In Re AMB

640 N.W.2d 262, 248 Mich. App. 144
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 25, 2002
DocketDocket 218869
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 640 N.W.2d 262 (In Re AMB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re AMB, 640 N.W.2d 262, 248 Mich. App. 144 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Whitbeck, P.J.

Apparently relying on an “order” entered by a family court referee, medical personnel at Children’s Hospital of Michigan withdrew life-sustaining medical treatment that AMB, an infant, was receiving. She died soon thereafter. William Ladd, the attorney appointed to represent her in the protective proceeding that originally brought her situation before the family court, appeals on her behalf. We reverse.

I. introduction

This case is, at its core, a human tragedy. AMB, whom we call baby Allison, is the central figure. She was bom severely ill, with a poor prognosis for long-term survival, and required extensive medical care. This care included immediate ventilator support and intravenous drug therapy in the neonatal intensive care unit at Children’s Hospital of Michigan, in Detroit. Baby Allison died at Children’s Hospital just ten days later.

*150 Baby Allison’s short life, while heartbreaking in itself, does not hint at the truly appalling circumstances relating to her conception and death. At age seventeen, baby Allison’s mother, KB, became pregnant. Baby Allison’s putative father, JB, was also KB’s father. When this situation came to light, local authorities pressed criminal charges against JB and instituted a protective proceeding against JB and his wife to terminate their parental rights to KB and KB’s younger brother. To complicate this situation further, the record includes explicit, though unproven, allegations that KB is mentally retarded or has some form of developmental delay. The resolutions of the criminal case against JB and the separate child protective proceeding against JB and his wife are not evident from the available record. However, it is possible to infer that JB raped his mentally disabled daughter, KB, leading to baby Allison’s incestuous conception.

If the facts surrounding baby Allison’s conception are tragic, the circumstances leading to her death are doubly so. Through unredeemably flawed family court proceedings, the Family Independence Agency (fia) acquired what appeared to be an order that authorized Children’s Hospital staff “to take the child off life support equipment and medication provided that ‘Comfort Care’ is provided.” Despite an explicit warning that the order did not take effect for seven days, the very next day Children’s Hospital staff contacted a chaplain who baptized baby Allison while her mother and her three aunts were present. According to the chaplain’s notes, at approximately 7:30 P.M. “[a]fter the baptism the aunts decided to have the child removed from life support. Both I [the chaplain] and Michelle the charge muse took pictures. I again *151 prayed for the baby and the family. The infant was pronounced dead at 9:25 P.M.” Thus, Children’s Hospital staff removed baby Allison from life support without any legal authority, even under the terms of an order that we ultimately conclude had no legal basis whatsoever. Nonetheless, baby Allison’s life ended, the final act of this tragedy of almost mythical proportions.

The series of individual legal errors and missteps that led to baby Allison’s death are our only focus in this appeal. The hasty family court proceedings were so unseemly precisely because those involved in this decision knew that a life hung in the balance. The unforeseen consequence of this rush to make a decision is that the record consists mostly of allegations, unsworn statements, and hearsay. More often than not, this has forced us to assume that the record is both adequate and accurate simply to reach the legal issues. We emphasize, however, that there is no way to determine the truth about this case with any assurance. Further, these proceedings occurred less than one month before significant changes to the Juvenile Code went into effect on March 1, 1999. 1 Perhaps, had baby Allison been bom just a few weeks later, these proceedings would have been conducted differently.

E. ALLEGED FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A BABY ALLISON’S BIRTH

KB gave birth to baby Allison five weeks prematurely, on February 9, 1999, at Oakwood Hospital. Physicians then discovered that baby Allison’s heart *152 was missing a septum, two of her heart valves were deformed, her aorta was very small, and the size of her heart had forced her left lung to collapse partially. Baby Allison had hydrocephaly and other brain abnormalities suggesting corpus callosum agenesis, as well as malformed hip joints and a possible problem with her intestines. Physicians used the drug prostaglandin to open baby Allison’s ductus arteriosis to help circulate oxygenated blood through her body and placed her on a ventilator. Within hours of her birth, Oak-wood Hospital staff transferred baby Allison to the neonatal intensive care unit at the Children’s Hospital of Michigan in Detroit.

B. THE FIRST HEARING

On February 11, 1999, fia caseworker Judith Mat-lock filed an original petition alleging that baby Allison came within the family court’s jurisdiction pursuant to MCL 712A.2(b)(l) or (2). The factual allegations in the petition focused on three circumstances: the sexual abuse in the home JB and his wife shared and the pending petition to terminate their parental rights, KB’s alleged mental limitations and her alleged inability to make decisions for critically ill baby Allison, and KB’s informal living arrangements with her uncle and aunt. The petition asked the family court to take temporary custody of baby Allison, noting that KB had not made any plans to care for her baby because KB neither knew how to care for an infant nor had any money.

Richard Smart, a referee in the family court, held a preliminary hearing regarding the petition that same day. Neither KB nor JB attended this first hearing, and neither was represented by counsel. No one, *153 including Matlock, testified under oath. However, Matlock informed referee Smart that she told KB, but not JB, about the hearing. Referee Smart went off the record briefly before finding “that reasonable efforts have been made to notify the respondent, all parties.” The attorney for the fia asked referee Smart to authorize the petition and a placement order and to “authorize all necessary medical treatment for this child, who is hydrocephalic and has heart defects.” Without hearing any additional argument, referee Smart found probable cause to authorize the petition.

After a second discussion off the record, baby Allison’s attorney, Ladd, objected to an order authorizing anything other than routine medical care, stating, “[T]he statute [does not allow] anything more than routine medical care and anything that’s not along those lines .... I believe the mother is also subject to a petition in this court. [B]ut she is eighteen. If she’s capable of . . . consenting, she can consent . . . .” Referee Smart then suggested that KB was incapable of consenting to medical treatment for baby Allison, to which Ladd replied, “Well, then I think that the agency, if there’s any . . . nonroutine medical care, they’re going to have to ask for consent of the Court.” Ladd gave several examples of what he considered nonroutine care, including brain surgery or a heart transplant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
640 N.W.2d 262, 248 Mich. App. 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-amb-michctapp-2002.