Cody Wayne McKay v. State ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •                     In The
    Court of Appeals
    Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana
    No. 06-14-00003-CR
    CODY WAYNE MCKAY, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 196th District Court
    Hunt County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 29032
    Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.
    Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Morriss
    Dissenting Opinion by Justice Moseley
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    A nightmarish accident, in which two-year-old Tristyn Jones was badly burned over most
    of her back, formed the basis for the Hunt County prosecution and conviction of Cody Wayne
    McKay for injury to a child through an action of criminal negligence. 1 This case raises the
    difficult question of whether McKay’s act of cooking vegetables in a small kitchen and carrying
    them from one work surface to another, while a toddler was unconfined somewhere in the living
    space, posed a substantial and unjustifiable risk of injury to the toddler of which McKay ought to
    have been aware. While this Court fears that a similar nightmare could easily play out in many
    kitchens across Texas, we conclude on this record that legally sufficient evidence supports the
    jury’s verdict of guilt.
    The sole focus of this appeal is whether there is sufficient evidence to support the
    conviction. The act and injury are admitted, the question here is the legal sufficiency of the
    evidence to prove McKay’s criminal negligence. Although the State initially indicted McKay for
    serious bodily injury to a child and claimed it was intentional, it amended the indictment to
    delete “serious,” and the jury charge included multiple levels of lesser offenses, including the
    criminal negligence the jury found.
    The principal effort of, and thus the subject of much of the evidence produced by, the
    State in this prosecution suggested that McKay intended to injure Tristyn. Because the State
    tried to prove intentional injury to a child, we find ourselves with a challenging mission—to
    review this record for evidence tending to support the finding of criminal negligence.
    1
    McKay was sentenced to two years in a state jail facility.
    2
    Bodily injury to a child is a third-degree felony if committed intentionally or knowingly,
    and a state jail felony if committed recklessly. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.04(a), (e) (West
    Supp. 2014); Villanueva v. State, 
    227 S.W.3d 744
    , 748 n.17 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). For it to be
    an offense, criminally negligent injury to a child must be by an affirmative act. See TEX. PENAL
    CODE ANN. § 22.04(a); 
    Villanueva, 227 S.W.3d at 748
    n. 17. By contrast, criminally negligent
    injury to a child by omission 2 is not an offense at all. 
    Villanueva, 227 S.W.3d at 748
    n.17.
    A person acts with criminal negligence when he or she takes some action—like cooking
    beans on a stove top and transferring those scalding hot beans across the kitchen—and ought to
    be aware of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the result—in this case, injury to a child—
    will occur. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 6.03(d) (West 2011); Keener v. State, 
    424 S.W.3d 196
    ,
    200 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2014, no pet. h.). “The risk must be of such a nature and degree that
    the failure to perceive it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care that an ordinary
    person would exercise under all the circumstances as viewed from the actor’s standpoint.” TEX.
    PENAL CODE ANN. § 6.03(d).
    Against that standard, we review the evidence in this record.
    The kitchen in which the incident occurred is a small, narrow, galley kitchen with the
    stove and refrigerator on one side and the sink and cabinet space on the other. The evening of
    the accident, McKay was in the kitchen cooking, and Tristyn was in the apartment playing.
    While McKay was “trying to make plates,” Tristyn “ran through” the kitchen. McKay turned
    around, not knowing that Tristyn was behind him, and tripped over her. McKay knew that
    2
    An omission is a failure to act. TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 1.07(a)(34) (West Supp. 2014).
    3
    “Tristyn was running around playing but didn’t know she had come into the kitchen.” Tristyn
    was “running behind” or was “behind” McKay while he was cooking green beans on the stove
    top. When he turned with the pot of beans, “Tristyn was behind him and he tripped over her.”
    An assessment by Child Protective Services (CPS) was that McKay was not an
    appropriate caregiver and “not fully aware of what he was doing.”
