OPINION
A jury сonvicted John Rodgers of the aggravated sexual assaults of two girls less than fourteen years’ old and assessed his punishment at forty years’ imprisonment for each conviction. Rodgers presents the *719 same two issues in each case, contending that the court committed egregious error by failing to sua sponte instruct the jury on the State’s burden of proof for extraneous offenses in the guilt-innocence charge and in the punishment charge. We will аffirm.
The indictments allege that Rodgers committed each offense by causing the mouths of the complainants to contact his sexual organ. A sexual assault nurse examiner testified that one of the complainants, M.E., told her that Rodgers had assaulted her in this manner multiple times, that he had contacted her vagina with his mouth, and that he had penetrated her vagina with his penis. 1
M.E. testified that Rodgers had forced her to perform oral sex оn him multiple times, but she did not testify about other extraneous offenses. The other complainant, C.S., also testified that Rodgers had forced her to perform oral sex on him, but she never responded to the prosecutor’s questions about whether Rodgers forced her to do this more than once. Nor did C.S. testify about extraneous offenses.
Rodgers offered in evidence a Child Protective Services file which reflected that CPS had first investigаted the complainants’ mother for suspicion of child abuse and neglect in 1998, two and one-half years before the offenses for which Rodgers was convicted. Among other things, the CPS file reflects allegations that one of the complainants had been sexually molested on a prior occasion, that one of them witnessed her mother engaged in sexual intercourse, and that one of them slept in the same bed with her mother “and [her mother’s] partner” while they were naked. The file also documents CPS’s investigation after the allegations against Rodgers were made and contains the complainants’ allegations of the offenses for which Rodgers was convicted and extraneous offenses he committed against them.
Guilt-Innocence Charge
Rodgers contends in his second issue that he suffered egregious harm because the court failed to sua sponte instruct the jury in the guilt-innocence charge that it could not consider evidence of extraneous offenses unless the jury was satisfied that the extraneous offenses had been proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
[The Court of Criminal Appeals] has held for many decades that “when evidence of collateral crimes is introduced for one of the various purposes for which such evidence becomes admissible, the jury should be instructed that they cannоt consider against the defendant such collateral crimes, unless it has been shown to their satisfaction that the accused is guilty thereof.” In other words, a jury should be instructed that they are not to consider extraneous act evidence unless they believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed that act.
Ex parte Varelas,
In the punishment phase, article 37.07, section 3(a)(1) similarly permits the fact-finder to consider evidencе of extraneous offenses only if “shown beyond a reasonable doubt by evidence to have been committed by the defendant or for which he could be held criminally responsible.” TexCode Crim. ProC. Ann. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(1) (Vernon Supp.2004-2005).
The Court of Criminal Appeals has considered the impact of this statute on the
*720
punishment charge and has concluded that it requires the inclusion of a reasonable doubt instruction in the punishment charge regardlеss of whether the defendant requests it or objects to its omission.
See Huizar v. State,
While extraneous-offense and bad-act evidence is generally admissible at punishment under section 3(a), we have recognized in unequivocal terms the circumstances in which it can be considered by the jury:
[Ejvidence [of extraneous bad acts and offenses] may not be considered in assessing punishment until the fact-finder is satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that [such, acts and offenses] are attributable to the defendant, [emphasis supplied] Once this requirement is met, the fact-finder may use the evidence however it chooses in assessing punishment.
While section 3(a) says nothing about the submission of a jury instruction to this effect, such instruction is logically required if the jury is to consider the extraneous-offense and bad act evidence under the statutorily prescribed reasonable-doubt standard. Absent such instruction, the jury might apply a standard of proof less than reasonable doubt in its determination of the defendant’s сonnection to such offenses and bad acts, contrary to section 3(a). Section 3(a)’s requirement that the jury be satisfied of the defendant’s culpability in the extraneous offenses and bad acts is thus “law applicable to the case” in the non-capital punishment context. As this was “law applicable to the case” appellant was not required to make an objection or request under section 3(a) in order for the trial court to instruct the jury thereunder.
Id.
(quoting
Fields v. State,
As indicated by
Huizar,
the court’s charge must instruct the jury on the “law applicable to the case” regardless of the defendant’s request or objection.
See id.
at 484;
see also
Tex.Code Crim. PROC. Ann. art. 36.14 (Vernon Supp.2004-2005). Conversely, the Court of Criminal Appeals has historically required a defendant to request a reasonable doubt instruction on evidence of extraneous offenses (or оbject to its omission) before complaining on appeal that same was omitted from the guilt-innocence charge.
