State of Iowa v. Reuben Daniel Schooley

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 8, 2024
Docket23-1117
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Reuben Daniel Schooley (State of Iowa v. Reuben Daniel Schooley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Iowa v. Reuben Daniel Schooley, (iowa 2024).

Opinion

In the Iowa Supreme Court

No. 23–1117

Submitted September 11, 2024—Filed November 8, 2024

State of Iowa,

Appellee,

vs.

Reuben Daniel Schooley,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Emmet County, Charles K. Borth,

judge.

The defendant challenges his conviction and sentence for child

endangerment causing bodily injury. Affirmed.

Oxley, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices joined.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Joshua A. Duden (argued), Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Melinda J. Nye (argued),

Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant. 2

Oxley, Justice.

This appeal requires us to consider whether a father’s actions crossed the

line from lawful corporal punishment to criminal conduct. Reuben Schooley was

arrested after he slapped his then nine-year-old daughter across the head,

spanked her, yanked her by the shirt, and told her to get out of the house

because she was acting like an animal. A jury ultimately convicted him of child

endangerment causing bodily injury. Schooley maintains there was insufficient

evidence to support his conviction. The excessiveness of corporal punishment is

generally a question for the jury. Upon our review of the evidence, we conclude

that sufficient evidence supports the jury’s verdict.

Schooley also challenges his five-year sentence of incarceration as

improperly influenced by the victim-impact statement submitted by the guardian

ad litem (GAL) on behalf of the child. Schooley argues that the GAL was not

authorized to provide a victim-impact statement under Iowa Code sections

915.21 and 915.37 (2022). But Schooley failed to raise that issue in the district

court when specifically asked by the court if he had any objections to the

statement, thereby waiving the challenge. Schooley also argues that the district

court relied on improper information contained in the GAL’s victim-impact

statement. We require an affirmative showing that the district court relied on

improper evidence introduced through an unchallenged victim-impact statement

before we will infer that the district court failed to properly exercise its discretion

in filtering out any improper statements. No such affirmative showing is evident

in the record. We therefore reject Schooley’s sentencing challenges.

As explained more fully below, we affirm Schooley’s conviction and

sentence. 3

I. Factual Background and Proceedings.

On June 12, 2022, Deputy Thomas Schultes was dispatched to Reuben

Schooley’s residence regarding a physical altercation between Schooley and his

then nine-year-old daughter, A.S. A neighbor, who lived a block or two away from

Schooley, was outside with family and friends when A.S. showed up, afraid and

alone. The neighbor observed marks on A.S.’s collar area. A.S. told the neighbor

that Schooley “had grabbed her by the collar of her shirt and slammed her head

into the wall, called her a dirty animal, and kicked her out of the house.” A.S.

told the neighbor that Schooley engaged in this conduct because she took

something that belonged to her siblings.

Ten to fifteen minutes later, Schooley showed up at the neighbor’s house.

When Schooley arrived, A.S. was scared and told the neighbor that she did not

want to go with Schooley. Once Schooley and A.S. left the neighbor’s house to

return home, the neighbor immediately called the police and the Iowa

Department of Human Services (DHS). After speaking with the neighbor, Deputy

Schultes went to Schooley’s house where he and A.S. lived with his girlfriend,

Tessica McNeese, and her three children.

Deputy Schultes first spoke with Schooley on the front doorstep. Schooley

told Deputy Schultes that he kicked A.S. out of the house because A.S. was not

obeying rules and thus behaving like an animal, comparing A.S. to their dog.

After Deputy Schultes asked Schooley if he could talk with A.S., Schooley went

back inside the house to get A.S. Deputy Schultes and A.S. then spoke privately

on the sidewalk, near his patrol car. A.S. told Deputy Schultes that Schooley

yanked her by the shirt, hit her on the head, and spanked her. Deputy Schultes

observed that A.S. was scared, uncomfortable, and had red marks near her collar 4

area. The deputy took photographs of the marks, which appeared fresh, possibly

from recent fingernail scratches.

Deputy Schultes then spoke with Schooley again outside the house.

Schooley admitted that he spanked A.S. and yanked her by the shirt but denied

hitting A.S. on the head. Based on these interviews, Deputy Schultes arrested

Schooley for child endangerment causing bodily injury. After being placed in the

back of the patrol car, Schooley elaborated that after he spanked A.S., he sat her

up and removed an extra shirt that she was wearing.

Once Schooley was secured in the back of the patrol car, Deputy Schultes

spoke with McNeese inside the house. Deputy Schultes asked McNeese to check

A.S.’s bottom for any injuries. When McNeese pulled down A.S.’s pants, McNeese

and Deputy Schultes observed bruising on A.S.’s left buttock. McNeese

spontaneously responded, “Uh-oh,” when she saw the bruising. Deputy Schultes

took photographs of the bruising, which contained different discoloration (mainly

a brownish color with blue and purple remaining), indicating various stages of

healing. Deputy Schultes then went back to his patrol car to inform Schooley of

the bruising. Schooley admitted that he spanked A.S. on both sides of her

buttocks that day, estimated that he spanked A.S. every other day, and agreed

that leaving marks is abuse rather than discipline. Schooley also admitted to

Deputy Schultes that he had hit A.S. on the head in the past when he was angry

and that he felt guilty afterward. The State charged Schooley with child

endangerment causing bodily injury, in violation of Iowa Code sections

726.6(1)(b) and 726.6(7).

The two-day trial began on May 9, 2023. Seven witnesses testified,

including McNeese and Schooley, who were the only defense witnesses. The

State’s witnesses included A.S., the neighbor, Deputy Schultes, and two child 5

protective workers with DHS. The trial testimony revealed that A.S. had been

grounded for the majority of the last two years. During that time, A.S. was

deprived of basic bedroom furniture, forced to eat alone in her bare bedroom,

and limited to two outfits, including a shirt that said, “Don’t trust me.”1 Her bed

was propped up against the wall, and she couldn’t use it unless she asked first.

A.S. was required to wear a bell around the house so that Schooley and McNeese

could keep track of her whereabouts. McNeese agreed that this was “extremely

degrading.”

With respect to the specific day in question, McNeese testified that she had

been yelling at A.S. for “getting into something,” when Schooley came out of his

room and “grabbed [A.S.], kind of put his arm around her head . . . and slapped

her on the top of the head.” McNeese had never seen Schooley act that “blunt or

excessive” with A.S.

Schooley testified that after entering the situation due to McNeese’s yelling,

he took A.S. to her bedroom, spanked her with an open hand as she lay on the

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State of Iowa v. Reuben Daniel Schooley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-reuben-daniel-schooley-iowa-2024.