FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
TOMMY L. STRUNK STEVE CARTER
Fishers, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
JUSTIN F. ROEBEL
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
DOUGLAS M. MITCHELL, )
)
Appellant-Defendant, )
)
vs. ) No. 49A02-0311-CR-973
)
STATE OF INDIANA, )
)
Appellee-Plaintiff. )
APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Danielle Gaughan, Commissioner
Cause No. 49G17-0203-FD-170233
August 16, 2004
OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION
VAIDIK, Judge
Case Summary
Douglas Mitchell appeals his convictions for battery with injury to a child as
a Class D felony
See footnote
and disorderly conduct as a Class B misdemeanor.
See footnote
We affirm both convictions, finding that Mitchells conduct exceeded his legal authority to
discipline his child; that Mitchell did not have to be asked to stop
making unreasonable noise by a law enforcement officer in order to be convicted
of disorderly conduct; that his constitutional right to free expression was not implicated
because there was no state action; and that it was harmless error for
the trial court to determine that Dr. An, Mitchells wife, could not qualify
as an expert witness.
Facts and Procedural History
One afternoon in June 2002, two Methodist Hospital (Methodist) employees, Christy Rohrman and
Christopher Wilson, were exiting the hospital cafeteria when they heard Mitchell yelling at
his child. Mitchell and his two children, a two-year-old and four-year-old M.M.,
were at Methodist visiting Dr. Caroline An, Mitchells wife and the childrens mother.
According to Wilson, Mitchell was yelling at M.M. to pick up the
f***ing bottle, and Mitchell was holding M.M. by his shirt, with M.M.s face
about a foot above the bottle on the ground. Tr. p. 44.
Mitchell then picked up M.M. by his shirt and threw the child
over his right shoulder, all the while clutching the two-year-old in the crook
of his left arm. Shortly thereafter, M.M. was either dropped or slid
off Mitchells shoulder to the floor, falling from approximately two to three feet
in the air. According to Rohrman, Mitchell then swung his leg toward
his sonlike you would kick a kickball
See footnote
while continuing to yell that M.M. was
a f***ing spoiled brat. He was just in such a chaotic rage
he probably doesnt even remember what he was saying . . . .
Id. at 38.
Rohrman, followed by Wilson, ran after Mitchell to confront him in the hospital
parking lot about his behavior. Observing that the two-year-old was sliding out
of his left arm into a sort of headlock position while Mitchell continued
to yell at M.M. as he placed him in the backseat of his
vehicle, Rohrman called out, Sir, sir. Stop. You cant treat your
children that way.
Id. at 48. Having placed M.M. in the
vehicle, Mitchell wheeled around to shout at Rohrman face-to-face:
He was yelling and screaming right in my face and telling me that
it was not any of my business[,] that his wife was a doctor
there, and that his child was a f***ing spoiled brat, and he had
to stay home with him everyday, and I didnt know what he had
to go through with him and to mind my own business.
Id. at 38-9. Mitchell was standing so close to Rohrman that another
employee intervened and asked Mitchell to step back. Rohrman requested that someone
call security. When Rohrman approached the vehicle to write down Mitchells license
plate number, she observed M.M. acting dazed and crying. Id. at 40.
Meanwhile, Methodist security officers Cherle Harris and Dewayne Posley received a dispatch requesting
them to report to the hospital lobby. Harris and Posley followed the
assembled crowd out the front door and observed the altercation between Rohrman and
Mitchell. The security officers approached Mitchell, asking if they could speak with
him. According to Harris, He refused to answer any of our questions.
. . . He was very red. . . . He
was loud. He was cursing. . . . He told me
those were his fing kids. They were some spoiled ass brats.
He has to do them like this because they are so damned spoiled
. . . .
Id. at 109-10. Concerned for the safety
of the two-year-old, whom Mitchell was still clutching, Harris asked Mitchell repeatedly to
hand over the baby, but Mitchell refused.
George Scott, a Clarian Safety and Security investigator and supervisor, was summoned to
meet with the security officers detaining Mitchell. Mitchell told Scott that he
was waiting on his wife, and he behaved in a very agitated manner.
Scott testified that during this incident, he had to ask Mitchell repeatedlyat
least three timesto calm down.
