Berryhill v. State

674 S.E.2d 920, 285 Ga. 198, 2009 Fulton County D. Rep. 1113, 2009 Ga. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 27, 2009
DocketS08A1775
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 674 S.E.2d 920 (Berryhill v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berryhill v. State, 674 S.E.2d 920, 285 Ga. 198, 2009 Fulton County D. Rep. 1113, 2009 Ga. LEXIS 100 (Ga. 2009).

Opinion

HINES, Justice.

Lloyd Arthur Berryhill (“Berryhill”) appeals his convictions for felony murder and aggravated assault in connection with the death of his infant son, Jonathan Peyton Berryhill (“Peyton”). For the reasons that follow, we affirm. 1

1. Berryhill asserts that the evidence was insufficient to support *199 his convictions, contending that the State presented only circumstantial evidence that did not exclude all reasonable hypotheses except that of his guilt. See OCGA § 24-4-6.

[Qjuestions as to the reasonableness of hypotheses are generally to be decided by the jury which heard the evidence and where the jury is authorized to find that the evidence, though circumstantial, was sufficient to exclude every reasonable hypothesis save that of guilt, that finding will not be disturbed unless the verdict of guilty is insupportable as a matter of law. [Cit.]

Robbins v. State, 269 Ga. 500, 501 (1) (499 SE2d 323) (1998).

Construed to support the verdicts, the evidence showed that Peyton was born on August 11, 2004 to Berryhill and his wife, Maralie; they had married on April 30, 2004. In early October 2004, Peyton was left in Berryhill’s sole care for the first time; when Maralie called Berryhill, he told her that Peyton choked while eating and Berryhill had to push on the infant’s chest to get the blockage out. The next day, Peyton whined whenever he was moved, and a day or two later, Berryhill called Maralie’s attention to a spot on Peyton’s rib cage where a rib appeared to be protruding. The couple took Peyton to the emergency room where he was diagnosed with a bruised rib. A week or two later, Peyton was taken to a physician because of an eye condition that was diagnosed as conjunctivitis.

Sunday, October 24, 2004, was Berryhill’s birthday. After a gathering at his home, he took Peyton to the bedroom to sleep; Maralie remained downstairs watching television with Lexie, her two-year-old daughter from a prior relationship, and fell asleep. She awoke at 5:30 a.m. to hear Peyton crying, and Berryhill soothing him, and returned to sleep. At 7:30 a.m., Berryhill awakened her to tell her that he had to go to work, and left the house. Maralie took Lexie upstairs and laid her, still sleeping, on the same bed as Peyton, with a pillow between them. Peyton was wearing only a diaper and appeared to be sleeping. Maralie took a shower and, as she was *200 drying her hair, her mother, Elaine Hutto, arrived and Maralie let her in. Ms. Hutto began to change Peyton’s diaper, and he “went stiff as a board [with] his arms straight out and his legs went straight up and he was holding his head up like a six-months-old baby and his eyes were going in the back of his head.” Ms. Hutto telephoned her husband, Benny Hutto, and Maralie telephoned Berryhill. When Mr. Hutto arrived at the house a few minutes later, he drove the women and two children to the hospital. Berryhill went into his employer’s office and stated that he had to leave because Peyton had been taken to the emergency room; in response to a query as to what happened, Berryhill replied: “I don’t know, unless I rolled over onto him in my sleep.” Berryhill speculated in a similar vein to another co-worker.

Berryhill arrived at the hospital shortly after Peyton and the other family members. Peyton was later taken to a hospital in Macon, with Berryhill and the rest of the family following. There, Berryhill asked a physician if there was “a possibility that he might have rolled over on Peyton in the middle of the night,” and whether the physician had heard of people who experienced blackouts. While Peyton was in the hospital’s intensive care unit, Berryhill would not sleep in the room with him. He told an investigating law enforcement officer that: “if Peyton dies, I’ll have to go . . . too.”

Peyton died on October 29, 2004. While friends and relatives gathered at the Berryhill home to express condolences, Berryhill told Maralie he was going “partying,” and asked if she wished to join him; she did not, and he left. During the “visitation,” Berryhill did not stay by the casket, but went outside the building with friends, bouncing a ball and “laughing and joking.” During the funeral, he stated he would be glad when “all of this was over with because he needed to go fishing”; as he walked by a funeral attendee, he “bowed up like he wanted to fight.” The sleeper that Peyton was wearing the night before his death was found under the bed, stained with pinkish mucus.

The medical examiner testified that: Peyton died of massive closed head trauma complicated by blunt force chest trauma; he suffered broken ribs two to three weeks prior to his death; the “violent squeezing” necessary to accomplish this showed much greater force than that which would be used if trying to perform a Heimlich maneuver on an infant; there were healing bruises on Peyton’s head, shoulder, hips, thighs, and abdomen; there was evidence of both recent brain injury and pre-existing brain hemorrhage; Peyton had likely been shaken violently; within “seconds to minutes” of the fatal injuries, Peyton would have experienced symptoms that included “laying there kind of stunned”; and Peyton could have gone into a seizure if stimulated by picking him up.

*201 While incarcerated, Berryhill sent letters to Maralie, which contained the text: “I miss my son more & more every day and the only way to change that is to ask him to take me in, and please God take me away”; “I don’t need to stress B/C well you know how I get”; and, “I know there’s no way you could have done it.”

Berryhill testified in his own behalf that when Peyton was choking in early October, he patted him, turned him upside down as Maralie had told him to do if Peyton choked, “squeezed him twice with my hands,” and “pushed on his chest. . . because it just seemed logical.” He also testified that on the day of Peyton’s seizure, Peyton awoke at 5:30 a.m. and would not eat or burp, he laid Peyton down to sleep, went to sleep himself, awoke at 7:00 a.m., awakened Maralie, and kissed her goodbye as she checked on Peyton. He said he was not one to show emotion, attempted to block out as much as possible his feelings during the aftermath of Peyton’s death, and went fishing at the suggestion of a friend who was trying “to take my mind off things.” Berryhill also introduced the testimony of a pathologist that “immediately” after such fatal injuries in a child, symptoms would be exhibited that include unconsciousness, and “then it would develop seizures.”

The evidence was sufficient to authorize the jury to determine that the State excluded all reasonable hypotheses save that of Berryhill’s guilt, and to authorize a rational trier of fact to find Berryhill guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes of which he was convicted. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979); Banta v. State, 282 Ga. 392, 395-396 (1) (651 SE2d 21) (2007).

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
674 S.E.2d 920, 285 Ga. 198, 2009 Fulton County D. Rep. 1113, 2009 Ga. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berryhill-v-state-ga-2009.