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Melancon v. State

2024-09-17

Summary

Holding. The Georgia Supreme Court vacated the Court of Appeals' judgment and remanded the case, finding that the evidence was insufficient to support Melancon's conviction under the theory that he caused Laura's death by instructing Long not to cooperate with DFCS, because the evidence failed to establish both cause-in-fact and legal cause.

Sidrick Melancon was convicted of second-degree murder for the death of his nine-month-old daughter Laura, who was killed by her mother Sadai Higgenbotham through fatal head trauma. Melancon's conviction rested on a theory that he caused Laura's death by instructing his girlfriend Gerallyn Long not to cooperate with a Division of Family and Children Services investigation after Long reported bruises and fingernail marks on Laura's face. The Court of Appeals upheld this theory, finding that a jury could infer Melancon prevented DFCS from intervening to stop Higgenbotham's abuse.

The Georgia Supreme Court clarified that proving causation in murder cases requires both cause-in-fact (a but-for causal relationship showing the result would not have occurred without the defendant's conduct) and legal cause (ensuring the death was a reasonably foreseeable, probable, or natural consequence of the defendant's conduct). Applying this framework, the court found the evidence insufficient under the specific theory the Court of Appeals endorsed because the record contained no evidence about what DFCS would have actually done had Long cooperated, making it purely speculative whether DFCS intervention would have prevented Laura's death. Additionally, even assuming Melancon's instruction prevented DFCS from intervening, fatal head trauma inflicted almost two months later was not a reasonably foreseeable result of stopping Long's initial report.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether stopping a witness from cooperating with a child welfare investigation can constitute proximate cause of a child's later death at the hands of an abuser
  • The components and application of proximate causation in murder prosecutions: cause-in-fact versus legal cause
  • Whether DFCS intervention would have prevented fatal abuse as a matter of but-for causation
  • Foreseeability of fatal head trauma as a consequence of preventing a single abuse report two months earlier

Procedural posture

After Melancon's conviction for second-degree murder, the Court of Appeals affirmed; the Georgia Supreme Court accepted review of the causation sufficiency issue.

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

Decided: September 17, 2024

S23G1128. MELANCON v. THE STATE.

PINSON, Justice.

Appellant Sidrick Raymone Melancon, Sr., was convicted of

second-degree murder after his ex-girlfriend Sadai Higgenbotham

inflicted fatal head trauma on their nine-month-old daughter, Laura

Higgenbotham. Although Melancon was not present when Higgenbotham killed Laura, he had earlier told his girlfriend, Gerallyn

Long, not to cooperate with a Division of Family and Children Services (DFCS) investigation of Higgenbotham that Long had initiated

after seeing a bruise and fingernail mark on Laura’s cheek. One of

the State’s theories at trial was that this instruction to Long

“caused” Laura’s death. The Court of Appeals approved that theory

on appeal, holding that the evidence authorized a jury to find that

merely by giving that instruction — almost two months before

Laura’s death — Melancon “caused” Laura’s death at Higgenbotham’s hands, because he “knew” about earlier incidents of

harm to Laura and “effectively ended” DFCS’s investigation, thus

preventing DFCS from preventing Higgenbotham from killing

Laura.

For each kind of murder offense set out in our murder statute,

the State must prove that the accused “cause[d]” the death of another human being. OCGA § 16-5-1. Although we have explained before that the word “cause” in that statute means “proximate cause,”

our decisions to this point have described this causation in a number

of different ways. Those descriptions can be distilled into two components, each of which must be established to prove causation in a

murder case: cause in fact, and legal (or “proximate”) cause. Cause

in fact refers to the basic requirement that the conduct must have

an actual causal relationship to the forbidden result — a relationship that is most often shown through evidence that the result would

not have happened “but for” the defendant’s conduct. In other words,

cause in fact is the “cause” in the phrase “proximate cause.” Legal

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cause, on the other hand, puts the “proximate” in “proximate cause.”

This inquiry takes as a given that the defendant’s conduct was causally connected to the forbidden result and asks whether the death

resulted from the defendant’s conduct in such an unforeseen or attenuated way that the defendant cannot be held accountable for the

death. As explained more below, our decisions have described these

distinct components of causation as follows: A defendant’s conduct

is a cause in fact of a death if his conduct “played a substantial part

in bringing about or actually causing” the death (again, typically

shown through evidence that the death would not have happened

“but for” the defendant’s conduct), or if the defendant’s conduct “materially accelerated the death.” And a defendant’s conduct is a legal

cause of a death if the death was “reasonably foreseeable” — that is,

a “probable or natural consequence” of the criminal conduct “according to ordinary and usual experience.”

Measured against these standards, the evidence in this case

was not sufficient to support the particular theory of causation the

Court of Appeals addressed. In light of this holding, which we

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explain in detail below, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is vacated. Because this decision reviews only the theory of causation the

Court of Appeals addressed, the case is remanded for the Court of

Appeals to apply the framework we set forth below and consider in

the first instance whether the evidence of causation in this case was

sufficient under a theory other than the one we have rejected here.

1. Background

(a) Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence at trial showed the following.

At the time of her death, nine-month-old Laura was living in

an apartment with Melancon (her father), Higgenbotham (her

mother), Long (Melancon’s girlfriend), and Melancon and Long’s

three children. When Higgenbotham and Laura first moved in with

Melancon and Long, Higgenbotham’s mother (Laura’s grandmother)

warned Melancon not to leave Laura alone with Higgenbotham.

Melancon exerted significant control over Long and Higgenbotham

and physically abused both women.

