Michael Ray Senn v. State ( 2018 )


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  •                       In the
    Court of Appeals
    Second Appellate District of Texas
    at Fort Worth
    ___________________________
    No. 02-15-00201-CR
    ___________________________
    MICHAEL RAY SENN, Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    On Appeal from the 213th District Court
    Tarrant County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 1308222R
    Before Walker, Meier, and Gabriel, JJ.
    Opinion on Remand and on Rehearing by Justice Walker
    Dissenting Opinion on Remand and on Rehearing by Justice Gabriel
    OPINION ON REMAND AND ON REHEARING
    On May 17, 2018, we issued an opinion on remand applying the holding from
    Arteaga v. State, 
    521 S.W.3d 329
    , 336 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017)—that “[t]he legislature
    intended for the State to prove facts constituting bigamy whenever it alleges that the
    defendant committed sexual assault, and the State invokes [s]ection 22.011(f)” of the
    Texas Penal Code—as we were instructed to do by the Texas Court of Criminal
    Appeals. See Senn v. State (Senn III), No. 02-15-00201-CR, 
    2018 WL 2248673
    , at *2
    (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 17, 2018, no pet. h.) (op. on remand); State v. Senn (Senn
    II), No. PD-0145-17, 
    2017 WL 5622955
    , at *1 (Tex. Crim. App. Nov. 22, 2017) (not
    designated for publication) (remanding case to this court because we “did not have
    the benefit of [the court of criminal appeals’s] opinion in Arteaga” and stating that it
    held in Arteaga that under section 22.011(f), “the [l]egislature ‘intended for the State to
    prove facts constituting bigamy’”). Following our opinion on remand, the State filed
    a motion for rehearing. The State asserted that we had erred by concluding that
    section 22.011(f) required the State to prove facts constituting bigamy when it alleged
    that Senn committed sexual assault and the State invoked section 22.011(f) of the
    penal code to elevate Senn’s punishment range for sexual assault to a first-degree
    felony offense. Relying on a footnote in the court of criminal appeals’s opinion in
    Arteaga, as well as Judge Yeary’s concurring opinion, the State argued that it was
    required to prove only “that, if he [Senn] were to marry or claim to marry his victim,
    or to live with the victim under the appearance of being married, then he would be
    2
    guilty of bigamy.” We deny the State’s motion for rehearing but withdraw our prior
    opinion and judgment dated May 17, 2018, and substitute in their places this opinion
    and judgment to clarify our prior holding.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    As set forth in our opinion on original submission, Senn sexually assaulted and
    impregnated his biological daughter Brenda1 while he was married to her step-mother.
    A jury convicted Senn of prohibited sexual conduct, for which he was sentenced to
    twenty years’ imprisonment,2 and of sexual assault, for which he was sentenced to life
    imprisonment after the jury affirmatively answered a special issue statutorily
    enhancing his sexual assault conviction from a second-degree felony to a first-degree
    felony under section 22.011(f). See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011(f) (West Supp.
    2018), § 25.02(a)(1), (c) (West 2011). After addressing Senn’s four issues—challenging
    the sufficiency of the evidence to trigger the enhancement, the constitutionality of
    section 22.011(f) as applied to him, and the absence of a bigamy instruction from the
    jury charge—we affirmed both of his convictions. See Senn v. State (Senn I), 551
    1
    To protect the anonymity of the victim, we use a pseudonym. See McClendon v.
    State, 
    643 S.W.2d 936
    , 936 n.1 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1982).
    2
    Senn’s notice of appeal states that he is appealing “from the judgments
    heretofore rendered against him,” but he does not raise any issue on appeal related to
    his prohibited-sexual-conduct conviction.
    
    3 S.W.3d 172
    , 183 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2017),3 vacated, Senn II, 
    2017 WL 5622955
    ,
    at *1.
