OPINION
delivered the opinion of the Court
We granted review in this case to determine whether the legal and factual sufficiency standards that govern Texas civil proceedings still apply to the rejection of an affirmative defense after this Court’s decision in
Brooks v. State.
1
We conclude that they do. Because the court of appeals
I.
In 1999, appellant was judicially determined to be the father of a five-year-old girl and ordered to pay child support. From the very beginning, appellant frequently failed to pay the $191.40 monthly child support. 3 Instead, he was “doing drugs ... crystal meth, heroin, and everything else you could think of.” Appellant introduced into evidence his “book-in book-out” Smith County jail sheet that showed his numerous criminal charges and arrest dates between February 16, 1995, and June 4, 2009. These charges included harassment, DWLS, misdemeanor theft, two DWIs, family-violence assault, several charges of nonpayment of child support, trespass, interference with an emergency call, and burglary.
Most recently, appellant was charged with sixteen counts of nonsupport for failing to pay child support on the first of each month from February 2006 through November 2006, in January 2008, in June 2008, and from September 2008 through December 2008. 4 The evidence was undisputed that appellant did not pay the required child support during those sixteen months. The only question was whether he had the ability to make those payments. 5
Chief Deputy Pinkerton of the Smith County Sheriffs Office testified that jail inmates cannot receive any money for the jobs that they may do in the jail, although a trusty may receive good-time credits. Chief Pinkerton also agreed that those who had money before they went to jail would still have that money, and “they can pay whoever they want to pay.”
An appointed lawyer who had represented appellant between 2005 and 2007 testified that appellant was jailed on previous nonsupport charges for more than a year. He was then conditionally released on probation to stay and work at the Family Prayer Counseling Center, a residential drug-treatment program. The Center paid appellant $50.00 a week and forwarded the rest of his paycheck for child support payments. But appellant’s probation was revoked in 2008, and he was ordered to serve 180 days in jail. His probation officer said that appellant was not a good probationer; she assumed “it was his drug addiction that kept him from paying his child support as ordered.” Appellant was continuously in jail on previous nonsupport charges from March 6, 2005, through
Appellant testified that he has a college degree in electronics, but that he can’t find work in electronics. “They’re not hiring.” He had looked all the way from Houston to Tyler. He had worked in fast-food restaurants, but sometimes they wouldn’t hire him because he was “over-qualified.” He worked at the Family Care Center for almost a year after he was released from jail in March, 2006. His salary was automatically sent off for child-support payments for his daughter and another son. After about six months working at the Center, appellant obtained a commercial driver’s license and got a job with Basic Energies, a trucking company, where he made $13.00 an hour. But he lost that job after a month because he wasn’t “ready to be around other people.” He later got a job with Shell Tanker. Appellant testified that he didn’t make any child support payments for either his daughter or son while he was in jail because “I didn’t have no money. Nobody would give me money.” During those periods of time, he was not “able to provide any funding or sources of income to pay any support toward” his daughter.
When asked by the prosecutor if he had “any money whatsoever in savings,” appellant said that he did not. He said that he had asked his uncle, a dentist in Marshall, for help in paying his child support, but his uncle gave him “Zero.” There was no suggestion that appellant owned a car, a house, or a bank account. There was evidence that he was estranged from his wife and that he had been staying with various relatives when he was not in jail or at the rehabilitation center.
Based upon this evidence, the jury found appellant guilty on all sixteen counts of nonsupport and sentenced him to confinement in a state jail facility for two years with a fine of $10,000 on each count.
