Brickley v. State

243 So. 2d 493, 46 Ala. App. 413, 1968 Ala. App. LEXIS 422
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 1968
Docket8 Div. 143
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 243 So. 2d 493 (Brickley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brickley v. State, 243 So. 2d 493, 46 Ala. App. 413, 1968 Ala. App. LEXIS 422 (Ala. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinions

PRICE, Presiding Judge.

This appellant was convicted of the offense of murder in the second degree for the killing of Lori Ann Wyma, a four-year old child. He was sentenced to twenty years in the penitentiary.

The evidence tends to show that on Saturday, October 23, 1965, the child’s mother left deceased and a younger child in defendant’s care while the mother was at work in a restaurant. The mother left home about 1:30 in the afternoon and around 8:00 defendant telephoned her there was something the matter with Lori Ann. The mother’s employer, a Mr. Thomas, drove her home and went in the house. He testified the defendant was on the bed with the little girl, “giving her mouth to mouth respiration.” The mother jumped up on the bed and exclaimed, “Oh, my God, You have killed my baby!” The defendant replied, “No, I didn’t. * * * She was playing out in the back yard and there was two little boys throwing rocks .at her.” There was no one in the house but the defendant and the two children. The only clothing the little girls were wearing was their underpants. Mr. Thomas observed a big bruised spot over one of Lori Ann’s eyes and several bruised places on her chest. The mother rode to the hospital in the ambulance with the child. The witness drove the defendant and the other little girl to the hospital. The defendant said he was lying on the bed at the time the children were throwing rocks.

Dr. William S. Corley, a Huntsville physician, testified Lori Ann was dead on arrival at the hospital. In his judgment death occurred thirty minutes to two hours prior to the time she was brought to the emergency room. He testified: “Scattered over the body of the child, including the head, the chest and abdomen, or stomach area, the extremeties, including the legs and arms, there were multiple bruises of various sizes and one might say multicolored, some varying from a 'slight reddish coloration to quite purple or dark purple or blue. * * * The variations in color could have been accounted for by, generally speaking, one of two things.” The difference in the age of the bruises themselves, or a difference in the intensity of whatever caused the bruises. * * * There was an area of about one inch or two centimeters in diameter in the mid forehead region which was raised and discolored * * *. As I stated before, the bruises were scattered in multiple areas over the body, including the anterior or front part of the chest wall and also in the upper abdominal region. The cause of these would be hard to determine from my standpoint. I could only assume that if they had been caused by a rock, as I said previously, there would have been some evidence of a breaking in the skin, if the rock had hit the child hard enough to cause a break.” The doctor did not see a break in the skin on the body. “In examining the child there was a slight amount of distension or swelling of the abdomen which I failed to mention previously. * * * I remember having asked the gentleman (defendant) what had happened to the child. He explained to me that the child had been playing with other children during the course of the day and had gotten into a rock fight and the children had thrown rocks at the child, and that the smaller child had come in and told him that something had happened to Lori and would he come and see about her.”

On cross examination Doctor Corey stated there was some bruising underneath both eyes, but no noticable swelling under either. He estimated the child’s age as between four or five. He testified further: “Of course, the standard types of artificial resuscitation or respiration are basically the same, as you say, mouth to mouth or closed chest, pressing on the chest. If you narrow it to what I would do, I would give [415]*415mouth, to mouth. * * * The only difference in an adult and a child is the vigor or intensity with which one does it.” There is no great danger in giving it to a child of tender years, so long as it is not done with too great intensity. “ * * * the most likely damage in too vigorous artificial respiration to a child, or an adult as far as that is concerned, is a fractured rib. * * * with mouth to mouth resuscitation the only danger would be encountered again is too vigorous expulsion of air or expiration in the child’s lungs and rupture some of the tiny air sacs. * * * Usually this is not given to the point of being permanent because this is usually to a mild degree and the lung sacs will close off themselves with time.”

James Agnew, owner and operator of Agnew Ambulance Service, testified on October 23rd he made a call to an address on Stevens Avenue, arriving there about 8:20 in the evening. The defendant was standing in the driveway with a child in his arms. He took the child and put her in the ambulance and asked defendant what had happened. Defendant said she had been hit in the head with a rock. The child’s mother rode in the ambulance to the hospital and told him the child’s name was Lori Ann Wyma. He took the child into the Emergency room and laid it on the table. Dr. Corley was the doctor on call and he came in immediately and checked the child. The defendant came into the hospital with a little girl in his arms. In a conversation with defendant at the hospital about the dead child, the defendant told witness he had whipped her several times.

Mr. Van V. Pruitt, Jr., a toxicologist with the State Department of Toxicology and Criminal Investigations, after detailing his training and experience, testified he performed a post-mortem examination on the deceased, October 24, 1965. His external examination revealed the following:

"There was a large bruise in the forehead between the eyebrows and midline, which was accompanied by swelling. The left eye was swollen and there was. evidence of bruising of the tissue of the eye. There were numerous or multiple smaller bruises, ranging in size from, approximately one-quarter inch in diameter to one inch in diameter, located in the midline area of the chest. There was a somewhat semicircular area of bruising which also involved an abrasion located on the midline of the chest, but above the level of the sternum. There was an area of bruising which measured one inch in width and four inches in length in the right abdomen which ranged from the hip bone across the-right abdomen to the pubic area. There-was evidence of bruising on the right side of the chest, along with what we call the axillary line or the line running underneath the armpit. Both the right and left buttocks showed evidence of numerous bruises. There was a bruise measuring one inch by three inches extending on the back surface of the right upper leg, ranging from underneath the right buttock. There were also multiple bruises about the inner surface of the left forearm.” There was only superficial broken skin, “which was the abrasion which I described externally, being involved in the bruise on the sternal notch on the midline. This would not actually be a puncture but what we call in common language a skinned place or. a scuffed place, which is technically an abrasion,”
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‘Internally I noted that there was gross, free hemorrhage within the abdomen, particularly about the upper right side, which was traced to a laceration, or what would commonly be called a tear, on the under surface of the liver. This ranged from the front of the organ to. the back of the organ. There was also a tear in the posterior or back portion of the diaphragm, which is the muscle separating the chest from the abdomen.” From this examination the witness determined the cause of death to be “hemorrhage of the liver resulting from [416]

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Related

Smith v. State
307 So. 2d 47 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1975)
Buckelew v. State
265 So. 2d 195 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
243 So. 2d 493, 46 Ala. App. 413, 1968 Ala. App. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brickley-v-state-alactapp-1968.