Anonymous B v. Anonymous C and Albemarle County Department of Social Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 29, 2008
Docket1170072
StatusPublished

This text of Anonymous B v. Anonymous C and Albemarle County Department of Social Services (Anonymous B v. Anonymous C and Albemarle County Department of Social Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anonymous B v. Anonymous C and Albemarle County Department of Social Services, (Va. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Elder, Frank and Millette Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

ANONYMOUS B

v. Record No. 1170-07-2

ANONYMOUS C AND ALBEMARLE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES OPINION BY ANONYMOUS C JUDGE LARRY G. ELDER APRIL 29, 2008 v. Record No. 1198-07-2

ANONYMOUS B AND ALBEMARLE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ALBEMARLE COUNTY Paul M. Peatross, Jr., Judge

William H. Hurd (Stephen C. Piepgrass; Troutman Sanders LLP, on briefs), for Anonymous B.

Steven L. Raynor (Martin & Raynor, P.C., on brief), for Anonymous C.

Andrew H. Herrick (Larry W. Davis; Edward H. Childress, Guardian ad litem for the minor child; Albemarle County Attorney’s Office; Edward H. Childress, P.C., on brief), for Albemarle County Department of Social Services.

In these related appeals, Anonymous B and Anonymous C, the father and mother of a

now seven-year-old daughter, challenge the rulings of the Albemarle County Circuit Court (the

trial court) related to a protective order entered following a finding by the juvenile and domestic

relations district court (J&DR court) that the child was abused and neglected. On appeal, father contends that, following an administrative reversal of a founded complaint of sexual abuse, the

trial court erred in refusing to dismiss the abuse and neglect petition filed against him by the

Albemarle County Department of Social Services (DSS) and to vacate the related protective

order entered by the J&DR court. He also avers the trial court erred in refusing to allow a trial

de novo or even to hear evidence on the issue of whether it was father or mother who abused the

child to the extent “such clarification was necessary to determine what sort of protective order

was appropriate.” Further, he argues that, in the absence of a determination that he abused the

child in any way, the trial court’s limitation of his visitation to three hours of supervised contact

per week was error. Finally, father contends the trial court erred in ordering him to pay a portion

of mother’s attorney’s fees.

Mother, in her related appeal, contends the trial court erred in construing the J&DR

court’s adjudicatory order, the contents of which the parties attempted to stipulate to in their

appeal to the circuit court, as finding only that one of the two parents had abused and neglected

the child rather than as finding that father had abused the child sexually.

We hold the trial court did not err in the way mother alleges, did not commit reversible

error in refusing to admit certain evidence regarding the administrative proceeding, and did not

err in refusing to dismiss the protective order based on the result of that proceeding.

Nevertheless, we conclude that, despite the parties’ apparent stipulation to the J&DR court’s

nonspecific finding of abuse, the trial court was required to hear evidence and make findings on

the issue of which parent or parents committed the abuse and what type of abuse was involved in

order to allow it to enter a protective order containing terms designed to meet the best interests of

the child while taking into consideration the rights of her parents, as well. Thus, we vacate the

trial court’s order of April 18, 2007, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this

-2- opinion. 1 On remand, the protective order shall remain in effect until those additional

proceedings have been completed.

I. BACKGROUND

Mother and father were engaged and lived together but never married. Daughter was

born on December 8, 2000, and at some point thereafter, a dispute arose over custody. By order

of August 10, 2004, the J&DR court awarded mother primary physical custody and granted

father liberal visitation. That order also included findings that “[t]here is no evidence to support

[the mother’s] abuse allegations against the Father” and “no evidence that the child is

experiencing any physical, mental or emotional problems at this time.” The court directed that a

particular therapist “conduct mental health wellness check-ups” of the child at a frequency to be

determined by that therapist and that the child “shall have no mental health therapy unless it is

approved by [that therapist] who can make that referral for another counselor.” Finally, the order

provided that “[i]f either parent believes it necessary to have a medical or psychological exam

involving alleged abuse, that parent shall directly contact Albemarle County CPS before such

appointment, so that Albemarle CPS can be present at such exam.”

Sometime in late 2004, mother contacted Dr. Viola Vaughan-Eden, a licensed clinical

social worker specializing in child sexual abuse, and asked about having the child evaluated.

Mother also contacted DSS social worker Lori Green, who approved the evaluation. On

December 29, 2004, Dr. Vaughan-Eden met with Green, mother, and the child. She then met

with the child alone on four different occasions. During those sessions, the child reported her

father had “a purple thing” called a “peanut,” “that the peanut had been put in her butt,” and “that

1 We deny as unnecessary Anonymous B’s motion for leave “to file under seal a statement identifying the individual parties and the child.” The sealed record and the portions thereof reproduced in the sealed appendix make clear, without the need for further identification, which parties are referenced in the briefs as Anonymous A, B, and C.

-3- it had really hurt.” When Dr. Vaughan-Eden asked the child to identify her body parts on a

drawing she had made of herself, “she identified her genitalia as being a vagina,” and when

Dr. Vaughan-Eden asked, “what does daddy have?” the child responded, “daddy has a peanut.”

The child also said “the purple thing is like a crown” or “crayon” and that “grown-ups have to

help it get hard.” The child said her father “had also been touching her vagina . . . with his hand”

on several occasions and “had put the peanut on her forehead.”

Dr. Vaughan-Eden contacted DSS’s Lori Green to report the suspected abuse. After the

child repeated to Ms. Green and a police detective some of her allegations that her father had

sexually abused her, DSS filed a petition for a preliminary protective order pursuant to Code

§ 16.1-253 alleging the child had been sexually abused, and the J&DR court entered an ex parte

preliminary protective order.

The J&DR court held an adversarial hearing on the petition on February 16, 2005, at

which Dr. Vaughan-Eden testified that, based on the child’s age, what the child said and how she

said it, Dr. Vaughan-Eden thought it “improbable and not likely” that the child had been coached

by mother to accuse father. The court ruled as follows:

Well I think clearly the evidence shows that this child is the subject [of] abuse and neglect. . . . [A]t this point I really can’t identify a perpetrator because the problem with the evidence [is that] . . . it’s either clearly coming from the mother or from the father. And the problem . . . with this whole case[] is that you never can get to the bottom of the matter because there is always interference. And [mother] certainly did not violate the Court’s order, . . . but she certainly did skirt it and that creates the problem because Dr. Vaughan-Eden certainly appears to be credible and she certainly has the credentials. But there is always the matter of is this tainted evidence, because there was not open disclosure and the rules were not clearly defined. . . .

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Anonymous B v. Anonymous C and Albemarle County Department of Social Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anonymous-b-v-anonymous-c-and-albemarle-county-department-of-social-vactapp-2008.