    In a per curiam opinion, the court of criminal appeals vacated our judgment
    and remanded this case to us because we did not have the benefit of its subsequent
    opinion in Arteaga, which construed for the first time the enhancement provision in
    section 22.011(f) in the context of jury-charge error. See Senn II, 
    2017 WL 5622955
    , at
    *1. After applying Arteaga’s holding—that “[t]he legislature intended for the State to
    prove facts constituting bigamy whenever it alleges that the defendant committed
    sexual assault, and the State invokes [s]ection 22.011(f)”—to the facts here, we hold
    that the evidence is insufficient to trigger the statutory enhancement of Senn’s sexual
    assault charge.    Accordingly, we will affirm Senn’s unchallenged conviction for
    prohibited sexual conduct, modify the trial court’s judgment on the sexual assault to
    reflect a conviction for a second-degree felony, reverse the judgment on the sexual
    In Senn I, we held that “[t]he State was therefore not required to show that
    3
    Senn was engaged in a bigamous relationship with Brenda under section 25.01 in
    order to trigger application of penal code section 22.011(f)’s enhancement provision.”
    
    Id. at 178.
    We reached this holding after conducting a statutory-construction analysis
    and concluding that the phrase in section 22.011(f)—“prohibited from marrying”—is
    not tied to section 22.011(f)’s phrase—“under section 25.01.” The court of criminal
    appeals rejected this statutory-construction analysis in Arteaga. 
    See 531 S.W.3d at 335
    –
    37.
    4
    assault as to punishment, and remand the sexual assault case for a new trial on
    punishment.4
    II. THE EVIDENCE IS INSUFFICIENT TO TRIGGER THE
    STATUTORY ENHANCEMENT
    A. The Statutory Provisions at Issue
    Section 22.011(f) enhances the offense of sexual assault from a second-degree
    felony to a first-degree felony “if the victim was a person whom the actor was
    prohibited from marrying or purporting to marry or with whom the actor was
    prohibited from living under the appearance of being married under [s]ection 25.01.”
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011(f). Section 25.01 (the bigamy statute) states,
    (a) An individual commits an offense if:
    (1) he is legally married and he:
    (A) purports to marry or does marry a person other than
    his spouse in this state, or any other state or foreign
    country, under circumstances that would, but for the
    actor’s prior marriage, constitute a marriage; or
    (B) lives with a person other than his spouse in this state
    under the appearance of being married; or
    (2) he knows that a married person other than his spouse is
    married and he:
    (A) purports to marry or does marry that person in this
    state, or any other state or foreign country, under
    Because Senn does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
    4
    elements of sexual assault as a second-degree felony, we omit a detailed factual and
    procedural background.
    5
    circumstances that would, but for the person’s prior
    marriage, constitute a marriage; or
    (B) lives with that person in this state under the appearance
    of being married.
    
    Id. § 25.01
    (West Supp. 2018).
    B. The Parties’ Positions
    In his first issue, Senn argues that the evidence is insufficient to the trigger the
    statutory enhancement under section 22.011(f) because there is no evidence that he
    was engaged in a bigamous relationship with Brenda. On rehearing of our opinion on
    remand, the State contends that the evidence necessary to trigger the statutory
    enhancement under section 22.011(f) is proof that “if he [Senn] were to marry or
    claim to marry his victim, or to live with the victim under the appearance of being
    married, then he would be guilty of bigamy.”
    C. Under Arteaga, What Evidentiary Burden Does the State Bear to
    Trigger the Enhancement Under Section 22.011(f)?
    Before we conduct a sufficiency analysis of the evidence to support
    enhancement of Senn’s conviction under section 22.011(f), we must first determine
    exactly what the State was required to prove to attain enhancement of Senn’s
    conviction under section 22.011(f). This was the very question the Texas Court of
    Criminal Appeals told us it had answered in Arteaga.
    The court of criminal appeals in Arteaga set forth the issue—the same issue
    presented to this court by the State’s motion for rehearing—followed by the various
    interpretations of section 22.011(f):
    6
    [W]hat does the State have to prove when it invokes [s]ection 22.011(f)
    of the sexual-assault statute, which incorporates the bigamy statute, to
    elevate sexual assault from a second-degree felony to a first-degree
    felony?[5]
    The State argues that [s]ection 22.011(f) requires proof under the bigamy
    statute only when the victim is a person who[m] the defendant is
    prohibited from living with under the appearance of being married. The
    court of appeals reached a “middle ground,” deciding that the State is
    required to prove facts that would constitute bigamy under [s]ection
    25.01 when the victim is a person that (1) the defendant was prohibited
    from claiming to marry or (2) when the victim was someone who[m] the
    defendant was prohibited from living [with] under the appearance of
    being married. We, however, conclude that the State is required to
    prove facts constituting bigamy [under section 25.01][6] under all three
    provisions of 22.011(f), that is, when the defendant was prohibited from
    (1) marrying the victim or (2) claiming to marry the victim, and when the
    defendant was prohibited from (3) living with the victim under the
    appearance of being 
    married. 521 S.W.3d at 335
    .
