Clark v. Clark
This text of 550 So. 2d 913 (Clark v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Kathleen Arms CLARK Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Nathaniel Jackson CLARK Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*914 Nelson, Hammons & White by Walter D. White, Shreveport, for defendant-appellant.
Love, Rigby, Dehan, McDaniel & Goode by Kenneth Rigby, Shreveport, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before MARVIN, FRED W. JONES, Jr., and LINDSAY, JJ.
MARVIN, Judge.
In this post-divorce action to modify child custody, we affirm a judgment rejecting the father's demands to reinstate his limited visitation privileges that were recognized in a 1986 judgment, which privileges, after a hearing on April 28, 1987, were suspended and prohibited by the trial court
until [the father] has undergone and completed professional psychological therapy and proves ... that visitation would not cause physical ... or psychological damage to the child, and reserving the right of the court to thereafter impose such ... conditions ... with respect to the visitation, as are necessary to minimize any risk of harm to the child, under the provisions of LSA-C.C. 147.
The quoted prohibition and suspension, which tracks the language of C.C. Art. 147, is contained in a judgment modifying custody that was signed April 28, 1987. The later 1987 divorce judgment continued in effect the above provisions "suspending the visitation privileges of [the father] with the said minor child ..." Neither of the 1987 judgments was appealed by the father.
Contrary to the father's assertions, we find these 1987 judgments are not ambiguous and are now "final" custody judgments. The trial court's judgment rejecting the father's demands is affirmed because he did not allege or show the required change of circumstances, that he has fulfilled the condition of the 1987 judgments by having "undergone and completed professional psychological therapy" and that his visits will not cause harm to his child. C.C. Arts. 146, 147.
THE FATHER'S CONTENTIONS
The father contends that he mistakenly "consented" to the suspension of his visitation privileges in the 1987 judgments and did not understand that his agreement to undergo "therapy" would require him to first "admit guilt" to a therapist that he had abused his child. He argues that this "ambiguity" in the 1987 judgments was not discovered until the delay for appealing those judgments had expired and that, short of "admitting guilt," which he says is an "impossible condition," he has done all he can reasonably do to undergo therapy and meet the conditions imposed by the trial court in 1987.
The father also contends that the trial court should have considered the record and transcript of the April 28, 1987, hearing which included depositions of several mental health professionals (before us as a proffer) and ruled that the 1987 judgments were "consent" and highly "ambiguous" judgments and, therefore, of no further force and effect.
At the hearing of the father's rule, the trial court sustained the mother's objection to the introduction of any evidence to modify custody until the father alleged and showed that he had "undergone and completed therapy."
FACTS
The mother sought the separation and sole custody in 1986, alleging the father's "sexual ... perversions." The father sought joint custody. The mother then alleged her belief that the father had sexually abused the child. The father did not contest the award, in November 1986, of sole custody to the mother with supervised visitation by the father with the child for about two months or the court's order that psychological examinations of the family and a DHHR "home study" be conducted.
Shortly after the two-month period of supervised visitation elapsed, the mother sought to terminate the visitation by a supplemental *915 petition filed February 3, 1987, in which she made detailed allegations of specific sexual abuse of the child by the father.
The mother's supplemental allegations were heard on April 28, 1987. At the hearing, the trial court heard the testimony of the mother and of Dr. Susan Vigen, a psychologist who works exclusively with children. Dr. Vigen had twice examined the three-year-old child. She stated that the child was very adept at identifying body parts on pictures, that the child made specific statements in the interviews regarding her activities with her father, and that these statements appeared to be uncoached and based upon the child's own experience. Based upon her visits, Dr. Vigen opined that there was a probability that the father had abused the child.
Additionally, the mother introduced into evidence the deposition of Robert Bishop and Eleanor Herd, both of whom had served as supervisors during the father's two-month period of restricted visitation. Mr. Bishop's deposition reveals that he was present when the child, while playing on the floor as he spoke with the mother, made statements about the father's alleged abusive activities. The mother also introduced a letter report of Dr. Nell Ryan, who recommended that the child get counseling even though she found no physical evidence of abuse.
The only evidence introduced by the father was the deposition of Dr. Donald K. Gucker. The deposition reveals that Dr. Gucker had seen all of the parties. He stated that during his session with the child, she was uncooperative and her statements were unreliable due to the inconsistency of her responses. He suggested that the child be interviewed by a female psychologist or social worker to see if it would be more productive.
Dr. Gucker also interviewed and consulted with the father, who was administered various psychological tests. In discussing the test results, Dr. Gucker stated that the father would have difficulty controlling impulses and may have a "tendency to justify himself acting on impulses to a mild or moderate degree," a finding which is "not usual," but "beyond normal limits." Dr. Gucker stated, however, that he could not link the results to any sexual impulses, but only possible risks.
The weight of this evidence, according to the trial court, was that the father may have sexually abused his daughter. The trial court impliedly found there was some degree of risk that the father is an incest offender and imposed the suspension and prohibition of which the father complains on appeal.
The evidence proffered by the father in this record consists of the April 28, 1987, transcript and later depositions of experts. The depositions reveal that there is some degree of risk (ranging from moderate to high) that the father is an incest offender. The father admitted to the professionals that he had been sexually abused for a "few years" beginning when he was about 10 years old (an "indication" to them because their studies show that 40 percent of child abusers were once victims of child abuse). He did not "admit," however, to sexually abusing his child and supported his denial with a polygraph test.
The mother and the child have undergone therapy and have been counseled repeatedly by professionals at the Genesis (treatment) Center during 1987 and 1988. In the 14 months after the November 1986 initial custody decree, the mother and the child were counselled about 70 times.
One expert explained that therapy in child abuse cases involves several steps, acknowledging the problem (the need to undergo treatment or therapy), examining the origins of the problem, and recognizing and understanding the impact of such behavior on the individual victim.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
550 So. 2d 913, 1989 WL 112092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-clark-lactapp-1989.