Brandy Smith Funderburg v. Harrisonburg Rockingham Social Services District

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 10, 2025
Docket0421243
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brandy Smith Funderburg v. Harrisonburg Rockingham Social Services District (Brandy Smith Funderburg v. Harrisonburg Rockingham Social Services District) 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
Brandy Smith Funderburg v. Harrisonburg Rockingham Social Services District, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Beales, Callins and Frucci Argued at Lexington, Virginia

BRANDY SMITH FUNDERBURG MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0421-24-3 JUDGE DOMINIQUE A. CALLINS JUNE 10, 2025 HARRISONBURG ROCKINGHAM SOCIAL SERVICES DISTRICT

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKINGHAM COUNTY Bruce D. Albertson, Judge

Brandy Smith Funderburg, pro se.

M. Victoria Shea, Assistant County Attorney; Kelsey Marker, Guardian ad litem for the minor children (Rockingham County Attorney’s Office; Sellers Law Firm PLLC, on brief), for appellee.

Brandy Smith Funderburg (“mother”), pro se, appeals the circuit court’s orders

adjudicating her minor children abused or neglected and ordering that custody of the children

remain with the Harrisonburg Rockingham Department of Social Services (the “Department”). On

appeal, mother challenges several of the circuit court’s evidentiary rulings, and she argues that

the evidence did not support a finding of abuse and neglect. Mother also contends that the circuit

court erred when it declined to place the children with their maternal grandmother. For the

following reasons, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND1

At the time the Department first became involved, mother had four biological children:

12-year-old T.U., 11-year-old J.B., 7-year-old A.S., and 1-year-old Am.F.; Jesse Funderburg

(“father”) is the biological father of Am.F. and Au.F., mother’s fifth child.2 Mother, her four oldest

children, father, and two of father’s adult children resided in the same home in 2020. On

Thanksgiving of that year, mother and father were arguing, and one of father’s adult children,

Josephine, intervened. When Josephine threatened to call the police, mother attempted to grab

Josephine’s phone from her, “choked her, and then wrestled her to the ground while holding” Am.F.

Mother’s older children witnessed this incident.

Police came to the house, “told all parties involved to calm down,” and then left the

residence. After the police left, the argument resumed and escalated until mother, while holding

Am.F., scratched father’s face. Police returned to the residence and arrested mother. She was

charged with assault and battery, and father obtained a protective order.3 Father, his older biological

children, and Am.F. moved into a motel.

The Department investigated the incident, during which mother reported to a social worker

her “concerns” about father regarding “incestual or sexual abuse.” Mother also expressed concerns

that father was involved in a “Satanic, pedophile cult” with a former President of the United States

and reported that father visited adult websites. Mother claimed that she homeschooled the children

1 “On appeal, ‘we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the prevailing party below, in this case the Department.’” Joyce v. Botetourt Cnty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 75 Va. App. 690, 695 (2022) (quoting Farrell v. Warren Cnty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 59 Va. App. 375, 386 (2012)). “To the extent that this opinion discusses facts found in sealed documents in the record, we unseal only those facts.” Brown v. Va. State Bar ex rel. Sixth Dist. Comm., 302 Va. 234, 240 n.2 (2023). 2 We use initials in an attempt to protect the privacy of the minor children. Additionally, Au.F. was not born until 2021, after the Department first became involved. 3 Both the assault and battery charge and protective order were dismissed. -2- and that her oldest child, T.U., was autistic. Mother explained that the children had attended public

school, but that the school did not have adequate resources for T.U.

The older children reported that mother and father often fought in the home. Months before

the Thanksgiving incident, mother had “pointed a gun at Josephine and the police were called,” but

she was not arrested. On another occasion, mother, with Am.F. inside her car, drove her car into

father’s car because she was angry. Father told the Department that mother had an “undiagnosed

narcissistic personality disorder, which cause[d] her to act dangerously and sporadically.” Father

explained that mother “believed people were following her and Satanists were casting spells on her

at the grocery store.”

A few weeks after Thanksgiving, mother informed the Department that Am.F. was in her

care because father had dropped the protective order. Mother told the Department that when the

child returned, the child’s “genital area was red and that [the child] was touching it,” and asked the

Department to investigate father for sexual abuse. The Department provided mother education on

the “various reasons why [the child’s] genital area could be red, and that it is age-appropriate for

children to touch this area at times.” The Department advised mother to take the child to a

pediatrician if she suspected sexual abuse.

One month later, mother “got upset with [father] because he had said he wanted a divorce,

and she began calling him a pedophile and took the child to the hospital for an evaluation.” Mother

took Am.F. to the emergency room; the doctor examined the child for “concern for sexual assault

reported by mother. Infant [was] alert, well appearing with no signs of recent physical or sexual

trauma.” Hospital personnel reported that “Mother ha[d] rapid speech, tangential and paranoid

ideas,” and the medical records expressed concern for the child’s well-being.

The Department then opened a service case on the family due to mental health concerns and

the history of discord between mother and father. The Department provided mother and father with

-3- counseling, psychological evaluations, an evaluation for T.U., and a referral to infant and toddler

connection. After mother’s psychological evaluation was scheduled, she informed the Department

that she and father planned to move to West Virginia. The Department then closed the family

assessment case before mother’s psychological evaluations could be completed.

Mother did not move to West Virginia, and in 2022, the Department opened another

assessment for inadequate supervision after receiving a report that mother and father were involved

in a “car chase” while Am.F. and Au.F. were in mother’s car. The Department learned that “there

[were] approximately 22 911 calls between the parties over a six-month period.” In many of the

calls, father requested a wellness-check on mother and the children.

As a part of its services case, the Department conducted a recorded family partnership

meeting with mother and father. During the meeting, mother claimed that father had assaulted her

several times. Mother also claimed that the FBI had deemed father a sociopath, and mother accused

father of watching “teenage pornography” and molesting Am.F.

After the family partnership meeting, a Department employee witnessed mother and father

arguing in the parking lot. While holding Au.F., mother screamed at father, “flip[ed] him off,” and

behaved erratically. The other children were also standing near mother. The Department employee

instructed mother and father to go their separate ways.

The Department filed preliminary child protective orders. When the social worker visited

mother’s home to inform her, only T.U. and J.B. were present; both appeared “dirty” and were

wearing stained clothing. When the social worker returned later that day, she observed “totes, rugs,

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