However, we invite the trial court’s attention to
Harrison v. State,
Finally, we need not decide whether it was error for the trial court to refuse to
*391
require the State to elect which of two acts of indecency testified to by C.M. was being relied upon for conviction. However, we invite the trial court’s attention to
Crawford v. State,
We reverse the judgment and remand the cause for a new trial.