    This section of the Arteaga opinion is immediately followed by footnote 9,
    which is relied on by the State in its motion for rehearing:
    5
    The dissent relies partially upon Estes v. State, 
    546 S.W.3d 691
    , 699 & n.50
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2018). The issue addressed in Estes, however, was an as-applied
    constitutional challenge to section 22.011(f), not a challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence produced to support enhancement of a conviction under section 22.011(f) as
    in this appeal.
    6
    Throughout the Arteaga opinion, the court of criminal appeals makes clear that
    the three prohibitions in section 22.011(f) must be interpreted in conjunction with the
    bigamy statute—Texas Penal Code section 
    25.01. 521 S.W.3d at 339
    (stating that “it
    was the State’s responsibility to prove that Arteaga was ‘prohibited from marrying the
    victim . . . under [s]ection 25.01’”) (emphasis added); see also 
    id. at 338
    (“As we have
    explained, however, the bigamy statute defines when a person is prohibited from
    marrying another for purposes of 22.011(f), not the [f]amily [c]ode.”) (emphasis
    added). We therefore insert the omitted words to provide additional clarity.
    7
    When we discuss “facts that would constitute bigamy,” we do not mean
    that the State has to prove that the defendant committed the offenses of
    sexual assault and bigamy. What we mean is that, to elevate second-
    degree felony sexual assault to first-degree felony sexual assault under
    [s]ection 22.011(f), the State must prove that the defendant committed
    sexual assault and that, if he were to marry or claim to marry his victim,
    or to live with the victim under the appearance of being married, then he
    would be guilty of bigamy.
    
    Id. at 335
    n.9.
    The court of criminal appeals in the body of its Arteaga opinion then concluded
    that the legislature drafted section 22.011(f) using the modifying phrase “prohibited
    from” to incorporate all six bigamy prohibitions from section 25.01: (1) marriage is
    prohibited if a person does marry a person other than his spouse; (2) marriage is
    prohibited if a person does marry someone whom he knows is already married; (3) a
    person is prohibited from claiming to marry a person other than his spouse; (4) a
    person is prohibited from claiming to marry a person whom he knows is already
    married; (5) a person is prohibited from living under the appearance of being married
    with a person other than his spouse; and (6) a person is prohibited from living under
    the appearance of being married with a person whom he knows is already married.
    See 
    id. at 336
    (citing section 25.01(a)(1)(A), (a)(1)(B), (a)(2)(A), (a)(2)(B)). The court of
    criminal appeals held that the legislature intended for the State to prove facts constituting
    bigamy under one of the six bigamy prohibitions enumerated above whenever it alleges
    that the defendant committed sexual assault and it invokes section 22.011(f). See 
    id. In support
    of its holding, the court of criminal appeals recognized the polygamy
    purposes underlying the enactment of section 22.011(f) and further recognized that, in
    8
    cases such as this in which the victim has been sexually abused by a family member,
    statutory protection already exists as found in Texas Penal Code section 25.02. See 
    id. at 337
    (citing section 25.02, which prohibits sex between family members). And in
    remanding this case to us, the court of criminal appeals summarized its Arteaga7
    holdings as follows:
    We recently handed down our opinion in Arteaga v. State, [citation
    omitted] in which we held that under § 22.011(f), the [l]egislature
    “intended for the State to prove facts constituting bigamy.” We also
    held that the jury charge in that case was erroneous because it neglected
    to include the definition of bigamy from § 25.01.
    Senn II, 
    2017 WL 5622955
    , at *1.
