Micah Stotts v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 2007
Docket06-06-00243-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Micah Stotts v. State (Micah Stotts 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
Micah Stotts v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana



______________________________



No. 06-06-00243-CR



MICAH LOYD STOTTS, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 6th Judicial District Court

Lamar County, Texas

Trial Court No. 20787





Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Moseley



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Micah Loyd Stotts appeals his conviction by a jury of endangerment of a child, S.C.F., (1) the small son of Deanna Pridemore (Stotts's girlfriend), with a deadly weapon (methamphetamine or amphetamine), a conviction which resulted in the imposition of a sentence of ten years' confinement and a fine of $10,000.00.

The offense with which Stotts was charged and convicted is a state-jail felony when a person "intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or with criminal negligence, by act or omission, engages in conduct that places a child younger than 15 years in imminent danger of death, bodily injury, or physical or mental impairment." See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.041(c) (Vernon Supp. 2006). The finding of the use of a deadly weapon (methamphetamine) in the commission of the act caused this to be classified as a third-degree felony, pursuant to Section 12.35(c)(1) of the Texas Penal Code. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 12.35(c)(1) (Vernon 2003).

Stotts raises three points of error: (1) that the trial court erred in its failure to properly instruct the jury regarding the use of accomplice-witness testimony, (2) that the evidence is legally insufficient to sustain the conviction, and (3) that the evidence was factually insufficient to sustain the conviction.

Testimony at Trial

According to the testimony of Vickie Foster (S.C.F.'s paternal grandmother) and Linsey Parson, on separate occasions in the weeks before the night upon which S.C.F. fell very ill, he had been in the presence of Stotts before the child was delivered to them. Upon S.C.F.'s arrival in their presence in each of these instances, he was lethargic and quite ill with coughing, nausea, and diarrhea. Each time, after only a few hours away from Stotts and Pridemore, S.C.F. would recover from his sickly state and commence play and other activities in which small children commonly engage.

S.C.F. had other circumstances of intermittent illnesses as described, these being continued for well over a month. As a result of these recurrent bouts of illness, Pridemore and Foster took S.C.F. to see Dr. Ed Clark, a pediatrician. Initially, Clark believed the symptoms were due to a virus and had prescribed treatment for S.C.F. which would be consistent with that diagnosis. However, given the extended periods of time from which S.C.F. suffered from the symptoms, in retrospect, Clark no longer believed that the cause was viral. Clark stated that although the exhibited symptoms were similar to those which would be found in a child suffering from shaken baby syndrome, a diagnosis such as that would not explain the intermittent nature of S.C.F.'s symptoms. Although expressing that he had not studied the impact which methamphetamine would have on a child, Clark posited that methamphetamine poisoning might have produced the symptoms suffered by S.C.F.

On July 27, 2004, Stotts took S.C.F. alone with him in his pickup truck from Sumner toward Sulphur Springs. Stotts stopped at a rest area park in Lamar County because S.C.F. had become nauseated and was vomiting. Resuming, further down the road, S.C.F. suffered a seizure and stopped breathing; Stotts administered CPR, revived S.C.F.'s breathing, and took him to Hopkins County Memorial Hospital. From the Hopkins County Memorial Hospital, S.C.F. was airlifted to Children's Hospital in Dallas, where he was treated by Dr. Matthew Cox, another pediatrician. Cox testified that x-rays revealed skull damage which would indicate that S.C.F. could have suffered from shaken baby syndrome. Cox's initial belief was that S.C.F.'s lethargy and other symptoms were due to head trauma as classic shaken baby syndrome. However, after learning that the child had suffered the symptoms intermittently over a rather extended period of time, that the symptoms would wax and wane, and that after S.C.F. began to reside with his grandparents, the Fosters, the symptoms disappeared entirely, the suggested causal connection between the head injury and the symptoms the child suffered was dismissed by him. Therefore, looking for other causes for the symptoms, Dr. Cox took hair samples from S.C.F. and discovered from hair follicle testing that S.C.F. had recently been exposed to methamphetamine or amphetamine; other evidence of S.C.F.'s exposure to methamphetamine was the poor condition of his teeth, the child suffering a condition which is often called "meth mouth." Cox concluded that the source of S.C.F.'s symptoms was the effect of methamphetamine in his body and that the impact of methamphetamine or amphetamine on a child can be (and sometimes is) deadly.

In an interview with Travis Rhodes (an investigator with the Lamar County Sheriff's Office), Stotts related that S.C.F. had exhibited the lethargy, nausea, and vomiting for three or four weeks before the night he had the seizure and ceased breathing. Although Stotts admitted to regular use of methamphetamine two to four times per day during this same period of time, he denied doing so in the presence of S.C.F. Stotts also indicated to Rhodes that he kept his drugs in places that S.C.F. would not have access to them.

Billy Booker, a deputy with the Choctaw County, Oklahoma, Sheriff's Office, testified that on October 28, 2004, he had stopped Stotts while Stotts was driving his pickup truck in Choctaw County and had discovered a one-gallon plastic bag under the back seat of the vehicle, close to the position in which a child's car seat would be expected to sit. Also located in the vehicle were about four ounces of high-grade methamphetamine in the bag, a glass pipe for smoking methamphetamine, and spoons and scales commonly used for measuring the substance. Booker also related that methamphetamine can be absorbed through the skin, a circumstance which dictates that law enforcement officials are advised to wear rubber gloves when handling it; due to that property of the chemical, there is a danger to children in coming in contact with methamphetamine.

Pridemore testified that she and S.C.F. had been living with Stotts at various places. All during their relationship, she and Stotts had regularly used methamphetamine three or four times per day, smoking the drug and inhaling its fumes. She had seen Stotts smoke methamphetamine on many occasions while in his pickup truck and had done so herself.

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