See Varelas,
According to our research, the Court of Criminal Appeals has not considered whether this requirement should continue in light of its holding in
Huizar. See Rodriguez,
The “law applicable to the case” generally includes statutes which apply to the facts of a particular case.
See e.g. Huizar,
Sometimes, the common law' serves аs a basis for the “law applicable to the case.”
See Gray v. State,
However, defensive issues (even if statutorily-defined) do not constitute the “law applicable to the case” unless the defendant makes them so by presenting evidence to support their submission in the charge and by requesting their inclusion in the charge.
See Huizar,
These two categories of issues and instructions for which requests are required rest largely on strategic choices made by defense counsel. Defense counsel must familiarize himself with the facts of the client’s case, identify any particular defenses which may be аpplicable to the facts, and develop a strategy to present the applicable defenses at trial. With regard to evidence of extraneous offenses, effective counsel will obtain pre-trial notice of those extraneous offenses which the State intends to prove at trial.
See Loredo v. State,
Unlike these two categories of issues and instructions which will vary depending on the facts of the case, the requirement that extraneous offenses admitted at the guilt-innocence phase be shown beyond a reasonable doubt is a common law requirement applicable to any case in which evidence of extraneous offenses is . admitted.
See Varelas,
In fact, it appears that the common law predating the enactment of the current version of article 37.07, section 3(a)(1) served as the source for the beyond-a-reasonable-doubt burden of proof the Legislature incorporated in that statute.
See
Edward L. Wilkinson,
Punishment Evidence: Grunsfeld Ten Years Later,
35 St. Mary’s L.J. 603, 667-68 & n. 363 (2004) (citing
Mitchell v. State,
*722 In Mitchell, a plurality of the Court of Criminal Appeals addressed the relationship between extraneous offenses admitted at guilt-innocence and those admitted at punishment.
[T]he use of extraneоus offenses during the punishment phase should be analogous to that of the guilt/innocence phase of a trial regarding burden of proof. The use of evidence of extraneous offenses during the guilt/innocence phase is used to prove “motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.” Diming the punishment phase, evidence of an extraneous offensе is offered to assist the trial court or the jury in determining punishment. When evidence of extraneous offenses has been offered, regardless of the respective phase of a trial, the law requires that it be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the said extraneous offenses, or is at least criminally responsible for its commission.
Mitchell,
“[T]he law requires” that extraneous offenses be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
Id.
This requirement is more compelling during the guilt-innocence phase than during the punishment phase because the defendant’s presumption of innocence is still intact.
Cf. Delo v. Lashley,
Accordingly, the requirement that extraneous offense be proved beyond a reasonable doubt is the “law appliсable to the ease” when evidence of extraneous offenses is admitted during the guilt-innocence phase. “As this was ‘law applicable to the case,’ appellant was not required to make an objection or request ... in order for the trial court to instruct the jury” on this requirement.
See Huizar,
The First Court of Appeals has suggested that there is a division among the intermediate courts of appeals on this issue.
See Rodriguez,
*723
The Amarillo and Fourteenth Courts have reached the same conclusion as the First Court that a trial court is not required to
sua sponte
submit a reasonable doubt instruction on extraneous offenses in the guilt-innocence charge.
See Gilbert v. State,
The First Court suggests that the San Antonio Court has held the trial court does have such a
sua sponte
obligation.
See Rodriguez,
The Dallas Court likewise has not plainly stated that a trial court must do so. In
Carter,
the Dallas Court reviewed a
pro se
response to an
Anders
brief
5
which raised the issue in the context of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
See Carter v. State,
We disagree with the courts which have concluded that a trial court has no
sua sponte
duty to submit a reasonable doubt
*724
instruction on evidence of extraneous offenses in the guilt-innocence charge when such evidence is admitted. We hold that the requirement that extraneous offenses be proved beyond a reasonable doubt is the “law applicаble to the case” when evidence of extraneous offenses is admitted during the guilt-innocence phase. “As this was ‘law applicable to the case,’ appellant was not required to make an objection or request ... in order for the trial court to instruct the jury” on this requirement.