Id. at 102. At some point,
Mitchell went and retrieved M.M. from the vehicle. Posley testified that at
this point he observed redness on M.M.s neck. Dr. An, Mitchells wife
and the childrens mother, appeared soon thereafter, took the two-year-old from Mitchell, and
then handed over both of the children. Security Officer Posley placed handcuffs
on Mitchell because, according to Scott, we thought he was getting a little
agitated there and for officer safety. Id. at 105.
By this time, Indianapolis Police Department Officer Phillip Malicoat had responded to a
dispatch run to assist Methodist security officers. Upon arrival, Officer Malicoat observed
a large group of peoplefive to nine Methodist staff members and security officersand
Mitchell, handcuffed, standing outside the hospital. Officer Malicoat spoke with a couple
of witnesses and then asked Mitchell to explain what had happened. Mitchell
told Officer Malicoat that he had taken some over the counter supplements for
his bodybuilding, and he lost his cool in disciplining his child.
Id.
at 143. Officer Malicoat continued his investigation, speaking with witnesses and then
Mitchells children, who were inside a Methodist office with their mother; he observed
that M.M. had at least a couple of fresh scratches that just barely
broke the skin with very minimal bleeding on the back of his neck.
Id. at 146. Ultimately, Officer Malicoat placed Mitchell under arrest.
The State charged Mitchell with battery as a Class D felony and disorderly
conduct as a Class B misdemeanor. At the bench trial, Mitchell introduced
into evidence a deposition of Chrissa L. Collings, M.D., who had examined M.M.
two days after the incident. In her deposition, Dr. Collings stated, [M.M.]
had a bruise on his left elbow and right upper arm and knees.
. . . but later in the deposition said she believed the bruises
on the left elbow were older bruises. Defense Exhibit B p. 12,
14. When asked if she found anything in the course of her
examination to indicate that there had been abrasions or breaking of the skin,
Dr. Collings had replied, I wrote, No sign of bleeding, in the chart.
So I dont believe so.
Id. at 13. Mitchell also
elicited testimony at the trial from Dr. An, his wife, concerning her examination
of M.M immediately after the incident, but the trial court refused to qualify
Dr. An as an expert witness because of her relationship with Mitchell.
Following the bench trial, the trial court found Mitchell guilty on both charges.
Mitchell now appeals his convictions.
Discussion and Decision
Mitchell raises several issues on appeal. First, he argues that there is
insufficient evidence to support the battery conviction because his disciplinary actions did not
exceed the scope of his legal authority as a parent. Second, he
argues that his disorderly conduct conviction cannot stand for two reasons: (1)
there is insufficient evidence to support the disorderly conduct conviction because he was
not asked to stop making unreasonable noise by a law enforcement officer, and
(2) he was exercising his constitutional right to engage in expressive activity as
guaranteed by article I, § 9 of the Indiana Constitution. Finally, Mitchell
argues that the trial court erred in determining that Dr. An, Mitchells wife
and M.M.s mother, could not be an expert witness.
See footnote
We consider each
issue in turn.
Battery and Indiana Code § 35-41-3-1
Mitchell argues that the evidence is insufficient to support his battery conviction because
his actions were within the scope of his legal authority to discipline his
child pursuant to Indiana Code § 35-41-3-1. When reviewing the sufficiency of
the evidence, we neither reweigh the evidence nor determine the credibility of witnesses.
Allen v. State, 787 N.E.2d 473, 482 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), trans.
denied. Rather, we look solely to the evidence most favorable to the
judgment together with all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom. Id.
A conviction will be affirmed if the probative evidence and reasonable inferences to
be drawn from the evidence could have allowed a reasonable trier of fact
to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.
To convict Mitchell of battery with injury to a child, the State must
prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he knowingly or intentionally touched a person
less than fourteen years of age in a rude, insolent, or angry manner
and that touching resulted in bodily injury. Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1(a)(2)(B).
But Mitchell asserts the defense of parental discipline pursuant to Indiana Code §
35-41-3-1, which provides: A person is justified in engaging in conduct otherwise
prohibited if he has legal authority to do so. This Court has
found that the defense of legal authority includes reasonable parental discipline that would
otherwise constitute battery.
Smith v. State, 489 N.E.2d 140, 141 (Ind. Ct.
App. 1986), rehg denied, trans. denied.; see also Johnson v. State, 804 N.E.2d
255 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004).
