People v. Klave

343 N.W.2d 565, 130 Mich. App. 388
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1983
DocketDocket 66034
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 343 N.W.2d 565 (People v. Klave) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Klave, 343 N.W.2d 565, 130 Mich. App. 388 (Mich. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Defendant appeals as of right from his conviction, following a bench trial, of second-degree murder in the death of his 28-month-old daughter Sarah on April 30, 1981. Defendant was sentenced to a term of 15 to 30 years.

Robin D’Amato, the child’s mother and defendant’s girlfriend, testified that when she gave a statement to the Fraser Police Department regarding the events leading to the death she was told by the police that she would not be charged. The testimony indicated that defendant was hitting Sarah for no reason about three or four times a day. D’Amato saw him strike, kick and push her on several occasions. On one occasion she heard a “thud” against the bathroom wall. Sarah was crying and screaming, and defendant yelled at her and slapped her. D’Amato did not attempt to stop him because he would hit her for interfering and *391 she was afraid of him. Defendant threatened to kill Sarah two days before she died. D’Amato denied beating her and said she knew of no accidents involving Sarah. She testified that the three of them were "always together” and "more or less” inseparable. The beatings began in the beginning of April, 1981. Defendant punched Sarah in the stomach three times, causing bruises. D’Amato said they drank on weekends. Sarah was always asleep when they were drinking. The beatings were administered when defendant was not drinking. When they visited defendant’s parents, he had excuses for the bruises, and D’Amato did not tell them what was happening. She wanted to take Sarah to a hospital because she thought her knee was broken, but defendant would not let her because of the bruises on her bottom. When Sarah became comatose on April 30, 1981, and the police were called, D’Amato told them that Sarah fell' down the stairs and had been bitten on the cheek by a nephew. She gave the story at defendant’s insistence. At the hospital, defendant rehearsed the story and was looking for a way to get out of the hospital. In fact, defendant had grabbed the child by the cheek and smacked her.

Several police officers testified, confirming the presence of bruises all over the child’s body. They also said that both defendant and D’Amato had told them that Sarah had fallen down the stairs before D’Amato implicated the defendant at the police station.

Officer James Colby interviewed defendant and D’Amato in the police station. After being given her Miranda 1 warnings, D’Amato said that Sarah fell down the stairs. Colby indicated that such *392 injuries could not occur in that way. Crying and upset, D’Amato said she wanted to tell the truth and proceeded to tell of the beatings.

Sergeant Charles Schinning testified, on a special record, that during a second interview with defendant the defendant said, "She told you the truth. You know what the truth is. I am not going to say anything else without conferring with an attorney”. However, the trial judge found that the statement had been given after a request for counsel and said that the evidence presented in the special record would not be considered.

Coreen Murphy, manager of the Royal Motel, testified that a maid, Terry Troia, came into the office on April 20, 1981, and said that a man was beating a child. Troia testified that she heard a man screaming, a child crying, and slaps. She saw defendant exit from the motel room from which the sounds came; a child was in his arms.

Mr. and Mrs. Sears testified. Defendant told Mr. Sears that he slapped Sarah. On one occasion, defendant and D’Amato left Sarah alone in the room. Defendant also left D’Amato and Sarah in the room when he worked on cars.

Medical Examiner Werner Spitz testified that the cause of death was the tearing of a kidney and the tearing of an intestine, with resulting peritonitis. He opined that the injury occurred as the result of a blow to the right flank. He said that the injury to the flank was approximately one week old, and that the rest of the injuries and bruises extended over a period of up to three weeks. The bruises were described as deep bruises. All the injuries were the result of beatings. There was an injury to the forehead as the result of a blow or violent fall on the area. Sarah had abdominal surgery while very young. The surgery had "an *393 influence on the mechanism of injury” in that adhesions had formed and the intestine had become more fixed to the surrounding organs. This caused them to be unable to move and to be more susceptible to damage. This did not influence the kidney injury. Spitz called Sarah a battered child. At the time of her death, the autopsy revealed that Sarah’s body had bruises on the face and forehead, the chest, the right arm, the abdomen, the knee, along the spinal column to the buttocks, on the back of the legs as far down as the ankles, and a large bruise on the right flank. The mark on the cheek was possibly caused by a bite and was only a few days old.

Violet Klave, defendant’s mother, testified that defendant went to "special” schools and was hospitalized at Northville and Lafayette Clinic. She never saw him hit or push Sarah. She saw Sarah almost every day except for the last three to four days prior to her death. On those days, D’Amato visited Klave’s house, but said a babysitter was with Sarah. She testified that the last she saw the child Sarah had no marks on her.

Herman Klave, defendant’s brother, saw Sarah a week prior to her death and saw no marks.

Lynette Roland, defendant’s ex-wife, testified that defendant still saw their son occasionally, and that defendant never hit his son.

Dr. Robey, defendant’s expert-psychiatrist, testified that defendant had organic brain disease and epilepsy that was successfully treated with medica: tion. He said that defendant had a certain level of retardation, but was polite and pleasant. Defendant told Robey that he spanked and slapped Sarah on occasion but did not think it caused bruises.

When asked by Robey where the bruises came *394 from, he responded that if D’Amato and the police said he did it, he must have done it. However, he denied doing it. Defendant really cared about Sarah and only stayed with D’Amato for the child, according to Robey. Robey opined that some forms of injury are probably inflicted more often by female attackers while other forms are probably inflicted by male attackers and that the bite to the cheek was probably done by a woman. He said that when drinking the defendant had a sleepy pattern, not a violent one. He said he doubted very much that defendant administered the death blow, but, if so, defendant could not have had the specific intent because of his background and drinking. According to Robey’s notes, defendant told him that Robin D’Amato beat Sarah. He opined that the size of the bruise on the right flank made it unlikely that it was made with defendant’s fist and would be more consistent with one made by a woman’s shoe.

Dr. Benedex, the prosecution’s rebuttal-psychiatrist, found defendant hostile and angry. Defendant told the witness he slapped Sarah on several occasions, including about four days prior to her death, but he denied beating her. He had been drinking a quart of liquor a day until the last three to four days prior to the death. Dr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Johnson v. Hofbauer
159 F. Supp. 2d 582 (E.D. Michigan, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
343 N.W.2d 565, 130 Mich. App. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-klave-michctapp-1983.