Churchill v. Arkansas Department of Human Services

423 S.W.3d 637, 2012 Ark. App. 530, 2012 WL 4478406, 2012 Ark. App. LEXIS 658
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 26, 2012
DocketNo. CA 12-310
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 423 S.W.3d 637 (Churchill v. Arkansas Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Churchill v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 423 S.W.3d 637, 2012 Ark. App. 530, 2012 WL 4478406, 2012 Ark. App. LEXIS 658 (Ark. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

DAVID M. GLOVER, Judge.

|, Andrea and Daniel Churchill appeal from the trial court’s decision that their two children, R.C. (DOB 1-12-08) and E.C. (DOB 5-7-11), are dependent-neglected. They challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting that decision. We affirm.

According to the affidavit of facts supporting the petition for emergency custody and dependency-neglect, on July 5, 2011, Andrea took E.C., the younger of the two children, to see Dr. Robin Williams because the child had been vomiting. As a result of the doctor’s examination, E.C. was determined to have lost weight since his last well-child visit; he had three bruises on his face, which Andrea explained were caused by R.C.’s kissing him, but the doctor found that explanation to be inconsistent with the bruising; and E.C. had indications of a rib fracture. E.C. was admitted to the White River Medical Center, where he underwent a CAT scan, x-ray, and lab work. The scan established that | ¡¿E.C. had suffered a skull fracture, rib fractures, and retinal hemorrhage. Andrea and Daniel gave differing accounts about how the injuries might have happened. ADHS placed a seventy-two-hour hold on both children. R.C. was placed in a foster home, and E.C. was taken to Arkansas Children’s Hospital on July 6, 2011. A petition for emergency custody and dependency-neglect was filed on July 8, 2011, alleging that the two children were dependent-neglected “as a result of abuse, neglect, and parental unfitness....”

The dependency-neglect adjudication hearing was held on September 20, 2011. The trial court heard testimony from Brooke Junkersfeld (investigator with the Crimes Against Children Division of the Arkansas State Police), Robin Williams, M.D. (E.C.’s pediatrician), Karen Farst (UAMS pediatrician, board-certified in general pediatrics and child-abuse pediatrics), and Andrea Churchill.

Junkersfeld testified that she interviewed Andrea and Daniel concerning E.C.’s injuries. Andrea offered the explanations that R.C. might have bumped E.C., or gotten into E.C.’s crib and caused the injury; and that the rib injury possibly resulted from bathing E.C. in the sink. Daniel told her that he had fallen twice in the last two weeks while holding E.C., one time with E.C. landing on the couch and the other time with E.C. hitting his head on one of the crib posts but landing in the crib, leaving a red mark on E.C.’s head; that E.C. had rolled off the couch once; and that he had left the children alone and unsupervised for ten- to fifteen-minute periods. Junkersfeld concluded that E.C. had been abused and medically neglected.

|sDr. Williams testified that she was E.C.’s pediatrician and that she began seeing him at the time he was born. She explained that Andrea brought E.C. to her clinic on July 5, 2011, because E.C. had been vomiting for three days, had bleeding gums, and had bruises popping up spontaneously. Dr. Williams stated that she had seen E.C. twice before in the clinic, on May 20, 2011, for a well-child check up, and on June 20, 2011, for a cold and facial bruising. She explained that at the June 20 visit, E.C. had a bruise on his forehead, a swollen lip, and a bruise on his lip, which Andrea claimed happened when R.C. dropped him from the swing.

Dr. Williams testified that she admitted E.C. on July 5 to give him fluids for the vomiting; that she observed and felt things in examining E.C. that made her think he had fractured ribs; and that she ordered a chest and head x-rays and blood work. She stated that Andrea mentioned concern about broken ribs prior to knowing about any such injury. Williams testified that E.C. had lost two ounces of body weight; that such a weight loss was abnormal for a child his age; that his weight gain had been good until the July 5 exam; and that she was also concerned about the bleeding gums. She stated that Andrea had switched E.C. to formula when she returned to work. Dr. Williams said that she admitted E.C. to the hospital because she was concerned about the vomiting and weight loss, was not sure what was causing it, and was worried about a head injury or other possible undiscovered injuries. She explained that the x-rays revealed rib fractures and a skull fracture; that the rib fractures were all the way through the rib bones; that such fractures were troubling because an infant’s bones are flexible and hard to break; and that |4Andrea did not really have a satisfactory explanation for the injuries. Dr. Williams stated that while it was possible for the baby’s skull fracture to have occurred during the fall described by Daniel, she had seen many skull fractures and could not recall one from simply falling with an infant. She said that she also could not imagine a rib fracture occurring from a fall because infant bones are flexible and that E.C.’s fractures were acute and likely had occurred within the last few days. She also stated that the eye exam revealed a large retinal hemorrhage in E.C.’s left eye and that she had not seen a retinal hemorrhage in a newborn absent child abuse. She said that she did not believe E.C.’s facial bruises were accidental because of their location. She testified that if they were the result of a fall, they would be on the extremities, e.g., the nose, chin, or brow line. Instead, these bruises were fingerprint-size next to the nose and on the forehead. She also said that these bruises were different from the ones that Andrea claimed had happened when R.C. dropped E.C. when removing him from the swing. Dr. Williams stated that the bruises were peculiar in shape and placement; that E.C. continued to vomit throughout the day; and that she kept him on IV fluids but stopped his oral feedings. She had E.C. transferred to Arkansas Children’s Hospital on the morning of July 6 because she was concerned that he was suffering from an “inorganic” failure to thrive because of his head injuries, and she believed the rib fractures, skull fracture, and retinal injuries were characteristic of shaken baby syndrome and wanted everything checked out at Children’s Hospital.

1 sDr. Karen Farst, a member of the children-at-risk team from Children’s Hospital, testified that she saw E.C. when he was admitted. She explained that the at-risk team includes a social worker and a pediatrician, such as herself, who is trained in child-abuse pediatrics. She also testified that E.C. had significant injuries, with no history of how they had occurred, including fractures in the ninth, tenth, and eleventh ribs on the right side of his body with a “deformity” associated with them in the “posterior aspect,” i.e., where the ribs come in contact with the backbone; and that such acute rib fractures were uncommon because infant ribs are very pliable. A follow-up x-ray confirmed that the July 6 x-rays showed acute rib fractures, and not fractures from birth. She said that follow-up x-rays also confirmed the July 6 x-ray showing a skull fracture. She testified that she tested E.C. for any possible hereditary conditions that might otherwise explain his injuries, e.g., the tests ruled out bleeding disorders, bone diseases, and vitamin deficiencies. She explained that the facial bruising was not normal because E.C. was too young to be mobile and could not really do anything to injure himself.

With respect to the fractured ribs, Dr. Farst testified that it was very uncommon for an infant to have that type of injury without a high-force event, such as a car wreck, and that it would have required some force to cause those rib fractures. She said the mechanism for those types of injuries would be to compress the front and back of his rib cage at the same time.

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Bluebook (online)
423 S.W.3d 637, 2012 Ark. App. 530, 2012 WL 4478406, 2012 Ark. App. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-v-arkansas-department-of-human-services-arkctapp-2012.