State v. Evans

839 A.2d 8, 150 N.H. 416, 2003 N.H. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 30, 2003
DocketNo. 2002-287
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 839 A.2d 8 (State v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Evans, 839 A.2d 8, 150 N.H. 416, 2003 N.H. LEXIS 209 (N.H. 2003).

Opinion

Brock, C.J.

The defendant, Chad Evans, was convicted of reckless second-degree murder, see RSA 630:l-b (1996), five counts of second-degree assault, see RSA 631:2 (1996), endangering the welfare of a minor, see RSA 639:3, I (1996), and simple assault, see RSA 631:2-a (1996), following the death of twenty-one-month-old Kassidy Bortner, the daughter of his girlfriend, Amanda Bortner. He appeals, arguing that: (1) the Superior Court (T. Nadca/a, J.) erroneously gave the jury a false exculpatory statement instruction; (2) the evidence on the second-degree murder charge was insufficient because it failed to eliminate the conclusion that Kassidy’s babysitter, Jeffrey Marshall, killed her; and (3) the court erroneously admitted various of Amanda’s statements under the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule. See N.H. R. Ev. 803(2). We affirm.

I. Facts

The jury could have found the following facts. Amanda and the defendant began dating in June 2000. A month later, she and Kassidy moved into the defendant’s Rochester home. Shortly thereafter, bruises started appearing on Kassidy. These bruises were caused by the defendant.

At first, the defendant bruised Kassidy only occasionally by forcibly grabbing her face out of frustration because Kassidy became jealous when Amanda was affectionate towards him. As time wont on, his frustration with Kassidy grew.

In the month before she died, the defendant grabbed Kassidy’s face hard as often as twice a week. He called her names such as “little bitch” and “f — ing retard.” As frequently as three times a week, the defendant disciplined Kassidy by picking her up by the armpits and roughly placing her in front of a wall or in a corner. Once, he grabbed her by the back of the neck and tossed her against a closet door, banging her head against the door. Another time, when Kassidy resisted, he picked her up by the [418]*418armpits and threw her on the bed. When Amanda intervened, he grabbed 'Kassidy’s leg and then walked away, muttering that he wished Kassidy had never been born. On another occasion, to stop her from crying and screaming, the defendant pressed his finger on Kassidy’s throat, hard enough to make her gag.

The defendant and Amanda made up false excuses to explain the obvious bruises on Kassidy’s face, including that the defendant grabbed Kassidy’s face to prevent her from falling off a trampoline. They also said that Kassidy was bruised because she was clumsy or because she accidentally bumped her head. Because of the bruises and her fear that Kassidy would be taken from her, Amanda refused to put Kassidy in day care. Instead, she asked her sister and her sister’s boyfriend, Marshall, to baby-sit.

On November 8, 2000, the day before Kassidy died, Amanda dropped her off at her sister’s and Marshall’s home in Kittery, Maine, at around 1:30 or 2:30 pm. When she dropped Kassidy off, Kassidy was fine, although a bit sleepy. She had a couple of scratches and a faded bruise on her face, but nothing more. Her behavior was normal. She spent the afternoon watching cartoons.

The defendant picked up Kassidy at around 5:00 pm. Shortly thereafter, he called from his car to tell Marshall that “[t]he little bitch is acting weird again.” He said that Kassidy was “kind of bobbin’ around” in the car. An hour or so later, he again called Marshall and said that she fell on her face on the ground when he took her out of the car. Later that evening, the defendant called Marshall again and told him that while playing ball with his three-year-old son, Kassidy was hit by his son with a ball. During the conversation, the defendant became frantic, telling Marshall that Kassidy’s eyes were in the back of her head, and yelling at her to wake up. He told Marshall that Kassidy was out cold. When Marshall suggested that the defendant take her to the hospital, the defendant said that she had “come out of it” and was fine.

The defendant also called Amanda to tell her about the incident. He told her that he did not want to baby-sit for Kassidy anymore because “[i]t seems like every time that I have her something happens where she hurts herself.”

When Amanda came home that night, she and the defendant fought. At one point, the defendant grabbed her throat and pinned her against the couch, telling her to “cut it out----you know what gets me going. You know what makes my temper.”

The next morning, Amanda brought Kassidy to Marshall’s house. Amanda lay Kassidy on a bed, looked at Kassidy’s face, and then said to [419]*419her sister, “Look what he did. It looks like f- — ing s — , doesn’t it.” Kassidy’s face was badly bruised; the bruises around her forehead looked like finger marks.

Kassidy appeared sick and in pain. Marshall and Amanda’s sister were concerned about her and put her to bed. When they tried to rouse her, Kassidy whimpered and pulled away from them. Amanda’s sister went to work and Marshall stayed at home with Kassidy, letting her sleep. At around 9:30 that morning, the defendant called and asked how Kassidy was doing. The defendant then told Marshall that he had received a call from the State because “someone had seen Kassidy at his house acting weird.” The defendant was quite angry, telling Marshall that Amanda and “the little bitch [are] going to have to get out of my house.”

At around 12:30 p.m., Marshall went to the bedroom to check on Kassidy and saw that she was unconscious, her eyes were in the back of her head, and she was making a gargling noise. While on the phone with 911, he tried to resuscitate her, but could not. Kassidy was taken by ambulance to a Maine hospital and pronounced dead on arrival.

An autopsy revealed that Kassidy died at approximately 12:30 p.m. from multiple blunt-force injuries that had caused bleeding and swelling in her brain, bleeding in the optic nerve, and internal bleeding in her abdomen. The medical examiner estimated that before she died, Kassidy received eight to ten blows to the head and at least two blows to the abdomen from a blunt force, such as a fist or a foot. Kassidy’s fatal head injuries were inflicted sometime within the twenty-four hours preceding her death.

In addition to her fatal injuries, Kassidy had numerous bruises and multiple fractures in various stages of healing. Most of the bruises were between eight and twelve hours old. None of the bruises on Kassidy’s face was consistent with being hit by a ball.

On the night of Kassidy’s death, the police interviewed Amanda, her sister, Marshall and the defendant. The defendant told the police the trampoline story to explain how he had once bruised Kassidy’s face. He also told them that she would sometimes “throw herself in the comer or throw herself into the wall” or run and “slam right into” a comer. He stated that Kassidy was “clumsy” and constantly walked into things like his coffee table. That night, Amanda and the defendant spoke by telephone. Crying, Amanda told the defendant, “[Y]ou killed my baby; I know you did this; you wanted her dead.”

II. False Exculpatory Evidence Charge

The defendant assigns two errors to the court’s false exculpatory statement instruction. First, he argues that such an instruction constitutes [420]*420an impermissible comment on the evidence. Second, he argues that even if the instruction is permissible, the court should have broadened it to include false exculpatory statements made by Marshall.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
839 A.2d 8, 150 N.H. 416, 2003 N.H. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-evans-nh-2003.