Department of Human Services v. G. D. W.

292 P.3d 548, 353 Or. 25
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 2012
DocketCC 098109J1, 098109J2; CA A147584; SC S059950
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 292 P.3d 548 (Department of Human Services v. G. D. W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Human Services v. G. D. W., 292 P.3d 548, 353 Or. 25 (Or. 2012).

Opinion

*27 DE MUNIZ, J.

In this juvenile dependency proceeding, a father was found by the court to have subjected one of his children to sexual abuse. Although the child was unavailable to testify at the proceedings, the juvenile court admitted into evidence child’s out-of-court statements. Father contends that the juvenile court’s theory for admitting the statements — that they were the statements of a party-opponent and, therefore, not hearsay — betrayed a fundamental misunderstanding of the evidence rule pertaining to statements of party-opponents, OEC 801(4)(b)(A). Father also argues that the court’s admission of child’s out-of-court statements under OEC 801(4)(b)(A) violated his (father’s) right to due process and to a proceeding that was fundamentally fair. We agree with father that the juvenile court erred in admitting the child’s statements under OEC 801(4)(b)(A), and we conclude that the error was not harmless. Accordingly, we reverse the judgments that incorporate the problematic findings and remand to the juvenile court.

FACTS

After a verbal and physical altercation with father, mother left the family’s home in Lincoln County with the couple’s two children — four-year-old V and six-month-old C— and went to the police to report that father had assaulted her and that he had sexually abused V. Mother also provided police with evidence that father was keeping a quantity of cocaine in a safe at his place of business. Based on mother’s allegations and the evidence that she had supplied, the police went to the family’s home, arrested father, and took him to jail.

The next day, a police detective, Miller, and a child protective service worker, Page, interviewed mother and V about the sexual abuse allegation. In response to Page’s questions, V indicated that father had touched her vaginal area with his hand. Page instructed mother that staff from the Department of Human Services (DHS) would contact her and that she should not allow V or C to have contact with father.

Two weeks later, V was interviewed at the Lincoln County Child Advocacy Center. In a taped interview, *28 V told, an interviewer that father had “touched [her] flower.” 1 In response to specific questions, V stated that father had touched her with “four fingers” “inside” her “flower” and that he had touched her “one time.” A physical examination performed at the Advocacy Center produced no physical evidence of sexual abuse.

Mother remained in the family home with V and C, and obtained a restraining order prohibiting father from contacting them. Father, who had been charged criminally with assault, sexual abuse, and other crimes, remained in jail for a number of months. While father was in jail, he wrote three letters to mother; in one of those letters, he asked mother to withdraw the charges of sexual abuse. Mother insisted that she did not read two of the letters and that she read only a part of the third.

Several months after the initial report to police, Page, the child protective services worker, went to V’s school to interview V after a teaching assistant reported to DHS certain disquieting statements that V had made to another child. In the interview, V told Page that “my dad didn’t touch me; I lie [d],” but also told Page that “my mom told me that I lied,” and that “my momma said if I say I lie [d], dad can come home.” About the same time, mother informed the police and DHS that she had lied about father sexually abusing V and that she had coached V to tell third parties that father had touched her “flower.” Page and other DHS staffers became concerned that mother no longer was motivated to protect V and C from father. Page had the children taken into protective custody and then placed into foster care. DHS thereafter filed the dependency petitions (one for each child) that are at the center of the present case. 2

The dependency petitions alleged that (1) mother had failed to provide the children with the necessary care, guidance, *29 supervision and protection, and lacked the skills and motivation needed to assure their safety; and (2) father had engaged in domestic violence, drug and alcohol abuse, and sexual abuse of V, and that that history made the children unsafe in his care. Mother immediately stipulated to the court’s jurisdiction over her and the children and she began to receive services from DHS. The juvenile court postponed the adjudication of the dependency petition with respect to father until after the criminal case against father was resolved.

The criminal charges against father ultimately were dismissed after mother testified that the alleged assault on her had been a mutual affray and that she had concocted the sexual abuse story and had coached V to confirm the story because she had been angry at father. 3 Thereafter, the juvenile case was scheduled for trial. In that proceéding, the court was required to determine (1) the court’s jurisdiction over V and C vis-á-vis father; (2) a permanency plan for the children vis-á-vis mother; and (3) the merits of the state’s request for an “aggravated circumstances” finding against father, which would relieve DHS of its obligation to make reasonable efforts to make it possible to return the children to father’s care. 4

Before the scheduled trial, the state moved for a ruling on the admissibility of V’s out-of-court statements to various third parties regarding alleged sexual abuse by her father. The state asserted in the motion that, although it did not intend to call V as a witness in the proceeding, 5 V’s out-of-court statements could and should be received into evidence *30 nonetheless because, in accordance with the Court of Appeals decision in State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Cowens, 143 Or App 68, 922 P2d 1258, rev den, 324 Or 395 (1996), the statements were admissible as the statements of a party opponent under OEC 801(4)(b)(A). In response, father argued that Cowens was inconsistent with the theory underlying OEC 801(4)(b)(A), that Cowens was wrongly decided, and that, in any event, the admission of V’s out-of-court statements when father could not cross-examine her violated his constitutional right to a fundamentally fair proceeding. Father suggested that, if the state wished to offer V’s statements, it must proceed under OEC 803(18a)(b), which provides an exception to the rule against hearsay for out-of-court statements of an unavailable child witness “concerning an act of abuse,” but “only if the proponent establishes that the time, content and circumstances of the statement provide indicia of reliability.” The juvenile court ruled that the statements were admissible as nonhearsay under OEC 801(4)(b)(A), and the state did not attempt to show that the statements would be admissible under the hearsay exception that father had identified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 P.3d 548, 353 Or. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-human-services-v-g-d-w-or-2012.