Long often took care of Laura when Higgenbotham was at

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work. Long believed Higgenbotham was unfit to be a mother and

testified at trial about Higgenbotham’s abuse of Laura. She said that

Higgenbotham would force feed Laura until she gagged and would

muffle Laura’s mouth to silence her crying. On one occasion, Higgenbotham left for work and left Laura alone in a hot room for thirty

minutes. Long once heard Higgenbotham tell Laura to “stop” followed by a slapping sound and Laura crying and, on several occasions, she heard “a loud thump . . . immediately followed by [Laura’s]

crying.” According to Long, Melancon knew about most of these incidents and “wasn’t surprised” by Higgenbotham’s behavior because

“[h]e knew she was capable of it.” In particular, Long testified that

Melancon knew about the time Higgenbotham left Laura in a hot

room and had seen bruises and scratches on Laura’s body.

On June 13, 2017, a little under two months before Laura’s

death, Long babysat Laura. During that time, she saw a bruise and

a fingernail mark on Laura’s face, and she texted a photo of these

injuries to Melancon. Long then asked Melancon for permission to

call DFCS about these injuries. He agreed, and Long contacted

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DFCS and reported the bruise and fingernail mark and also told

DFCS how Higgenbotham would put her hand over Laura’s mouth

to muffle her crying. But the DFCS investigator noted that Long was

“not willing to provide a current address,” did not give DFCS her

own name, and she gave an outdated (and wrong) address for Higgenbotham.

The next morning, Melancon changed his mind and told Long

not to “file a report” with DFCS. But he agreed with Long that Higgenbotham’s explanation for the injuries — that Laura fell off the

bed and hit her face on a dresser — was “bulls**t.” So Melancon had

Long look after Laura for five days after the incident, and told Higgenbotham by text message that he “took [Laura from her] because

[Higgenbotham was] abusing her, not taking care of her,” and that

he knew Laura “didn’t fall out of no f**king bed.” For Long’s part,

she stopped answering DFCS’s calls. She testified that if Melancon

hadn’t told her not to “file[] the report,” she would have done so.

The DFCS investigator testified to his unsuccessful investigation after Long’s initial report. On June 14, the day after Long’s call,

6

the investigator tried to contact Higgenbotham in person, by phone,

and via social media based on the information Long had provided,

but to no avail. The investigator also tried to call and text Long that

day. Long answered two of these calls, but she did not provide additional information to help locate Higgenbotham and Laura and told

the investigator DFCS could “cancel the report.” DFCS did not “cancel the report” as Long had asked, but it ultimately closed the case

because the investigator could not find Higgenbotham or Laura.

On July 22, about two weeks before Laura’s death, Higgenbotham took Laura to a family nurse practitioner for a ninemonth wellness check. The nurse practitioner did not note any concerns of abuse or neglect.

On July 31, about a week before Laura’s death, Long saw new

evidence of injuries to Laura, including “many scratches” that Long

recorded in a video, which was entered into evidence at trial. Long

did not tell Melancon about these scratches or show him the video.

On August 3, four days before Laura’s death, Long noticed that

Laura could not stand up in her playpen and that her legs were

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shaking. Long did not know that, at the time, Laura had a leg fracture. A little after midnight on August 4, Laura screamed in her

sleep and Melancon took Laura, who had been sleeping in his and

Long’s room, to Higgenbotham’s room. Around noon on August 5,

Higgenbotham texted Melancon that Laura had been sleeping since

he left for work, would not wake up, and “felt hot.” Between 3:30 and

4:00 p.m., with Melancon’s permission, Higgenbotham left for work,

leaving Laura alone in her room (Long was home but in her own

bedroom).

Around 4:00 p.m., Melancon came home and brought Laura,

who was strapped tightly into her car seat, to Long in their bedroom.

Melancon then left the apartment. Long noticed that Laura was not

moving and had one eye open and one eye shut. Long removed Laura

from the car seat and realized she was strapped into the car seat

because she was unconscious — when Long lifted Laura, her limbs

and head dropped immediately. Long saw that one of Laura’s pupils

was dilated and the other was small, she was drooling on one side of

her mouth, her breathing was labored, her heartbeat was fast, and

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she had thick blood in her mouth. Long called Melancon and tried

CPR on Laura. Melancon told Long not to call 911 because he was

nearby and would drive her to urgent care, which he did. When

Laura arrived at the urgent care, she appeared gray, was not breathing, and her head was slumped over in the car seat. Medical personnel tried to resuscitate Laura and called 911. Laura was eventually

taken by helicopter to the pediatric intensive care unit of a children’s

hospital, where she was declared brain dead on August 7. She died

later that day.

An autopsy showed that Laura died as a result of injuries

caused by intentionally inflicted head trauma and blunt force injuries to her head, neck, abdomen, back, arms, and legs, which were

all in a state of healing. Laura had recent brain injuries that reflected massive trauma, including brain bleed and retinal hemorrhage, and she had spinal injuries and leg fractures, including some

older fractures that were partially healed. She also had injuries consistent with undergoing violent shaking back and forth. A medical

expert testified that the nature and location of Laura’s injuries

9

indicated that they were likely inflicted intentionally and that she

had been in distress for several hours before being taken to urgent

care.

(b) After Melancon’s trial,1 the jury returned verdicts of guilty

for second-degree murder, second-degree child cruelty, and two

counts of influencing a witness. Melancon was sentenced to 30 years

in prison for the second-degree murder conviction and two consecutive sentences of 10 years’ probation for each count of influencing a

witness. The second-degree child cruelty count merged with the second-degree murder count.