The law is well settled that a parent has the right to administer
proper and reasonable chastisement to his child without being guilty of an assault
and battery; but he has no right to administer unreasonable or cruel and
inhuman punishment. If the punishment is excessive, unreasonable, or cruel[,] it is
unlawful. The mere fact that the punishment was administered by the appellant
upon the person of his own child will not screen him from criminal
liability.
Smith, 489 N.E.2d at 142 (quoting Hornbeck v. State, 16 Ind. App. 484,
45 N.E. 620 (1896)). There is precious little Indiana caselaw providing guidance
as to what constitutes proper and reasonable parental discipline of children, and there
are no bright-line rules. Nonetheless, the evidence supports the trial courts finding
that Mitchells treatment of his four-year-old son was excessive and did not fall
within the scope of reasonable parental discipline.
Witness Rohrman testified that when she and Wilson observed Mitchells parenting skills in
actionholding M.M. over the bottle on the floor, hoisting M.M. up by his
shirt and then allowing M.M. to drop to the hospital floor before kicking
his leg at him, all the while referring to M.M. loudly and repeatedly
as a f***ing spoiled brat
Mitchell was in a chaotic rage. Tr. p.
38. Hence, Mitchell knowingly or intentionally touched M.M. in a rude or
angry manner. Moreover, four-year-old M.M. sustained bodily injury as a result of
the incident: Security Officer Posley testified as to the redness of M.M.s
neck; Officer Malicoat testified that he had observed at least a couple of
fresh scratches on his neck; and during an examination of M.M. a couple
of days after the incident, Dr. Collings observed bruises on his right upper
arm and knees. See Hanic v. State, 406 N.E.2d 335, 337-38 (Ind.
Ct. App. 1980) (finding that testimonial evidence of red marks, bruises, and minor
scratches is sufficient to support a conviction for battery causing bodily injury).
Considering the young age of the child, the injuries sustained, and the disproportion
between the punishment inflicted upon M.M. and the childs alleged misbehavior, we find
the evidence is sufficient to support Mitchells conviction for battery with injury to
a child as a Class D felony.
Mitchells arguments on appeal, which consist primarily of minimizing the harm to M.M.
and insisting that Mitchells behavior was not excessive but was justified and distinguishable
from prior caselaw involving parental discipline, are merely an invitation to reweigh the
evidence, which we decline to do. The trial court was entitled to
conclude that Mitchells behavior was excessive, unreasonable, and outside the bounds of appropriate
parental discipline, and the mere fact that it was imposed by an out-of-control
parent upon his four-year-old child does not shield Mitchell from criminal liability.
Disorderly Conduct
Mitchell also contends that his disorderly conduct conviction cannot stand for two reasons:
(1) the evidence is insufficient to support a disorderly conduct conviction because
he was not asked to stop making unreasonable noise by a law enforcement
officer, and (2) he was exercising his constitutional right to engage in expressive
activity pursuant to article I, § 9 of the Indiana Constitution. In
order to convict Mitchell of disorderly conduct as a Class B misdemeanor, the
State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Mitchell recklessly, knowingly, or intentionally
ma[de] unreasonable noise and continue[d] to do so after being asked to stop.
Ind. Code § 35-45-1-3(2). To sustain a conviction, the State must
show that the complained-of speech infringed upon the right to peace and tranquility
enjoyed by others. Hooks v. State, 660 N.E.2d 1076, 1077 (Ind. Ct.
App. 1996), trans. denied.
The evidence shows that Mitchell first attracted attention while shouting in the Methodist
lobby that four-year-old M.M. was a f***ing spoiled brat, Tr. p. 38, and
that he responded in a loud and extremely hostile manner toward witnesses and
security officers who attempted to confront him outside the hospital. Mitchell was
yelling and screaming at Rohrman that his wife was a doctor . .
. and his child was a f***ing spoiled brat . . . and
to mind [her] own business. Id. at 38-9. According to Security
Officer Harris, [h]e was very red. . . . He was loud.
