OPINION ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
Appellant was convicted of aggravated sexual assault and the jury assessed punishment at thirty-seven years confinement. Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 22.021(a)(l)(B)(i) and (ii). The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Stevens v. State,
I.
Appellant was indicted for aggravated sexual assault. The indictment alleged “100589-040584” as a pseudonym for the victim’s legal name. Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 57.02(b). However, throughout the extensive pre-trial hearings and the trial both the parties as well as the trial judge used the victim’s legal name. The State offered no proof at trial to establish the victim and 100589-040584 were one and the same person.
II.
A.
As a general rule a variance between the indictment and the evidence at trial is fatal to a conviction.
Corley v. State,
In
Ward,
the defendant was charged with burglary of a building owned by Seth Haller.
Id.,
However, not every variance between the evidence at trial and the indictment is fatal. In
Plessinger v. State,
We approved this limitation on the fatal variance doctrine in
Human v. State,
B.
This case is easily resolved under
Plessinger
and
Human.
The victim’s legal name was provided to appellant in compliance with his motion seeking disclosure of the State’s witnesses. Moreover, appellant, in his pre-trial motions, specifically referred
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to the victim by legal name. Pursuant to one such motion, the trial judge held a hearing at which time the victim testified to establish his competency to testify. Finally, the State filed notice of its intent to offer the outcry testimony of the victim to his mother. Tex. Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 38.072. Appellant objected and a pre-trial hearing was held. At the hearing all parties referred to the victim and his mother by their legal names. Clearly, any variance between the indictment and the proof offered at trial did not operate to the appellant’s surprise or prejudice his rights.
Plessinger,
III.
The remaining question is whether an indictment which alleges an obvious pseudonym is subject to the fatal variance doctrine. Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 57.02(b) provides:
A victim may choose a pseudonym to be used instead of the victim’s name to designate the victim in all public files and records concerning the offense, including police summary reports, press releases, and records of judicial proceedings. A victim who elects to use a pseudonym as provided by this article must complete a pseudonym form developed under this article and return the form to the law enforcement agency investigating the offense.
Art. 57.02(f) requires the prosecutor to use the pseudonym “in all legal proceedings concerning the offense.” However, art. 57.02(g) provides for the disclosure of the victim’s legal name when identity is an issue or such information is essential to the trial.
By enacting art. 57.02, the Legislature changed the manner in which the victim may be alleged in an indictment. In doing so the Legislature sought to address and satisfy two competing interests: the defendant’s due process right to notice of the offense for which he was indicted; and, the victim’s interest in avoiding the embarrassment associated with a public pronouncement of the details of the alleged offense.
2
The pseudonym is used to protect the
victim
— not to deprive the defendant of notice. Therefore, we hold the fatal variance doctrine is inapplicable to pseudonym cases so long as the defendant’s due process right to notice is satisfied.
See, Sailings v. State,
IV.
Appellant does not, and indeed could not, contend he was surprised to learn the victim’s identity. Nor does appellant contend his due process right to notice was violated. Appellant’s first and second grounds for review are overruled. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant raises the following grounds for review:
The Court of Appeals erred in finding the evidence to be sufficient when there was a material and fatal variance between the name alleged and the name proven.
The Court of Appeals erred in finding the evidence to be sufficient when the offense charged was not the offense proven.
. In the instant case "100589-040584” is an obvious pseudonym which accomplished both purposes. However, we express no opinion on whether a due process violation may occur in cases where the State opts to use a less obvious or non-numerical pseudonym.