Melancon appealed, arguing in relevant part that the evidence

was not sufficient to establish that he caused Laura’s death. The

Court of Appeals rejected that argument. See Melancon v. State, 368

Ga. App. 340, 344 (1) (890 SE2d 113) (2023). The court recounted

evidence that authorized the jury to find what it saw as “a natural

and continuous sequence leading from Melancon’s interference” to

1 Melancon and Higgenbotham were indicted jointly, but Melancon’s trial

was severed from Higgenbotham’s. The record does not reflect the disposition

of the charges against Higgenbotham.

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Laura’s death, and also that “had Melancon not interfered to end the

DFCS investigation, Higgenbotham’s abuse of Laura would not have

continued.” Id. at 345 (1). Although “no direct evidence” showed

“what DFCS would have done if Long had cooperated,” the court reasoned that a jury could infer that DFCS would have stopped the

abuse based on evidence that Higgenbotham was “actively abusing

Laura” while DFCS was taking steps to find her after Long’s first

report. Id. at 346 (1). Nor did the court consider Higgenbotham’s

later abuse of Laura an “intervening act that broke the causal chain

between his interference in the DFCS investigation and Laura’s

death.” Id. In the court’s view, “[i]t is reasonably foreseeable that if

one interferes to stop a DFCS investigation into child abuse that the

abuse will continue to occur,” id., and Melancon also could have reasonably foreseen that Higgenbotham’s continued abuse would “result[] in serious injury to or death of the baby.” Id. at 347 (1). The

court concluded with a summary: the evidence was sufficient to find

that Melancon committed second-degree murder and cruelty to children in the second degree because “the jury was presented with

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evidence that Melancon, knowing that Higgenbotham was physically abusive to Laura, took steps to stop DFCS from investigating

and acting to prevent further abuse,” and “that Higgenbotham’s continued abuse caused the baby to suffer and ultimately caused her

death.” Id. 2

We granted review.

2. Causation Principles

For each kind of murder defined by our murder statute, the

State must prove (among other things) that the accused “cause[d]

the death of another human being.” OCGA § 16-5-1. 3 Although we

have generally described this requirement as a single element of

“causation” or “proximate cause,” our decisions show that the causation required by our murder statute encompasses two distinct concepts: cause-in-fact, and legal cause.

2 Because it concluded the evidence was sufficient to support Melancon’s

convictions on this theory of causation, the Court of Appeals expressly declined

to address the State’s other theories of causation. See Melancon, 368 Ga. App.

at 344-345 (1).

3 Melancon was convicted of second-degree murder. “A person commits

the offense of murder in the second degree when, in the commission of cruelty

to children in the second degree, he or she causes the death of another human

being irrespective of malice.” OCGA § 16-5-1 (d).

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Start with State v. Jackson, 287 Ga. 646, 647 (2) (697 SE2d

757) (2010), a seminal decision addressing “what the term ‘causes’

means as used in the felony murder statute.” In that decision, we

overruled an earlier decision that had interpreted the term “causes”

to mean that the defendant must have “directly caused” the death

at issue. See id. at 656 (4), 660 (6) (overruling State v. Crane, 247

Ga. 779 (279 SE2d 695) (1981)). In place of that rule, we held that

“causes” requires “proximate cause,” so “the felony murder statute

requires only that the defendant’s felonious conduct proximately

cause the death of another person.” Id. at 660 (6).

Along the way to that holding, we offered varied descriptions

of the causation standard. We first noted that “the term ‘cause’ is

customarily interpreted in almost all legal contexts to mean ‘proximate cause,’” and then recited a definition of that term from Black’s

Law Dictionary: “that which, in a natural and continuous sequence,

unbroken by any efficient intervening cause, produces injury, and

without which the result would not have occurred.” Id. at 648 (2)

(quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 1103 (5th ed. 1979)). We then

13

turned to our own decisions. From Skaggs v. State, 278 Ga. 19, 19-20 (1) (596 SE2d 159) (2004), we quoted a standard for criminal

cases in general:

“In a criminal case, proximate cause exists when the accused’s ‘act or omission played a substantial part in bringing about or actually causing the victim’s injury or damage and . . . the injury or damage was either a direct result

or a reasonably probable consequence of the act or omission.’”

Jackson, 287 Ga. at 648-649 (2). From James v. State, 250 Ga. 655,

655 (300 SE2d 492) (1983), we quoted a standard for murder cases

in general:

“Where one inflicts an unlawful injury, such injury is to

be accounted as the efficient, proximate cause of death,

whenever it shall be made to appear, either that (1) the

injury itself constituted the sole proximate cause of the

death; or that (2) the injury directly and materially contributed to the happening of a subsequent accruing immediate cause of the death; or that (3) the injury materially

accelerated the death, although proximately occasioned

by a pre-existing cause.”

Jackson, 287 Ga. at 649 (2). From Durden v. State, 250 Ga. 325, 329

(5) (297 SE2d 237) (1982), and Jones v. State, 220 Ga. 899, 902 (3)

(142 SE2d 801) (1965), we cobbled together a causation standard

that we described as applicable “[i]n the context of this case”:

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In the context of this case, proximate causation would exist if (to use “the rule” for felony murder that the Court

stated a year after deciding Crane) the felony the defendants committed “directly and materially contributed to

the happening of a subsequent accruing immediate cause

of the death,” Durden, 250 Ga. at 329, 297 SE2d 237, or if

(to use language from a case decided 16 years before

Crane) “‘the homicide [was] committed within the res gestae of the felony’ ... and is one of the incidental, probable

consequences of the execution of the design to commit the

robbery.”

Jackson, 287 Ga. at 652 (2). And finally, in distinguishing Crane’s

“often unhelpful[] direct-indirect dichotomy,” we described “[p]roximate causation” in yet another way, explaining that it “imposes liability for the reasonably foreseeable results of criminal (or, in the

civil context, tortious) conduct if there is no sufficient, independent,

and unforeseen intervening cause.” Id. at 654 (3).