He was cursing. . . . Id. at 109-10. At least
one person, Scott, asked Mitchell repeatedly to calm down. Indeed, Mitchell admitted
during cross-examination that the hospital security officers asked him to quiet down and
he did not do so. Id. at 161. Particularly in light
of the hospital setting, it is clear that Mitchells speech infringed on the
right to peace and tranquility enjoyed by others. See Whittington v. State,
669 N.E.2d 1363, 1367 (Ind. 1996) (The State must prove that a defendant
produced decibels of sound that were too loud for the circumstances.); Hooks, 660
N.E.2d at 1077 (To sustain a conviction, the State must show that the
complained-of speech infringed upon the right to peace and tranquility enjoyed by others.);
Radford v. State, 640 N.E.2d 90, 93 (Ind. Ct. App. 1994) (Radfords abusive
and harmful speech invaded the privacy of those patients in the hospital and
destroyed their right to a quiet and peaceful environment. Patients with heart
conditions and patients with nervous disorders, among others, come to the hospital expecting
quietude.), trans. denied. Thus, the evidence shows that Mitchell was mak[ing] unreasonable
noise and continue[d] to do so after being asked to stop[.] I.C.
§ 35-45-1-3(2).
Mitchell asserts, however, that his disorderly conduct conviction cannot stand because he was
not asked to stop making unreasonable noise by someone with authority to do
so, i.e., a law enforcement officer. Appellants Br. p. 9. He
does not challenge the constitutionality of the disorderly conduct statute on the grounds
of vagueness, but rather his attack upon the conviction is premised upon a
reading of the statute that would require a warning to be given by
a law enforcement officer. Because this Court has never had the opportunity
to consider the question presented by Mitchells argument, we do so today.
As a general proposition, one might surmise that a warning or admonition against
continued criminal conduct would have to be given by a law enforcement officer.
See 12 Am. Jur. 2d, Breach of Peace § 32 (1997); 11
C.J.S. Breach of Peace § 5b (1995). In some jurisdictions, the legislature
has specifically enunciated in their statutes the requirement of a warning by a
law enforcement officer. In Hawaiis statute, for instance, the warning must be
given by a police officer. Haw. Rev. Stat. § 711-1101. In
Texas, it is a defense if the conduct or noise is speech or
other communication unless the actor is first ordered to remedy the violation by
the proper authorities. Bowie v. State, 841 S.W.2d 963, 964 (Tex. App.
1992). But the Texas statute states that the order may be given
by a peace officer, a fireman, a person with authority to control the
use of the premises, or any person directly affected by the violation.
Id. at n.2; Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 42.01.
Other state statutes, though silent as to who must give the warnings, have
been construed by courts to include a law enforcement warning requirement. In
Maryland, the statute under consideration in
Eanes v. State prohibited loud and unseemly
noises but did not contain a warning requirement. Eanes, 569 A.2d 604
(Md. 1990); Md. Code Art. 27, § 121 (now repealed). The Maryland
Court of Appeals, however, to assure fair notice to the actor as to
what was forbidden, read into the statute a requirement for prior warning by
police authority. Id. at 617. Similarly, Pennsylvanias statute does not include
a law enforcement warning requirement. 18 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 5503.
Nonetheless, in Pennsylvania v. Mastrangelo, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court emphasized a meter maids
official position in affirming the conviction of the defendant who hurled obscene epithets
at her for ticketing his car and continued after being asked to stop
by her. Mastrangelo, 414 A.2d 54, 56 (Pa. 1980).
As to Indianas disorderly conduct statute, it does not, on its face, impose
a requirement that the person making unreasonable noise must be asked to stop
by a law enforcement officer. I.C. § 35-45-1-3(2). Generally, we give
a facially clear and unambiguous statute its plain and clear meaning.
See
Goffinet v. State, 775 N.E.2d 1227, 1235 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002). Moreover,
we do not ordinarily read requirements into statutes. This is so especially
where the legislature has demonstrated in other statutes that it is capable of
including the omitted language. See, e.g., Ind. Code § 34-28-5-3.3 (Refusal to
identify self to a law enforcement officer . . . .); Ind. Code
§ 35-42-2-1(a)(2) (Battery is a Class D felony if it results in bodily
injury to a law enforcement officer . . . .); Ind. Code §
35-44-3-3 (A person who . . . forcibly resists, obstructs, or interferes with
. . . or flees from a law enforcement officer . . .
commits resisting law enforcement . . . .).
Nevertheless, we do have at least some direction from our supreme court as
to who is required to give the warning before a person can be
found guilty of disorderly conduct. Indeed, our supreme court case of
Whittington
v. State, 669 N.E.2d 1363 (Ind. 1996), is cited in the Am. Jur.
