Billy Elrod v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 28, 2012
DocketA12A0721
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Billy Elrod v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., ANDREWS and BOGGS, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

June 28, 2012

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A0721. ELROD v. THE STATE. DO-027 C

DOYLE , Presiding Judge.

Billy Scott Elrod was convicted of cruelty to a child in the first degree.1 He

appeals, alleging that the trial court erred by overruling his objection to portions of

the testimony of one of the State’s expert witnesses and by refusing to charge the jury

on the lesser included offense of simple battery. He also contends that trial counsel

provided ineffective assistance by failing to call an expert witness to rebut the

testimony of the State’s expert witness. Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of

conviction but remand the case to the trial court for a hearing on Elrod’s ineffective

assistance of counsel claim.

1 OCGA § 16-5-70 (b). Viewed in favor of the verdict,2 the record shows that Elrod and his co-

defendant, Katherine Scott Barlow, began a romantic relationship in approximately

November 2010.3 Elrod lived on the ground floor of a two-story, single-family

residence in Cartersville and rented out most of the top floor, reserving the right to

use the bathroom and kitchen on the top floor. . The entire downstairs part of the

house featured a cement floor, including Elrod’s bedroom, where he kept a crib for

his six-month-old son, who would occasionally visit. Barlow lived with her mother

a short distance away, but by December, she began spending nights at Elrod’s house

and introduced Elrod to her children, A. M. and L. M., who were three years old and

twenty months old, respectively, on the date of the incident.

On January 18, 2011, Barlow and Elrod put L. M. in the crib for a nap. The

mattress for the crib was set at the highest level, which setting allowed L. M. to stand

with the crib railing only reaching his chest. Barlow then went upstairs to take a

shower, and when she returned approximately 15 minutes later, she found L. M.

sitting upright on the couch with Elrod. Elrod claimed that he was in the adjacent

2 See Short v. State, 234 Ga. App. 633, 634 (1) (507 SE2d 514) (1998). 3 Barlow entered a guilty plea to second-degree cruelty to children and is not a party to this appeal.

2 room when he heard L. M. cry out, and when he went to check on the child, he found

L. M. had fallen out of the crib, with his leg lodged in the crib railing and his face on

the cement floor. Barlow did not see any noticeable injuries on L. M. at the time,

although he indicated that his leg was uncomfortable and seemed less active than

usual.

The following morning, L. M. continued to show signs of unusual inactivity,

and Barlow first noticed signs of bruising on his face. Barlow gave him Tylenol all

day, but did not call the pediatric clinic until that evening, at which time she was

advised to take the child to an urgent care facility. Rather than doing so, she took him

to the pediatric clinic the following afternoon – January 20 – where Dr. Tammy

Williams observed swelling in L. M.’s leg, advised Barlow that his leg might be

fractured, instructed her that L. M. needed to go to Scottish Rite Hospital in Atlanta,

and suggested that he be transported there in an ambulance. Barlow declined,

however, instead choosing to transport L. M. from Elrod’s house to her mother’s

house and pack L. M.’s things.

In the meantime, Dr. Williams reported L. M.’s injuries and need for immediate

treatment to the Department of Family and Children’s Services (“DFCS”), who in

turn sent a representative, Jenna Cliver, to Barlow’s mother’s house to ensure that L.

3 M. received the necessary care. Cliver followed Barlow, Elrod, and the two children

to Scottish Rite Hospital, where L. M. was seen by the doctors, diagnosed with a

transverse right tibia fracture, and fitted with a cast.

The following day, Dr. Jordan Greenbaum from the Center for Safe and

Healthy Children at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta conducted her own examination

of L. M. and observed numerous facial, chest, and abdominal bruises, many of which

were inconsistent with normal accidental toddler bruising. Dr. Greenbaum also

conducted separate interviews with Barlow and Elrod in order to obtain their

recollections of the event, and she noticed several inconsistencies in the details

provided by each of them. . In her opinion, Elrod’s explanation did not adequately

account for the bruises on L. M.’s body or the type of fracture L. M. had sustained to

his leg, and she concluded that L. M.’s injuries had resulted from physical abuse. Dr.

Greenbaum also noted that her review of L. M.’s x-rays revealed a healing left fibula

fracture as well. At trial, Dr. Greenbaum was introduced as an expert witness and

testified as to the examinations she performed and the conclusions she reached. She

also was asked to consider a hypothetical scenario resembling the version of events

provided by Elrod in order to judge the likelihood of L. M.’s accidental injuries in

such a scenario.

4 Elrod was charged with aggravated battery (Count 1) and first degree cruelty

to a child (Count 2).4 Following deliberations, the jury found Elrod not guilty of

aggravated battery and guilty of cruelty to a child in the first degree, and the trial

court sentenced him to twenty years in prison, to serve ten. This appeal followed.

1. Elrod asserts that the trial court erred by overruling his objection to

hypothetical questions posed by the State to Dr. Greenbaum during redirect

examination. We disagree.

After L. M. was discharged from the hospital, a DFCS worker went to Elrod’s

house and took photographs of the crib from which L. M. allegedly fell; the

photographs were admitted at trial. Barlow clarified, however, that the mattress in the

photographs was on the lowest setting; at the time of L. M.’s injuries, the mattress

was set “on the very top level” such that the crib railing came to his chest when he

stood in the crib. During re-direct examination of Dr. Greenbaum, the State asked her

to “imagine” the placement of L. M.’s foot and ankle through the rail, in the position

provided by Elrod in his version of the incident, and the child’s face on the concrete

floor. Elrod objected on the grounds that Dr. Greenbaum had not viewed the actual

4 The trial court included a charge of second-degree cruelty to children (OCGA § 16-5-70 (c)) as a lesser-included offense of first-degree cruelty to children.

5 scene and that the photographs did not accurately depict the crib at the time of the

incident. The trial court overruled the objection, and Dr. Greenbaum went on to

testify that in her opinion, the child’s injuries were inconsistent with Elrod’s version

of events.

It is well-settled that “an expert witness may testify about opinions based on

facts within . . . her personal knowledge or facts admitted into evidence at trial and

presented to the expert in the form of hypothetical questions.”5 And “where an expert

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