Cannon v. State

181 A.3d 615
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 1, 2018
Docket254, 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 A.3d 615 (Cannon v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannon v. State, 181 A.3d 615 (Del. 2018).

Opinion

TRAYNOR, Justice:

In a girls' bathroom in a Wilmington high school, a verbal confrontation between two 16-year-old students, Tracy Cannon and Alcee Johnson-Franklin, 1 turned physical when Tracy threw Alcee to the ground and started throwing punches. Alcee tried to protect herself from the blows, and the two ended up on the floor of the bathroom, grappling and kicking at each other. It was over in less than a minute, but within two hours of the assault, Alcee was pronounced dead-not from blunt-force trauma, but from a rare heart condition that even Alcee did not know she had. This tragic result prompted the State to charge Tracy with criminally negligent homicide, and, after a five-day bench trial in Family Court, she was adjudicated delinquent. 2

Tracy appeals. She contends that no reasonable factfinder could have found that she acted with criminal negligence or, even if she did, that it would be just to blame her for Alcee's death given how unforeseeable it was that her attack would cause a 16-year-old to die from cardiac arrest. We agree. A defendant cannot be held responsible for criminally negligent homicide unless there was a risk of death of such a nature and degree that her failure to see it was a gross deviation from what a reasonable person would have understood, and no reasonable factfinder could conclude that Tracy's attack-which inflicted only minor physical injuries-posed a risk of death so great that Tracy was grossly deviant for not recognizing it. And even if-as the Family Court saw it-Tracy should have realized that her attack might have deadly consequences because she carried it out in the close confines of the bathroom (near its tile floor and hard fixtures), Alcee's death had nothing to do with those risks, and they were too far removed from the way that she died to blame Tracy for her death. We therefore reverse the Family Court's adjudication that Tracy was delinquent of criminally negligent homicide.

I

A

A delinquency proceeding in Family Court is not a criminal prosecution, 3 but the burden on the State to prove its case is no lighter. Branding a juvenile "delinquent," and subjecting her to "the stigma of a finding that [she] violated a criminal law" and the possible deprivation of her liberty, "is comparable in seriousness to a felony prosecution" and cannot be done "on proof insufficient to convict [her] were [she] an adult." 4 So when a juvenile challenges whether the record supports a finding of delinquency, we ask, just as we would were this an adult criminal case, whether the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the State, would permit a reasonable judge of the facts to find "the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt." 5

B

A clear picture of the events leading up to Alcee's death emerged at trial. On the day before her fatal encounter with Tracy, Alcee, a 16-year old sophomore at Howard High School of Technology, sent a relatively innocuous text message to a friend warning her to be careful in her communications with schoolmates, some of whom might not be trustworthy. The text was sent to a group that included Tracy Cannon, one of Alcee's classmates. Believing that she was the butt of the comment, Tracy took offense and exchanged a series of text messages with Alcee that became increasingly contentious. After one of the messages, Alcee-who was in English class at the time-asked for and received permission to go to the bathroom. Under that pretense, she met Tracy and another girl in one of the school's bathrooms.

According to one of Alcee's close friends, who was with her in English class, Alcee went to that bathroom expecting a fight, but she ended up returning to class ten or fifteen minutes later, unrattled and reporting that "nothing happened." 6 Alcee was similarly nonchalant about the encounter while discussing it with another friend later that day, who recalled that Alcee had "brushed it off ... [and] didn't make it seem like a big deal." 7 But at trial, a hall monitor who had been near the bathroom that day testified that he had overheard "a lot of screaming ... [and] loud noise." 8

Unfortunately, the quarrel did not end there. Later that day, the other student who had been in the bathroom with Alcee and Tracy posted a video on Snapchat of a portion of the argument, with the caption, "[Tracy] bouta fight her." The video also depicted Tracy, this other student, and a third student walking down a hallway at school, bragging that they intended to "get" Alcee.

The next morning, Tracy and her allies made good on their taunt. Before first period, Tracy and the other two students followed Alcee as she walked into a bathroom. A number of other students crowded in behind, including Alcee's friend from English class. At trial, she described what happened next:

When they got in the bathroom, everyone was having a conversation. I really do not know ... remember what they were talking about, but everyone was trying to solve the problem that [Alcee] told me was already solved [the day before].
So when we got in there, you know, everyone was talking quietly and having a peaceful conversation, and a crowd started hovering over everyone. And I turned around and it was a lot of people there. People started screaming, and I turned around for one second, and as soon as I turned back around, [Tracy] slammed [Alcee] on the ground. And all three girls before that dropped their bags as the crowd started screaming and yelling. 9

The testimony concerning what happened after Tracy "slammed" Alcee to the ground is limited, presumably because the prosecution relied upon a video of the encounter captured by one of the onlooking students, which picks up soon after Tracy attacked Alcee. The video lasts approximately 45 seconds, 20 seconds of which depicts a one-sided attack. Tracy yanked Alcee by her hair and started striking her-by and large ineffectually-with loosely-balled fists, before pulling her again by her hair. Alcee tried to defend herself, and the two of them ended up flailing at each other on the floor. Although the Family Court said that Tracy kicked Alcee in the face, the video shows both girls pushing against each other with their feet as they grappled on the floor, while some of the other students sought to pull them apart.

Around that time, a teacher, hearing the commotion, entered the bathroom and dispersed the crowd. Tracy left with the other students, but the teacher found Alcee sitting on the floor with her hands behind her, her face pale. When she asked Alcee what happened, Alcee said, "they snuck me and then they jumped me." 10 The teacher ran for a nurse, who arrived to find Alcee laying on the floor, moaning and holding her abdomen.

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Bluebook (online)
181 A.3d 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-state-del-2018.