Adoption of Quentin

678 N.E.2d 1325, 424 Mass. 882, 1997 Mass. LEXIS 104
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 13, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 678 N.E.2d 1325 (Adoption of Quentin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adoption of Quentin, 678 N.E.2d 1325, 424 Mass. 882, 1997 Mass. LEXIS 104 (Mass. 1997).

Opinion

Lynch, J.

The parents appeal from an order of the Juvenile Court awarding custody of their three minor children to the Department of Social Services (department) and dispensing with their need to consent to adoption. See G. L. c. 210, § 3. On appeal, the parents allege that the judge’s findings are not supported by the evidence and, taken together, do not meet the clear and convincing evidentiary standard necessary [883]*883to demonstrate current parental unfitness. In addition, the parents claim that the judge erred in admitting out-of-court statements under G. L. c. 233, § 82, a statutorily created exception to the hearsay rule for statements made by a child under the age of ten describing sexual contact. We transferred the case here on our own motion and now affirm.

We summarize the judge’s findings. The father and mother are the natural (unwed) parents of Ellen (bom in 1987), Quentin (1989), and John (1991). At the time of the proceeding, December, 1994, the father and the mother were thirty-two and thirty-three years old, respectively.

The father was bom in San Jose, California, and raised in Oregon. He ran away from home at the age of sixteen. After living on the streets for two years, he joined the Navy. During his service, he was arrested for selling marihuana. He deserted in an attempt to evade the charges, but was arrested, and after a court martial, served five months in “the Naval brig” before being dishonorably discharged.

The father returned to Oregon to live with a woman and their infant daughter, but left after a few months, and has had no further contact with them.2 He went back to California and resumed his former life-style, living in a public park, and working intermittently. During this period, he regularly used drugs and was promiscuous.

In 1983, the father joined a religious organization called Orlo Templi Orientis and studied the so-called “Satanic Bible.” In January, 1984, he was convicted of grave robbing, and sentenced to two months in jail. After release, he returned to his transient life-style, alternating between Los Angeles and San Francisco.

In 1985, the father and the mother met, and soon after started living together. Between November, 1985, and July, 1987, they moved frequently, living in Oregon, California, Texas, Arkansas, Pennsylvania, and Maine. The mother became pregnant with their first child while they were living in Maine. During her pregnancy, the father left and moved to Cambridge. Soon after, the mother lost her job and joined him in Cambridge. Without work, a place to live, and a child about to be bom, they returned to California.

[884]*884During the next few years the father and the mother managed a residential hotel in California. Their second child, Quentin, was bom there. They left their jobs and moved to Colorado in February, 1991; shortly afterward, their third child, John, was bom.

In April, 1991, the mother took the children to California to live with her sister. The father moved to Oregon and lived with another woman who “sparked his interest.” In November, 1991, the family reunited and moved to Massachusetts with a friend, Michael Switzer. When they arrived, the father lived in his automobile. Unemployed and homeless, the mother and father took the children with them to beg in Harvard Square in Cambridge.

In January, 1992, John was hospitalized. A report was filed pursuant to G. L. c. 119, § 51A (injured child report), alleging neglect due to failure to immunize the children and failure to provide appropriate warm clothing. These allegations were not substantiated. In February, 1992, the family moved into a two-bedroom apartment in Chelsea with Michael Switzer.

In July, 1992, a second injured child report was filed. The investigation revealed that “[t]he children were dirty, the two younger children wore only diapers, a bottle of bleach was within reach of the children, and the hot water heater and pipes were dangerously exposed in the kitchen.” Furthermore, the department expressed concern about three adults and three children living in the two-bedroom apartment. An unannounced visit in August found the children dirty, the pipes exposed, and Switzer still living with the family.

During an interview with Dr. Karen O’Connell, a clinical psychologist, the mother indicated that the father had used her public assistance money to buy drugs. She also admitted that she had no power to protect the children from their father’s inappropriate behavior. The mother was given an intelligence test by Dr. Michael A. Goldberg with the Boston Juvenile Court Clinic. She scored in the “borderline” range of intelligence, meaning that her verbal performance was “in the high end of the mentally retarded range,” and that she had the reading skills of a third grader. Dr. Goldberg concluded that “[she] has cognitive difficulties in processing information, difficulty complying with social norms, low verbal reasoning capacity, inability to remedy stressful situations and, as a [885]*885result, that [she] would have difficulty caring for special needs children.”

The eldest child, Ellen, was diagnosed as suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder. During an interview with Dr. O’Connell, she stated that “her ‘Daddy’s a witch;’ that ‘bad witches took my picture with no clothes on;’ that ‘[Paul, a friend of the father] calls me his girlfriend;’ that [Paul] took pictures of her with no clothes on; that [Paul] said not to tell; that she and her mother were tied up together with no clothes on while her father had no clothes on; and that the witches ‘shared weenies’ and tried to touch her with their weenies but that she ran away.” When Quentin was evaluated by Heather Ayers, a licensed clinical social worker who specialized in child trauma, he stated that his mother and father had “kissed my wee wee.” He also displayed sexual behavior of a nature that was not normal for his age, such as undressing dolls, licking the dolls’ genital areas, saying, “I’ll kiss your wee wee,” inserting toys in the area between the dolls’ legs, and lifting Ayers’s skirt and saying, “I see your wee wee.” Ayers testified that a three and one-half year old child would not kiss a doll’s genital area unless he participated in or observed such behavior. Dr. Catherine Ayoub, a psychologist with the Boston Juvenile Court Clinic, stated that preschool children do not act out or ask others to engage in adult sexual activity of the sort manifested by Quentin as part of normal development. The judge credited Dr. Ayoub’s opinion that this behavior is one of the few direct indicators of sexual abuse.

On August 19, 1992, the department was granted temporary custody of the children. When the children arrived in the foster home, they did not know how to brush their teeth, how to brush their hair, how to wipe themselves after using the toilet, or how to eat using utensils. One night, Quentin put his tongue in his foster mother’s mouth when she put him to bed. When asked where he learned that behavior, he said his mother and father.

The department referred the mother to classes for parents with learning disabilities and a domestic violence support group, but she refused to attend. In addition, the department arranged for both parents to participate in a parenting group at the Revere Counselling Center, but they refused to attend. The parents did not get along with John Oteri, the department’s case worker. They cited their personal animosity to[886]

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Bluebook (online)
678 N.E.2d 1325, 424 Mass. 882, 1997 Mass. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-quentin-mass-1997.