State v. Davis

798 S.W.2d 268, 1990 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 391, 1990 WL 165946
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 8, 1990
DocketNo. 01-C-01-9001-CC-00015
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 798 S.W.2d 268 (State v. Davis) 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. Davis, 798 S.W.2d 268, 1990 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 391, 1990 WL 165946 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

SCOTT, Judge.

The appellant was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and received a sentence of two years in the state penitentiary as a Range I, standard offender. Her application for probation was granted and she was placed on supervised probation for two years.

On appeal she has presented six issues. Taken together, five challenge the sufficiency of the convicting evidence. So far as we can ascertain, this is a case of first impression in Tennessee. The case arises out of the accidental drowning of the appellant’s two year old child.

The appellant lived in an apartment at Lakeside Apartments in Murfreesboro with her husband, her mother, her younger brother and her two year old son.1 On August 11, 1988, her son, Michael Hughes, was pulled from the swimming pool at the apartment complex by fifteen year old Jason Clardy. Mr. Clardy saw the victim earlier in the afternoon with the appellant’s husband, who was working on his truck in front of one of the buildings in the apartment complex. The victim was playing with the other little children.

Later that afternoon the appellant and her husband began looking for the child and they asked Mr. Clardy and the other older youngsters if they had seen him. [269]*269Thinking that he might have wandered into the woods behind the apartment complex, Mr. Clardy and one of his friends went to look for him. Mr. Clardy spotted the child in the shallow end of the pool and pulled him out. Resuscitation efforts were undertaken by the appellant’s mother, who is a licensed practical nurse, and by paramedics summoned to the scene. The child was taken to Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville by Life Flite helicopter, but all efforts to resuscitate him failed and he was later pronounced dead by physicians at Vanderbilt. Dr. Mona Gretel Harlan, the Assistant Davidson County Medical Examiner, performed the autopsy on the victim and determined that the cause of death was drowning.

The state’s proof consisted of Mr. Clar-dy, Billy Howard Hadnot, who had been the resident manager for four buildings at Lakeside Apartments and the common areas, James W. Steele, who succeeded Mr. Hadnot, Dr. Harlan, Major Sally Walls of the Symrna Police Department, Judith Marie Webber, a child protective services worker with the Tennessee Department of Human Services, and Sally N. Randolph, a neighbor, who had reported the appellant’s neglect of her child.

In addition to Mr. Clardy’s description of his rescue of the victim, the state’s proof centered on the operation of the pool, the victim’s attraction to it and the appellant’s prior neglect of him.

As to the pool, the proof showed that the latches on the two gates had been installed quite low, making it possible for the little children to open them at will. About three weeks before the victim’s death, Mr. Had-not and the appellant’s husband, Mark Anthony Davis, II, moved the latches up to a point where the victim could only touch it with his fingertips. However, it was possible for him to reach the latches by standing on a gutter.

The state’s evidence was in dispute about whether the pool was closed on the date of the drowning. According to Mr. Clardy, it itad already been announced that the pool would be closed for cleaning. Mr. Steele disputed that, contending that the pool was not closed or going to be. Ms. Randolph agreed with Mr. Clardy that, according to her understanding, the pool was to be closed that day.

As to the victim’s attraction to the pool, the proof showed that he was a precocious, inquisitive little boy. He was, like most youngsters, attracted to the pool and Mr. Clardy had taken him home from the pool area once or twice the month before. Mr. Hadnot recalled that the victim came over five or six times during the five weeks that they had worked on the pool to get it in shape for opening.2 At least three times he was unattended by an adult. Mr. Had-not had taken him out of the pool area twice. On one occasion the victim walked down the steps of the pool into the water with his shoes on. On the other occasion he was near the pool, but not in it.

As to the appellant’s prior neglect of her son, Mrs. Randolph testified that she first met the victim in May when he fell on a skateboard at the tennis court. She took him home and then returned to the park. The boy returned alone to the park immediately and continued to play. Two weeks later she took him home when he flipped out of a swing and landed on his stomach. On a third occasion, she and her husband saw the child, who started coming toward her calling her “mommy.” Rather than deal with the child, Mrs. Randolph and her husband left. She called the Department of Human Services and reported the child as being neglected.

Ms. Webber investigated several complaints that she received concerning the appellant’s neglect of her child. Her investigation began in February 1988 and continued through July 7,1988. Ms. Webber had no contact with the appellant after July 7. She had insisted that the appellant fix a latch on the storm door to her apartment which allowed the child to come and go at will.

[270]*270Major Walls had known the appellant for a long time. She went to the appellant’s home after the death of the child to see if she could help the appellant and also to see if the latch had been repaired as required by Ms. Webber.

That was the state’s case. No proof was presented by the prosecution concerning the circumstances of the child’s death, except that he drowned. The defense, through the testimony of the appellant, her husband, her mother and father, and a neighbor filled in the details of that fateful day.

The appellant was in her fourth month of pregnancy and she and her mother went to Wal-Mart to buy her some maternity clothes. While they went to the store, the victim stayed with the appellant’s husband, who was repairing a truck outside in the apartment complex. They returned home between 4:30 and 5:00 o’clock P.M., and she and her mother sat on the steps of the apartment. Her husband was still outside working on the truck and the victim was playing in the yard. According to the appellant’s mother, Catherine Driver, he was within five or six feet of her playing with the other youngsters. The appellant began to feel nauseated and she went into the apartment where she vomited. She changed clothes and laid down for a time. She estimated that she was in the house for thirty to thirty-five minutes. At about 6:00 or 6:15 P.M., she went back outside and asked her mother where her son was. Mrs. Driver said she didn’t know, so they asked the appellant’s husband. He responded that he thought the child was with Mrs. Driver.

Two ladies were sitting in lawn chairs near where Mr. Davis was working on his truck. When asked if they had seen the child, they responded that he went with the other children to the back of the apartments to look at a mushroom or toadstool that one of the children had discovered. Katherine Christine VanBrooker, and another lady named Cindy, were sitting outside. She and Cindy were watching the children. She remembered that the appellant had asked if it was all right for her son to play there with the other children and' she agreed that it was. There were forty to fifty children in the apartment complex and Ms. VanBrooker testified that all the adults watched everyone’s children.

Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
798 S.W.2d 268, 1990 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 391, 1990 WL 165946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-davis-tenncrimapp-1990.