State v. Hughes

457 N.W.2d 25, 1990 Iowa App. LEXIS 42, 1990 WL 74609
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 27, 1990
Docket88-1716
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 457 N.W.2d 25 (State v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hughes, 457 N.W.2d 25, 1990 Iowa App. LEXIS 42, 1990 WL 74609 (iowactapp 1990).

Opinion

HABHAB, Judge.

Defendant Dexter Hughes appeals from his conviction, following a bench trial, of first-degree murder. Defendant raises two issues on appeal: (1) whether the trial court erred in admitting evidence of past instances of child abuse committed by defendant; and (2) whether the trial court erred in its determination that felony child endangerment could serve as the underlying felony for felony murder. We affirm.

On Labor Day, 1987, defendant left Mississippi with his girlfriend, Lisa Jennings, and his eight-month-old son, Devriek Jennings, and drove to St. Louis, where they intended to reside. However, almost immediately after their arrival in St. Louis, defendant decided to drive to Chicago, where his mother lived. While in Chicago, defendant saw his brother, Richard Brown. Brown was visiting Chicago from Waterloo. Defendant then decided to drive to Waterloo. Defendant, Jennings, and Dev-rick arrived in Waterloo the day after Labor Day. Jennings and Devriek stayed at the apartment of defendant’s brother’s girlfriend, Shirley Pickett, and defendant was housed by other relatives.

Soon after their arrival in Waterloo, Dev-rick developed a fever and diarrhea, which necessitated his being brought to the emergency room at Covenant Medical Center on both September 15 and 23. On September 25, 1987, Devriek was examined by Dr. Templemire and found to be suffering from a minor ear infection and fever. Other than those maladies, Devriek was in good health. After the examination, Jennings and Pickett stopped to have a prescription for Devriek filled and then returned to Pickett’s apartment.

When they arrived at Pickett’s apartment, Jennings took Devriek into a bedroom and gave him a dose of the prescription medicine, after which Jennings bottle fed Devriek. It was at this point, while Jennings was in the process of feeding Devriek, that defendant returned to the apartment. Jennings laid Devriek down for a nap, but Devriek soon thereafter started to cry. Jennings asked defendant to check on Devriek. Defendant entered the bedroom for a brief time, and Devriek quieted down. Defendant then exited the bedroom, but he had no more than stepped out when Devriek resumed crying. Defendant reentered the bedroom and, after one to two minutes, called for Jennings. Upon entering the bedroom, Jennings observed Devriek lying in a fetal position on a pallet of blankets on the floor of the bedroom. Defendant picked Devriek up and shook him, but Devriek was unresponsive. Dev-rick was then rushed to the emergency room at Covenant Medical Center and subsequently was transferred to University Hospitals in Iowa City, where he died.

*27 Dr. Templemire testified at trial that she diagnosed Devrick to be the victim of shaken baby syndrome. Medical personnel from University Hospitals concurred with Dr. Templemire’s diagnosis.

Dr. Randall C. Alexander was called as a witness for the prosecution. When he diagnosed the cause of Devrick’s death as shaken baby syndrome, he ruled out the possibility of accidental death. During the course of his testimony, he described shaken baby syndrome, or shaken infant whiplash syndrome, as follows:

It’s a condition that can occur in older people, tends to occur mostly in children under two years of age, often under one year of age in part because what the mechanism of injury is is to hold a child and shake them back and forth repeatedly which then will result in retinal hemorrhages, bleeding in the back of the eyes and bleeding within the brain most commonly actually just outside the brain between the brain and the skull itself.
The reason it happens in the younger children is a fairly simple one. It’s hard to pick up an older child and hold them and shake them back and forth. They just become too heavy. The older child can run away better, so they have a little bit better defense, and they also can control their neck better.
The problem with infants is that where one-eighths [sic] of our body length is our head length, alone, for a young infant one quarter of their body length is their head; so it’s as if an adult had a head twice as big but supported on the same size neck; so that when a child is picked up and shaken the repeated oscillations back and forth cause the skull that’s one of certain kind of density and the brain which is of a different density, they will start varying on how fast they go back and forth; and at one given moment the brain will be going one way and the skull will be going the opposite way. What we call bridging veins that go in between the two will be stretched to their limits, snapped; and then we’ll have the bleeding that we call subarach-noid or subdural hemorrhages. There can also be more direct injury right to the brain itself, occasionally in some cases to the spinal cord. The oscillations back and forth also seem to account for the retinal hemorrhages.

The trial court noted that the defendant’s defense at trial was that

Devrick’s death is the direct result of a previously unknown physical condition of the child, frontal brain atrophy, aggravated when the defendant after observing the child in the midst of a seizure caused by that condition shook the child to arouse him. The child’s death, the defense asserts, was an unknown, unfortunate and unforeseeable result of an act done by a concerned parent acting under stress who did not know the child’s true medical condition or the danger that shaking to arouse from a seizure presented under the circumstances.

To establish that the injuries of Devrick were not the result of a casual shaking but rather the result of a violent shaking, the State introduced evidence showing that Devrick suffered a severely-swollen brain, swelling about the eyes, bilateral subdural bleeding from the brain, subarachnoid bleeding, and subdural hematomas over the entire spinal cord, all of which were acute rather than chronic. Dr. Schelper, who performed the autopsy, when testifying that the shaking required to cause such injuries was not casual, testified:

[T]his would be a substantial shaking. We’re not talking about patting on the back or ... a little rattling. We’re talking about such a significant shaking that the head is being forcefully bounced from the chest and then all the way back to hit against the back and then bounced back and forth like this. That kind of rhythmic to and fro motion is what causes the brain and the skull to get out of synchrony with each other because every time the skull hits the chest wall, or at least it stops accelerating forward, then the skull stops but the brain continues to move forward for a little while now. On top of that the head becomes pulled backwards by this to and fro shaking so that the brain will eventually begin to get this to and fro rocking.... *28 [T]hat requires a reasonable substantial physical effort to shake something that weighs a number of pounds hard enough to get that type of motion.

I.

Our review is on assigned errors of law. Iowa R.App.P. 4. The main thrust of the defendant's appeal centers around that part of the State’s evidence which revealed that in May of 1987 defendant had been responsible for injuries to his twin boys, Damion and Devon, caused by shaking. In this respect, Iowa Rule of Evidence 404(b) provides in relevant part:

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Bluebook (online)
457 N.W.2d 25, 1990 Iowa App. LEXIS 42, 1990 WL 74609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hughes-iowactapp-1990.