On a first read, it is not clear how exactly one should distill

from Jackson’s collection of descriptions a definitive standard or test

for determining whether the element of causation has been proven

in a murder case.4 But on a closer review of Jackson and our other

4 Indeed, after Jackson, our courts have emphasized different formulations of that standard from Jackson in different cases. Compare Daddario v.

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causation decisions, two distinct concepts of causation emerge: (1)

cause in fact (sometimes known as “actual cause”), and (2) legal (or

“proximate”) cause.

(a) Cause in Fact

As a general matter, “cause in fact” refers to the basic requirement that the defendant’s conduct must have an actual causal relationship to the forbidden result (here, the death of another human

being). See Burns v. State, 240 Ga. 827, 828 (242 SE2d 579) (1978)

(explaining that a “causal relationship” between the defendant’s act

and the victim’s death is required). The cause-in-fact requirement

shows up in our decisions in the form of various statements that define the necessary causal relationship itself. We have said, for example, that the defendant’s conduct “causes” a death if it “played a substantial part in bringing about or actually causing the death.”

State, 307 Ga. 179, 186 (835 SE2d 181) (2019) (focusing on “natural and continuous sequence” definition) with Hood v. State, 303 Ga. 420, 422 (811 SE2d

392) (2018) (focusing on descriptions Jackson sourced from Durden and Jones).

At times, we have even stitched several of Jackson’s various standards together to describe the causation standard. See, e.g., Bell v. State, 317 Ga. 519,

522-523 (893 SE2d 918) (2023).

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Jackson, 287 Ga, at 648-649 (2) (quoting Skaggs, 278 Ga. at 19-20

(1)); Chaney v. State, 281 Ga. 481, 482 (1) (640 SE2d 37) (2007)

(same).5 That showing is ordinarily made through evidence from

which a jury can infer that the forbidden result would not have happened “but for” the defendant’s conduct. See, e.g., Daddario v. State,

307 Ga. 179, 186-187 (2) (a) (2019) (rejecting argument that evidence

of causation was not sufficient because evidence was presented

showing that the victim’s severe injuries would not have occurred

“but for” the defendant’s act of molestation). See also Bell v. State,

317 Ga. 519, 523 (893 SE2d 918) (2023) (explaining conduct is considered the “cause” where “without [it] the result would not have

occurred” (quoting Jackson, 287 Ga. at 648 (2))). And we have made

5 We have also indicated that cause in fact is satisfied if the defendant’s

conduct “directly and materially contributed to the happening of a subsequent

accruing immediate cause of the death.” Williams v. State, 225 Ga. 21, 22 (334

SE2d 691) (1985); James, 250 Ga. at 655 (quoting Wilson v. State, 190 Ga. 824,

829 (10 SE2d 861) (1940)); Durden, 250 Ga. at 329; Larkin v. State, 247 Ga.

586, 587 (278 SE2d 365) (1981). As a description of a way to establish cause in

fact when the defendant’s conduct is not the most “immediate” cause of a death,

this statement is accurate, but it is also adequately captured by the requirement that the defendant’s conduct “played a substantial part in bringing about

the death.” So we focus on the latter description with a view towards distilling

our myriad descriptions of causation into a clearer standard.

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clear that such a showing will establish cause in fact whether or not

the defendant’s conduct was the “sole” or “immediate” cause of

death. Jackson, 287 Ga. at 649 (2) (explaining that a defendant’s injury-creating conduct causes a death if “the injury itself constituted

the sole proximate cause of the death” or “the injury directly and

materially contributed to the happening of a subsequent accruing

immediate cause of the death”). See also Wayne R. LaFave, 1 Subst.

Crim. L. § 6.4 (b) (3d ed.) (“In order that conduct be the actual cause

of a particular result, it is almost always sufficient that the result

would not have happened in the absence of the conduct; or, putting

it another way, that ‘but for’ the antecedent conduct the result would

not have occurred.”).6 Finally, if the evidence shows that the death

would have eventually happened even absent the defendant’s

6 This description of cause in fact suggests that at least in rare circumstances, a but-for causal relationship may not be necessary. For example, if a

defendant’s conduct is independently sufficient to cause a death, it may be a

cause in fact of the death even if the defendant’s conduct operated together

with another independently sufficient cause of the death. See LaFave, 1 Subst.

Crim. L. § 6.4 (b) (3d ed.) (explaining that “where two causes, each alone sufficient to bring about the harmful result, operate together to cause it,” the defendant’s conduct is still a cause in fact if it is “a substantial factor in bringing about the forbidden result”). But but-for causation is, by far, the usual way to

establish that the defendant’s conduct was a cause in fact of the death.

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conduct, we have said that the defendant’s conduct is still a cause if

it “materially accelerated” the death. Jackson, 287 Ga. at 649 (2)

(quoting Wilson, 190 Ga. at 829)). See also Wayne R. LaFave, 2

Subst. Crim. L. § 6.4 (3d ed.) (agreeing that “one who hastens the

victim’s death is a cause of his death”).

(b) Legal Cause

In addition to cause in fact, our decisions describe a separate

requirement that we refer to here as legal cause.7 It takes as a given

that the defendant’s conduct was causally connected to the forbidden

result — in a “but for” sense or otherwise — and asks whether the

death resulted from the defendant’s conduct in such an unforeseen

or attenuated way that the defendant cannot be held accountable for

the death. See Bell, 317 Ga. at 523 (citing Johnson v. Avis Rent A

Car Systems, LLC, 311 Ga. 588, 593 (858 SE2d 23) (2021) (“The

7 We have sometimes called this requirement “proximate cause.” See,

e.g., Eubanks v. State, 317 Ga. 563, 568 (2) (a) (894 SE2d 27) (2023). But because we have also referred to the overall element of causation required in

murder cases as “proximate cause,” Jackson, 287 Ga. at 648-649 (2), and that

element includes both cause in fact and legal cause, we use “legal cause” here

to describe the specific concept that, together with cause in fact, makes up the

element of causation.