    The State makes much of what steps were taken, omitted, or delayed after the accident,
    but we do not see how inaction or delay after the accident helps establish criminal negligence in
    causing the accident. A large part of the State’s evidence is intended to show that McKay’s
    injuring Tristyn was intentional, but the jury appears to have discounted that evidence, and we
    are not called on to review that result.
    As a result of the accident, Tristyn was burned over a large portion of her back,
    photographs of which were introduced at trial showing a large area that was extremely red and in
    places was blistered. As feared by Brandee Casteel, Tristyn’s mother, CPS got involved, took
    both children away from her, and sought to terminate her parental rights, evidently based solely
    on this incident.
    In reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence, we review all the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the jury’s verdict to determine whether any rational jury could have found the
    essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Brooks v. State, 
    323 S.W.3d 893
    ,
    912 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (citing Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979)); Hartsfield v.
    State, 
    305 S.W.3d 859
    , 863 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2010, pet. ref’d).            Sufficiency of the
    evidence is measured by the elements of the offense as defined by a hypothetically correct jury
    4
    charge. Malik v. State, 
    953 S.W.2d 234
    , 240 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997). The hypothetically correct
    jury charge “sets out the law, is authorized by the indictment, does not unnecessarily increase the
    State’s burden of proof or unnecessarily restrict the State’s theories of liability, and adequately
    describes the particular offense for which the defendant was tried.” 
    Id. Here, the
    State must have proven that McKay, with criminal negligence, by act, caused
    bodily injury to Tristyn. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.04(a)(3). The State proposes a
    number of different reasons why it believes the evidence is sufficient to show that McKay was
    criminally negligent. The State suggests McKay should have been aware that cooking hot items,
    or boiling water on a stove was criminally negligent when a child was in the house. Backing up
    from that position, the State also suggests that his action of moving the pan full of hot water and
    green beans from sink to counter itself was criminally negligent. In both instances, our focus is
    on whether there is some evidence to allow the jury to have found that these actions created a
    substantial and unjustifiable risk that the result (the injury) would occur to a small child in the
    house.
    In argument, the State also tried to shift the jury’s attention away from the case at bar to a
    number of bruises that the child exhibited when examined. 3 The State also introduced over
    1,000 pages of reports generated by CPS in connection with this case and dumped those into the
    jury’s laps as exhibits. They were not used extensively or read to the jury, but were admitted
    into evidence and were available for it to read should it choose to do so.
    3
    As pointed out at trial, the bruises were numerous, but minor, and the various x-rays and other examinations by
    medical personnel revealed no broken bones and no healed breaks or fractures. The parties all testified that the girl
    played outside a lot and that, as well as falling down as a two-year-old is wont to do, their two dogs had both often
    knocked her down as part of their play.
    5
    There are very troubling aspects to this exercise. If it is criminally negligent to cook, or
    move hot food or water from one place to another, in a kitchen with small children in the
    vicinity, then most parents in the State who do not subsist on fast food alone might be said to be
    guilty of criminal negligence. Although a parent may attempt to keep track of where his or her
    child is as a matter of course, unless the child is confined in a particular space, those attempts
    will inevitably fail from time to time. This is not a situation where McKay turned, took several
    steps without looking, and tripped over the child. The space is very tight. The jury found no
    merit to the State’s efforts to prove that McKay intentionally or even recklessly poured boiling
    water and beans over the child. We are left with the strictures of criminal negligence.
    One unusual aspect to this record is that Casteel originally reported that she was the one
    who spilled hot beans on Tristyn, but later stated that the actor was McKay and otherwise that
    the accident had happened just like she had reported. In one, potentially vital, comment, she
    stated—when noting to investigators initially that she had tripped over Tristyn in the kitchen and
    burned her—that Tristyn is “always” “up her butt.” We understand that colloquialism to mean
    that Tristyn is “always” getting close at hand or under foot. Another way of saying that would
    be to say that, quite often, Tristyn was getting in the way of an adult in the living space. While
    the comment by Casteel, admitted into evidence, does not necessarily mean that Tristyn was also
    “always” under McKay’s feet, a fact-finder might so conclude. McKay had lived with Casteel
    and her children approximately two and one-half months at the time of the accident. Because of
    this state of the record, we conclude that the jury, if it so decided, was authorized to find that
    McKay knew or should have known that Tristyn was “always” underfoot in the residence.
