Elizee v. People

54 V.I. 466, 2010 WL 4962915, 2010 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedOctober 1, 2010
DocketS. Ct. Crim. No. 2008-0043
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 54 V.I. 466 (Elizee v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elizee v. People, 54 V.I. 466, 2010 WL 4962915, 2010 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 47 (virginislands 2010).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

(October 1, 2010)

Cabret, J.

After Sherbb Elizee brought her infant son to the hospital with life-threatening injuries, the People of the Virgin Islands charged her with aggravated child neglect and neglect of parental duty. A jury convicted Elizee of both offenses, and she filed this appeal challenging the wording of the Information charging her with the offenses, the sufficiency of the evidence presented at trial, and the Superior Court’s jury instructions. For the reasons which follow, we will affirm Elizee’s conviction for neglect of parental duty, but reverse her conviction for aggravated child neglect and remand the matter for a new trial on that charge.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The record shows that the victim in this case is Elizee’s infant child, J.B. At the time of the offenses J.B. was seventeen months old, and Elizee was approximately twenty years old. Elizee and J.B. lived in a house that they shared with Elizee’s twenty-five year old boyfriend, [470]*470Amijah Charles (“Amijah”), Amijah’s brother, Kevin Charles (“Kevin”), Kevin’s girlfriend, Liza Lord, and Elizee’s cousin, Reynold Alexander.

The charges against Elizee stem from a series of injuries sustained by J.B. over a one week period during April of 2007. On April 18, 2007, J.B. was playing at home with Kevin’s three-year-old son when J.B. fell and injured his chin. Because neither Elizee nor Amijah owned a vehicle, Amijah borrowed a car and they took J.B. to the hospital emergency room. J.B. was treated for a laceration on his chin, and Elizee was instructed to make an appointment to bring J.B into the hospital’s health clinic three days later. Elizee did not schedule the appointment, nor did she bring J.B to the clinic as instructed.

On April 23, 2007, J.B. was outside his house playing with Kevin’s son and Elizee. According to Elizee:

We were outside, we were playing with a ball, and [J.B.] was up on the ramp and then the ball came down. When [J.B.] came down, when he was running down to get the ball, he fall.... I heard him crying and when I look I saw him, he fell down and he stand up right away, but he was still crying, so I just pick him up [sic].

(J.A.II 119-20.) Elizee testified that she did not believe it was a serious injury and described it as a “small bump.” (J.A.II 135.) Elizee treated the injury by applying ice to the bump.

Conflicting with Elizee’s testimony that J.B. injured himself while playing outside on April 23rd, was the fact, judicially noticed by the trial judge, “that St. Thomas received very heavy rain on April 23, 2007.” (J.A.II 260.) Although Elizee acknowledged that it “was raining in the morning,” (J.A.II 135) she claimed in her trial testimony that J.B. injured his head “in the afternoon.” (J.A.II 136.) In a statement given to the police, however, Elizee indicated that J.B. and Kevin’s son were outside playing in the morning.

In addition to this inconsistency, there were conflicts in the evidence concerning when Elizee first noticed certain bruises on J.B.’s body. In a statement Elizee gave to police on the afternoon of April 24th, Elizee was asked: “When did you first notice the mark on [J.B.]?” (J.A.II 43.) Elizee answered: “Yesterday morning while they were out playing.” (J.A.II 43.) In her statement, Elizee indicated she noticed one mark between J.B.’s eyes and another on his neck. In her statement Elizee did not describe the [471]*471mark between J.B.’s eyes, but she declared that the mark on his neck was a “blue mark.” (J.A.III 133.) At trial, however, Elizee stated that she first noticed the marks on the morning of April 24th, she denied that she described the neck mark as blue, and she insisted that the neck mark was only a “scratch” that resulted from J.B. “scratching] his neck.” (J.A.II 140.)

Around noon on the 24th, Elizee went shopping for groceries and various household items. Although Elizee often took J.B. shopping with her if Amijah could borrow a car, on this day no car was available so she left J.B. at home. According to Elizee, she left J.B. with her cousin, Alexander. Kevin was also at home that day. Elizee was out shopping for approximately one hour.

When Elizee returned from shopping, Alexander was outside working on a car, Amijah was home, and J.B. was in Elizee’s bedroom. Elizee testified that she went into her bedroom, saw J.B. “sleeping,” and then left the room to prepare some food. (J.A.II 110.) Approximately two to three minutes later, a friend, Richie Fontaine, who had come into the house to use the restroom, told Elizee that J.B. was not breathing properly. According to Elizee, she went into her bedroom and found J.B. sleeping. Elizee picked J.B. up and put him on her shoulder. Because J.B. did not immediately wake up, Elizee shook him on her shoulder and told him to wake up. At some point Elizee touched J.B.’s neck, back and chest to see if he was breathing. Eventually, Elizee testified, J.B. opened his eyes “and he started stretching and then he started breathing hard.” (J.A.II 110.) Elizee told Amijah and Alexander what was happening, and Amijah told her that she needed to take J.B. to the hospital. Amijah borrowed a car, and they took J.B. to the emergency room.

When they arrived at the emergency room, J.B. was initially treated by Dr. Robin Ellett. Dr. Ellett testified that J.B. was in critical condition, unresponsive, and that his “respirations were distorted.” (J.A.II 12.) Dr. Ellett also observed that J.B. “had a concentric bruise around his neck” that may have been caused by someone choking him. (J.A.II 15.) Dr. Ellett asked Elizee if J.B. had been choked, and Elizee responded: “maybe his [three-year-old] brother.” (J.A.II 15.) Dr. Ellett did not believe this was possible because, she explained, “[i]t would have taken a bigger hand to make bruises all the way around like that. Stronger.” (J.A.II 16.) Dr. Ellett’s examination further revealed that J.B. was having a brain hemorrhage and that his injuries were “life threatening.” (J.A.II 19.) [472]*472Dr. Ellett elaborated that J.B. had “bleeding in the brain, bleeding inside the skull and into brain tissue.” (J.A.II 22). Although Dr. Ellett believed that J.B.’s head injuries were consistent with child abuse, conceivably from shaking the child, she did not determine whether that was the cause of the injuries.

J.B. was also examined that day by Dr. Iris Dottin, a pediatrician. Dr. Dottin testified that she arrived at the emergency room at “[approximately 2:15 or 2:30” (J.A.I 260) and that her examination revealed, among other things, that J.B. “had bruises in specific areas of his body.” (J.A.I 260.) Describing the bruises, Dr. Dottin stated: “Around his neck he had a purple lesion, and on his chest he had a purple lesion that indicates to me that those were injuries that had just happened no more than 24 hours prior and that they were forceful.” (J.A.I 260-61.) Dr. Dottin noted that the “bruising around [J.B.’s] neck resemble[ed] strangulation” (J.A.I 263) and further stated that J.B. had swollen eyes, an open laceration on his chin, and purple braises around his mouth and on his forehead.

Dr. Dottin ordered a CT scan which revealed bleeding in J.B.’s brain. When asked about possible causes of the bleeding, Dr. Dottin responded: “At [J.B.’s] age, there’s only one thing that can produce it, it’s trauma .... It would be a severe trauma basically where you take a child and you’re jerking them.” (J.A.I 267.) Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
54 V.I. 466, 2010 WL 4962915, 2010 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elizee-v-people-virginislands-2010.