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requirement of proximate cause constitutes a limit on legal liability;

it is a policy decision that, for a variety of reasons, e.g., intervening

act, the defendant’s conduct and the plaintiff’s injury are too remote

for the law to countenance recovery.”)). See also LaFave, 1 Subst.

Crim. L. § 6.4 (b) (3d ed.) (explaining that “even when cause in fact

is established, it must be determined that any variation between the

result intended (with intent crimes) or hazarded and (with reckless

or negligent crimes) the result actually achieved is not so extraordinary that it would be unfair to hold the defendant responsible for

the actual result”). To that end, the legal-cause requirement shows

up in our causation decisions as language specifying the requisite

foreseeability or likelihood of the death happening in the way it did,

given the defendant’s conduct. As we put it recently, legal cause “requires that the death actually happened in a way that was a reasonably foreseeable result of the criminal conduct—that is, the death

must also have been a ‘probable or natural consequence’ of the criminal conduct.” Eubanks v. State, 317 Ga. 563, 569 (2) (a) (ii) (894

SE2d 27) (2023). See also Jackson, 287 Ga. at 654 (3) (“Proximate

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causation imposes liability for the reasonably foreseeable results of

criminal (or, in the civil context, tortious) conduct if there is no sufficient, independent, and unforeseen intervening cause.”); Skaggs,

278 Ga. at 20 (1) (“In cases of felony murder, ‘for example, legal

cause will not be present where there intervenes (1) a coincidence

that is not reasonably foreseeable . . . or (2) an abnormal response.’”

(quoting 1 LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law, § 6.4 (h), p. 495 (2d

ed. 2003)). And “probable” means just that: “a person is not responsible for a consequence which is merely possible, according to occasional experience, but only for a consequence which is probable, according to ordinary and usual experience.” Bell, 317 Ga. at 523

(cleaned up). See also id. (explaining that “probable” means “not unlikely” or “such a chance of harmful result that a prudent man would

foresee the risk at issue here, i.e. the risk of serious injury or death”).

Our causation decisions also describe legal cause when they

address “intervening acts” — that is, links in the causal chain, like

the conduct of another person or other causal forces that happen between the defendant’s conduct and the death. See Eubanks, 317 Ga.

21

at 570-571 (2) (a) (ii); Wilson v. State, 315 Ga. 728, 809 (4) (883 SE2d

802) (2023) (“[T]he defendant is liable for the reasonably foreseeable

results of [his] criminal conduct if there is no sufficient, independent, and unforeseen intervening cause.” (cleaned up)); Jackson, 287

Ga. at 654 (3). As with legal cause generally, the inquiry about intervening acts asks whether an intervening act was itself a natural

or probable consequence of the defendant’s conduct. See Eubanks,

317 Ga. at 570 (2) (a) (ii) & n.3. That would be true when, for example, the intervening act “ensue[s] in the ordinary course of events,”

or was “set in motion by the original wrong-doer,” as when the intervening act was undertaken “by someone other than the defendant

who could reasonably be expected to take that action in response to

the criminal conduct.” Id. at 570 (2) (a) (ii) (cleaned up). See Bell,

317 Ga. at 522-523; Skaggs, 278 Ga. at 20 (1). When an intervening

act was a natural or probable consequence of the defendant’s conduct, a finding of legal cause is not precluded. And this is so even

when the intervening act was “not intended by the defendant,” like

when the victim is “especially vulnerable” or suffers a “medical

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complication as a result of the defendant’s conduct.” Eubanks, 317

Ga. at 571 (2) (a) (ii).

*

So the standard for proving the element of causation for a murder charge can be distilled from our decisions as follows. As we held

in Jackson, proving that a defendant “caused” the death of another

human being requires proof of “proximate cause.” Jackson, 287 Ga.

at 647; id. at 654 (3). This showing has two components: cause in

fact and legal cause. See e.g., Jackson, 287 Ga. at 648-649 (2) (“In a

criminal case, proximate cause exists when the accused’s act or

omission played a substantial part in bringing about or actually

causing the victim’s injury or damage and the injury or damage was

either a direct result or a reasonably probable consequence of the act

or omission.” (quoting Skaggs, 278 Ga. at 19-20 (1)) (cleaned up and

emphasis added)). See also LaFave, 1 Subst. Crim. L. § 6.4(a) (3d

ed.) (describing cause in fact as “the word ‘cause’ in the phrase . . .

‘proximate cause,’” and legal cause as “the word . . . ‘proximate’ in

the phrase . . . “proximate cause”). Cf. McGrath v. State, 277 Ga.

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App. 825, 828 (627 SE2d 866) (2006) (proving causation in a vehicular homicide case requires showing that “the defendant’s conduct

was the ‘legal’ or ‘proximate’ cause, as well as the cause in fact, of

the death” (cleaned up)); Miller v. State, 236 Ga. App. 825, 828 (513

SE2d 27) (1999) (same). A defendant’s conduct is a cause in fact of a

death if the defendant’s conduct “played a substantial part in bringing about or actually causing” the death — typically shown through

evidence that the death would not have happened “but for” the defendant’s conduct — or if the defendant’s conduct “materially accelerated the death.” Jackson, 287 Ga. at 648-649 (2); Daddario, 307

Ga. at 186-187 (2) (a); James, 250 Ga. at 655. And a defendant’s conduct is a legal cause of a death if the death was “reasonably foreseeable” — that is, a “probable or natural consequence” of the criminal

conduct “according to ordinary and usual experience,” not a “merely

possible” result. Eubanks, 317 Ga. at 569 (2) (a) (ii); Bell, 317 Ga. at

523. Determining whether the State has proved these requirements

in any given case is “fact-intensive” and demands “mixed considerations of logic, common sense, justice, policy, and precedent,” so

24

questions of causation are “generally left to the jury at trial.” Jackson, 287 Ga. at 652 (2).