On direct appeal, appellant claimed that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s rejection of his “inability to pay” affirmative defense. The court of appeals focused on Count I— the failure to pay child support on February 1, 2006 — and the undisputed evidence that appellant had been in the Smith County jail for the eleven months preceding that date. The court noted that there was no evidence to suggest that appellant had money to pay his child support obligation that month or that he “had a source from which he could borrow or obtain the money to pay that child support obligation.” 6 Therefore, the court of appeals held that, “after considering all of the evidence relevant to Appellant’s affirmative defense of inability to pay child support, ... the jury’s finding of guilt as to Count I of the indictment is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust.” 7 It entered a judgment of acquittal on Count I. 8
As to the other counts, the evidence was in conflict because appellant admitted that he had a college degree in electronics and had worked during much of that time, sometimes as a truck driver making $13.00 an hour. As to those counts, appellant’s testimony was “equivocal, conflicting, and unelear[,]” and thus the jury’s finding against the affirmative defense was “not so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust.” 9 It upheld those fifteen convictions.
The State petitioned this Court, arguing that the court of appeals erred by applying a factual-sufficiency standard of review in deciding whether the evidence was legally sufficient to satisfy appellant’s burden to prove his affirmative defense. We agree, but first we briefly examine how the standard of proof is related to the standards of review in criminal cases.
A. Burden of Proof/Standard of Review for Elements of Offense (Jackson/Brooks )
Under Brooks v. State, 10 we review the sufficiency of the evidence establishing the elements of a criminal offense for which the State has the burden of proof under the single sufficiency standard set out in Jackson v. Virginia. 11 Under that standard, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. 12 The Jackson standard of review is that required for criminal cases when the standard of proof is that of “beyond a reasonable doubt.”
That constitutional standard of review applies to the elements of an offense that the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt, but it does not apply to elements of an affirmative defense that the defendant must prove by a preponderance of the evidence. 13 Prior to Brooks, we used the traditional Texas civil burdens of proof and standards of review in the context of affirmative defenses where the rejection of an affirmative defense is established by a “preponderance of the evidence.” 14 Our decision in Brooks did not affect that line of cases. We continue to use those civil standards in reviewing a jury’s rejection of an affirmative defense in a criminal case.
B. Standard of Review on Legal Sufficiency Concerning Affirmative Defense (Modified Sterner)
A party attempting to overcome an adverse fact finding as a matter of law must surmount two hurdles. First, the record must be examined for evidence that supports the jury’s finding, while ignoring all evidence to the contrary. Second, if there is no evidence to support the fact finder’s answer, then, the entire record must be examined to see if the contrary proposition is established as a matter of law. 16
The majority of courts of appeals that have addressed the issue of the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support a jury’s rejection of an affirmative defense in a criminal case have followed the
Sterner
standard.
17
That standard has, however,
When an appellant asserts that there is no evidence to support an adverse finding on which she had the burden of proof, we construe the issue as an assertion that the contrary was established as a matter of law. We first search the record for evidence favorable to the finding, disregarding all contrary evidence unless a reasonable factfinder could not. If we find no evidence supporting the finding, we then determine whether the contrary was established as a matter of law. 20
In reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support an adverse finding on the affirmative defense of an inability to pay in a nonsupport prosecution, we first look for evidence (“more than a mere scintilla”
21
) that supports the jury’s implied finding that the defendant could pay child support,
22
and we disregard all evidence of the defendant’s inability to pay unless a reasonable factfinder could not disregard that evidence.
23
If no evidence supports the jury’s finding that the defendant could pay child support, then we search the record to see if the defendant had established, as a matter of law, that he did not have the ability to pay his child
Only if the appealing party establishes that the evidence conclusively proves his affirmative defense and “that no reasonable jury was free to think otherwise,” 26 may the reviewing court conclude that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s rejection of the defendant’s affirmative defense. 27 Applying that standard to criminal cases, we conclude that the defendant is entitled to an acquittal on appeal despite the jury’s adverse finding on his affirmative defense only if the evidence conclusively establishes his affirmative defense under the modified two-step Sterner test. 28
C. Standard of Review on Factual Sufficiency Concerning Affirmative Defense (Meraz)
A criminal defendant might also raise a factual-sufficiency challenge to the jury’s adverse finding on his affirmative defense.
