Dague v. State

81 P.3d 274, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 149, 2003 WL 22903121
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 2003
DocketS-10385
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 81 P.3d 274 (Dague v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dague v. State, 81 P.3d 274, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 149, 2003 WL 22903121 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Michele Dague admitted responsibility for the death of a ten-month-old child in her care. The only issue in dispute was whether Dague had acted "knowingly"-with awareness of the nature of her act-when she swung or threw the child against a hard object. This is an element of the extreme indifference second-degree murder charge against Dague. At trial Dague attempted to question the State's expert witness regarding three items of interest: the dynamics of child abuse, the mental state of abusers generally, and the expert's opinion about Dague's mental state at the time of the incident. Dague hoped to demonstrate to the jury this expert's belief that most abusers act unknowingly. Dague also hoped to elicit testimony that would add credence to her own expert's parallel testimony, as well as her expert's specific conclusion that Dague had acted "reflexively." The trial court initially ruled that the State's expert did not have the proper expertise and a jury convicted Dague of see-ond-degree murder. Ultimately, the court of appeals held that, though the State's expert was qualified to testify regarding Dague's topics of interest, the exclusion of his testimony was harmless error. We conclude that the exclusion of this testimony was not harmless error and reverse and remand for a new trial.

IL STATEMENT OF FACTS

A. Facts

Michele Dague, age twenty-eight in 1997, operated a state-licensed daycare facility out of her family home, a duplex apartment in Eagle River. At approximately 3:12 P.M. on Tuesday January 28th, Dague dialed 911 from her residence and reported that a baby in her care was seriously hurt. She informed the 911 operator that the baby was having a hard time breathing. When the operator inquired as to how the baby was injured, Dague hesitated, simply stating that the baby had been on the couch. The operator then asked if the baby had fallen off the couch. Dague answered in the affirmative.

Paramedics arriving on the seene encountered a tragic scene: the baby, ten-month-old K.T., was barely breathing and had increasing swelling on one side of his head. Although the paramedics were certain that KT. could not survive his injuries, they kept him breathing artificially. One of the paramedics almost immediately concluded that such dramatic injuries could not have occurred from a simple three-foot fall onto a carpeted floor.

Emergency room doctors, pediatricians, and child abuse experts would soon thereafter reach a similar conclusion. KT. had suffered severe trauma to his head resulting in a complex fracture of his skull so serious that portions of his brain had escaped out of the bone chasm. Despite the unlikelihood that a fall from the couch could cause such *276 injuries, Dague reiterated her story to various friends, family, neighbors, medical personnel, and the police throughout the day.

Eventually, Dague allowed the police to give her a polygraph about the incident. The morning of the polygraph Dague indicated that she had not slept well but nevertheless agreed to come to the station. During a number of post-test interviews Dague changed her story from K.T. falling off the couch to an admission that she had accidentally dropped the baby. She also revealed that she may have accidentally dropped a plastic juice bottle onto the baby's head, and indicated that there might be a bruise on the child's ankle "where I tried to grab his leg" as he fell. Dague agreed to return to her residence for a video re-enactment of the incident. Sometime during the re-enact, ment, Dague indicated a desire to end the reenactment and speak with an attorney.

B. Proceedings

1. Trial

Dague was indicted for second-degree extreme indifference murder and the case proceeded to trial.

a. Dr. Krugman

The State first cglled Dr. Richard Krug-man. The State had indicated in an earlier pretrial notice of expert witnesses that "[i]t is anticipated that [Krugman's] testimony will be the same as what is in his report, as well as his grand jury testimony." At trial, the State spent much time going over Krugman's considerable qualifications. With no objection from the defense, the State offered Krugman "as an expert in the area of pediatrics and child abuse."

Krugman indicated on direct that, early in the investigation of K.T.'s death, the State had asked him to determine whether the incident was an accident or child abuse. When asked whether Dague's explanations of the events were consistent with the injury inflicted, Krugman indicated that the injuries were so severe that neither a fall from a couch onto a carpeted floor nor a simple drop onto a kitchen floor or other surface-even followed by a blow to the head from a Juice bottle-could explain the baby's injuries. Rather, he concluded the injuries could only be explained as "non-accidental."

On cross Krugman acknowledged that part of the process in determining whether an incident is abuse or an accident involves "look[ing] at the caretaker or the person who is being held responsible for that injury." But when the defense then asked about the "dynamics involved in that person," the State objected that such questioning was beyond the scope of Krugman's expertise, was irrelevant profile evidence, and was best handled by a sociologist or "psychologist pediatrician." The court initially allowed the questioning as a legitimate exploration of "the contours and the limits" of Krugman's testimony, and indicated to Krugman that he should alert the court if any questioning was beyond his expertise. But when the defense attempted to explore the factors of how an abuse situation can develop and the State again objected, the court this time sustained the objection as beyond Krugman's expertise. Defense counsel countered that Krugman had testified similarly at grand jury and in his deposition interview, and had indicated he felt comfortable answering such questions. The court responded that, regardless of whether Krugman testified about such factors at grand jury, the State wasn't offering him as an expert in that area, that he wasn't the defense expert, and that such issues were not covered on direct examination and thus the questioning was outside the scope of direct examination.

After redirect examination, the defense asked to approach the bench and requested an opportunity to recall Dr. Krugman at a later time. The following bench conference then took place:

THE COURT: Well, he's not your witness, and hée-you didn't retain him. The fact that you asked him questions outside the seope of what he testified to in the ... pretrial preparation doesn't mean you have any right to call him as your own witness in your defense case. Ms. Henry?
MS. HENRY [prosecutor]: Well, that's correct. I mean if they want to contract with him that's fine, too.... My position is going to be the same how that this is *277 beyond his expertise. They should be bringing in a sociologist or a psychologist or something.
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THE COURT [to defense counsel]: So if you're going to hold him your agency is going to have to be the one that pays the tab, that's all there is to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P.3d 274, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 149, 2003 WL 22903121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dague-v-state-alaska-2003.