Nielsen v. State

430 P.3d 740
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 2018
DocketS-18-0085
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 430 P.3d 740 (Nielsen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nielsen v. State, 430 P.3d 740 (Wyo. 2018).

Opinion

FOX, Justice.

[¶1] A jury found Joseph Nielsen guilty of first-degree felony murder for causing the death of CF, a 3-year-old child. He appeals from his judgment and sentence, alleging that the district court committed plain error by permitting expert medical testimony opining on his guilt and credibility and by allowing improper cross-examination of his sole medical expert. We affirm.

*742ISSUES

[¶2] Mr. Nielsen raises three issues on appeal which we rephrase:

1. Has Mr. Nielsen demonstrated plain error in testimony elicited from medical experts concerning a diagnosis that has a distinct legal meaning?
2. Has Mr. Nielsen demonstrated plain error in testimony elicited from medical experts concerning inconsistencies between Mr. Nielsen's proposed mechanism of injury and their observations of CF's injuries?
3. Has Mr. Nielsen demonstrated plain error in the State's cross-examination of Dr. Young?

FACTS

[¶3] Mr. Nielsen moved in with Crystal Hudson and her two young children shortly after they began dating in September 2015. The four of them lived together at Ms. Hudson's apartment until they were evicted in early August 2016. Three days after they moved into a new trailer home in Gillette, Wyoming, Ms. Hudson woke up at around 10 in the morning and checked on her children. She brought both her daughter, two-year-old SW, and her son, three-year-old CF, into the room she and Mr. Nielsen shared and asked him if they could get doughnuts for breakfast. They decided that Ms. Hudson would go get the doughnuts. As she was leaving, CF attempted to follow her out of the trailer home and became upset when Mr. Nielsen brought him back inside.

[¶4] Ms. Hudson was about to check out at the grocery store when Mr. Nielsen called her and told her CF had fallen while trying to jump off the coffee table. Ms. Hudson heard "weird, ... heavy breathing" in the background and told Mr. Nielsen to call 911. Mr. Nielsen called 911, and Officer Jeremy Traverse was dispatched to the trailer home. When Officer Traverse arrived, he saw CF lying on the couch. CF had a pulse, but his eyes were not reactive, he had urinated on himself, his breathing sounded like "snoring or gurgling," and he was "posturing."1 Officer Traverse adjusted CF on the couch and held him in a "C-Spine" position, which involves straightening the spine and holding the head to prevent further injury. As he was holding the C-Spine position, Officer Traverse noticed a bruise on CF's sternum, "a bruise on the inside of his left arm, and other small bruises on his abdomen," "marks and bruises" on his face, and blood inside his mouth.

[¶5] After paramedics arrived and began caring for CF, Officer Traverse spoke with Mr. Nielsen. Mr. Nielsen told him that he had been down the hallway near the bathroom when he saw CF standing on the coffee table. Mr. Nielsen told CF "no" and "[CF] then jumped and landed on [a] dollhouse, fell over it, and then the dollhouse fell on top of him." Mr. Nielsen believed CF had hit his chest on the dollhouse and that CF had gone "headfirst onto the carpet" before the dollhouse fell on him. When Mr. Nielsen moved the dollhouse, he saw that CF was "not acting normally," "breathing differently," and "making weird movements." Mr. Nielsen said he had carried CF to the couch and splashed cold water on CF's cheek, but he did not respond.

[¶6] When CF arrived at the hospital, the paramedics told hospital staff that CF had reportedly jumped off a coffee table, flipped over a dollhouse, and hit his head on the ground. Emergency-room physician Dr. Theodore Lawson observed that CF was unconscious, non-responsive to stimulation, and that one of his pupils was larger than the other, indicating that brain-swelling was putting pressure on his optic nerve. Dr. Lawson ordered an immediate CT scan, which he testified showed that CF had a skull fracture,2 a subdural hematoma, and several rib fractures3 in various stages of healing. Dr. Joseph John Lawrence, the radiologist who *743interpreted CF's CT scan, testified that subdural hematomas"are unquestionably always the result of trauma" usually caused by motor vehicle accidents and "physical trauma, sometimes." Dr. Lawson testified similarly that subdural hematomas normally occur in "automobile wrecks where people are ejected and hit the ground ... at highway speeds." He further testified that a subdural hematoma is "a terrible prognosis" and that he did not believe CF would survive. When asked if he found anything suspicious about CF's injuries, Dr. Lawson said:

[H]e had an abrasion on his head, and he apparently landed on a carpeted floor, which didn't make too much sense to me. He also had some other contusions.
....
The fact that he had jumped off of a coffee table and supposedly hit a dollhouse just didn't conform to the amount of trauma that it would take to produce a skull fracture and a subdural hematoma [.]"

Dr. Lawson asked the Gillette police department to investigate the incident.

[¶7] Dr. Lawson determined that CF's injuries were "not something [they could] deal with in the ER." An air ambulance service transported CF to Children's Hospital Colorado, where several doctors, including Dr. Denis Bensard, took over CF's care. When asked what his assessment of CF's condition was, Dr. Bensard responded:

My assessment was that he was a young child that had suffered serious injuries. On his physical examination ... we also saw scattered bruising of the face and the chest. ... And with the history we were provided, [ ] the constellations of findings made us suspicious that this was nonaccidental trauma.

The State asked Dr. Bensard to define "nonaccidental trauma," to which he responded: "It's inflicted injury." Finally, the State inquired about potential mechanisms of injury for subdural hematomas. Dr. Bensard responded:

We've studied this area and we've written on this area. Subdural hematoma is the most common pattern of injury we see for abusive head trauma. There are additional studies that indicate that it is very difficult from this height to sustain these types, this severe of an injury. And the bruising that he -- the pattern of bruising he had is very suspicious for abusive trauma.

[¶8] Dr. Gina DeMasellis was the supervising physician in the pediatric intensive care unit of Children's Hospital Colorado when CF arrived there. She testified that she had been told that the mechanism of CF's injury was "a fall from a table." She was "not told the height of a table or any other further details." According to Dr. DeMasellis, the mechanism of injury affects her initial evaluation of a patient and is critical to the process of treatment. In her initial examination of CF, she noticed

a significant amount of bruising on his forehead and the sides of his head, including his right ear, his cheeks, ... below his chin, and around his clavicles, ... his right shoulder, the sides of his chest, as well as the sides of his abdomen, ... and then bruising down his legs as well. He at this point was not sedated, but his pupils were fixed and dilated, meaning they're not responsive to light.

Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 P.3d 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nielsen-v-state-wyo-2018.