Ian Daniel Mathison v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2014
Docket11-12-00052-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ian Daniel Mathison v. State (Ian Daniel Mathison 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
Ian Daniel Mathison v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion filed February 27, 2014

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-12-00052-CR __________

IAN DANIEL MATHISON, Appellants V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 29th District Court Palo Pinto County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 14636

MEMORANDUM OPINION The jury convicted Ian Daniel Mathison of the offense of intentionally or knowingly causing serious bodily injury to a child, G.H. (Count One), and of the offense of intentionally or knowingly causing bodily injury to a child, C.H. (Count Two). The jury assessed punishment at confinement for twenty-two and one-half years for Count One and ten years for Count Two, and it assessed a fine of $10,000 in each count. The trial court sentenced him accordingly and ordered the sentences to run concurrently. In his sole point of error on appeal, Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction on Count One. We affirm. Background Gene Dunlap and her two sons, C.H. and G.H., lived with Appellant in Mineral Wells. C.H. was four years old, and G.H. was three years old. Dunlap left the boys at home with Appellant while she worked nights. When she returned home from work one morning, G.H. was lying on her bed, had a busted lip, and could not move his arm. Dunlap took G.H. to Weatherford Regional Medical Center while Appellant stayed with C.H. The attending physician in the emergency room, Gerald Phillip Douglas, described G.H. as “bruised and battered all over” and said that he had not “seen anybody hurt this bad in a long time.” His “initial impression was that somebody had used this child’s face and head as a punching bag.” Due to the nature of the injuries, a nurse reported abuse to the Mineral Wells Police Department. G.H. had a fractured humerus, so Dr. Douglas ordered a splint to stabilize the arm and transferred G.H. to Cook Children’s Medical Center in Fort Worth. When the attending physician, Daniel David Guzman, saw the significance of G.H.’s injuries, he called a “trauma alert.” During such an alert, an anesthesiologist, a trauma surgeon, a radiologist, and laboratory services personnel respond immediately. G.H. had a broken jaw, a spiral fracture in his left upper arm, three broken fingers, and bruises from head to toe. G.H.’s eyes were swollen shut, and he had lacerations and bruising on his face and on the side of his head. Dr. Guzman was concerned about the bruises in G.H.’s lower pelvic area and abdomen because blunt force trauma there could have injured his spleen, liver, pancreas, or bowel and could cause him to “bleed out.” After running tests, however, Dr. Guzman determined that there were no internal injuries in the abdominal cavity. The CT scan showed a nasal bone fracture, but G.H. did not

2 have intracranial bleeding or other head injuries. Doctors also determined that, due to a lack of swelling, the broken jaw was an old injury. Dunlap told the doctors what Appellant had told her. According to Appel- lant, G.H. got out of bed to use the restroom, and when he saw a spider, he “freaked out.” Appellant claimed that G.H. tripped over his blanket and landed with his arm “pinned up behind him.” Dunlap initially blamed the various injuries on a fall that occurred while wrestling with C.H. Once they were at Cook Children’s, however, Dunlap told the doctors that C.H. caused the bruises to one of G.H.’s eyes when C.H. stomped on G.H.’s face, and she also told doctors that G.H. hurt his chin and his lip when he fell on the sidewalk a few days before. Detective Darby Thomas spoke with the treating physician in Weatherford, who told him that Dunlap’s story appeared to be inconsistent with G.H.’s injuries because it was not plausible that the injuries were caused by a four-year-old. Detective Thomas went to Cook Children’s to continue his investigation. The treating physician there, Dr. Guzman, believed that it was “non-accidental trauma,” so he consulted with Dr. Jayme Coffman, who is a child abuse pediatrician and the medical director of the child abuse program at Cook Children’s. Dr. Coffman believed that G.H.’s injuries were the result of abuse because “[t]he information the mom gave was not consistent at all with the injuries” she observed. Dr. Coffman described “horrible, horrible bruising and swelling to [G.H.’s] face” and a “horribly torn” frenulum, which is a piece of skin that connects the lip to the gums. Dr. Coffman said that, when she lifted G.H.’s lip, it looked like “hamburger meat” because there were “a lot of abrasions or lacerations inside his lip.” Dr. Coffman explained that such injuries were the result of a blunt impact to the mouth and that the injuries were fresh because there was no evidence of healing. Cook Children’s personnel reported G.H.’s injuries to Child Protective Services. When Appellant heard that CPS was coming to his house to investigate,

3 he called and asked his friend Darryl Flint, who had been over playing video games the previous night, to come over and help clean the house. When he saw C.H., Flint noticed that he had two black eyes. Appellant said that C.H. ran into a doorknob. When Elizabeth Clement, the CPS investigator arrived and saw C.H.’s injuries, she obtained approval from her supervisor to take C.H. from the home and take him to Cook Children’s. Clement testified that she had been an investigator with CPS for four years and that she had never done that before. CPS officials decided to begin removal proceedings. G.H. was hospitalized for three days, and both boys were placed with temporary foster parents and eventually were placed with Dunlap’s brother and his wife. Officers asked Appellant to come to the police station for questioning. Appellant’s version of events contradicted the stories that police had already heard. As a result of that interview, Appellant was placed under arrest and searched prior to being booked into jail. The officer who searched Appellant noticed blood on Appellant’s sock and seized the sock for testing. Officers executed a search warrant and took several items from the home, including a swab from a stain on G.H.’s mattress, a board that officers found in the trash, and a swab from blood that they found on the hallway floor. Lab results confirmed that the DNA profiles on each of these items, including Appellant’s sock, matched G.H.’s DNA profile. Once G.H. was discharged from the hospital, both boys were interviewed by Joy Hallum, a child forensic interviewer. Hallum endeavors to conduct neutral, non-biased, and non-leading interviews of children who may have suffered abuse. One of the ways that Hallum determines whether the child is telling a story from his own recollection or someone else’s recollection is whether the child can describe sensory details such as what the child saw or heard, who was present, or how the child felt. C.H. told Hallum that Appellant spanked him with a board and a belt and that Appellant choked him with his hands and with a belt. C.H.

4 demonstrated how Appellant choked him. C.H. also said that he was “stomped on.” C.H. said that G.H. hurt his arm while playing outside and that he had heard G.H. cry when Appellant punched G.H. in the face. G.H. was more timid, but Hallum said this was common for younger children. G.H. originally told Hallum that he hurt his arm while playing outside, but he eventually admitted that it happened when Appellant spanked him. Dunlap was arrested and charged with injuring a child by omission for leaving the children with Appellant and knowing they were in danger of being injured, to which she pleaded guilty. Appellant was arrested and charged with two counts of causing serious bodily injury to a child. At Appellant’s trial, the doctors could not testify that C.H.’s injuries constituted serious bodily injury, and the jury was asked to determine whether Appellant committed the lesser included offense of causing bodily injury to C.H.

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