29
In that event, we turn to
Meraz,
In the factual-sufficiency review of a rejected affirmative defense, an appellate court views the entirety of the evidence in a neutral light, but it may not usurp the function of the jury by substituting its judgment in place of the jury’s assessment of the weight and credibility of the witnesses’ testimony. 33 Therefore, an appellate court may sustain a defendant’s factual-sufficiency claim only if, after setting out the relevant evidence and explaining precisely how the contrary evidence greatly outweighs the evidence supporting the verdict, the court clearly states why the verdict is so much against the great weight of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust, conscience-shocking, or clearly biased. 34
With that general background, we turn to the present case.
III.
In this case, appellant claimed on direct appeal that the evidence was “legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s rejection of appellant’s affirmative defense of inability to pay.” 36 The court of appeals set out appellant’s argument concerning Counts I and II:
[H]e was in jail the entire two months in which it was alleged that he failed to pay child support. Further, Appellant contends that, even when he was not in jail, he was in a rehabilitation center that limited his ability to earn extra income to pay child support. 37
The court of appeals then stated that, in Meraz, this Court “discussed the standard of review for a criminal case involving an affirmative defense in which the defendant has the burden of proof.” 38 That is true, but what we did not make particularly clear in Meraz was that we were discussing only factual sufficiency and whether the “the adverse resolution of [the defendant’s] incompetency plea was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.” 39 Thus, the court of appeals in Meraz, having found that the jury’s finding of competency was against the great weight of the evidence, remanded the case for a new competency trial based on Mer-az’s factual-sufficiency claim. 40 We affirmed that disposition. 41
In the present case, the court of appeals conflated the distinct legal and factual sufficiency standards in stating that
when courts of appeals examine whether an appellant proved his affirmative defense by a preponderance of the evidence, the correct standard of review is whether after considering all of the evidence relevant to the issue, the judgment is so against the great weight andpreponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust. 42
That is the factual-sufficiency standard of review for affirmative defenses. And if the defendant’s factual-sufficiency claim is sustained, then he is entitled to a new trial in which he may once again raise his affirmative defense. In this case, the court of appeals applied the standard of review for factual sufficiency and sustained appellant’s claim on Count I. However, it rendered a judgment of acquittal as if it had granted his legal sufficiency claim.
The State Prosecuting Attorney (SPA) argues that the court of appeals erred by failing to apply the modified Sterner v. Marathon Oil Company legal-sufficiency standard to appellant’s claim. We agree. The court of appeals was required to first decide if there was “some” evidence to support a reasonable jury’s finding that appellant had the ability to pay his child support on February 1, 2006. If there was some evidence, then the court must reject appellant’s legal sufficiency claim. 43 If there was no such evidence, then the court must examine the entire record to see if appellant established his inability to pay as a matter of law. 44 His legal sufficiency claim “should be sustained only if the contrary proposition is conclusively established.” 45
The SPA also argues that the court of appeals erroneously held that “the fact of incarceration alone” satisfied either the legal-sufficiency or factual-sufficiency standard. We agree with the State’s position in the abstract. But we do not read the lower court’s opinion as holding (and the record does not reflect) that appellant established his “inability to pay” affirmative defense based solely upon the evidence that he had been incarcerated for the eleven months preceding the child support payment due on February 1, 2006. Appellant testified that he had no savings and no other sources of income during at least some of that time. However, we note that, if the court of appeals intended to reverse a jury’s verdict using a factual-sufficiency review under Meraz, it must “detail [all of] the evidence relevant to the issue” and “state in what regard the contrary evidence greatly outweighs the evidence in support of the verdict.” 46
Because the court of appeals conflated the standards for legal and factual sufficiency review, we are uncertain if it found that appellant had conclusively established his “inability to pay” affirmative defense as
We therefore reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Appendix
[[Image here]]
Notes
.
