STATE OF OREGON, Respondent, v. GINGER L. McLAUGHLIN, Appellant.
No. C 78-06-10397, CA 12702
Court of Appeals of Oregon
Argued July 26, affirmed in part; reversed in part; reconsideration denied November 29, petition for review denied December 11, 1979
600 P2d 474 | 288 Or 173
W. Benny Won, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were James A. Redden, Attorney General, and Walter L. Barrie, Solicitor General, Salem.
Before Schwab, Chief Judge, and Joseph and Roberts, Judges.
JOSEPH, J.
JOSEPH, J.
Defendant was indicted for child neglect.
Defendant and her husband were both 22 years of age; she has a tenth grade education. At the time of the alleged crime defendant had two daughters born out of wedlock, aged about six and four. Defendant and husband were married in 1976; they had a child in April, 1978, who died as a result of husband‘s assaulting him in June, 1978. Husband had a history of bad temper and several acts of physical violence. In October, 1977, he had spanked one of defendant‘s daughters with a toy broom handle because she misbehaved and refused to correct her behavior. The incident, which occurred while the husband was babysitting the two daughters, caused severe bruises on the six-year old girl‘s buttocks and legs. As a result of that incident the husband was charged with assault and was awaiting trial at the time of the subject incident.
On two occasions the husband had gone to the bedroom of one of the girls and had spanked her, without immediate provocation and also without injury. The evidence indicates that in the daytime before the spankings the girl had misbehaved in some ill-defined fashion. The spankings occurred in the middle of the night, and the husband disclaimed any memory of them the next day. On two occasions defendant had been struck by the husband in the course of family
In January, 1978, Children‘s Services Division became interested in the welfare of the two daughters, and a CSD caseworker urged upon the defendant either that the husband and wife have counseling if he were to live in the home, or that he not be around the daughters. The caseworker also later warned the mother that a “high-risk situation” could exist if the daughters were around the husband and also after a new baby would come into the home. The caseworker saw the husband only once but knew the history of the family. During the March to June period the mother left the father with the daughters as a babysitter without incident and, after the baby was born, also occasionally left the baby with the father without incident. All witnesses testified that the father seemed proud of the new baby. He participated in taking care of the child.
The mother interpreted the caseworker‘s advice as meaning that the husband should not be living in the home. During some of the period after the birth of the child the father stayed at a friend‘s house, but it is apparent that he spent a great deal of time at the mother‘s home.
On the day of the assault the father had been in the back of the house working on an automobile. The mother asked him to load bottles in her car so they could be taken back to the store. The father thought there were not as many bottles there as there were supposed to be. An argument ensued because he did not accept either the mother‘s statement that all the
When she returned she found the child was injured. They immediately took the child to a hospital, but he died a few days later of head injuries received from at least two blows.3
Defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal both at the close of the state‘s case and at the close of the defense.4 Defendant argues that the statute should be construed not to apply to any situation where a parent has placed or permitted a child to be in the care of the other parent. It is unnecessary for us to determine that question, for even assuming that the statute can properly be applied in that setting, we conclude that the evidence was insufficient to submit the case to the jury.
The standard of care under the statute is defined as “criminal negligence.”5 Although the legislature has
defined criminal negligence in words different than those used to define “gross negligence” in the case law or in the guest passenger statute (
The statutes describing the offense and the definition of the standard of care together required that before this charge could have been submitted to the jury there had to be evidence from which it could fairly have been found: (1) that the act of the mother in leaving the child in the care of his father while doing an ordinary family chore was done without recognition of a high degree of likelihood that he would cause an injury to the child; and (2) that the failure to recognize that likelihood was different in an extraordinary way from what others would have done in similar circumstances. Even given the husband‘s record of bad temper and violence toward her and one of the older children, and the warnings of the caseworker, the
The conviction for violation of
ROBERTS, J., dissenting.
I dissent because I believe the evidence was sufficient to present a jury question and to support the jury verdict. Although the husband had never displayed violence toward the infant, the indications noted by the majority, i.e., the husband‘s record of violence and bad temper and the warnings of the caseworker, taken together with the fact that the wife‘s departure was preceded by an argument, were sufficient for the jury to find the wife should have been cognizant of the danger presented by leaving the baby with the husband.
Notes
“(1) A person having custody or control of a child under 10 years of age commits the crime of child neglect if, with criminal negligence, he leaves the child unattended in or at any place for such period of time as may be likely to endanger the health or welfare of such child.
“(2) Child neglect is a Class A misdemeanor.”
Defendant also assigns error to the court‘s refusal to give two requested instructions. The instructions were properly refused.
“(10) ‘Criminal negligence’ or ‘criminally negligent,’ when used with respect to a result or to a circumstance described by a statute defining an offense, means that a person fails to be aware of a
“*** To that extent this article makes somewhat less change in the law than appears at first blush. Since gross negligence in Oregon is now equated with recklessness, the only substantial change is in using a subjective test for awareness of risk, rather than an objective one. ***”