    After arduous study, we are unable to reconcile footnote 9’s articulation of the
    evidence the State is required to produce to trigger enhancement under section
    22.011(f)—facts that would constitute bigamy—with the Arteaga opinion’s articulation
    of the evidence the State is required to produce to trigger enhancement under section
    22.011(f)—facts constituting bigamy. The State on rehearing contends that footnote
    9’s standard applies; Senn argues that the State was required to prove facts
    constituting bigamy. Examining footnote 9, we note that the “would constitute
    7
    Arteaga involved jury-charge error, but the analysis also governs the sufficiency
    challenge here because we are required to compare the elements of the crime as
    defined by the hypothetically correct jury charge to the evidence adduced at trial, and
    Arteaga set forth what must be included in a hypothetically correct jury charge for the
    statutory enhancement at issue here. See Jenkins v. State, 
    493 S.W.3d 583
    , 599 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2016). Consequently, although in Senn I we analyzed section 22.011(f)
    without regard to section 25.01, we now apply the Arteaga analysis incorporating
    section 25.01. See 
    Arteaga, 521 S.W.3d at 336
    –38; Senn I, 
    2017 WL 117306
    , at *1–3.
    9
    bigamy” language referenced by footnote 9 is not used in the sentence immediately
    preceding the footnote, which sets forth the court’s holding, but rather is used in a
    prior sentence that summarizes the court of appeals’s holding.         See 
    Arteaga, 521 S.W.3d at 335
    . And although the body of the Arteaga opinion uses the “would
    constitute bigamy” language five times in its statutory construction analysis comparing
    section 22.011(f) to section 25.01, the court of criminal appeals ultimately concludes
    its statutory construction analysis with a holding using the “facts constituting bigamy”
    language, as follows:
    When the two statutes are considered in light of each other, the
    grammatical ambiguity in [s]ection 22.011(f) is clarified: The legislature
    intended for the State to prove facts constituting bigamy whenever
    it alleges that the defendant committed sexual assault, and the State
    invokes [s]ection 22.011(f).
    
    Id. at 335
    –36 (bolded emphasis added). Throughout the Arteaga opinion, each time
    the holding is referenced, the court of criminal appeals does not use the “would
    constitute bigamy” language but instead utilizes the “facts constituting bigamy”
    language. See 
    id. at 335
    (“We, however, conclude that the State is required to prove
    facts constituting bigamy under all three provisions of 22.011(f), that is, when the
    defendant was prohibited from (1) marrying the victim or (2) claiming to marry the
    victim, and when the defendant was prohibited from (3) living with the victim under
    the appearance of being married.”) (emphasis added), 336 (“The legislature intended
    for the State to prove facts constituting bigamy whenever it alleges that the defendant
    committed sexual assault, and the State invokes [s]ection 22.011(f).”) (emphasis
    10
    added). Nor is the “would constitute bigamy” language contained in the court of
    criminal appeals’s opinion remanding this case to us; that opinion also utilizes the
    “facts constituting bigamy” language. See Senn II, 
    2017 WL 5622955
    , at *1 (“We
    recently handed down our opinion in Arteaga v. State, [citation omitted] in which we
    held that under § 22.011(f), the [l]egislature ‘intended for the State to prove facts
    constituting bigamy.’”) (emphasis added).
    The court of criminal appeals has previously instructed that footnotes and
    concurring opinions are not precedential. See Gonzales v. State, 
    435 S.W.3d 801
    , 813
    n.11 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014) (“We agree that we have intimated that we are not bound
    by holdings expressed in the footnotes of our own opinions.”); Young v. State, 
    826 S.W.2d 141
    , 144 n.5 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) (stating that footnotes should receive
    minimal precedential value); see also Unkart v. State, 
    400 S.W.3d 94
    , 101 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2013) (stating that concurring opinions have only persuasive value); Schultz v.
    State, 
    923 S.W.2d 1
    , 3 n.2 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996) (“As a concurring opinion, Lugo-
    Lugo is not binding precedent.”). For this reason, and also because we are constrained
    to follow the instructions given to us on remand by the court of criminal appeals, we
    decline the State’s request on rehearing urging us to apply the “would constitute
    bigamy” language in our sufficiency analysis.8 See Senn II, 
    2017 WL 5622955
    , at *1
    The dissent asserts that we are bound by Arteaga’s footnote 9. This may be so.
