Adoption of Tina

701 N.E.2d 671, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 727, 1998 Mass. App. LEXIS 1223
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1998
DocketNo. 98-P-0672
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 701 N.E.2d 671 (Adoption of Tina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adoption of Tina, 701 N.E.2d 671, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 727, 1998 Mass. App. LEXIS 1223 (Mass. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Dreben, J.

The parents of Tina, who was born in March, 1996, appeal from decrees of a Juvenile Court judge entered in a combined proceeding adjudicating Tina in need of care and protection and dispensing with their consent to her adoption. Their main claims are that the judge (1) erroneously admitted the findings entered in a 1994 proceeding adjudicating their three other children in need of care and protection, (2) precluded them from controverting those findings, and (3) erroneously admitted reports of a court investigator and others without redacting hearsay statements of their eldest child regarding sexual abuse. The statements of the eldest child are claimed to have been admitted without adherence to the requirements of G. L. c. 233, § 82, as inserted by St. 1990, c. 339, the text of which is set out in the Appendix to this opinion.

We are constrained to vacate the decrees and remand for further proceedings, as we cannot tell on this record whether the ruling precluding the parents from introducing evidence to contradict the prior determination of sexual abuse by the father was harmless error. See Adoption of Frederick, 405 Mass. 1, 6-7 (1989); Adoption of Paula, 420 Mass. 716, 722 (1995); Care & Protection of Isabelle, 33 Mass. App. Ct. 548, 551 (1992). We are also troubled because portions of documents containing the eldest child’s hearsay statements relating to sexual abuse were erroneously admitted and may have affected the result.

We take our facts primarily from the findings of the trial judge supplemented by docket entries and uncontradicted evidence. Tina was born on March 10, 1996, and one day later, the Department of Social Services (DSS) filed a petition for her care and protection and obtained temporary custody. Tina has been in a preadoptive home since July, 1996. Although prior to Tina’s birth, DSS had decided to let Tina’s mother take her home, when the mother’s social worker discovered that Tina’s father had been in the delivery room, DSS filed a petition under G. L. c. 119, § 24.2 Each DSS service plan for the mother, after the conclusion of the prior care and protection proceeding that [729]*729had determined that the father had sexually abused the parents’ oldest daughter, required the mother not to have any contact with the father, and, indeed, a 1994 plan required her to obtain a restraining order against the father.

Witnesses who testified in the present proceeding, which was heard over eleven days, included the eldest child (testifying in camera over the parents’ objection), her therapist, the parents, the court investigator, DSS personnel, the court appointed special advocate (CASA), a teacher of a parenting class, and a psychologist who had tested the mother. Numerous reports were also admitted in evidence, many of them containing hearsay evidence of the eldest child and admitted over the parents’ (primarily the father’s) objection.

1. Prior findings and preclusion of evidence to contradict them. “The basis for the court’s judgment in the previous case,” as stated by the judge in the present case, “was primarily that [the father] had sexually abused at least one of the children, [the oldest child], on more than one occasion, that he had neither admitted so abusing her nor obtained counseling as a sexual abuse perpetrator, and that [the mother] had been unable or unwilling to protect [the oldest child] from the sexual abuse.” Over the objections of counsel for the parents, the judge in the present case admitted in evidence the earlier findings, which she found “relevant . . . though not the sole basis” for her decision. She acknowledged that, over the objections of counsel, she “did not allow evidence to be presented which would have the effect of relitigating the issues decided in the previous case regarding children who are not the subject of this proceeding.”3 . The judge’s findings show that her decision rested heavily on the determination that the father had abused the eldest child. Although she included findings that the father had made inconsistent statements concerning his employment history and had lied on his financial statements, the crucial finding as to his unfitness was that he “sexually abused the sister of Tina and has not received appropriate counseling to address the issues.” The judge did not state the evidentiary basis for this conclusion [730]*730and made no subsidiary findings other than a discussion of the eldest child’s in camera testimony which, in keeping with the judge’s ruling of not going behind the 1994 findings, “allowed [her] ... to answer questions in camera regarding whether she had any changes or additions to make to her previous testimony.”4

While the findings as to the mother were more extensive and included a discussion of her depression, her failure to take prescribed drugs, her failure to avail herself of many services offered by DSS, and her incidents of inappropriate behavior,5 the judge also laid stress on her consistent contacts with the [731]*731father which “association . . . poses a risk of significant harm to [Tina], if [Tina] were ever to live with [the mother].”

At trial and throughout the DSS involvement with the family, both the father and the mother insisted that the father had not sexually abused Tina’s sister.6 That they held this view was confirmed by their therapists and others. Although the mother and father believed that the child had, indeed, been abused, they claimed the abuser was someone else, either a man referred to as Squiggy or a bus driver from the child’s day care provider. They attempted to obtain a rape kit, acknowledged by DSS to have been mentioned in the prior proceeding, but were precluded from obtaining it on the ground that it had been available prior to the 1994 proceeding and, hence, under the judge’s mling barring relitigation, was inadmissible. They also objected to the child testifying in camera, and objected to the denial of the mother’s request that the judge ask the child about Squiggy and about certain sleeping arrangements which indicated that the child’s memory as to prior events was faulty. Certain questions of the child’s therapist were disallowed on the ground that they related to pre-1994 matters.

Findings from a care and protection proceeding are to be treated with caution before admission in an adoption proceeding. The better practice may be to exclude such findings, especially where they relate to children other than the child before the court. See Care & Protection of Isabelle, 33 Mass. App. Ct. at 550-551. “The parties and the judge are not bound by the findings which carry no special evidentiary weight, and evidence may be offered at the adoption proceeding by any party on any of the issues covered by the findings either to support or contradict them.” Adoption of Paula, 420 Mass. at 721-722. While it was not error to admit the findings in this case to the extent relevant — as to relevance, see G. L. c. 210, § 3(c)(ii), as inserted by St. 1992, c. 303, § 5 — the preference is for fresh findings, see Adoption of Simone, 427 Mass. 34, 44 [732]*732(1998), and the care and protection findings should not be conclusively or exclusively determinative of the issues. See Adoption of Frederick, 405 Mass. at 6. It was, therefore, error to preclude evidence to contradict them. Id. at 6-7. Care & Protection of Isabelle, 33 Mass. App. Ct. at 551.

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Bluebook (online)
701 N.E.2d 671, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 727, 1998 Mass. App. LEXIS 1223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-tina-massappct-1998.