3. This Case

Having clarified the standard for proving causation under our

murder statute, we can turn to this case. On appeal from his conviction for second-degree murder, see OCGA § 16-5-1 (d), Melancon contends that the State failed to present sufficient evidence that he

caused the victim’s death. 8 The Court of Appeals disagreed, concluding that the evidence authorized the jury to find that Melancon

caused Laura’s death at Higgenbotham’s hands by telling Long to

stop cooperating with DFCS. To review that conclusion, we must

consider whether a rational trier of fact could have found, beyond a

reasonable doubt, that Melancon’s conduct was the proximate cause

— both cause in fact and legal cause — of Laura’s death. See Jackson

v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 318-19 (99 SCt 2781, 61 LEd2d 560) (1979)

8 Commission of second-degree cruelty to children is an element of second-degree murder. See OCGA § 16-5-1 (d). Melancon was also charged with

and found guilty of second-degree cruelty to children, but that count merged

with the second-degree murder count, so a challenge to the sufficiency of the

evidence supporting a cruelty to children conviction is not currently before us.

25

(explaining that the “critical inquiry on review of the sufficiency of

the evidence to support a criminal conviction” is “whether, after

viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,

any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of

the crime beyond a reasonable doubt”). In doing so, as with any dueprocess sufficiency review, we view the evidence presented at trial

in the light most favorable to the verdict, id., “leav[ing] to the jury

the resolution of conflicts or inconsistencies in the evidence, credibility of witnesses, and reasonable inferences to be derived from the

facts.” Perkins v. State, 313 Ga. 885, 891 (2) (a) (873 SE2d 185)

(2022) (citation and punctuation omitted).

(a) Cause in Fact

Although the Court of Appeals did not expressly address cause

in fact, its reasoning indicates that it determined that a rational juror could have found that Melancon’s conduct was a but-for cause of

Laura’s death. The Court of Appeals accepted the State’s theory, presented in its indictment of Melancon, that Melancon’s instructing

Long to stop cooperating with DFCS (after she initially reported

26

Higgenbotham’s abuse of Laura) caused Laura’s death. Melancon,

368 Ga. App. at 347 (1). In support of that theory, the Court reasoned

that a jury could find “that, had Melancon not interfered to end the

DFCS investigation, Higgenbotham’s abuse of Laura would not have

continued.” Id. at 345 (1). In other words, the Court thought the evidence supported a finding that but for Melancon’s instruction to

Long, Higgenbotham’s abuse would have stopped, and she would not

have killed Laura.

At the outset, this particular kind of cause-in-fact theory faces

an uphill battle. To establish that Melancon’s instruction was a

cause in fact of Laura’s death, the State had to prove that it “played

a substantial part in bringing about or actually causing” that death.

Jackson, 287 Ga. at 653 (2) (quoting Skaggs, 278 Ga. at 19-20 (1)).

In a case where the defendant’s conduct was not the most immediate

cause of death, this showing is typically made through evidence that

he nonetheless “directly and materially contributed” in some affirmative way to that immediate cause. For instance, in Skaggs, we held

that kicking the victim in the face with his steel-toed boots, resulting

27

in the victim falling headfirst onto the concrete, caused the victim’s

death some days later from trauma to skull and brain because the

fall “was the direct and immediate result” of the defendant’s actions

and “[t]he only intervening force was gravity.” Skaggs, 278 Ga. at 20

(1). See also Larkin v. State, 247 Ga. 586, 587 (278 SE2d 365) (1981)

(upholding felony murder conviction because defendant “caused his

mother-in-law’s death” when he stabbed her after she tried to stop

him from assaulting his wife, and his mother-in-law later died from

a complication of surgery to re-stitch the knife wound (citation omitted)). And in Calhoun v. State, 38 Ga. 146, 150-151 (2) (a) (839 SE2d

612) (2020), we held that a defendant caused the death by fleeing,

where a police officer’s use of a “PIT” maneuver to end a high-speed

car chase resulted in the defendant’s car crashing and killing his

passenger. By contrast, the theory here — that Melancon caused

Laura’s death by stopping Long from cooperating with DFCS — is

that the defendant’s conduct merely foreclosed one conceivable way

that a third party might have intervened to stop another third party

from killing the victim. For such a preventing-someone-from28

preventing-murder theory to work (if it can work), the State would

have to establish not only that the defendant’s conduct in fact prevented the hypothetical intervening third-party conduct, but also

that the intervention would have in fact succeeded in stopping the

murder. Without such evidence, it cannot be said that the defendant’s conduct — preventing the putative intervention — played a

substantial part in bringing about the death, much less that the

death would not have happened but for the defendant’s conduct.

And that’s precisely the kind of evidence that is missing here.

