Adam Clay Price v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 2006
Docket02-04-00348-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Adam Clay Price v. State (Adam Clay Price v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adam Clay Price v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

PRICE V. STATE

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO.  2-04-348-CR

ADAM CLAY PRICE APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM THE 90TH DISTRICT COURT OF YOUNG COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION (footnote: 1)

I. Introduction

Appellant Adam Clay Price was charged with the offense of intentionally or knowingly causing serious bodily injury to a child by shaking.  A jury convicted him of the lesser included offense of reckless injury to a child, and the trial court sentenced him to fifteen years’ confinement and a $2,500 fine.  In one point, Appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction.  We affirm.

II. Review of Evidence

On the morning of January 19, 2003, Appellant called 9-1-1 after his three-month-old son stopped breathing.  Bryan Walls, an officer with the Graham Police Department, was dispatched to the residence and was the first officer on the scene.  Officer Walls testified that when he walked in the front door, Appellant handed him the three-month-old baby.  The child had a heartbeat, but was otherwise unresponsive and not breathing.  Officer Walls performed CPR, and the child responded; however, he began stiffening up.  The ambulance had arrived by that time, and Officer Walls gave the baby to the paramedics.  Officer Walls testified that he suspected that the child had head trauma; therefore, he contacted Investigator Charles Parker.  Officer Walls further stated that he did not see anyone else in the residence at the time and that Appellant said that his son had been sick.   

Dr. Gerald Mitchell, an emergency room physician at Graham Regional Medical Center, testified that when paramedics brought the baby into the emergency room that day, he was “in active seizuring, sort of an epileptic type of straightening out, twitching, jerking, not breathing real well, color was not the best.” The doctors started an IV to give the baby medicine, but when he remained unconscious and continued to breathe ineffectively, he was intubated. Dr. Mitchell stated that lab studies showed the baby had a high white blood cell count.  Dr. Mitchell further testified that after the child stabilized, a CAT scan was performed.  

The radiologist reported to Dr. Mitchell that the CAT scan showed “an accumulation of fluid that appeared to him to be blood that was on both sides of the frontal lobes [of the brain].”  Dr. Mitchell stated that when he received the oral report from the radiologist, he wrote down, “Question mark, questionable frontal fluid, questionable old blood,“ indicating that there was very little fresh blood present.  Furthermore, Dr. Mitchell testified that the printed report regarding the CAT scan, which was transcribed and printed later that day, stated:

[B]ilateral large subdural fluid collections are observed about the frontal and the parietal lobes.  This is bilaterally on both sides.  The appearance suggests subacute to chronic subdural hematomas.  Acute hemorrhage is not seen.  The calvarium -- that ‘s the bone -- appears to be intact.  No fractured skull.  Findings would be highly suspicious for child abuse. (footnote: 2)

Dr. Mitchell also testified, however, that even though the report said that acute hemorrhage was not seen, due to the limitations of the CAT scan, that did not conclusively mean that fresh blood was not present. Dr. Mitchell testified that from his exam of the child, he did not see any bruises, hematomas, lacerations, or evidence of head injury.  He stated that the type of injury was consistent with “blunt head injury” due to either shaken child syndrome, blunt force trauma from a softer object like the side of a hand, or past injuries that could no longer be seen externally.  

Additionally, Dr. Mitchell testified that when he spoke with Appellant and his wife, Appellant told him that the child became angry while feeding, just before the baby stopped breathing.  The parents told Dr. Mitchell they did not know of anything that could have caused trauma to the child, but Dr. Mitchell also stated that Appellant admitted “slapping on the legs and shaking the torso of the child” in order to “start him breathing again.”  The child was transported to Cook Children’s Medical Center.

Dr. Jeffery McGlothlin, a pediatric neurologist who treated the baby when he arrived at Cook Children’s Medical Center and who continued to be the treating physician at the time of trial, (footnote: 3) testified that when the baby first arrived at Cook Children’s, he was contacted to determine whether the baby had had a seizure or if he had been shaken.  Dr. McGlothlin stated that when he initially examined the baby, the baby was “listless and irritable.”  Dr. McGlothlin suspected that the baby had been shaken since the baby had experienced some seizure activity and had gone from “being a normal active child to suddenly being a very sick child.”  

Dr. McGlothlin testified that he watched the baby very closely as the seizures continued over the next few days, despite the baby receiving five different seizure medications.   A spinal tap revealed that there was blood in the baby’s spinal fluid, indicating that there had been some bleeding in and around the brain.  The baby’s EEG was abnormal, revealing improper electrical activity in the brain that could give rise to seizures.  An MRI revealed excessive amounts of fluid around the brain, which Dr. McGlothlin initially felt did not show any acute hemorrhage.  Furthermore, x-rays revealed an approximately six-week-old fractured rib, indicative of the child being shaken approximately six weeks earlier.

Ultimately, Dr. McGlothlin testified, “This injury can only be caused by shaken baby syndrome.  In my opinion, there’s nothing else that will cause this injury.”  Dr. McGlothlin stated that the baby had suffered a separation of the brain from the skull, bruising on the brain, and retinal hemorrhaging and that no cause other than shaken baby syndrome would have given the baby these three symptoms together on that day.   Further, Dr. McGlothlin stated, “My opinion is that the child had been shaken the day that he was brought to Graham Emergency Room and the day that he was then subsequently transferred to Cook Children’s Medical Center.”  Dr. McGlothlin reasoned that, in his opinion, on the morning of January 19, 2003, something happened to make the child change from “fine” to “no longer fine.”  Moreover, he testified that when a child’s brain is injured, he will typically have seizures immediately when he is hurt, and these seizures are very difficult to control; then, once the brain has had a chance to heal, the seizures become more controllable.  Dr. McGlothlin stated that the baby’s seizures in this case were consistent with that pattern. Furthermore, Dr. McGlothlin stated that the many CAT scans that were performed on the baby’s brain supported his opinion.  He testified:

What we did is we did CAT scans over and over again on his brain, and we found that there was actually a very severe injury with the evolution of the CAT scan.

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Adam Clay Price v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adam-clay-price-v-state-texapp-2006.