State v. Overby

643 S.E.2d 679, 183 N.C. App. 158, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 992
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMay 1, 2007
DocketCOA06-384
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 643 S.E.2d 679 (State v. Overby) 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. Overby, 643 S.E.2d 679, 183 N.C. App. 158, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 992 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v.
MARSHALL DARRELL OVERBY

No. COA06-384

Court of Appeals of North Carolina.

Filed May 1, 2007
This case not for publication

Attorney General Roy A. Cooper, III, by Assistant Attorney General Linda Kimbell, for the State.

John T. Hall, for defendant.

JACKSON, Judge.

At approximately 2:00 in the afternoon on 17 February 2005, Sergeant Jeff McCormick ("Sergeant McCormick") of the Wadesboro Police Department responded to a report expressing concern about a child inside a van parked at the Feed My Lambs ministry. Sergeant McCormick, along with two other officers from the Wadesboro Police Department, found Marshall Overby ("defendant") in the van with a two-year-old, male child, later identified as R.P. Officers noticed that R.P. was sitting in a car seat resting on the floor between the two front seats, and that the car seat was not strapped down.

At trial, Sergeant McCormick explained,

When I first noticed the child, I could tell he had a knot on his forehead, which has [sic] bruising around it. Also both of his eyes up under them was [sic] black and blue. I noticed, I think it might have been his right ear, it looked like it had on the top where it looked like to me maybe cigarette burns. The child's left ear was [sic] bruising around the outside and on the inside of it.

Sergeant McCormick addressed defendant and inquired about the cause of the child's condition. Defendant explained that in the process of moving a child's play table, the table had fallen on R.P. Sergeant McCormick became suspicious and suggested that a table falling on the child could not have caused the type and number of injuries on the child. Consequently, Sergeant McCormick contacted emergency medical services ("EMS"), and also radioed the police dispatcher and requested that the Department of Social Services ("DSS") be contacted.

Teresa Morton ("Morton") with Anson County EMS arrived at the scene to investigate the child's injuries. Defendant became upset and stated that "he didn't see that the child needed to be checked." Defendant was holding R.P. and refusing to turn him over to the police officers. Morton explained that defendant "was screaming to the top of his lungs that they were accusing him of beating his child." Defendant reluctantly turned the child over when officers informed him that they would take him into custody if he did not relinquish control of the child.

During her examination, Morton noted that

[t]he baby was very bruised, both eyes were black and blue. There was bruising all up both sides of his cheeks, his neck area. The left ear was completely purple and reddish tint inside and out, the whole back of it, with some dried blood inside of it. There was a large knot on the front of his forehead.

Morton also testified that R.P. "had several deformities throughout the top of his head that you could fee[l]." These "little knots" and "lacerations" could be seen and felt "throughout his entire head area, the top and back." Morton also discovered cigarette burn marks around the top of R.P.'s right ear, and Morton testified that the burn marks "were fresh looking, because they had dried blood around them."

After conducting the initial examination, Morton, along with her partner, Billy Gibson, and her supervisor, Scott Russell, brought R.P. into the back of the ambulance and helped R.P. change out of his clothes, which Morton described as "dirty" and "soaking wet." Morton testified that "[t]he front of the shirt that he had on looked like dried vomit, and I can say that because I have the medical training to describe that." The Feed My Lambs ministry provided clean clothes and clean diapers, which defendant initially refused. Morton explained that defendant "started cussing at the ladies in the ministry store concerning the clothes" and stating "that he wasn't going to take no . . . damned charity from anybody." Defendant eventually conceded, and while helping R.P. out of the soiled clothes, Morton found additional bruising on R.P.'s body — specifically, "on the chest area, the arms, the neck, the entire back area." Morton also discovered extensive bruising when she and her partner removed R.P.'s diaper.

When I went to remove the diaper, also which was soaked, I mean it was just completely soaked through, that's when he threw his little hands down to his straddle and started saying daddy hurts. And when I pulled the diaper back, that's when I seen all the red marks and the bruisings that was through his straddle and on his private area. Bruising all down his legs, most of them were the purplish tint to them. There was some that was older looking, which is the yellowish type. The back of his back down across his buttocks was like — I thought at first it was like marks from a hairbrush. It looked just like something that had hit him and left little, like little spike marks. And it was — it was all the way down across his buttocks, down the back of his legs, inside of his legs. We pulled his shoes off. He had blood on his socks, and there was marks on the bottom of his feet, the top of his feet, and there was some dried blood there also.

When Morton removed R.P.'s clothes, R.P. made comments such as "[R.P.] bad," "daddy hurts," and "clothes dirty." Based upon her findings, including the fact that many of the injuries appeared to have been "fresh looking," Morton determined that R.P. needed to be seen by other medical professionals at the hospital.

Joan Polk ("Polk") of DSS also arrived at the scene and entered the ambulance to meet with R.P. and the EMS workers. Polk saw that R.P. had two black eyes and "a V on his forehead that was bruised." She asked R.P. what his name was and attempted to make R.P. feel comfortable with her. Polk then conducted an examination and testified,

I felt knots all over his head that were swollen. And when I pulled his . . . bangs back on his forehead, . . . I saw the V more clearly, and it was bruised and it was swollen. I looked at his ears and he had burns on the outside of his earlobe on both ears, and his ears were just red and purple. It was blood. And there appeared to be marks, . . . bite marks by his right eye, and he had two black eyes, and there appeared to be a burn mark by his nostril. And there were more burn marks by his mouth . . . and he had bruises on his neck that were in various stages, anywhere from yellowish to green to purple. . . . His arms had bruises and scratches. His hands, his fingers, his chest. I turned him around, and the whole time I was doing this I kept talking to him, just trying to make him feel comfortable, and his back had bruises and marks, his chest, his belly, his legs. The only part of him that I did not see a mark on was his penis. Even his scrotum had . . . a red mark, appeared to be some type of bruise, hematoma.

Polk also noted that R.P.'s body was covered with fresh "oval-shaped" marks with dots. R.P. told her that "Daddy hurt," but Polk did not ask R.P. any questions at that time. Polk asked EMS to transport R.P. to the DSS office, and she asked the police to escort defendant to the DSS office. As the ambulance was driving away, R.P. stated, "Daddy gone" and "Daddy hurt."

At the DSS office, Polk gave R.P. some crackers, and based on the way he quickly devoured the crackers, she determined he was hungry and purchased some food for him. She stated that "he just took the food, he just grabbed it and shoved it in his mouth." Subsequently, Polk took the food away from R.P. and "g[a]ve it to him [in] smaller pieces so that he could eat that." Meanwhile, Polk examined the clothes that had been removed from R.P.

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Related

State v. Reaves
676 S.E.2d 74 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
643 S.E.2d 679, 183 N.C. App. 158, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-overby-ncctapp-2007.