Brandon v. State

109 So. 3d 128, 2013 WL 427381, 2013 Miss. App. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 5, 2013
DocketNo. 2009-KA-01761-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 109 So. 3d 128 (Brandon v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandon v. State, 109 So. 3d 128, 2013 WL 427381, 2013 Miss. App. LEXIS 49 (Mich. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

MAXWELL, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Christopher Brandon challenges his conviction for the depraved-heart murder of a one-year-old boy. The young child, Xavier Staples, was in the sole care of Brandon when he was fatally injured. He died after the blood vessels between his brain and skull and behind his eyes were violently broken. While Brandon claimed Xavier had fallen off the bed and hit his head on a plastic toy, Xavier’s two treating physicians and the pathologist who performed the autopsy testified that Xavier’s injuries were too severe to have been caused by a short fall. They believed the immense force required to cause such extreme injuries was generated by Xavier having been severely shaken.

¶ 2. On appeal, Brandon insists his conviction should be reversed and rendered in his favor or a new trial should be granted because the trial judge denied him a publicly funded expert to challenge the State’s expert testimony. But we find any fault concerning Brandon’s failure to obtain state-funded expert testimony can be traced to his trial counsel’s actions and inactions, not the circuit judge’s denial of his last-minute request. And the proper context for considering potential prejudice from his attorney’s handling of the expert request is through his ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim. However, because this issue is not fully developed in the record, we must deny relief on direct appeal, preserving Brandon’s right to raise this argument in a motion for post-conviction relief (PCR).

¶ B. Finding the trial judge did not abuse his discretion and the jury’s verdict is supported by the sufficiency and weight of the evidence, we affirm the judgment of conviction and sentence.

Background Facts

¶ 4. Just after midnight, on June 10, 2007, paramedics and law enforcement officers responded to a 911 call from Brandon, who reported that his girlfriend’s fifteen-month-old son, Xavier, had fallen off the bed and was unresponsive. Brandon had been watching Xavier while his girlfriend was away from their home. According to Brandon, he put Xavier in bed and went to the bathroom to turn on the shower. Brandon claimed he then heard a loud thud. When he returned to the bedroom to check on Xavier, Xavier was on the floor beside the bed, crying and gasping for breath. Brandon maintains that he picked the child up and tried to console him, but Xavier’s eyes rolled back in his head. Brandon explained that he took Xavier to the bathroom and ran cold water on his face in attempts to revive him. When this did not work, Brandon called 911.

¶ 5. But according to Xavier’s treating physicians, the child’s extensive head injuries indicated much greater force than a fall from the bed. Emergency-medicine physician Dr. Russell Knight treated Xavier when he arrived at the North Mississippi Medical Center. Dr. Knight testified that Xavier, who was not breathing and had no pulse, was bleeding inside his skull and behind his retina. Dr. Knight believed Xavier’s injuries required tremendous force — akin to a car wreck or a fall from a two-story building, not a fall from a two-and-a-half-feet-high bed. In his opinion, the injuries were consistent with shaken-baby syndrome (SBS). Because Xavier’s injuries did not square with Brandon’s story that Xavier had fallen from a bed, Dr. Knight contacted social services.

¶ 6. North Mississippi Medical Center did not have a pediatric-intensive-care unit, so Xavier was airlifted to Le Bonheur [131]*131Children’s Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Pediatric-intensive-care physician Dr. Mark Bugnitz treated Xavier when he arrived at Le Bonheur. Dr. Bugnitz testified that, upon arrival, Xavier’s heart, lungs, and brain were not functioning. Xavier was taken off life support and was declared brain dead. Like Dr. Knight, Dr. Bugnitz observed that Xavier had bleeding inside the skull and behind the retina. Dr. Bugnitz testified that it requires an “immense amount of force” to tear the veins inside the skull and that it was “impossible” for Xavier’s injuries to have been caused by falling from a bed and hitting a plastic toy. Instead, in his opinion, Xavier had experienced “abusive head trauma,” what experts now call SBS, likely caused by “severe shaking.” Because Xavier’s purported fall from a bed “was totally inconsistent with the injuries [Xavier] had,” Dr. Bugnitz also alerted social services.

¶ 7. Pathologist Dr. Steven Hayne performed Xavier’s autopsy. He too found Xavier had fatal bleeding behind the retina and on the surface of the brain. Dr. Hayne determined that the cause of death was SBS. Dr. Hayne testified that SBS occurs when a child is shaken without impacting the child’s head on a hard surface. The shaking generates a force “equivalent to ... a motor vehicle crash,” causing the brain and skull to move in different rotations, tearing the blood vessels between them. He described SBS as a violent death, listing in his autopsy the manner of Xavier’s death as “homicide.” But on cross-examination, Dr. Hayne acknowledged disagreement among pathologists on whether SBS is a valid cause of death. He noted that some pathologists believed that other circumstances could cause the same types of injuries as SBS.

¶ 8. The jury found Brandon guilty of depraved-heart murder — which is the “killing of a human being without the authority of law ... done in the commission of an act eminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved heart, regardless of human life, although without premeditated design to effect the death of any particular individual!.]” Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-19(l)(b) (Rev.2006). Brandon was sentenced to life imprisonment in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. The trial judge denied Brandon’s post-trial motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, alternatively, a new trial. Brandon timely appealed.1

Discussion

¶ 9. All of Brandon’s appellate issues relate to Brandon’s not having his own expert at trial. He argues the trial judge abused his discretion by: (1) denying his pretrial motion for a state-funded expert, (2) not sua sponte appointing Brandon a state-funded expert during trial or declaring a mistrial, and (3) not granting his post-trial motion for a new trial or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

¶ 10. We certainly do not turn a blind eye to Brandon’s claim that not having his own medical expert disadvantaged his defense. But we cannot find the lack of an expert was due to the trial judge’s misapplication of the law or abuse of his discretion. Brandon had not been declared indigent — a prerequisite to a state-funded expert. Further, Brandon’s counsel failed to show a concrete need for a state-funded expert. It appears Brandon’s failure to secure a state-funded expert possibly rests on his counsel’s failure to push for [132]*132Brandon’s indigent status and need for an expert, an issue we find more appropriate for a PCR motion, versus this direct appeal.

I. Denial of State-Funded Expert A. Pretrial Hearing

¶ 11. This case illustrates the problems that arise with last-minute requests on the heels of multiple continuances. Brandon’s trial had originally been set for February 2008 but was postponed until August 2009 because of Brandon’s seven motions for continuance. In the months leading to trial, the circuit judge became fully aware of the role expert testimony would play in Brandon’s trial.

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 3d 128, 2013 WL 427381, 2013 Miss. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandon-v-state-missctapp-2013.