1. Did the court of appeals err in holding that the jury's rejection of the affirmative defense of inability to pay child support was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence when the majority of Texas appellate courts, including the Tyler court, apply the civil legal sufficiency standard of review announced by the Texas Supreme Court in Sterner v. Marathon Oil Company, 767 S.W.2d [686] (Tex. 1989), and the factual sufficiency standard in Meraz v. State, [785] S.W.2d 146 (Tex.Crim.App. 1990), has been severely undercut by Brooks v. State,323 S.W.3d 893 (Tex.Crim.App.2010)?
2. Applying the Sterner legal sufficiency standard, does the fact of incarceration alone satisfy the appellant’s burden on the affirmative defense of inability to pay child support by a preponderance of the evidence?
.
Matlock
v.
State,
No. 12-09-00358-CR,
. Appellant testified that he was also ordered to pay child support for two other children, and that he and his wife have three children, for a total of six children that appellant is supposed to support.
. See Tex. Penal Code § 25.05(a) ("An individual commits an offense if the individual intentionally or knowingly fails to provide support for the individual’s child younger than 18 years of age, or for the individual’s child who is the subject of a court order requiring the individual to support the child.”).
. See id., § 25.05(d) ("It is an affirmative defense to prosecution under this section that the actor could not provide support for the actor’s child.”). The defendant must prove an affirmative defense by a preponderance of the evidence, the same standard of proof as that employed in civil cases.
.
Matlock,
. Id.
. Id. at *12.
. Id. at *11.
.
.
.
Id.
at 319,
.
See Brooks,
.
See Van Guilder v. State,
.
.
Id.
at 690;
see also Dow Chem. Co. v. Francis,
.
See, e.g., Cleveland,
A minority of the courts of appeals have used the
Meraz
factual-sufficiency standard to review all sufficiency-of-the-evidence claims concerning an affirmative defense.
See, e.g., Patterson v. State,
The Texarkana Court of Appeals discussed these two divergent lines in
Ballard v. State,
.
. Sea id. at 827. The Texas Supreme Court explained that
[t]he final test for legal sufficiency must always be whether the evidence at trial would enable reasonable and fair-minded people to reach the verdict under review. Whether a reviewing court begins by considering all the evidence or only the evidence supporting the verdict, legal-sufficiency review in the proper light must credit favorable evidence if reasonable jurors could, and disregard contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not.
Id.
.
One Ford Mustang VIN 1FAFP40471F207859 v. State,
. "Evidence does not exceed a scintilla if it is 'so weak as to do no more than create a mere surmise or suspicion’ that the fact exists.”
In re Estate of Campbell,
.
See Howard v. State,
.
See City of Keller,
.
See. Sterner,
.
See Grider v. Mike O'Brien, P.C.,
.
Tanner v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
.
See Van Guilder v. State,
.
See Cleveland,
. Technically, a defendant's claim is not one of "factual insufficiency.” He is really arguing that he had offered so much evidence in support of his affirmative-defense claim and the State offered so little evidence rebutting his defense, that the jury's rejection of his affirmative defense is against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.
See Stone v. State,
.Meraz,
.
Meraz,
.
Id.,
at 154-55 ("when the courts of appeals are called upon to exercise their fact jurisdiction, that is, examine whether the appellant proved his affirmative defense or other fact issue where the law has designated that the defendant has the burden of proof by a preponderance of evidence, the correct standard of review is whether after considering all the evidence relevant to the issue at hand, the judgment is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence so as to be manifestly unjust.");
see abo Cleveland,
.
Meraz,
.
Meraz,
.
See id.
at 156 (affirming judgment of court of appeals remanding the case for a new competency trial based on the defendant’s factual sufficiency challenge);
Cropper v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.,
. Appellant’s Brief on Direct Appeal at iii.
.
Matlock,
. Id. at *9.
.
Meraz,
. Id. at 109.
.
Meraz II,
.
Matlock,
.
Sterner,
. Id.
.
Dow Chemical Co. v. Francis,
.Pool v. Ford Motor Co.,
