Albertson v. Washington ex rel. Department of Social & Health Services

361 P.3d 808, 191 Wash. App. 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 10, 2015
DocketNo. 45748-2-II
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 361 P.3d 808 (Albertson v. Washington ex rel. Department of Social & Health Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albertson v. Washington ex rel. Department of Social & Health Services, 361 P.3d 808, 191 Wash. App. 284 (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

¶1 — ARB, through his guardian ad litem, Dan Albertson, sued the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) for negligent investigation of alleged abuse by his father, Jacob Mejia. A jury found that DSHS was negligent in its investigation of ARB’s injuries but that its actions were not a proximate cause of ARB’s injuries. ARB appeals the judgment in favor of DSHS based on several alleged evidentiary errors and the trial court’s jury instructions on superseding cause. DSHS cross appeals, asserting that the trial court erred by instructing the jury on DSHS’s duty to ARB and denying DSHS’s CR 50 motions to dismiss.

¶2 We hold that (1) the trial court erred by instructing the jury on superseding cause, (2) the trial court’s jury instruction misstated DSHS’s duty to ARB, and (3) the trial court did not err in denying DSHS’s CR 50 motions to dismiss. Therefore, we reverse and remand for a new trial.1

FACTS

I. ARB’s November 18 and December 22 Injuries

¶3 ARB was born in late 2008 to Sarah Tate and Mejia. ARB’s birth was unremarkable, and he had no signs of [289]*289trauma or physical injury as a newborn. Tate and Mejia lived with Mejia’s parents. Mejia was attending high school when ARB was born. Tate had already graduated from high school, and she was ARB’s primary caregiver. Five days after ARB’s birth, he was a healthy baby.

¶4 On the morning of November 18, Tate found that ARB’s left arm was limp. Mejia had fed ARB, changed him, swaddled him, and placed him back into bed two hours earlier. Tate, Mejia, and Mejia’s mother brought ARB to Harrison Medical Center’s emergency room that night.

¶5 X-rays showed that ARB’s left humerus bone was broken. The break was a spiral fracture, which typically requires a twisting, pulling, or jerking motion with greater than normal force required to accomplish. Tate and Mejia first told the emergency room doctor, Dr. William Moore, that the injury could have been caused at a wedding three days beforehand when ARB was passed around. Later, Tate explained that she noticed ARB’s limp arm after Mejia swaddled him that morning. Dr. Moore suspected that ARB’s injury was caused from abuse, and he contacted law enforcement, who placed ARB into protective custody with Child Protective Services (CPS). Nicole Miller, a social worker at Harrison Medical Center, referred ARB’s case to DSHS after she interviewed the family.

¶6 ARB was transferred to Mary Bridge Children’s Hospital, where he was placed on a hospital hold.2 The emergency room physician at Mary Bridge, Dr. Jeffrey Bullard-Berent, ordered a skeletal survey and a CT (computed tomography) scan of ARB’s head. Those studies did not show any other fractures but did find a subscleral hemorrhage.

¶7 Dr. Bullard-Berent was concerned that ARB had been abused because ARB had two “abnormal” injuries, a broken [290]*290humerus and the hemorrhage. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 4068. He did not believe that Tate and Mejia’s explanation for ARB’s broken bone, swaddling, was consistent with the injury. Dr. Victoria Silas, a pediatric orthopedic specialist who examined and treated ARB’s broken arm at Mary Bridge, was also concerned that ARB’s broken arm had been caused by nonaccidental trauma.

¶8 On November 19, Dr. Yolanda Duralde, a child abuse and neglect medical specialist and the medical director of child abuse intervention at MultiCare Health Systems, interviewed Tate and Mejia at the request of Heather Lofgren, the CPS social worker assigned to investigate whether ARB had been abused. Dr. Duralde also examined ARB. Dr. Duralde reported to Lofgren that Tate and Mejia were appropriately concerned and remorseful about ARB’s injury and interacted with him well. During the interview, Mejia demonstrated how he swaddled ARB using a doll. Mejia put the doll’s left arm behind its back, used a small blanket to swaddle it, and rotated the doll’s arm forward so that the arm was on its side again. According to Dr. Duralde, Mejia’s demonstration was consistent with ARB’s injury. Dr. Duralde did not contact Dr. Silas about ARB, but she was aware that doctors at Harrison and Mary Bridge were concerned that ARB’s broken arm was caused by abuse. Based on Dr. Duralde’s opinion that ARB’s injury was accidental, DSHS returned him to Tate and Mejia’s care on November 19.

¶9 In the early morning hours of December 23, ARB’s parents brought him to Harrison again. ARB’s skull was fractured and his brain tissue had been injured. He was experiencing seizures and had bleeding on his brain. ARB had multiple other skeletal fractures, including rib fracture, clavicular fracture, and a fracture to his right humerus.

¶10 Tate and Mejia said that ARB had been lying on the couch that evening, December 22, when their dog jumped onto the furniture, bouncing ARB onto the floor. Dr. Dur-[291]*291aide concluded that ARB’s December 22 injuries were caused in part by shaking and were probably caused by nonaccidental trauma. As a result of the injuries, ARB is permanently physically and cognitively disabled and will need 24-hour care for the rest of his life.

II. DSHS’s Investigation of ARB’s November 18 Injury

¶11 At the time she was assigned to investigate ARB’s case, Lofgren had recently completed her social worker education and training. After she received Dr. Duralde’s report on November 19, Lofgren and her supervisor removed the hospital hold on ARB, which allowed Tate and Mejia to take him home. Dr. Duralde’s opinion was the sole reason for Lofgren’s determination that ARB was not at risk of harm in the care of his parents.

¶12 On November 19 and 20, Lofgren completed several tasks to conduct her investigation after ARB was returned to Tate and Mejia’s care. Lofgren contacted Tate and Mejia’s high school, which did not report any concerns about either of them. Lofgren also completed a background check on all the family members living with ARB, which did not uncover any criminal history or CPS referrals for child abuse.3

¶13 Lofgren conducted a home visit at the Mejias’ house the day after ARB was released to Tate and Mejia’s care. She interviewed Tate, Mejia, and Mejia’s father about the home environment and their plans for the future. At this home visit, Lofgren did not interview Tate and Mejia separately, even though she knew that they had provided inconsistent stories about how ARB’s arm had been injured.

¶14 During this home visit, Lofgren formulated a safety plan with Tate and Mejia.4 The safety plan provided for a public health nurse, who would visit ARB in his home once [292]*292or twice a month. The safety plan stated that Lofgren would follow up on retaining the service of a public health nurse, but she did not do so because she believed that the responsibility belonged to a person in another department. The safety plan also provided that Tate and Mejia would find parenting classes and contact Lofgren if they could not find one close to their home, but neither of them contacted Lofgren after the home visit. Lofgren did not follow up with them about the parenting class requirement. Although Mejia’s father was the only other family member present during the home visit and he did not sign the document, the safety plan also provided that “[a] 11 family members agree to call CPS if they have concerns [regarding] care of [ARB].” CP at 182.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
361 P.3d 808, 191 Wash. App. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albertson-v-washington-ex-rel-department-of-social-health-services-washctapp-2015.