State v. Halley

691 S.E.2d 766, 202 N.C. App. 771, 2010 N.C. App. LEXIS 461
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 2, 2010
DocketCOA09-1051
StatusPublished

This text of 691 S.E.2d 766 (State v. Halley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Halley, 691 S.E.2d 766, 202 N.C. App. 771, 2010 N.C. App. LEXIS 461 (N.C. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA,
v.
JAMES NEAL HALLEY, Defendant.

No. COA09-1051.

Court of Appeals of North Carolina.

Filed March 2, 2010.
This case not for publication

Roy Cooper, Attorney General, by Mary Carla Hollis, Assistant Attorney General, for the State.

Parish, Cooke & Condlin, by James R. Parish, for defendant-appellant.

MARTIN, Chief Judge.

Defendant was indicted for one count of felony child abuse inflicting serious bodily injury and was found guilty by a jury. At a subsequent sentencing proceeding, the jury also found as an aggravating factor that "[t]he victim was very young." The trial court entered judgment sentencing defendant in the aggravated range to a minimum of 84 months and a maximum of 110 months imprisonment. Defendant gave notice of appeal.

The State's evidence tended to show that on 25 July 2007, defendant was left alone to care for K.M., a minor child, while her mother was at work. When the mother's stepbrother, Kevin Alexander, came home, defendant said, "Look at [K.M.'s] hands. She burned them on the swing." K.M.'s hands were blistered and K.M. was crying and appeared to be in pain. Mr. Alexander thought that the child needed to go to the hospital. Mr. Alexander testified that defendant seemed nervous because he said, "With what's going on in Pitt County, they're going to think I done something." Mr. Alexander, K.M., and defendant went to K.M.'s mother's workplace. Defendant told K.M.'s mother that K.M. had burned her hands on the swings at the park. Defendant, K.M., and Mr. Alexander then met Mr. Alexander's mother, Lydia Barnhardt, near her home. Mrs. Barnhardt described K.M.'s hands as "real high in blisters" and "oozing." She also stated that defendant seemed nervous. When Mrs. Barnhardt insisted that K.M. go to the hospital immediately, defendant said, "With everything going on in Pitt County, do you really think this is necessary?" Mrs. Barnhardt said yes and took K.M. to the hospital.

At the hospital, defendant told personnel that K.M. had burned herself on the swings. The emergency room doctor noted that defendant's explanation was inconsistent with K.M.'s wounds. K.M.'s burns appeared to be second or possibly third-degree burns. Dr. John David Hoover, a pediatric surgeon who examined K.M., testified that the burns would have been very painful. Dr. Hoover also believed defendant's account did not match K.M.'s injuries. He testified that grasping the swing set chains would not produce the burns, and a neurologically normal child, like K.M., would not stay in contact with a hot surface long enough to create these kinds of burns.

K.M. was transferred to the Jaycee Burn Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on 31 July 2007. At the Burn Center, K.M. received medication for pain and also underwent a process called debridement to remove dead skin, a process which is both painful and frightening to the child. Dr. Dana Hagele, a pediatrician specializing in child abuse and neglect, wrote in her assessment of the case that the "burn pattern does not appear to be consistent with a history of an accidental burn as provided by [defendant]" and that "this case is highly concerning for inflicted trauma, otherwise known as child physical abuse." She also noted in K.M.'s medical records that "a potential mechanism of injury could include . . . [K.M. being] restrained [and] forcibly immobilized against a hot object or held up against some other hot object. . . . Restraint against a hot surface resulting in a second degree burn would have met with considerable pain and child resistance." Dr. Hagele also testified that K.M.'s hospital stay was prolonged.

Once K.M. was discharged from the Burn Center, she saw a nurse practitioner employed by UNC Hospitals for follow-up visits. In the notes from a follow-up visit on 7 September 2007, K.M. complained of pain with a full extension of her hand and K.M.'s mother reported that the hands appeared tight and could not be stretched out fully. During the 7 December 2007 visit, the nurse practitioner noted "pulling with flexion," "tightness," and that "contractions to the left hand are worsening." K.M. also saw a plastic surgeon, Dr. Charles Scott Holtman, who assessed whether K.M. would need surgery for the management of a hand contracture, a deficit "in function caused by scarring that limits the range of motion of a joint." Dr. Holtman noted at K.M.'s 7 January 2008 visit that K.M. had hypertrophic scars on both hands and deeper contractures which limited her range of motion. On 17 December 2008, despite treatment, K.M. still had a significant contracture and impairment of her hand. Dr. Holtman thought she would benefit from surgery to "release these contractures, resurface the hand and optimize her function." The procedure would require a skin graft, the insertion of metal pins, six weeks in a splint, removal of the pins, and six weeks of intensive physical therapy. Dr. Holtman testified that K.M.'s injury was permanent, that she has "scarring that will be present for the rest of her life," and that she has a current loss of function. Additionally, he testified, "she may have close to normal hand function some day, but it would be unlikely that she would have full ability or use of her hand."

While she was in the hospital, K.M. said that she had been burned on the swing. However, after she was released from the hospital, K.M. told Mr. Alexander that defendant "had burned her on the stove and it hurt really bad." K.M. also told Mrs. Barnhardt that defendant had burned her on the stove and told her maternal grandfather, Rodney Barnhardt, that defendant had hurt her. K.M. also told her paternal grandmother, Lisa Murray, that defendant burned her and when questioned K.M. demonstrated to her grandmother on a stool how defendant put her hands on a stove and burned her. Mrs. Barnhardt reported that after K.M. was released from the hospital, there was an incident in which K.M. seemed afraid of the stove. K.M.'s mother reported a similar incident of K.M. being fearful of the stove and stated that K.M. had told her, "Daddy James burned me on the stove." The Cabarrus County Department of Social Services ("DSS") investigated the incident and determined that K.M. could no longer have contact with defendant.

An officer with the Kannapolis Police Department and the DSS Investigator went to the park where the alleged burn took place and touched the swings on days that were as warm or warmer than the date of the injury. It was their opinion that K.M. could not have burned herself on the swings. A Kannapolis Park Manager also testified that this was the first time he had had a complaint of burns on the swings.

The State was also allowed to present evidence under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b) about a previous incident involving K.M. and defendant. The evidence concerning that incident tended to show that on the evening of 26 April 2007, the City of Greenville Fire Rescue responded to a call that a female was possibly seizing. The female was K.M. who was approximately two and half years old at the time. The child's mother was on the scene and told personnel that defendant had been watching the child while she was at work. K.M. was taken to the emergency room at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was diagnosed with acute water intoxication. Dr. Michael E. Reichel who attended to K.M. while she was in the hospital, spoke to both defendant and K.M.'s mother. Defendant told him that K.M. drank three cups of water over a two to three hour period. Dr. Reichel testified that defendant's account of what occurred was not consistent with the amount of water found in K.M.'s body. Dr. Reichel was also concerned because defendant did not immediately seek care for K.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
691 S.E.2d 766, 202 N.C. App. 771, 2010 N.C. App. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-halley-ncctapp-2010.