2d discussion as authority for the premise that a warning by a police
officer is required. The case itself, however, is not so explicit.
Although in that case a law enforcement officer was the individual giving the
admonition to the defendant, the Whittington court couched the requirement in terms of
an official warning. See Whittington, 669 N.E.2d at 1370 ([A] conviction for
disorderly conduct requires proof of unreasonable noise both before and after an official
warning.) (emphasis supplied). We therefore determine that the statute requires an official
warning.
Turning to the facts of this case, the person who asked Mitchell repeatedly
to calm down was not a law enforcement officer but was, instead, the
superior officer of security on duty at Methodist at the time the incident
occurred. To be sure, this would appear to be the very point
of the hospital security officers: to protect the hospital patients and staff
from danger or disruption and to expel or to subdue dangerous or disruptive
elements from the hospital in order to maintain a safe and orderly environment.
Thus, we find that the disorderly conduct statute does apply in these
circumstancesthat the warnings given by hospital security personnel were sufficiently official to satisfy
the dictate of an official warning as set forth in
Whittington, supraeven though
the person asking Mitchell to stop making unreasonable noise was not a law
enforcement officer.
See footnote
The evidence is sufficient to support Mitchells conviction for disorderly
conduct.
But Mitchell also asserts that the conviction violates his constitutional right to freedom
of expression as guaranteed by article I, § 9 of the Indiana Constitution.
We disagree. When reviewing the constitutionality of the disorderly conduct statute,
we perform a two-step inquiry.
Whittington, 669 N.E.2d at 1367. First,
a reviewing court determines whether state action has restricted the claimants expressive activity.
Id. Second, if it has, the reviewing court must decide whether
the restricted activity constituted an abuse of the right to speak. Id.
Here, article I, § 9 of the Indiana Constitution has not been implicated
because there was no state action.
See id. at 1368 (The right
to speak clause focuses on the restrictive impact of state action on an
individuals expressive activity.). Mitchell concedes that the security officers were acting as
private citizens. Appellants Br. p. 6. Hence, Mitchell has
not made it past the first step: to the extent that his
expressive activity was restricted, the restriction was imposed by private, rather than state,
actors.
See footnote
We conclude that there is no merit to Mitchells constitutional claim,
and we affirm his conviction for disorderly conduct.
Dr. An as Expert Witness
Finally, Mitchell argues that the trial court erred in determining without hearing evidence
that Dr. An could not be a medical expert witness for the purpose
of testifying on bruises because she was not an unbiased third-party. Tr.
p. 166. Indiana Evidence Rule 702 provides:
(a) If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of
fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a
witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may
testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise.
(b) Expert scientific testimony is admissible only if the court is satisfied that
the scientific principles upon which the expert testimony rests are reliable.
Ind. Evidence Rule 702. Pursuant to this rule, a witness may
be qualified as an expert by virtue of knowledge, skill, experience, training, or
education. Kubsch v. State, 784 N.E.2d 905, 921 (Ind. 2003). Only
one of these characteristics is necessary to qualify an individual as an expert.
Id. Moreover, Rule 702(a) does not require that the witness be
unbiased. 13 Robert Lowell Miller, Indiana Practice § 702.105 (1995). But
i
t is within the trial courts sound discretion to decide whether a person
qualifies as an expert witness, and we will reverse only upon a showing
that the trial court abused its discretion
. Creasy v. Rusk,
730 N.E.2d
659, 669 (Ind. 2000).
Here, the trial court sustained the States objection to admitting Dr. An as
an expert witness for the purposes of testifying about bruises on the grounds
that she was not an unbiased third-party. In response to Mitchells request
for a hearing on the issue of Dr. Ans qualification as an expert
witness, the trial court stated, I dont think that no matter what you
do she can qualify as an expert in this case. Tr. p.
174. The trial court stated further, I am listening to her as
if she is a doctor, and a mom, and not an expert.
Id. at 173. Dr. An then went on to testify about her
observationsincluding whether she had observed bruises, as opposed to Mongolian spots
See footnote
when she examined
M.M. immediately after the incident.
We find that it was an abuse of discretion for the trial court
to determine without hearing evidence that Dr. Anthough apparently otherwise qualifiedcould not here
testify as an expert witness because she could not be impartial and unbiased.
