Morris v. Com., Record No. 052654.

Decision Date03 November 2006
Docket NumberRecord No. 052654.
Citation636 S.E.2d 436
PartiesSamantha Lynn MORRIS v. COMMONWEALTH of Virginia.
CourtVirginia Supreme Court

James M. Hingeley, Public Defender (Elizabeth P. Murtagh, Deputy Public Defender, on briefs), Lynchburg, for appellant.

Robert H. Anderson, III, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Robert F. McDonnell, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Present: HASSELL, C.J., and LACY, KEENAN, KINSER, LEMONS, and AGEE, JJ., and STEPHENSON, S.J.

OPINION BY Senior Justice ROSCOE B. STEPHENSON, JR.

The sole issue in this appeal is whether the evidence is sufficient to support a mother's conviction of felonious child neglect in violation of Code § 18.2-371.1(B). The accused mother, Samantha Lynn Morris, contends that the evidence is insufficient, as a matter of law, because it did not prove that she willfully failed to provide care for her two children in a manner so gross, wanton, and culpable as to show a reckless disregard for their lives.

I

In a bench trial, Morris was found guilty of two charges of felony child neglect. The court sentenced Morris to two years' imprisonment, with one year and nine months suspended, on each offense and directed that the sentences run concurrently.

In an unpublished opinion, a three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals reversed the convictions and dismissed the charges. Thereafter, the Court of Appeals granted the Commonwealth's petition for a rehearing en banc and affirmed the convictions. Morris v. Commonwealth, 47 Va.App. 34, 37, 622 S.E.2d 243, 244 (2005). We awarded Morris this appeal.

II

In considering whether evidence is sufficient to sustain a criminal conviction, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party at trial and grant to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible from that evidence. Jackson v. Commonwealth, 267 Va. 178, 204, 590 S.E.2d 520, 535 (2004). When thus viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the evidence established that, as of September 29, 2003, Morris had two children, both boys, L.J., age five-and-a-half years, and S., age two-and-a-half years. L.J. had hearing and speech impairments and wore hearing aids.

On the morning of September 29, 2003, Richard Goodin, a family support worker at L.J.'s elementary school, learned that L.J. was not in school. When Goodin was unable to contact Morris by telephone, he went to the trailer court where Morris lived. Goodin arrived about 9:30 a.m. and knocked on Morris' door. Despite knocking "for a significant amount of time," Goodin raised no response, except for a dog's barking, and left Morris' trailer.

About 11:15 a.m. that day, Goodin returned to Morris' residence and again raised no response to his knocking. Goodin looked around the neighborhood and saw two children playing in the nearby woods. One child appeared to be between four and six years old, and the other child, who was naked, appeared to be between two and three years old.* The children were "interacting and laughing" and seemed to be "having a good time." The younger child was "fairly dirty" and had a runny nose and dried fecal matter on his leg.

Goodin knocked on several doors in the neighborhood, hoping to ascertain where the children lived. When he got no response from any residences, Goodin called Child Protective Services and 911. While waiting for the police to arrive, Goodin decided to take custody of the younger child because the child had started to climb on an automobile that appeared to be awaiting repair. Goodin thought the area was "dangerous" due to the presence of the car as well as engine blocks and a weight lifting bench with weights on it, all of which were "closer to the road."

Two police officers arrived within five to 15 minutes after Goodin's call. Officer Raleigh Anderson knocked on the doors of several residences, including Morris' trailer, but received no response. When he knocked on the door to Morris' trailer, however, the door came open. Anderson yelled, "[C]ounty police," several times, and, when no one responded, he "pulled the door closed" and continued his search for the children's home.

In the meantime, Corporal James Larkin approached L.J. Due to L.J.'s hearing and speech difficulties, however, Larkin was unable to learn L.J.'s address. When Larkin asked L.J. if the younger child was his brother, L.J. "kept saying no," so he and L.J. walked away to look for L.J.'s home.

As Larkin and L.J. walked away, the younger child became "pretty visibly upset," "started calling mommy," and ran toward a particular trailer. Anderson followed the child to the trailer. The child pushed the door open and ran into the trailer and toward one of the rear bedrooms, still "calling mommy." Anderson followed and, in the darkness, saw a man and a woman lying on the bedroom floor. Upon seeing them, Anderson stopped and "announced county police a couple of times." When he received no response, Anderson backed out of the trailer.