The Court of Appeals was right that some evidence showed that but

for Melancon’s instruction to Long, DFCS could have found Higgenbotham and Laura. Long testified that she would have “filed the

report” about Laura’s fingernail mark and bruise if Melancon had

not stopped her, and the jury could have inferred from her testimony

that she would have told DFCS where to find Higgenbotham and

Laura (even though she did not share their whereabouts when she

first called DFCS with Melancon’s approval). But as the Court of

Appeals also acknowledged, the jury heard no evidence at all about

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what DFCS would have done next. There was no evidence in the

record, for instance, that based on allegations of a bruise and fingernail mark, DFCS would have removed Laura from Higgenbotham’s

custody or taken some other action that would eliminate the possibility of further abuse. The Court of Appeals suggested that the jury

could nonetheless “infer” that DFCS “would have intervened in a

way to stop the ongoing abuse,” Melancon, 368 Ga. App. at 346 (1),

but inferences require some basis in evidence. Without any evidence

even suggesting how DFCS would have responded to Long’s report

and cooperation, or the likelihood that it would have done so based

on the evidence of which it was aware, any conclusion about further

actions DFCS might have taken — and whether any such actions

would have prevented Higgenbotham from inflicting fatal head

trauma to Laura months later — would be speculation, not inference.9 In short, this record did not authorize a jury to conclude

9 In fact, a report from Laura’s nine-month wellness check just a month

after Long asked DFCS to “cancel” the report noted no concerns about possible

abuse or neglect. If anything, that evidence, had DFCS known about it, could

have supported an inference that DFCS would not have seen a basis for removing her from Higgenbotham’s care at that time.

30

beyond a reasonable doubt that DFCS would have prevented Laura’s

death at Higgenbotham’s hands but for Melancon telling Long not

to “file a report” about Laura’s fingernail mark and bruise two

months earlier.

Because the evidence did not authorize the jury to find that

Laura’s death would not have happened but for Melancon telling

Long not to cooperate, and the State has not advanced any theory

other than but-for causation (for example, that Melancon’s conduct

somehow accelerated Laura’s death), we conclude that the evidence

was not sufficient to establish that instructing Long not to file a report was a cause in fact of Laura’s death.

(b) Legal Cause

As explained above, the analysis of legal cause takes as a given

that the defendant’s conduct was causally connected to the forbidden

result and asks whether the death that resulted from the defendant’s conduct was reasonably foreseeable. So here, we ask whether,

assuming Melancon’s instruction to Long was an actual cause of

Laura’s death, her death by head trauma at Higgenbotham’s hands

31

two months later was a reasonably foreseeable result of that instruction. 10 As we discussed above, that standard is met only if the death

is a “probable or natural consequence” of the conduct in question.

Eubanks, 317 Ga. at 569 (2) (a) (ii). A death can be a probable or

natural consequence even if an intervening act happened between

the defendant’s conduct and the death, as long as the intervening

act, too, was a probable or natural consequence of that conduct. See

Id. at 570 (2) (a) (ii). In all events, however, a defendant “is not responsible for a consequence which is merely possible, according to

occasional experience, but only for a consequence which is probable,

according to ordinary and usual experience.” Bell, 317 Ga. at 523.

Measured against this standard, the evidence here does not

support a finding that Melancon’s conduct was a legal cause of

Laura’s death.

10 We address both cause in fact and legal cause in this opinion. But as a

general matter, the State fails to prove causation if it fails to prove either cause in fact or legal cause. See Jackson, 287 Ga. at 648-649 (2). Thus, if a court

determines that the evidence of cause in fact is not sufficient, the evidence is

not sufficient to prove causation, and so the court would not be required to go

on to evaluate legal cause.

32

When Melancon told Long not to “file the report” about the fingernail mark and bruise on Laura, certain consequences may have

been reasonably foreseeable: Given the evidence of his controlling

relationship with Long, one could conclude that she was likely going

to heed his instruction, and indeed, she asked DFCS to “cancel the

report.” It could also be fair to conclude that ending Long’s cooperation with DFCS might well prevent DFCS from finding Higgenbotham and Laura. And although Melancon addressed this particular incident by putting Laura in Long’s care for several days,

given evidence that Melancon may have known about not only the

bruise and fingernail mark but also earlier incidents of concern, the

evidence arguably supported a conclusion that more incidents of

harm to Laura going forward would be a reasonably foreseeable (i.e.,

natural or probable) consequence of his conduct aimed at stopping

possible action by DFCS.

But the legal-cause inquiry here is not merely whether it was

reasonably foreseeable that Higgenbotham’s abuse of Laura would

continue if Melancon stopped Long from filing the report about the

33

bruise and fingernail mark. The question is whether the intervening

act of Higgenbotham inflicting fatal injuries, including massive head

trauma on Laura almost two months later was a natural or probable

consequence of that instruction. And we see no basis in the record

for that conclusion. We do not deny that it could be “possible, according to occasional experience,” that declining to help authorities investigate allegations of child abuse of this nature could result in the

authorities not taking some action that conceivably would have prevented some future act of abuse serious enough to cause the child’s

death. See Bell, 317 Ga. at 523. But nothing in this record indicates

that such a consequence is “probable, according to ordinary and

usual experience” as a general matter, or was so in the particular

circumstances of this case. Id. As the State concedes, there is no argument that Melancon’s instruction “set in motion” Higgenbotham’s

later, fatal abuse of Laura, or that he reasonably could have expected it as some kind of “response” to his conduct. See Eubanks,

317 Ga. at 570 (2) (a) (ii) (citing Davis v. State, 290 Ga. 757, 760 (4)

(725 SE2d 280) (2012) (defendant proximately caused death where

34

defendant’s brother fatally shot drug dealer); Robinson v. State, 298

Ga. 455, 456, 458-459 (1) (782 SE2d 657) (2016) (defendant proximately caused death when store owner they were robbing shot and

killed his accomplice)). Nor can we see how Laura’s death would be

expected to “ensue in the ordinary course of events” from stopping

Long’s cooperation with the authorities given Melancon’s knowledge

of, at most, a small number of milder (relative to the massive and

fatal trauma that caused Laura’s death) incidents of harm in the

past. The record shows that Long and Melancon were concerned

about Higgenbotham’s ability to parent and her treatment of Laura,

but there was no evidence that Higgenbotham had inflicted any potentially fatal injuries before Laura’s death, much less that Melancon knew about any such incidents. 11 So although the evidence may

11 The Court of Appeals reasoned that Melancon “equivocated at trial

about the extent of the abuse of which he was aware, and the jury was not

required to credit his testimony that his knowledge of the abuse was limited.”

