State v. Hubmer

553 So. 2d 1056, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 2455, 1989 WL 146309
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 5, 1989
DocketNo. CR89-231
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 553 So. 2d 1056 (State v. Hubmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hubmer, 553 So. 2d 1056, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 2455, 1989 WL 146309 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinions

YELVERTON, Judge.

Richard Hubmer, Sr., 23 year old father of a 15 month old boy, was convicted by a jury of manslaughter in the child’s death. The child died at their home near Leesville, Louisiana, on December 26 or 27, 1987. The trial judge sentenced the defendant to imprisonment at hard labor for 12 years. The defendant appeals both the conviction and the sentence on the basis of six assignments of error: (1) insufficiency of the evidence, (2) an improper jury charge, (3) the allowance of inadmissible testimony, (4) failure to grant a mistrial, (5) restrictions on the scope of the opening statement, and (6) an excessive sentence.

We affirm the conviction and the sentence for the following reasons.

(1)

SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

Defendant and his wife lived in a small house in a populated area near Leesville. They had a 2¾⅞ year old daughter and a 15 month old son. Defendant was in the army.

Five or six days before the child’s death the Louisiana Office of Human Development investigated a complaint of neglect of the children. Larry Rooker, a Social Service supervisor, testified that some neglect was found, but that it was corrected and the children were left with their parents.

At six o’clock on the evening of December 26, Hubmer was eating supper at the kitchen table with his two children. The mother, Donna, was standing at the stove. She heard but did not see several hard slaps inflicted on the 15 month old boy by his father. Hubmer testified that he slapped his child’s hand five times, part of an effort to train the child to eat with a spoon. The mother testified that, although she did not see where the blows were inflicted, she immediately remonstrated with her husband concerning the severity and number of the slaps. She testified that the child cried only for a short time.

Donna Hubmer testified that she later changed the children and put them to bed in their bedroom at 9:15 p.m. A space heater in the bedroom was lit because it was chilly.

At about 10:30 she heard her son whine once, and told her husband to check on him, but she could not recall whether her husband had in fact checked on the child. Both father and mother testified that at some point before midnight, Hubmer went across the street to use a telephone (the [1058]*1058couple did not have a telephone) and placed collect calls to his grandmother and his mother in Minnesota. Hubmer testified that he was gone from the house from an hour to an hour and a half. Mrs. Hubmer testified that she did not go in the children’s bedroom during her husband’s absence.

At 1:20 or 1:30 a.m. on Sunday, December 27, according to Donna Hubmer’s testimony she went into the bedroom and turned on the light to check the children. They appeared to be all right, she turned off the light, closed the door, and she and her husband went to bed.

Sometime during the night the little girl got up and joined her parents in their bed. The next morning, at 10:00 or 10:15 a.m., the little girl woke up her mother who then went into the children’s bedroom to check on the infant. The door was shut and inside the room it was very hot. She went to the crib and discovered that the baby was blue and appeared dead. When she ran back into her bedroom and awakened her husband, he told her to run across the street and call an ambulance and then to wait on the front porch for the ambulance and police.

Hubmer testified in his defense. Substantially, his testimony was the same as that of his wife, with a few differences. One of these was a denial that she asked him to check on the kids at around 10:30 on the night of December 26. Hubmer explained that he never checked on them at night; she always did that.

He testified that his wife spanked the child and slapped him on the fact and back when she got angry, and that on occasion she disciplined the children excessively. He said that he had talked to her about that quite a few times.

Both the father and the mother testified that no one else was at the house that night. They testified that they had no explanation for the bruises that appeared on the right side of the child’s head as shown by the photographs later taken in the funeral home.

Dr. Chanh Vinh was on duty in the emergency room at Byrd Memorial Hospital in Leesville when the ambulance came with the body. He testified that the body was warm but that the child had been dead a long while. He found evidence that the body had been deliberately warmed up. He thought the redness on the buttocks happened after the baby was dead, perhaps from submersion in hot water, or direct bodily contact with another heat source. In his opinion the heat of the body could not have been caused by the heater in the room. There were bruises in the area of the buttocks and the right side of the head. There was red area below the right eye, which he said was a neurological sign of a skull fracture. He ordered skull x-rays. The body had an odor of death. Suspecting child abuse, he directed the emergency room supervisor to notify Fort Polk officials and the Child Protection Agency.

Dr. John Epling, a radiologist on the staff of Byrd Hospital, testified that he took x-rays requested by Dr. Vinh, while the body was still in the hospital and before it was taken to the funeral home. He testified that those x-rays revealed a fracture of the skull on the right side, and some soft tissue swelling over the right side of the skull.

From the emergency room the body was released to the funeral home for embalmment and transportation to Minnesota. Danson Trotti, a mortician, began the embalming process. He testified that he was suspicious when he first saw the body and that he called his suspicions to the sheriff’s attention. From his contact with the sheriff, he knew that the sheriff was going to follow up on the investigation. Nevertheless, he began the embalming process because he could see no way that this would impede or interfere with the investigation of the bruises. According to this witness, this was standard procedure, and he would have done it even had he known that within three or four hours the body would be transported to Shreveport for an autopsy.

The body was transported to Shreveport where an autopsy was performed on December 28, 1987, by Dr. George M. McCormick, II, a forensic pathologist and coroner of Caddo Parish. He testified at the trial [1059]*1059that the embalming process, which was incomplete, did not affect his autopsy or his conclusions. His conclusions were that the head injury was made while the baby was alive, and that the blistering of the skin in the buttocks area was a result of decomposition, occurring after the baby had died. There was brain hemorrhage beneath the scalp that extended down to the skull itself, and there was also a bruise of the brain. His most significant finding was on the right side of the head, a finding consistent with a blow or slap to the head. He testified that the difference between brain damage from a fall on the head and a blow to the head is this: “If you fall and hit your head the damage itself is on the opposite side from the point of impact, whereas if you are struck on the head, the injury to the brain is on the same side as the point of impact”. This precept he described as “a relatively solid rule of pathology”. In the present case he testified that the injury was on the right side and the bruise, the point of impact, was on the same side.

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Related

State v. Hurst
606 So. 2d 965 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1992)
State v. Hubmer
560 So. 2d 11 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
553 So. 2d 1056, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 2455, 1989 WL 146309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hubmer-lactapp-1989.