Anderson then began "pounding on the door" with his fist while "announcing county police." Ultimately, the man came to the door. When Anderson asked about the children, the man went to get the woman. The woman came into the living room, identified herself as the children's aunt, and said that she was just watching the children for her sister, Samantha Morris. The younger child, however, kept calling the woman, "Mommy." When the woman asked Anderson where the five-year-old child was, Anderson radioed Larkin that he had found the children's residence, and Larkin brought L.J. to the residence.

The woman continued to maintain that the children were her nephews until the children's grandmother arrived on the scene. After the two women had some private conversation, the woman admitted that she was the children's mother and that her name was Samantha Morris. Morris said she had given the false information because she was afraid that there were outstanding warrants for her arrest. When Morris was asked to explain why the children were outside unattended, she said that she had been sleeping. She also said that the children had gotten out of the trailer on another occasion "a few days prior" and that "somebody in the [neighborhood] had to return them home." Thereupon, Larkin arrested Morris for the instant offenses.

At trial, Morris testified that L.J. had "great hearing loss . . . in his left ear" and a lesser hearing loss in his right ear and that he had lost one of his hearing aids. She explained that L.J. also had chronic asthma and a painful condition in his left leg. She said that, because of these conditions, L.J. "had been up the couple nights before" September 29, which caused him to "be tired in the mornings." When L.J. awoke on September 29, he told Morris that he did not feel well, so Morris decided to let him stay home from school.

According to Morris, she and her two children were sitting on the couch watching television when the younger child appeared to be getting sleepy. She asked L.J. if he wanted to take a nap, and he said, "[S]ure." Morris closed the curtains, turned on a fan, and "locked the chain lock on the door and the door knob lock" of the trailer. She and the children "went in and all laid down in the bed." Morris then fell asleep. She later was awakened when she heard someone yelling, "Albemarle County Police."

Morris admitted that, at the time of trial on February 3, 2004, she had a "significant substance abuse problem." However, she denied being under the influence of drugs or alcohol on September 29, 2003. She further stated that she had last used drugs "[a]bout three days prior" to that date.

III

Code § 18.2-371.1(B)(1) provides as follows:

Any parent, guardian, or other person responsible for the care of a child under the age of 18 whose willful act or omission in the care of such child was so gross, wanton and culpable as to show a reckless disregard for human life shall be guilty of a Class 6 felony.

In explaining his reasons for finding Morris guilty of felonious child neglect under the statute, the trial judge stated the following:

[T]he [question] the Court's confronted with is . . . did she omit proper care of her children and [was] this omission, this negligence, . . . so great that it was wanton and likely to cause injury or which would make it not improbable that injury would be occasioned[.] [T]he facts that I've got are that somehow, she was so sound asleep, she was so deep in sleep that nothing would arouse her to alert her that her children were getting up and going outside and were outside for forty-five (45) minutes and that there were knocks at the door by Mr. Goodin . . . . There were knocks at the door by the police. There was shouting and whatever sleep she was in, it was so sound, it almost would require an earthquake to wake her up, and going to sleep in that fashion, and whatever caused that, with a five-year-old who I've heard is speech impaired, hearing impaired, had leg pain and a limp with chronic asthma and a two-year-old who can't communicate. So we've got kids that are wandering outside who cannot communicate, cannot tell anybody who they are, there are no other responsible adults around, the two-year[-]old's unclothed, Mr. Goodin says he finds them in a dangerous area and he searches for the parents, and she's so asleep that she can't be awakened to check on her children or know where her children are, and I think that meets the definition, coupled with what—that the neighbors [previously] brought the children back, that it was seventy (70) degrees, that she had awakened that morning, but couldn't remain alert enough to omit being negligent in caring for her children or . . . to be negligent in the omission of the care of her children, so I find her guilty. . . . [A]nd I add to that her credibility about not even being their mother. I think that factors in, too, in her omission in the care of her kids.

As previously stated, we must view the evidence and all reasonable...

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