Melancon, 368 Ga. App. at 346-347 (1). Even so, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the evidence supported an inference that Melancon

knew at most that Laura’s grandmother generally warned him not to leave

Laura alone with Higgenbotham, and that Higgenbotham had force-fed Laura,

left her in a “hot room” for thirty minutes, and muffled her crying by covering

her mouth, in addition to the fingernail mark and bruise.

35

have offered a basis for believing that Laura’s later death at Higgenbotham’s hands was a possible consequence of preventing Long

from cooperating with DFCS, the record does not support a finding

that Laura’s death by violent head trauma “could reasonably have

been anticipated, apprehended, or foreseen” as the consequence of

that instruction. See Eubanks, 317 Ga. at 569-570 (2) (a) (ii) (cleaned

up).

The attenuated nature of the State’s theory of causation also

informs this conclusion. The State’s theory was that it was reasonably foreseeable to Melancon that when he told Long not to cooperate

with DFCS, (1) Long would comply, (2) DFCS would not be able to

find Higgenbotham and Laura, and that (3) Higgenbotham would

ultimately inflict injuries that caused Laura’s death. All else equal,

legal cause generally will be harder to establish when it turns on

whether it was reasonably foreseeable to the defendant what third

parties would do in response to his conduct — and even more so

when, like here, the chain of causation involves multiple third parties acting in particular ways over an extended period of time. See

36

Eubanks, 317 Ga. at 569 (2) (a) (ii) (explaining that in a hypothetical

case in which someone dies because they tried to flee from an ongoing robbery by climbing from a third-floor balcony to the balcony below, slipped, and then fell thirty feet to the ground, “proximate cause

would be a closer question” (citing Stafford v. State, 312 Ga. 811 (865

SE2d 116) (2021) (decided on other grounds)). That is not to say that

a finding of legal cause is foreclosed merely because a causal chain

is made up of a series of events that must happen in sequence, or

includes third parties, but as a matter of logic and probability, such

attenuated chains of causation typically will be harder to characterize as “natural or probable.” And when the ultimate result becomes

“too remote” a possibility in such a case — even though the attenuated chain of causation ultimately happened — legal cause stands

as a limit on legal liability. Bell, 317 Ga. at 523 (quoting Johnson,

311 Ga. at 593)); See also LaFave, 1 Subst. Crim. L. § 6.4 (b) (3d ed.).

Just so here.

Finally, the ramifications of the State’s theory of causation

here warrant mention. Reduced to its simplest form, that theory is

37

that the defendant caused a child’s death at the hands of another by

stopping the reporting of an earlier allegation of that other person’s

act of abuse against that child. If that were a sufficient theory of

causation as a general matter, any failure to report an allegation of

almost any type of child abuse likely could be prosecuted as seconddegree murder if the child later dies as a result of abuse. OCGA §

16-5-1 (d) (“A person commits the offense of murder in the second

degree when, in the commission of cruelty to children in the second

degree, he or she causes the death of another human being irrespective of malice.”). And there is no particular reason that this theory

would not transfer to failures to report conduct outside the context

of child abuse. Such an expansive construction of our murder statute’s causation element strikes us as untenable, especially since our

legislature has enacted a statute that (1) makes reporting of suspected child abuse mandatory for only a subset of people (like doctors, teachers, and police), and (2) makes the failure to report such

abuse only a misdemeanor. See OCGA §§ 19-7-5 (c) (1), (h). Because

what “causes” means as it is used in OCGA § 16-5-1 (d) is, at bottom,

38

a question of statutory construction, and statutory context is an important indicator of meaning, the serious tension (if not conflict)

with the mandatory reporting statute that this particular theory of

causation creates is a final reason to reject it here.

For all of these reasons, the evidence here was not sufficient to

establish that Melancon’s instruction to Long to not cooperate with

DFCS was a legal cause of Laura’s murder two months later at Higgenbotham’s hands.

4. Conclusion

In sum, the evidence here did not authorize a jury to conclude

that Melancon telling Long not to “file a report” with DFCS was either a cause in fact or legal cause of Laura’s death. Because both

cause in fact and legal cause are necessary components of the element of causation under OCGA § 16-5-1 (b), the Court of Appeals

erred in concluding that there was sufficient evidence of causation

based on the theory of causation it reviewed.

That said, our decision today addresses only the theory of causation the Court of Appeals reviewed below, which was one of three

39

theories the State included in Melancon’s indictment. 12 Thus, on remand, the Court of Appeals should apply the framework set forth

above and consider in the first instance whether the evidence of causation in this case was sufficient under a theory other than the one

we have rejected here.

Judgment vacated and case remanded. All the Justices concur.

12 Melancon was charged with second-degree murder and second-degree

child cruelty (1) “by causing Gerallyn Long to not cooperate with a Division of

Family and Children Services investigation into the abuse of Laura Higgenbotham”; (2) “by failing to seek adequate and necessary medical attention

for said child’s injuries”; and (3) “by leaving the child alone with Sadai Higgenbotham knowing that Sadai Higgenbotham was abusive toward the child.”

40