State v. Hupp

809 P.2d 1207, 248 Kan. 644, 1991 Kan. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 15, 1991
Docket65035
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 809 P.2d 1207 (State v. Hupp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hupp, 809 P.2d 1207, 248 Kan. 644, 1991 Kan. LEXIS 82 (kan 1991).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ABBOTT, J.:

This is a direct appeal by defendant Mark Hupp from his conviction by a jury of first-degree murder based upon a killing committed in the perpetration of the abuse of a child, K.S.A. 1989 Supp. 21-3401(c).

Hupp contends that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on lesser included offenses and that K.S.A. 21-3609 is unconstitutionally vague in that it does not reasonably convey a sufficient warning as to the conduct which is proscribed.

Michael Cloud was three and one-half months old when he died of a severe blow to his head. Michael was born on June 9, 1989, to Debbie Tenbrink. When Debbie was eight months pregnant, she started dating Mark Hupp. Mark and Debbie were married on June 30, 1989.

Mark was 21 years old at the time of Michael’s death. Mark had been a hyperactive child. At the age of 10 or 11, Mark was removed from his home by SRS and placed in a group home. *646 He was then admitted to the Topeka State Hospital for about two years and then transferred to the Parsons State Hospital until he was 18.

On July 8, 1989, Michael was admitted to Stormont-Vail Regional Medical Center because of several unexplained bruises on his left shoulder and upper back and the left side of his neck. Mark initially told a social worker at the hospital that he was unable to explain how the bruises occurred, but later Mark said he supposed that Michael got pinched between the frame of the waterbed and the mattress where he and Michael had been sleeping the previous night. The social worker reported her suspicions of child abuse to the SRS.

Debbie testified that on July 7, 1989, she, Mark, and Michael had spent the night at Mark’s mother’s house. Michael woke up at 1:30 a.m. and was placed next to Mark on the bed. At approximately 3 a.m., Michael woke up crying again. Debbie testified she fixed Michael a bottle, returned, and gave it to Mark, who started feeding Michael. Debbie then noticed the bruises on Michael. She testified she had no idea how they occurred.

The doctor who examined Michael at the hospital for these bruises was of the opinion that the bruises were not accidental.

Michael spent several days in the hospital and was then placed in a foster home by SRS.

Dustin Koelliker, a friend of Debbie’s, who had lived with the Hupps at several different time periods, testified at trial that Debbie gave him inconsistent explanations for the bruises and why Michael was in SRS custody. He testified that at one point when Mark was present, she told him that Michael was injured in a car accident. He testified that Debbie later told him, while Mark was not present, that she had been in the room with Mark and Michael, had left, and returned to find Mark shaking the baby. Koelliker also testified that he had seen Mark “tap” Michael on his bottom too hard.

A number of people at the hospital testified that Mark’s behavior with the baby was inappropriate. Laurie O’Shea-Parsons, a social worker at the hospital, observed that Mark kept asking nurses, “When can we make him go to sleep?” and “Why is he crying?” Several nurses saw Mark repeatedly try to make Michael take the pacifier when he was already asleep. He would pat the *647 sleeping baby hard enough to wake him up. The nurses had to tell him to leave the baby alone. When personnel were trying to draw blood from Michael, Mark yelled at Michael for crying.

When Michael was in the hospital on another occasion, one nurse saw Mark try to hold Michael’s head down in order to force him to go to sleep.

The Hupps were referred for psychological testing. The psychologist testified that when Mark came into his office, he picked up the padded arm which had broken off of a chair and said that it looked like “something that he could discipline his kids with.”

A resident in the Hupps’ apartment complex testified that he would hear a baby crying in the Hupps’ apartment, and then he would hear Mark telling the baby to shut up.

Michael died on September 28, 1989. Debbie testified that on the night of September 27, 1989, Michael slept in his crib in the bedroom. She testified that she and Mark stayed up all night playing cards and Nintendo. She testified that at 6:30 a.m., Mark went to rent videotapes. She testified that when he returned, they both watched one tape, and she watched half of another while Mark went to bed.

Debbie testified that she started to go to bed and stopped to check Michael’s heart monitor and noticed that it had gone off and was on “slow heart.” (Michael suffered from sleep apnea.) Debbie testified that Michael was okay, but that the alarm went off and Mark woke up. She testified she asked Mark if she should fix Michael a bottle and that she then went into the kitchen to do so. She testified that she heated the bottle by running it under hot water, so it took ten to fifteen minutes.

Debbie testified that while fixing the bottle, she did not hear any noises from the bedroom until Mark yelled her name and she returned to the bedroom. She testified that Mark told her he had picked up Michael from the crib and that he was wiggling around and had fallen to the floor. Debbie testified that something was obviously wrong with Michael, that there was a knot on the right side of his head that was growing larger. She testified that she saw Michael was not crying and that when she spoke to him he did not look up at her.

*648 Debbie testified that because they did not have a phone, Mark ran to a nearby phone to call an ambulance while she fixed an ice pack.

An off-duty paramedic heard the call and was first to arrive. He testified Debbie was in the corner crying and that Mark repeated his story about dropping Michael. The paramedic said Michael’s condition was critical—that he was suffering from some form of a central nervous system dysfunction or a head injury. He noted a large hematoma on Michael’s head.

When Michael arrived at the hospital, he was in critical condition. His blood pressure kept dropping and he stopped breathing. A C.T. scan showed a depressed skull fracture. The physicians operated immediately to elevate the bone and take the pressure off of Michael’s brain. Michael was in a coma by the time the operation started, and suffered cardiac arrest repeatedly during the two-hour operation. Michael died soon after.

One of the physicians who treated Michael, Dr. Poulton, had intensively studied injuries to children resulting from abuse. He testified that the injury to Michael could not have occurred in the manner in which Mark claimed. The floor at the Hupps’ apartment was concrete and covered with padding and carpeting. Poulton testified that an infant’s skull is extremely flexible, and that a fall from three to four feet onto such a soft floor could not cause such an injury. He testified that a severe blow is required to fracture an infant’s skull.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
809 P.2d 1207, 248 Kan. 644, 1991 Kan. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hupp-kan-1991.