    8
    But we are undisputedly bound by the court of criminal appeals’s stated holding in the
    Arteaga opinion. And we are undisputedly bound by the court of criminal appeals’s
    opinion remanding this case to us in light of Arteaga and stating that in Arteaga it had
    held “the [l]egislature ‘intended for the State to prove facts constituting bigamy.’” See
    11
    (remanding case to this court because we “did not have the benefit of [the court of
    criminal appeals’s] opinion in Arteaga” and stating that it had held in Arteaga that
    under section 22.011(f), “the [l]egislature ‘intended for the State to prove facts
    constituting bigamy’”); see also Senn II mandate, Texas Court of Criminal Appeals,
    http://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVersionID=c78d3ae4-9601-aa1-
    af87-8ba4242f7e25&coa=coscca&DT=MANDATE%20ISSD&MediaID=cd646b38-
    e360-436c-bcb6-611407c7aa66 (commanding us to “observe the order of our said
    Court of Criminal Appeals in this behalf and in all things to have it duly recognized,
    obeyed[,] and executed”) (omitted use of bolded all caps).        We apply the same
    sufficiency standard that we applied in our original opinion on remand. See Senn III,
    
    2018 WL 2248673
    , at *2.
    D. Standard of Review
    In our due-process review of the sufficiency of the evidence, we view all of the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s answer to the special issue to
    determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
    the special issue beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319, 
    99 S. Ct. 2781
    , 2789 (1979); Gale v. State, 
    998 S.W.2d 221
    , 224 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999);
    Stewart v. State, 
    350 S.W.3d 750
    , 755 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2011, pet. ref’d).
    Senn II, 
    2017 WL 5622955
    , at *1. Therefore, here, we are compelled to apply that
    undisputedly binding precedent and not footnote 9.
    12
    To determine whether the State has met its burden under Jackson to prove a
    defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, we compare the elements of the special
    issue as defined by the hypothetically correct jury charge to the evidence adduced at
    trial. Cf. 
    Jenkins, 493 S.W.3d at 599
    ; Crabtree v. State, 
    389 S.W.3d 820
    , 824 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2012) (“The essential elements of the crime are determined by state law.”). A
    hypothetically correct jury charge is one that accurately sets out the law, is authorized
    by the indictment, does not unnecessarily increase the State’s burden of proof or
    restrict the State’s theories of liability, and adequately describes the particular offense
    for which the defendant was tried. 
    Jenkins, 493 S.W.3d at 599
    . The law as authorized
    by the indictment means the statutory elements of the special issue as modified by the
    factual details and legal theories contained in the charging instrument. Cf. 
    id. E. Applying
    Arteaga to These Facts
    Pursuant to the court of criminal appeals’s holding in Arteaga, the State was
    required to prove facts constituting bigamy to enhance Senn’s second-degree felony
    sexual assault to first-degree felony sexual assault. 
    See 521 S.W.3d at 336
    (stating
    “[t]he legislature intended for the State to prove facts constituting bigamy
    whenever . . . the State invokes [s]ection 22.011(f)”), 
    id. at 339
    (“[I]t was the State’s
    responsibility to prove that Arteaga was ‘prohibited from marrying the victim . . .
    under [s]ection 25.01.’”); see also 
    Estes, 546 S.W.3d at 699
    (quoting Arteaga’s holding).
    This does not mean that the State was required to indict Senn for bigamy, nor does it
    require the State to obtain a predicate finding of bigamy in order to trigger the
    13
    enhancement under section 22.011(f). Instead, a hypothetically correct jury charge
    requires the State to prove that Senn was “prohibited from marrying the victim . . .
    under [s]ection 25.01.” See 
    Arteaga, 521 S.W.3d at 339
    (emphasis added). Thus, to
    trigger the enhancement under section 22.011(f), the State was required to prove facts
    constituting a sexual assault and facts constituting one of the six bigamy prohibitions
    listed in section 25.01.
    But here, the State put on evidence only of Senn’s sexual assault of Brenda and
    his marriage license reflecting his marriage to Brenda’s step-mother. There was no
    evidence that Senn took, attempted, or intended to take any action involving marrying
    or claiming to marry Brenda or living with Brenda under the appearance of being
    married. Evidence of the sexual assault and of Senn’s marriage license to Brenda’s
    step-mother, standing alone, do not amount to facts constituting one of the six
    bigamy prohibitions under section 25.01. Moreover, the State conceded in its original
    briefing9 to this court “that it offered no evidence that [Senn] committed a bigamy
    offense with [Brenda].”10 Thus, regardless of the correctness or incorrectness of the
    section 22.011(f) special issue submitted in this case,11 because no facts exist that Senn
    We did not request, nor did the parties file, new briefing when this case was
    9
    submitted after remand.