    6
    In the end result, beyond the common situation in which toddlers are loose in a residence,
    we are faced with the comment from Casteel suggesting that it was normal for Tristyn to be
    under foot in the kitchen. Given that, the jury could also have concluded that, charged with that
    knowledge, McKay was criminally negligent to have moved the hot pot of beans across the space
    without first checking to see if Tristyn was, again, under foot.       The evidence was legally
    sufficient to support the conviction.
    We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Josh R. Morriss, III
    Chief Justice
    DISSENTING OPINION
    In this matter, it is plain to see that the State made a very strong case that Cody Wayne
    McKay was an inept, ineffective, and inattentive sitter for a small child. That, however, is not
    the crime with which McKay was charged.             Rather, McKay was charged with having
    intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly caused bodily injury to Tristyn Jones, a child under
    fourteen years of age, by pouring boiling water on her head or scalding her.
    McKay has appealed, claiming an insufficiency in the evidence to sustain the conviction.
    There is no question pertaining to the role played by an appellate court in reviewing a challenge
    to the legal sufficiency of the evidence. That test is, “‘Once a defendant has been found guilty of
    the crime charged, the factfinder’s role as weigher of the evidence is preserved through a legal
    conclusion that upon judicial review all of the evidence is to be considered in the light most
    favorable to the prosecution.’” Brooks v. State, 
    323 S.W.3d 893
    , 899 n.13 (Tex. Crim. App.
    7
    2010) (quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979)). In making this review, a “‘court
    faced with a record of historical facts that supports conflicting inferences must presume--even if
    it does not affirmatively appear in the record--that the trier of fact resolved any such conflicts in
    favor of the prosecution, and must defer to that resolution.’” 
    Id. (quoting Jackson,
    443 U.S. at
    326).
    In this case, the majority has diligently pored through the record to perform its required
    function under such a challenge and has located a small part of a very lengthy report generated
    by the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services. This report quotes the injured
    child’s mother as saying that when the mother was with her child, the child (Tristyn) was
    “always” “up her butt.” From this, the majority assumes that the child would not only be
    underfoot with her mother, but she would also be “getting in the way of an adult in the living
    space.” Just because a child may regularly be underfoot of its mother, it takes too great a leap of
    logic to assume that the child would treat just any sitter or caregiver in the same fashion. The
    courts of this State have repeatedly recognized that a special relationship exists between a parent
    and a child. Providence Health Ctr. v. Dowell, 
    262 S.W.3d 324
    , 331 (Tex. 2008); S.V. v. R.V.,
    
    933 S.W.2d 1
    , 8 (Tex. 1996). In some circumstances, the Legislature has recognized the special
    relationship existing between parents and children and has imposed certain obligations on
    parents for the conduct of their children. In re D. M., 
    191 S.W.3d 381
    , 392 (Tex. App.—Austin
    2006, pet. denied).
    In other words, the conduct of a child in the presence of its mother could easily be
    substantially different than it would be around a simple sitter or caregiver. Just because there is
    8
    evidence that the child was regularly underfoot with her mother is not evidence that the child was
    likewise underfoot with McKay, her sitter.
    Unless we take the leap of logic to assume that the child’s conduct in the presence of her
    mother would be identical to her conduct in the presence of a male sitter, we do not have the
    requisite evidence of negligence on the part of McKay to justify his conviction of the offense
    with which he is charged.
    I respectfully dissent.
    Bailey C. Moseley
    Justice
    Date Submitted:        June 4, 2014
    Date Decided:          August 8, 2014
    Do Not Publish
    9