Com. v. Thomas, O.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 6, 2019
Docket1668 WDA 2018
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Thomas, O. (Com. v. Thomas, O.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. v. Thomas, O., (Pa. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

J-S40010-19

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : OZELL THOMAS : : Appellant : No. 1668 WDA 2018

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered October 10, 2018 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-02-CR-0005303-2017

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., McLAUGHLIN, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED DECEMBER 06, 2019

Ozell Thomas appeals from the judgment of sentence imposed following

his convictions for aggravated assault, simple assault, recklessly endangering

another person (“REAP”), and endangering the welfare of children (“EWOC”).1

Thomas argues the Commonwealth failed to present sufficient evidence to

establish that he acted with the requisite mens rea. We affirm.

The charges in this case arose from an April 2017 incident in which

Thomas threw his son across a room. At Thomas’s bench trial, his son

(“victim”) testified that he was visiting Thomas on the weekend of the incident.

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2702(a)(9), 2701(b)(2), 2705, and 4304(a)(1), respectively. J-S40010-19

N.T., 8/9/18, at 8.2 He, his brother, D.S., and a cousin were engaged in

“horseplay” in an upstairs bedroom. Id. The victim said that Thomas came

upstairs, and, when the victim would not stand up, grabbed the victim by his

shirt and threw him across the room:

[Thomas] came upstairs with a broom and I thought that he was going to hit me.

So he was just walking up and I started backing up between my arms on grandma’s bed on the edge. I sat down and he says, get up, and I didn’t want to because I thought he was going to hit me with the broom.

Then he grabbed me by my shirt and threw me across the room. I tried to save myself from the broom and he waited for me to touch the floor, so I guess that my wrist bent the other way.

Id. at 8-9. The victim testified that his wrist “started cracking,” “hurt really

bad,” and he “felt like [he] was going to throw up.” Id. at 9. Thomas told the

victim to stop crying. Id. The following day, his paternal grandmother bought

him “muscle rope” and wrapped his arm. Id. at 20. The victim did not go to

the hospital until he was back in his mother’s care. Id. at 10. When he went

to the hospital, they put a cast on his arm, which he had on for three to four

weeks. Id. at 10.3

2 The victim testified that he was ten years old at the time of the trial, which was in August 2018. N.T., 8/9/18, at 5. The victim was therefore nine at the time of the incident, in April 2017.

3 The testimony is unclear as to when the accident occurred, but it appears that the victim’s arm was injured on a Saturday, and he went to the hospital on the following Monday.

-2- J-S40010-19

Although the victim was unable to put a number on the distance that

Thomas threw him, he stated it was farther than the distance between himself

and the place where the “young lady in a greenish dress” was sitting, and was

about the distance between himself and a stack of papers on a table. Id. at

19-20.

The Commonwealth admitted into evidence the victim’s medical records,

which stated that victim had suffered a “left wrist fracture, which caused

substantial pain, impairment, and he could not use his left arm normally.” Id.

at 26.

Thomas testified in his own defense that both he and the victim’s

grandmother were sick the weekend of the incident. Id. at 50. The kids were

playing, and were “being a little loud, but it was getting to the point that it

was becoming extreme.” Id. He testified that he went upstairs with a broom

in his hand and was hitting a chair that was under the window with the broom

to try to calm the kids. Id. D.S. and his cousin stood by the door, but the

victim tried to squeeze under the bed. Id. Thomas said that he grabbed the

victim by his t-shirt and “gave him a suggestive nudge.” Id. at 51. He denied

throwing him across the room. Id. Rather, according to Thomas, the victim

jumped onto the bed, bounced off, and fell onto his hands. Id. He “basically

rolled his wrist and his arm” and Thomas “didn’t think it was that severe.” Id.

Thomas claimed that he called the victim’s mother and told her that he

was going to come get her so that they could take the victim to the hospital,

but the mother said that she would come the next day. Id. He claimed that

-3- J-S40010-19

the victim’s mother came to the house the next day, and she agreed that it

was not that serious. Id. at 52. He stated that the next day the victim was

still running and playing, and he did not see a reason to take him to the

hospital. Id. at 54. Thomas stated that he and the victim’s grandmother put

a bandage on the arm “just as a precaution.” Id. at 57.

The trial court, as fact-finder, credited the victim’s testimony, and found

Thomas guilty:

Well, it seems to me that the Defendant in this case was sick and irritated and he was upset. He admits pulling [the victim] by his T-shirt and I question the credibility of the Defendant because he is portraying his wrist to be normal, even though the doctor says that he cannot use his left arm normally.

He had a broom and he hit on some bath towels to gain attention, although [the victim’s brother] did not see the broom, and I think that [the victim’s brother] was encouraged to testify to what he did because the Defendant is his father.

I find [the victim] is credible, well spoken and consistent. I am not sure that the Defendant meant to break [the victim’s] arm, but he did so at least recklessly because I find as a matter of fact that he picked up the child and threw him resulting in the break of his wrist.

There is no question that his wrist was broken. The medical records also say that they suspect child abuse. So I find the Defendant guilty of all charges.

Id. at 58-59.4

4The Honorable Donna Jo McDaniel presided over this trial, and found Thomas guilty. Judge McDaniel retired after trial, but prior to issuing an opinion pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 1925. Therefore, another judge from Allegheny County issued the Rule 1925(a) opinion.

-4- J-S40010-19

The trial court sentenced Thomas to 11 months 15 days to 23 months’

incarceration, followed by one year restrictive intermediate punishment. The

court also imposed a concurrent term of three years’ probation. Thomas filed

a timely Notice of Appeal.

He raises the following issues:

I. Whether the evidence is insufficient to sustain Mr. Thomas’s convictions for Aggravated Assault, Simple Assault, and Recklessly Endangering Another Person when the evidence adduced at trial showed only a negligent accident, not a conscious disregard for a substantial risk to the complainant’s safety?

II. Whether the evidence is insufficient to sustain Mr. Thomas’s conviction for Endangering the Welfare of a Child when the Commonwealth failed to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Mr. Thomas acted knowingly to endanger the complainant's welfare?

Thomas’s Br. at 5.

Thomas first argues that the Commonwealth failed to present sufficient

evidence to support the aggravated assault, simple assault, and REAP

convictions because the evidence at most showed that the incident was a

negligent accident, not that Thomas acted with criminal recklessness. He

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