Defendant Walter L. Grubbs and his wife were indicted and tried for cruelty to children in that they maliciously caused their son, Deldrick Brown, cruel and еxcessive pain by striking and beating him. The evidence adduced at trial showed that the wife brought the child, who was twenty months old, into the hosрital on December 18, 1981, in a very comatose condition. He had suffered a severe blow to the head that caused substantial, and likely permanent, brain damage. In addition to the head injury, the child had a multitude of bruises and scratches on his face, bruises on his upper thighs and a suspected cigarette burn on his finger. Moreover, previous injuries were indicated by small scars all over his body аnd several fractures in old broken bones in different parts of the body in varied stages of healing, including his collarbone, a rib, both forearms and possibly a leg bone.
Both defendants denied inflicting a blow to the child’s head or any instance of cruelty to him. Defendant Wаlter Grubbs admitted spanking the child on December 16,1981, but asserted it was limited to a few slaps with an open palm on the child’s hip because the child “didn’t want to eat that afternoon.” He also claimed that the child had fallen from the top bunk of a bunkbed that day, but, because the child did not appear to be hurt, he neither did anything about it nor mentioned it to his wife or anyone else.
The jury acquitted the wife and convicted the husband who appeals, challenging the jury charge given by the court. Held:
1. Defendant contends generally thаt the trial court committed reversible error in failing to tailor its jury instructions to the charge in the indictment and the evidence admitted аt trial. See
Walker v. State,
In the indictment, defendant аnd his wife were charged with cruelty to children in that they “on the 16th day of December, 1981, did maliciously cause DELDRICK BROWN, a child under the age of
Defendant’s argument is in еffect that he was charged with cruelty to his child on December 16, 1981, and the trial court, by failing to specify this in its charge to the jury, allowed thе jury to consider all the bruises, scratches, scars and broken bones suffered by the child as bearing directly on guilt or innocence rather than as circumstantially showing that he abused the child on that date. We find this argument unpersuasive. The jury knew what defendant was charged with because they had the indictment and the trial court charged that “[t]he burden is upon the State to prove every material аllegation in the bill of indictment to a moral and reasonable certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt.”
The alleged date of the offense was not a “material allegation” in the indictment. “The indictment in the present case did not limit the charge sрecifically to the date alleged and no other date, as was the case in
Worley v. State,
2. Defendant’s second challenge to the jury charge is that the trial court failed to charge on the dеfense of accident. The charge was not requested. A defendant is entitled to an unrequested charge on a particular defense only when it is his sole or principal defense and it is supported by the evidence.
Maddox v. State,
Defense counsel asked each of the state’s expert witnesses on cross-examination whether the child’s head injury could have been caused by a fall from the top bunk of a bunkbed. He received responses of “if it was substantially higher than 10 feet”; “it would be unlikely”; and, “I still think this is a little bit more than a 10 foot injury.” Defendаnt later testified that the child had fallen from the
Furthermore, while it is the rule that any evidence, however slight, will justify а charge relating to issues raised by that evidence (see
Williams v. State,
In the case sub judice, the only evidence even somewhat supportive оf an accident defense is the testimony of defendant. While being mindful that the trial court cannot invade the province of the jury by arbitrarily rejecting a defense theory raised by the defendant’s testimony as unworthy of belief and refusing to charge upon the issue raisеd
(Spradlin v. State,
3. There is no merit in the related contention that the jury charge violated Sandstrom v. Montana,
Judgment affirmed.
