Eric Michael White v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 2010
Docket03-08-00528-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Eric Michael White v. State (Eric Michael White v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eric Michael White v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-08-00528-CR

Eric Michael White, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 264TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 61643, HONORABLE JOE CARROLL, JUDGE PRESIDING


M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



A jury found Eric Michael White guilty of injury to a child with intent to cause serious bodily injury, a first-degree felony. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.04(a)(1), (e) (West Supp. 2009). The trial court assessed White's punishment at life imprisonment. In his sole point of error, White contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for new trial based on ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Because we conclude that White did not carry his burden of proving that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance, we affirm the trial court's judgment.



BACKGROUND

At about 9 p.m. on May 30, 2007, Jolynn Cammisa left her home to pick up beer for White, her live-in boyfriend. White had asked her to get the beer from a room he had at his barracks on Fort Hood. At first, Cammisa planned to take her seven-month-old daughter, S.B., with her on the errand. In preparation for doing so, she changed S.B.'s diaper and clothes. She then laid S.B. on a mattress on the floor next to a computer where White was playing video games. She asked White to watch the baby while she got dressed to leave. When Cammisa returned after dressing, White was patting S.B. on her back, and S.B. had fallen asleep. White told Cammisa that she could leave S.B. at home and he would take care of her. Cammisa testified at trial that White had had "a few beers" at the time she left the house.

Cammisa testified that it took her about fifteen minutes to get to the barracks. While she was there, at 9:26 p.m., she called White to ask him how S.B. was doing, but White did not answer his phone. Cammisa got the beer and started back home, stopping only briefly on the way to take a photo of the full moon with the camera on her mobile phone. When she arrived at her house and was about to unlock the side door, White opened the door from the inside. He was holding S.B., and he told Cammisa that S.B. had fallen off the couch and was not moving. Cammisa took S.B. from White and carried her into the living room, where she laid her on the floor. Cammisa noticed dried blood around S.B.'s nose and mouth and a "very, very large" bump on the side of her head. Cammisa asked White if he had called 9-1-1, and he said he had not. She told him to do so but he instead went into another room and returned with S.B.'s car seat. Cammisa told him they could not take S.B. to the hospital and repeated that they had to call 9-1-1, but White told her that he could not find a phone. She told him that there was a phone on the microwave in the kitchen, and he got the phone and called 9-1-1. Meanwhile, Cammisa was rubbing S.B.'s stomach and talking to her. As she did so, S.B. started to move in "jerky" motions that "weren't normal baby movements" and started moaning in an abnormal way. Cammisa noticed that S.B.'s blue eyes had turned almost completely white and that her eyelids were half-closed.

A 9-1-1 operator received the call from White at approximately 9:45 p.m. and immediately dispatched paramedics to the scene. Paramedic John Woljevach arrived at Cammisa's house to find S.B. on the floor of the home in front of the couch and Cammisa and White nearby. Woljevach asked Cammisa and White what had happened to S.B., and they both told him that S.B. had fallen off of the couch and hit her head on a plastic baby-wipes box. Woljevach noticed a stain on White's shirt that appeared to be blood. He also noticed that S.B. was not moving, her eyes were open, she had a "gazed" look, and she did not respond to noises in front of her. S.B. also had a knot the size of a golf ball on the side of her head, scratches on her chin, bruises on her eyes and arms, and dried blood on her nose, lip, and left hand. Upon assessing S.B.'s condition, Woljevach called for a helicopter to fly her to a hospital in Temple. He also contacted a dispatcher to request that police officers be sent to the scene based on his determination that S.B.'s injuries were not consistent with a fall from the couch.

In the ambulance on the way to meet the helicopter, S.B. began "decerebrate posturing," pushing her arms away from her body in a way that indicated a brain injury. One of her pupils also began dilating, indicating pressure in the brain, and the knot on her head grew in size. After transferring S.B. to the helicopter, Woljevach returned to Cammisa's home to speak with police officers. Upon returning, he noticed that White had taken off his shirt.

Police Officer Cassandra Fulton arrived at the scene, where she interviewed Cammisa and White. White told Fulton that S.B. had fallen off the couch and hit her head on a baby-wipes box. In a written statement, he wrote:



[S.B.] was sleepin[g] in her bed and woke up. I picked her up and patted her back to sleep. I put her down on the couch to go get a bottle, I heard a thud, turned around and [S.B.] was on the ground. I ran over to her and she wasn't moving. I picked her up, started looking for my phone, heard [Cammisa's] car, opened [the] door, and told her [S.B.] had just fell [sic] off the couch and wasn't movin[g]. She took her and I called 911. We do not discipline her due to her age.



Cammisa told Fulton that S.B. was asleep on the mattress on the floor of the master bedroom when she left the house. While Fulton was in the home, she also noticed a hole in the living-room wall, which Cammisa said she had caused by punching the wall two weeks earlier during an argument with her mother. Fulton collected the shirt White had previously been wearing and a sheet from the mattress on the floor of the master bedroom that also appeared to have blood on it.

By the time the helicopter transporting S.B. arrived at the hospital in Temple, S.B. was in critical condition and in a coma. One of her doctors testified that there was massive swelling in her brain, her brain was bleeding, she had several skull fractures, and she had retinal hemorrhages. The doctor also found three partially healed rib fractures that he estimated had occurred at least seven to ten days earlier.

S.B. spent more than two months in the hospital, where she underwent brain surgery. When she was released from the hospital, her father and grandparents took her to live with them in California. S.B. had two surgeries on her skull after arriving in California. At the time of trial, she was legally blind and had limited use of the left side of her body. She was also developmentally delayed, both physically and mentally.

According to the testimony of Dr. David Hardy, a pediatric critical care physician and one of the physicians who treated S.B. when she first arrived at the hospital in Temple, the injuries suffered by S.B. could not have been caused by a fall from a couch. He felt so certain that a fall from the couch could not have caused her injuries that it was "not even a close call" for him to make.

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Eric Michael White v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-michael-white-v-state-texapp-2010.