While we recognize that
evidence of personal relationships has been accepted as
being indicative of bias, see Shanholt v. State,
448 N.E.2d 308, 316 (Ind.
Ct. App. 1983), Mitchell was entitled to the benefit of Dr. Ans testimony
if she was otherwise qualified to be an expert witness. The proper
procedure under these circumstances would have been to permit the State to expose
any actual bias through cross-examination. See id. ([I]t has been held that
a party has a right to cross-examine an opposing partys witness on matters
which tend to impair that witnesss credibility or to show her interest, bias,
or motives.). Moreover, the revelation of any actual bias should have gone to
the weight of Dr. Ans testimony rather than to her ability to testifyassuming
she was otherwise qualifiedas an expert witness.
When reviewing an erroneous evidentiary ruling by the trial court, we apply the
harmless error rule, determining if the probable impact of the error, in light
of all the evidence in the case, is sufficiently minor so as not
to affect the substantial rights of the parties.
Black v. State, 794
N.E.2d 561, 565 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003). Here, we find that the
trial courts error in determining that Dr. An could not be an expert
witness did not affect Mitchells substantial rights because Dr. An was permitted to
testify about bruises and, in any event, the evidence was cumulative of information
contained in the deposition of Dr. Collings, who performed an examination of M.M.
two days after the incident. Therefore, we find that the trial
courts refusal to permit Dr. An to testify as an expert witness was
harmless error.
Affirmed.
SULLIVAN, J., and MAY, J., concur.
Footnote:
Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1(a)(2).
Footnote:
Ind. Code § 35-42-1-3(2).
Footnote:
The evidence is inconclusive as to whether Mitchells foot actually made contact
with M.M. or whether, as Mitchell insists, he kicked his leg toward M.M.
but missed him. Tr. p. 155.
Footnote:
Mitchell presents no cognizable argument as to how the trial court erred
in excluding the testimony of Chrissa Collings, M.D. Appellants Br. p. 10.
Therefore, Mitchell has waived review of this issue. See Ind. Appellate
Rule 46(A)(8)(a). In any event, the record reflects that the majority of
Dr. Collings deposition was admitted into evidence.
Footnote:
As to the applicability of the disorderly conduct statute where a
person is asked to stop making unreasonable noise by someone who is not
a law enforcement or a security officer, we leave that question for another
day.
Footnote:
Even if we were to find that Officer Malicoata state actorrestricted
Mitchells right to speak and express himself, Mitchell still would not prevail on
his constitutional claim. [I]f a claimant demonstrates that the right to speak
clause is implicated, he or she retains the burden of proving that the
State could not reasonably conclude that the restricted expression was an abuse.
Whittington, 669 N.E.2d at 1369 ([E]xpressive activity constitutes abuse if, notwithstanding § 9,
it is punishable within the strictures of the police power.). Mitchell presents
the following argument in his brief: Mitchell was in the process of
disciplining his children, and in an admitted loud voice. Mitchell[s] use of
profanity [was] in protest to interference by other persons, and at no time
did Mitchell challenge any one to fight nor did he threaten the safety
of any person. Appellants Br. p. 8. Mitchell then discusses Price
v. State, in which our supreme court held that treating as abuse political
speech which does not harm any particular individual (public nuisance) does amount to
a material burden, but that sanctioning expression which inflicts upon determinable parties harm
of a gravity analogous to that required under tort law does not.
Price, 622 N.E.2d 954, 964 (Ind. 1993). Thus, although it is not
clear, it appears that Mitchell is asserting that his speech was pure political
expression. Mitchells speech was not pure political expression, however, since his statements
were directed at and concerned with the conduct of private actors. Whittington,
669 N.E.2d at 1370 (Expressive activity is political, for the purposes of the
responsibility clause, if its point is to comment on government action, whether applauding
an old policy or proposing a new one, or opposing a candidate for
office or criticizing the conduct of an official acting under color of law.)
In any event, Mitchell has failed to meet his burden of proving
the second prong of the test, i.e., that the State could not reasonably
conclude that the restricted expression was an abuse. See id. at 1369.
Footnote:
According to Dr. Ans testimony, Mongolian spots are pigmented skin cells
that occur in the sacral region most commonly in Asian-American and African-American .
. . children. Tr. p. 170. The evidence showed that Dr.
An, M.M.s biological mother, is of Asian descent.