    Because the State did not have the benefit of Arteaga’s construction of section
    10
    22.011(f) when it tried this case, the State mistakenly believed that no proof of bigamy
    was required under section 22.011(f).
    As set forth above, Arteaga held that a jury charge involving a special issue on
    11
    section 22.011(f) must include the definition of bigamy from section 25.01. 521
    14
    committed a bigamy offense with Brenda, the evidence is insufficient to “prove facts
    constituting bigamy” as required by Arteaga’s holding. See 
    id. at 336
    (stating that “[t]he
    legislature intended for the State to prove facts constituting bigamy whenever . . . the
    State invokes [s]ection 22.011(f)”). Based on the evidence presented, no reasonable
    factfinder could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that Senn and Brenda’s
    relationship constituted bigamy when he sexually assaulted her. See 
    Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319
    , 99 S. Ct. at 2789; cf. Torres v. State, No. 03-14-00712-CR, 
    2017 WL 3124238
    , at
    *5 (Tex. App.—Austin July 21, 2017, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for
    publication) (holding, in light of Arteaga, evidence insufficient to prove that appellant
    “committed the first-degree-felony offense of sexual assault of a person whom he was
    prohibited from marrying under the bigamy statute”). Accordingly, we hold the
    evidence insufficient to trigger the statutory enhancement for sexual assault under
    section 22.011(f), and we sustain Senn’s first issue.12
    S.W.3d at 338–39. Although the jury charge here did not comply with Arteaga’s
    holding, we need not address it further because Senn’s jury charge issue would not
    afford him greater relief than his sufficiency challenge. See Curry v. State, 
    30 S.W.3d 394
    , 404 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
    12
    Because we hold the evidence insufficient to trigger the statutory
    enhancement under section 22.011(f), we need not address Senn’s fourth issue
    challenging the correctness of the jury charge or his second and third issues
    challenging the constitutionality of section 22.011(f). See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1
    (requiring appellate court to address only issues necessary to disposition of appeal).
    15
    F. Effect on Conviction and Punishment
    Senn prays that we vacate the sentence on his sexual assault conviction and
    enter a judgment of acquittal. Because Senn does not challenge the sufficiency of the
    evidence to support the elements of sexual assault as a second-degree felony, it would
    be an “‘unjust’ windfall” for us to order an acquittal on the sexual assault charge based
    on insufficient evidence relating solely to the statutory enhancement that raised the
    offense to the level of a first-degree felony. See Thornton v. State, 
    425 S.W.3d 289
    , 298
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2014). Moreover, in the course of convicting Senn of sexual assault
    as a first-degree felony, the jury must have found every element necessary to convict
    him of the charged sexual assault as a second-degree felony; therefore, there is
    sufficient evidence to support a second-degree felony conviction for sexual assault.
    See 
    id. at 300.
    Thus, we modify Senn’s sexual assault judgment to reflect that he was
    convicted of a second-degree felony, but we must remand that charge to the trial
    court for a new trial on punishment so that a factfinder may consider the proper
    punishment range. See id.; Torres, 
    2017 WL 3124238
    , at *6 (modifying judgment to
    reflect a conviction for the second-degree-felony offense of sexual assault, affirming
    the judgment as modified as to the finding of guilt, reversing the part of the judgment
    imposing sentence, and remanding to the district court for a new punishment hearing
    for that offense); Smith v. State, Nos. 02-08-00394-CR, 02-08-00395-CR, 
    2010 WL 3377797
    , at *15–16 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug. 27, 2010, no pet.) (not designated
    for publication) (holding that when the first-degree felony range of punishment under
    16
    section 22.011(f) had been improperly applied to a defendant but the defendant had
    not challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to support second-degree felony
    convictions, the appropriate remedy was to “remand for a new trial on punishment
    alone”).
    III. CONCLUSION
    Having sustained Senn’s first issue, which is dispositive of the appeal on
    remand, we affirm the trial court’s judgment of conviction on Senn’s unchallenged
    conviction for prohibited sexual conduct, modify the trial court’s judgment on Senn’s
    charge for sexual assault to reflect a second-degree felony, reverse the trial court’s
    judgment on Senn’s charge for sexual assault as to punishment, and remand the sexual
    assault case to the trial court for a new trial on punishment only.
    /s/ Sue Walker
    Sue Walker
    Justice
    Publish
    Delivered: October 25, 2018
    17