State v. Michaux

647 S.E.2d 688, 185 N.C. App. 160, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 1760
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 7, 2007
DocketCOA06-1040
StatusPublished

This text of 647 S.E.2d 688 (State v. Michaux) 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. Michaux, 647 S.E.2d 688, 185 N.C. App. 160, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 1760 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v.
JAMES FRANKLIN MICHAUX, Defendant.

No. COA06-1040

Court of Appeals of North Carolina.

Filed August 7, 2007
This case not for publication

Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Special Deputy Attorney General James P. Longest, Jr., for the State.

Richard E. Jester for defendant-appellant.

GEER, Judge.

Defendant James Franklin Michaux appeals from his convictions for first degree murder of his seven-month-old son, J.T.M., and felony child abuse inflicting serious bodily injury. With respect to defendant's contentions on appeal regarding the admissibility of various testimony, we hold that defendant either himself elicited that testimony or has failed to demonstrate that he was prejudiced by the testimony. We have further concluded that, contrary to defendant's position, the trial court properly instructed the jury regarding admissions since statements made by defendant to his wife and to a social worker qualified as admissions. Accordingly, we hold defendant received a trial free of prejudicial error.

Facts

At trial, the State's evidence tended to show the following facts. In 2002, the Rockingham County Department of Social Services ("DSS") began providing treatment services to defendant; his wife, Serita Michaux; and their two young children. Later in 2002, Ms. Michaux gave birth to twins, one of whom was J.T.M. The social worker assigned to the family testified regarding defendant's domination of Ms. Michaux and his hostility to receiving assistance from DSS.

On one occasion, after J.T.M.'s birth, a restaurant owner, who had known defendant since he was a young boy, observed defendant playing too roughly with the child. After she told defendant, "you're going to hurt that baby," defendant responded: "It's my damn baby. I'll do what I want to." When defendant learned that an employee of the restaurant had urged Ms. Michaux to leave him, defendant threatened to slap the employee and said, "Bitch, . . . I'll burn your house down with you in it."

Following a DSS safety assessment during which defendant was "explosive," DSS concluded that the environment for defendant's children was "unsafe" and, on 25 October 2002, placed J.T.M. and his twin with a foster family. In mid-February 2003, defendant and Ms. Michaux were allowed to have the twins for intermittent trial placements. After one such trial placement, J.T.M. returned to the foster family with noticeable scabbing and bruise marks, including bruising on his abdomen, groin area, and the backs of his thighs. Nonetheless, on 24 March 2003, physical custody of the twins was restored to defendant and Ms. Michaux. Shortly thereafter, on 8 April 2003, J.T.M. was admitted to Morehead Memorial Hospital. Nurse Amy White and other hospital staff examined J.T.M. and observed that he suffered from critical dehydration, a rash on his bottom, and bloody tissue around his rectum. According to Nurse White, J.T.M. was not behaving like a six-month-old, but rather "more like two months" because "he wouldn't lift his head up[,] he wouldn't try to lift his arms[,] he wouldn't put his eyes on you . . .[;] [h]e was just totally weak." X-rays taken at that time showed fractures to J.T.M.'s ninth and eleventh ribs that could have been caused by squeezing or a blow.

On 15 May 2003, emergency personnel were dispatched to defendant's residence at about 10:30 p.m. for a "cardiac respiratory emergency." When Chief Frazier of the Colfax Fire Department arrived, Ms. Michaux directed him to the back room of the house where defendant was holding J.T.M. When Chief Frazier took the child, he found no pulse and began CPR. Paramedic David Wilkins of the Guilford County Emergency Medical Services attempted to intubate the child in order to provide a direct line of air into the child's lungs. There was no obstruction in the airway prior to the intubation attempt. When J.T.M. could not be revived at the scene, he was transported to High Point Regional Hospital.

When the child arrived shortly after 11:00 p.m. at the hospital, Nurse Misty Hooper noticed that the baby had bruising on the left side of his head, down the left side of his abdomen, on his right lower back, on his leg, and around his diaper line. The child's foot also appeared as if "several layers of skin . . . had been peeled back," and his rectum "was macerated . . . very abnormal appearing . . . [r]aw, almost." Defendant and Ms. Michaux were asked by hospital staff about J.T.M.'s medical history, but they refused to provide the hospital staff with any information. Emergency room physician Dr. David Fisher unsuccessfully tried to resuscitate J.T.M. and then pronounced the seven-month-old dead.

Defendant was subsequently interviewed at the hospital by Rhonda Oboh, a social worker with the Guilford County Department of Social Services. He told Ms. Oboh "that he was feeding the child and playing with the child and then the child all of a sudden went limp." Defendant claimed that "he went to stick the bottle in the baby's mouth, and that the child would not take the bottle, and that at that point he knew that something was wrong." Defendant stated that he panicked, attempted CPR, and began tapping the child on his stomach, legs, and chest in order to get the child to respond.

Dr. John D. Butts, Chief Medical Examiner for the State of North Carolina, performed an autopsy of the victim on 16 May 2003. Dr. Butts observed a number of injuries on the child's body: bruises on the chin, forehead, chest, lower abdomen, and legs; tissue loss on the heel; both fresh and healing fractures to several ribs; and bruising in the wall of the small bowel and mesentery. Dr. Butts believed that "these injuries are all blunt force injuries," that "a child of this age isn't capable of incurring these injuries by itself," and that they "were caused by another party." Based on his findings, Dr. Butts concluded that the victim exhibited signs of "battered child syndrome."

In September 2004, defendant was indicted for felony child abuse inflicting serious bodily injury and first degree murder. A superseding indictment on the felony child abuse charge was filed in August 2005. The case proceeded to trial during the 31 October 2005 criminal session of Guilford County Superior Court.

Ms. Michaux, who was herself indicted on murder and child abuse charges, testified at defendant's trial pursuant to a plea agreement. According to Ms. Michaux, on the morning of J.T.M.'s death, she and defendant went to court and regained legal custody of their four children. Later in the day, the family accompanied defendant to his workplace. When the family returned home around 10:00 p.m., Ms. Michaux saw defendant take J.T.M. into the bedroom. After putting food in the oven for the older two children, Ms. Michaux went back to the bedroom and saw defendant choking the victim with his left hand. Ms. Michaux testified that she told defendant to stop, but defendant replied "it was his kid[,] he could do what he wanted to."

Ms. Michaux left the room to get laundry. She then heard defendant yell that the baby was not breathing. In response, Ms. Michaux called 911. According to Ms. Michaux, defendant instructed her to never tell anyone about what happened the night of J.T.M.'s death. Ms. Michaux testified further that she did not tell the emergency personnel about defendant's choking J.T.M. because she was scared of her husband. She stated that her husband had, in the past, choked her, threatened her with a jigsaw, kicked her in the leg with steel-toed boots, broken a picture over her head, thrown a glass at her, and hit her in the stomach when she was pregnant with the twins.

During her testimony, Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
647 S.E.2d 688, 185 N.C. App. 160, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 1760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-michaux-ncctapp-2007.