State v. Swafford

520 P.2d 1151, 21 Ariz. App. 474, 1974 Ariz. App. LEXIS 353
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedApril 5, 1974
Docket2 CA-CR 347
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 520 P.2d 1151 (State v. Swafford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Swafford, 520 P.2d 1151, 21 Ariz. App. 474, 1974 Ariz. App. LEXIS 353 (Ark. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

OPINION

HOWARD, Judge.

Appellants were charged with the unlawful killing of their two and one-half *477 months’ old son, James, in violation of A. R.S. §§ 13-456 and 457(A), as amended. The jury returned a verdict as to both of guilty of involuntary manslaughter and this appeal followed.

In the month of April, 1972, the defendants lived in a trailer with their three children James, Brian, age three and Christina, age one and one-half. The trailer next to defendants was occupied by a young couple, Sharon and Preston Bullock who had become acquainted with the defendants.

On April 4 or 5, 1972, Preston Bullock’s mother, Heather, came to visit the younger Bullocks. Thirty-four years previously, Heather had been an English nanny, which is a professional children’s nurse who works in private homes taking care of infants. The training of the English nanny consists of instruction under a registered nurse for six weeks and on-the-job training under a qualified nanny for about three months. She had been employed as a nanny for about four years and also did volunteer work for the welfare department in London. After she was married and throughout the years she cared for children of working mothers.

Having heard that the Swaffords had a baby, Heather asked if she could see him. Upon seeing him she was immediately impressed by his appearance. In response to Heather’s inquiry Marilyn Swafford stated that James weighed five pounds and fourteen ounces at birth. Heather then weighed the baby on a scale in the Bullock trailer and discovered that he weighed only six pounds. Heather told Mrs. Swafford that she thought the baby was terribly thin and asked what the baby was being fed. Mrs. Swafford replied that he was being fed with Similac, baby cereal and sugar. Heather then inquired as to the daily bowel movements of the baby and was told that he had eight or nine. Heather informed Marilyn that this was too many for a child of that age and advised her to eliminate the sugar from his diet. She also told her that something was wrong with the baby, that he needed medical attention and that if a doctor were to suggest vitamins for the baby she would buy the vitamins if the Swaffords could not afford to do so. In further describing the baby, Heather stated that the child’s jawline did not appear to be normally developed, there was no substance to his body anywhere at all and the skin appeared just like “thin plastic over bone”.

Because of lack of transportation and her own telephone Heather waited two days until a telephone was installed at her residence and called the welfare department. It was not until April 11, 1972, that she was finally able to contact the supervisor of nurses. Heather told her that the baby needed immediate attention; that he looked worse than “the babies you see on television for the Biafra Fund”; that she had never seen anything like it in her life; that she told the mother to take the child to the doctor but did not think that she had done so; and that she did not think that the baby would last for three more weeks. 1

Subsequent to the call to welfare and prior to April 26, 1972, Heather visited her son’s trailer and on one occasion saw Mrs. Swafford. Mrs. Swafford told her the baby was doing better since she had taken him off the sugar and was having only two bowel movements a day. However, she had not yet taken him to see a doctor. When Mrs. Swafford said she was going to see a gynecologist the next day, Heather suggested that she take the baby with her in hopes that the gynecologist would refer the baby to a good pediatrician. Heather even offered to babysit for the Swaffords — her plan being that she would then take the baby to a doctor.

On April 26, 1972, Heather visited her son. She and her husband had devised a plan whereby they were going to invite the Swaffords to a barbecue and beer party at their home and while they were at the house, Heather would get the baby and take him to a doctor. As this plan was *478 being discussed with the younger Bullocks, Mrs. Swafford came banging on the door of the trailer yelling for them to call an ambulance and crying that the baby had stopped breathing. Heather exited from the trailer and met Mr. Swafford coming towards her with the baby in his arms. The baby was taken into the Bullocks’ trailer where Heather laid the baby on the floor and started mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. She thought the baby was dead but finally got him to start breathing, although in a very irregular fashion. All during this time the Swaffords appeared to be extremely .upset and distraught. The ambulance finally came and took the baby and his parents to the hospital.

While the baby was at the hospital the younger Bullocks and Heather undertook to care for the two other children, Brian and Christina. While Sharon Bullock put the children in the bathtub at the Bullock trailer, Heather went to the Swafford trailer to find some night clothes for them. In the trailer she saw a small car bed in which she found a baby bottle. When she picked the bottle up, its contents did not move. The milk in the bottle was so sour that she had to shake firmly to make it move into the bottom of the bottle. The nipple of the bottle was mildewed. Preston Bullock, who had accompanied Heather to the trailer, described the contents of the bottle as smelling sour and looked to him like cottage cheese that was moldy around the bottom. Heather searched the trailer and could not find any milk or Similac. She asked her son to get his camera and she took pictures of the inside of the trailer. According to Preston the trailer smelled badly. When she failed to find clothing for Brian and Christina, Sharon Bullock washed the clothes they had been wearing when she took them to her trailer. That evening the children ate at the Bullocks. According to Preston Bullock they ate as if they were hungry.

Preston Bullock testified that prior to the 26th he heard the baby crying and heard defendant Dennis Swafford shout to his wife to shut the kid up or else he would. He described the crying as sounding like a moan. He was of the opinion that the Swafford children were skinny.

The baby was first taken to St. Joseph’s Hospital and then transferred to Tucson Medical Center where he was initially seen by a pediatrician, Dr. James W. LaBelle. Upon examination Dr. LaBelle found that the baby had no fat or tissue in the face area. His eyes were sunken and he had an extreme “old man look”. The baby’s genitals were excoriated with diaper rash. According to the doctor, he was more emaciated and malnourished than any other child he had ever seen.

When the child was brought into the emergency room at St. Joseph’s, an intravenous cutdown was placed in his leg and he was given plasma. His respiration was very shallow, one to two per minute, and his temperature was approximately 94°. As soon as the body started breathing at a rate of about twelve per minute, he was transferred to Tucson Medical Center where several laboratory tests were performed. The spinal tap was essentially normal at that time. A blood count showed that the child’s hemoglobin was low and a transfusion of whole blood and antibiotics was given. When Dr. LaBelle first saw him, the baby was having frequent seizures and convulsions. This indicated to the doctor that the child had suffered brain damage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
520 P.2d 1151, 21 Ariz. App. 474, 1974 Ariz. App. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-swafford-arizctapp-1974.