SEERDEN, Justice.
A jury fоund appellant guilty of indecency with a child and assessed punishment at eight years’ probation. Appellant raises four points of error in his brief. The State has chosen not to respond to appellant’s claims of reversible error. We reverse and remand.
By his first point of error, appellant complains that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. In reviewing this point, we consider whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Butler v. State,
By his second point of error, appellant complains that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of extraneous offenses over his timely objection, injuring his right to be tried on the offense charged only and thus denying him a fair trial. We agree.
In the case in chief, over appellant’s objection, the State called four witnesses who testified about uncharged acts of misconduct allegedly committed by appellant with third parties. The first witness, A.V., a twelve year old girl at the time of trial, testified that during the 1986-87 school year she was in appellant’s class for the first part of thе year. At that time she often became upset and cried easily. She testified that appellant “would take me into the closet and hug me and kiss me.” On the day that she remembers this incident happening, she had been crying because a boy had said a “bad word” to her. She stated that after this incident she told her mother. A.V. said it happened again two or three days later and that she and her mother reported the incident to the Superintendent of the school and to Principal Darlene Perez. As a result, she was removed from appellant’s classroom. (This statement was contradicted by Principal Perez who testified that A.V. was afraid of appellant because he had a “rough-gruff” voice which scared her.) A.V. also testified that she never reported thе incident to anyone else but her mother and the Superintendent until the time of trial.
A.G., another twelve year old child, testified that she was a student in appellant’s classroom in 1986 and that once during that year appellant attempted to kiss her on the chеek while she was walking out of his classroom. She punched him and said “watch it buster” and ran off. She also stated that during appellant’s class she would see other students sitting on appellant’s lap and sometimes they would comb his hair.
V.M., also a twelve year old сhild, testified that she was in appellant’s second grade class in 1986-87, and that appellant took her into a closet located inside the classroom, locked the door and kissed her on the mouth. She did not remember how many times appellant kissed her and hugged her. She also saw other children sit on appellant’s lap and hug him and kiss him on the cheek, like she did.
Irma Saldana, a retired school district employee, was working as a community aide at the elementary school during the time of the alleged offenses. She testified that once while working in the principal’s office she received a phone call for appellant and went to tell him. When she arrived at his classroom, the door was open and appellant was standing near the doоr, stooped over, kissing a young girl.
Montgomery v. State,
Whether objected-to evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts has relevance apart from character conformity is a question for the trial court.
Montgomery,
This approach is faithful to the Court of Criminal Appeals’ long tradition of determining the admissibility of extraneous acts by reviewing not only the relevance of the evidence, but the State’s need for it as well.
Id.;
(citing, e.g.
Albrecht v. State,
The State, in the present case, offered the extraneous act evidence to show appellant’s intent to arouse or gratify his sexual desire. The evidеnce elicited by the complaining witness was that appellant grabbed her, placed his hands on her breasts, and rubbed them several times. The State further elicited from the complainant that the rubbing was “like a massage.” The intent to arouse sexual desirе can be inferred from this testimony. In *31 deed, this would be the only plausible explanation for the conduct testified to by T.M., the complaining witness. In testifying in his own defense, appellant denied touching T.M. He stated that this testimony was untrue.
The testimony of the extraneous aсt witnesses showed that two of the children were crying when appellant allegedly kissed them. A third was walking out of the classroom after school. Other testimony indicated that appellant was an affectionate person, and that many children kissed and hugged appellant. Appellant’s testimony revealed that he was in fact an emotional and affectionate person and that he often hugged and kissed children on the cheek, sometimes as they were leaving class and at times during the class. The circumstances of those acts are not of such a nature that appellant’s intent to gratify could be inferred from any one of them. The testimony of the three children who accused appellant of kissing or attempting to kiss them was lengthy, sometimes contradictory, and emotionally charged. In most instances, the testimony indicated that most of the kissing was on the cheek, not on the lips. Appellant was forced to defend himself not only against the charged offense, but also against the uncharged extrаneous acts. We conclude that the State had no compelling need to show that appellant kissed other students to show his specific intent to arouse or gratify his sexual desire. Even if this evidence were relevant, its probative value is marginal. Its рrejudicial value, however, is great. Sexually related misconduct and misconduct involving children are inherently inflammatory.
Montgomery,
Notes
. Other relevant criteria listed in the Montgomery decision include 1) that the ultimate issue was not seriously contested by the opponent; 2) that the probative value of the misconduct was not, either alone or in combination with other evidence, particularly compelling; or 3) that the misconduct was of such a nature that a jury instruction to disregard it for any but its proffered purpose would not likely have been efficacious.