See Huizar,
Here, the evidence of extraneous offenses was provided by the testimony of the sexual assault nurse examiner and by the information about thе allegations against Rodgers contained in the CPS file, both of which referred to sexual assaults committed against the complainants in a manner other than alleged in the indictment. 7 Because evidence of extraneous offenses was admitted during the guilt-innocence phase, the trial court had a duty to sua sponte submit an instruction in the guilt-innocence charge that this evidence could not be considered unless the jurors were convincеd beyond a reasonable doubt that Rodgers had committed the extraneous offenses shown. Because the court failed to submit such an instruction, we must conduct a harm analysis.
In
Rodriguez, Gilbert,
and
Salazar,
the courts did not conduct harm analyses because they found no error in the charge.
See Rodriguez,
Rodgers concedes that because he failed to object to this omission he cannot obtain reversal unless he suffered “egregious harm.”
See
Tex.Code Ckim. PROC. Ann. art. 36.19 (Vernon 1981);
Shanks,
The evidence in question was admitted through the testimony of the sexual assault nurse examiner and notations in the CPS file. However, the references to the extraneous offenses in the CPS file were *725 not mentioned in testimony. Neither party otherwise emphasized the extraneous offense evidence in testimony or argument, although Rodgers’s counsel encouraged the jury to review the CPS file in support of the defense’s theory that the complainants were exposed to inappropriate sexual behavior by thеir mother and her paramours and were never sexually assaulted by Rodgers. The State responded by “inviting” the jury to look at the CPS file because the State was “not going to hide anything.” The State encouraged the jury to consider the CPS file and see (1) the difficulties the complainants’ mother was experiencing during the pertinent time periods, (2) the fact that none of the allegations against her were substantiated, and (3) the fact that the сhildren were never removed from her care by CPS.
Because Rodgers admitted the CPS file in evidence without redaction or limitation, because neither party placed emphasis on the evidence of extraneous offenses contained in the CPS file, and because neither party made further reference to the brief testimony of the sexual assault nurse examiner regarding extraneous offenses against M.E., we cannоt say that Rodgers suffered “egregious harm” because of the court’s failure to submit a reasonable doubt instruction with regard to the evidence of extraneous offenses admitted during the guilt-innocence phase.
See Martin,
Punishment Charge
Rodgers contends in his first issuе that he suffered egregious harm because the court failed to sua sponte instruct the jury that it could not consider evidence of extraneous offenses in assessing punishment unless the jury was satisfied that the extraneous offenses had been proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
The court erred by failing to
sua sponte
submit a reasonable doubt instruction regarding evidence of extraneous offenses in the punishment charge.
Ellison,
Here, Rodgers’s 40-year sentences were significantly less than the 70-year sentences sought by the State.
See Tabor v. State,
Accordingly, we cannot say that Rodgers suffered egregious harm because of the court’s failure to submit a reasonable doubt instruction in the punishment charge concerning evidence of extraneous offenses *726 admitted during the guilt-innocence phase. Thus, we overrule Rodgers’s first issue.
We affirm the judgment.
GRAY, C.J., concurred in the judgment.
Notes
. This witness read the complаinant's comments to the jury from the "sexual assault exam paperwork” which was marked as State's Exhibit No. 1 but never offered in evidence.
. The charge at issue in
Gray
instructed the jury on the "synergistic effect” of multiple intoxicants in a case in which the information alleged only alcohol as an intoxicant.
See Gray v. State,
. As noted,
Mitchell
is a plurality opinion. The lead opinion in
Mitchell
was joined by only 1 judge; 1 judge did not participate in the decision; 3 judges concurred in the judgment but not the opinion; and 3 judges dissented. See
Mitchell v. State,
.The Fort Worth Court held in Allen:
If extraneous offense or bad acts evidence is before the jury, regardless of whether such evidence was introduced at the guilt-innоcence or punishment phase, article 37.07, section 3(a) requires that the jurors be instructed not to consider such extraneous offenses or bad acts in assessing the defendant’s punishment unless they find the defendant culpable for such offenses or acts under the statutorily prescribed reasonable-doubt standard.
Allen v. State,47 S.W.3d 47 , 50 (Tex.App.Fort Worth 2001, pet. ref'd).
.
See Anders v. Cal.,
. For reasons unknown, newly appointed counsel in
Carter
chose not to raise this "arguable issue” on resubmission.
See Carter v. State,
. The testimony that Rodgers sexually assaulted the complainants in the manner alleged in the indictment on more than one occasion does not constitute evidence of extraneous offenses.
See Shea v. State,
.
Almanza v. State,
