State v. Bordis

905 S.W.2d 214, 1995 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 146
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 24, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by217 cases

This text of 905 S.W.2d 214 (State v. Bordis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bordis, 905 S.W.2d 214, 1995 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 146 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

WADE, Judge.

The defendant, Michael Arthur Bordis, Sr., was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to a term of life imprisonment. In addition to his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, the defendant submits the following issues for appellate review:

(1) whether the trial court erred by admitting into evidence photographs of the victim; and
(2) whether the trial court erred by allowing as evidence prior acts of misconduct on the part of the defendant.

We find the evidence insufficient to support a first degree murder conviction; we also hold that the failure to exclude certain of the evidence requires a reversal of the conviction and a remand for a new trial.

Between 2:00 or 3:00 A.M. on Saturday, April 6,1991, the defendant approached Metro Police Officers Raymond Rader and Ronnie Barnes in a Nashville parking lot and asked for help because his infant child had stopped breathing. The officers followed him back to his apartment and found the defendant’s wife, Claudette Pittman Bordis, 1 *217 crying and holding her three-month-old son, Michael Bordis, Jr., in her arms. Officer Rader described the infant as having an “ash color ... kind of grayish,” “cold to the touch,” and with his arms in an upright position. There was no pulse. Doctors later determined that the victim had died of malnutrition and dehydration.

Officer Rader, who described the defendant as “a little excited,” examined each of the two bedrooms in the apartment. The second contained a crib and a single-sized bed/playpen where the victim’s half-brother Matthew Pittman, age 3 or 4, was found asleep. Because the room had no lights, the officer used a flashlight. There was a bottle in the baby’s crib. The room had the smell of feces with an ammonia-type odor “like a lot of urine had been spilled.” The officers described the room as “trashy.” There was feces in a plastic dish in the window sill. While Matthew did not appear to be malnourished, he did have a black eye; and later, at the police station, Matthew ate two packages of crackers, two packages of doughnuts, and drank soft drinks.

Sergeant Barnes testified that the defendant told him “that the [victim] had not been eating very well lately.” When asked about whether he had taken the victim to a doctor, the defendant indicated that he and his family had only recently moved to the area and did not yet have a doctor. Sergeant Barnes testified that the defendant showed little emotion during their conversations.

Detective Johnny Lawrence testified that he arrived at the defendant’s apartment after the victim had been taken to the hospital. The defendant and his wife sat in the living room comforting each other; an older child, Matthew, was in their room. Initially, Detective Lawrence suspected that the victim had suffered infant death syndrome. When asked about the incident, the defendant explained that when he arrived at his home from work at about 2:30 A.M., he first observed his wife on the couch and then went to the bedroom to check on the children. He called his wife when he discovered something was wrong and she attempted to resuscitate the victim. Meanwhile, the defendant left to get help.

Later, Detective Lawrence saw the victim’s body at the hospital. He described his appearance as similar to photographs he had seen of starving children in Africa. After consulting with the doctor, Detective Lawrence instructed another officer to transport the defendant and his wife to police headquarters for more intensive questioning.

Detective Lawrence, Officer Steve Stone, and Investigator Jim Mason all testified that the first thing they noticed when entering the apartment was the smell coming from the children’s room. Each observed trash throughout their bedroom, smears of feces over portions of an ice chest and the walls, the feces in the dish in the window sill, and a training potty turned over on the floor. A bottle in the baby’s bed apparently contained old or spoiled milk. There also appeared to be either vomit or milk on the blanket in the crib. Officers noted that there was rice cereal for babies, baby food and a half empty can of baby formula in the apartment.

Steve Proesch, an emergency medical technician who had been called to the defendant’s apartment, testified that the victim was pale and emaciated by the time of his arrival. Rigor mortis and liver mortis had set in. Proesch described the parents as “upset.”

Eureva Elmore, a Social Counsellor for the Department of Human Services, interviewed the defendant and his wife only hours after the discovery of the victim’s death. Portions of the statement she acquired included the following information:

[The defendant] told [her] that he had come home ... [about 2:30] a.m. that morning, and had gone in to check on the baby, which was something that he normally did, that as soon as he saw the baby, he realized something was wrong. And he called for his wife to come in there. She ... then gave mouth to mouth resuscitation and asked him to go get the police. He said that since they didn’t have a tele *218 phone, he had walked down to use the pay phone but had ... run into two police officers who came back to the home with him.
[[Image here]]
He [also stated] that they had noticed the baby had been thin, but they didn’t think ... the baby had any medical problems.
⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
He told [her] that he had ... been investigated in Illinois for slapping Matthew.
[[Image here]]
He said that they kept very little food in the house because they mostly ate out.

When asked about the appearance of the children’s room, the counsellor described it as “very nasty” and “totally unke[m]pt.” The defendant told her that he had noticed that the baby was losing weight but thought that it was due to his formula and that a change had been recently made. The defendant also told her that he believed the victim to be doing better on the new formula.

During this interview of the defendant, Claudette Bordis responded to many of the questions asked. She told Ms. Elmore that she had fed the victim at 8:00 P.M., only hours before his death, and then put him to bed. She indicated that she thought the victim might be allergic to milk and confirmed that they had changed his formula some two or three weeks before his death. She claimed that the victim had consumed from two to six bottles of the formula per day and acknowledged that the defendant, who from all appearances rarely changed or bathed the victim, seldom saw the victim without clothing.

Ms. Elmore, who spent the day the body was discovered with the victim’s older brother, Matthew, described Matthew as constantly eating or wanting something to eat.

Dr. Julia Goodin, Deputy Chief Medical Examiner for Middle Tennessee, performed the autopsy and found dehydration and malnutrition to be the cause of death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
905 S.W.2d 214, 1995 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bordis-tenncrimapp-1995.