Joshua Sean Muegge v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 2014
Docket05-13-00408-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Joshua Sean Muegge v. State (Joshua Sean Muegge 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.

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Joshua Sean Muegge v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

AFFIRMED; Opinion Filed April 21, 2014.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-13-00408-CR

JOSHUA SEAN MUEGGE, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 380th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 380-82053-2012

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Moseley, Francis, and Lang Opinion by Justice Lang Following a plea of not guilty, appellant Joshua Sean Muegge waived a jury trial and was

convicted by the trial court of injury to a child. TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.04(a)(3), (f) (West

2013). Punishment was assessed at ten years’ confinement. In his sole issue on appeal,

appellant contends the evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction.

For the reasons stated below, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The testimony at trial shows that in October 2011, appellant lived in a home with fifteen-

month-old B.M.K. and B.M.K.’s mother (“Mother”). Mother and appellant had been in a

relationship since August 2011 and began living together in September 2011.

Mother testified that, after appellant moved in, there were “rocky moments” in their

relationship, including fights and arguments. She further testified that, when she first began dating appellant, appellant got along well with B.M.K. However, around early October 2011,

she noticed a change in appellant’s relationship with B.M.K., particularly that B.M.K. would cry

whenever appellant “came around.” Mother testified that she asked appellant “just to leave

[B.M.K.] alone” and that she would care for B.M.K. herself.

Mother testified B.M.K. was a healthy child and that, prior to appellant moving into her

home, she had never witnessed any bruising or physical injury on B.M.K.’s body. However,

Mother’s father and stepmother both testified that, in late October, they had begun to notice

bruising on B.M.K.’s ears and cheek.

On the morning of Saturday, October 29, 2011, Mother, her father, and her stepmother

went to clean out a storage unit. B.M.K. accompanied them, and Mother, her father, and her

stepmother all testified that B.M.K. appeared normal at that time.

Appellant was at the home he shared with Mother when she, her father, and her

stepmother returned to the home around 10:30 AM. Mother testified she, her father, and her

stepmother were all playing with B.M.K. after they returned home that morning, but that

appellant did not. Between 11:30 AM and noon, Mother’s father and stepmother returned to the

storage unit, and Mother placed B.M.K. in a playroom to watch TV. She testified B.M.K.

appeared normal and was not crying at this time.

Mother then went outside to the garage to organize items she had removed from storage.

She heard B.M.K. crying about a half hour later. She immediately went inside, where she saw

appellant holding B.M.K. She testified that she took B.M.K. away from appellant and asked

why he was holding B.M.K. since appellant “agreed he would have nothing to do with

[B.M.K.’s] care.” Appellant responded that he had intended to put B.M.K. down for an

afternoon nap, an act appellant had never done before. Mother put B.M.K. down for a nap

herself and returned to the garage. –2– Mother attempted to wake B.M.K. from the nap around 2:30 PM. At that time, she

observed B.M.K. was “very groggy,” and after she placed B.M.K. in a recliner chair, B.M.K.’s

head kept dropping, as if trying to fall asleep. She testified these behaviors were “very unusual”

for B.M.K.

Appellant offered to give B.M.K. a bath to help wake B.M.K. up, although appellant had

never given the child a bath before. Nevertheless, Mother allowed appellant to do so. Less than

ten minutes later, appellant brought B.M.K. to Mother and pointed out a bruise on B.M.K.’s

hairline. Mother testified the bruise was “pretty large” and “fairly fresh.”

Mother attempted to lay the child on its back to change clothes. She testified B.M.K.

“kept lifting [its] head up” as though in pain, a behavior she described as “very unusual.” She

saw B.M.K.’s head was “very tender and red” and observed another bruise on B.M.K.’s

forehead. Mother’s friend arrived shortly thereafter, and Mother, her friend, and B.M.K.

immediately left for the emergency room. Mother asked appellant if he would come to the

emergency room with her, but she could “tell by his action (sic) that he did not want to come.”

While at the hospital, Mother received a text message from appellant, stating in part, “I

just want you to know I would never hurt your baby . . . .” Mother testified, when she received

this text message, she had not yet accused appellant of injuring B.M.K. and agreed with the

prosecutor at trial that this statement was something appellant “brought up on his own.”

The pediatrician who treated B.M.K. at the hospital on October 29 and 30 testified that,

upon B.M.K.’s admission, she observed bruising, hematomas, and swelling on the child. B.M.K.

was found to have multiple skull fractures to the occipital bone, a bone located in the back of the

head. The pediatrician testified, “In general, the occipital bone is very difficult to break and

requires high force.” She testified further that the occipital bone is “[t]ruly one of the hardest

bones to break” because of its location in the back of the head and that one does not tend to see –3– accidental breaking of this bone. She testified it would only be possible for a child to break this

bone from a “very significant fall”, like from a roof or a second story, and that the child would

have to land on the lower back part of his or her head to incur this injury. After observing

B.M.K.’s scans, which featured three breaks, the pediatrician concluded B.M.K.’s injuries were

“more likely” caused by more than one strike.

The pediatrician stated the “most reasonable” explanation would be that B.M.K.’s

injuries occurred on October 29 because B.M.K. had a history of appearing normal and playful

the morning before being taken to the hospital and because symptoms would be expected to

manifest shortly after this kind of injury. She testified that she would expect to see a child with

B.M.K.’s injuries to be crying, possibly vomiting, and avoiding pressure on the affected area.

She indicated that someone using a force sufficient to inflict these injuries would have known he

was injuring the child.

At trial, appellant presented the testimony of a forensic pathologist, who testified B.M.K.

could have sustained those injuries from simply falling on a small object. The pathologist

testified it would not be impossible for a child to act normally for several days after the injury

without exhibiting symptoms, but did admit on cross-examination that it “doesn’t make sense”

for a child to have sustained this injury on a Tuesday, when B.M.K. would have been in its

father’s care, and not exhibit any signs of pain, hematomas, or grogginess until the following

Saturday. The pathologist further testified, “[i]n this particular case where you have a punched-

in fracture,” a rapid and forceful action would be necessary to create such an injury.

Mother testified she had not observed the child fall or hit its head on October 29 or on the

days preceding the accident, and she had never seen the kinds of bruises like the ones that

developed that day. B.M.K.’s father also testified at trial, stating that when B.M.K. was in his

–4– care two days earlier, B.M.K.

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