In Re C.M., D.M., and E.M

782 S.E.2d 763, 236 W. Va. 576, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 63
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 2016
Docket15-0451
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 782 S.E.2d 763 (In Re C.M., D.M., and E.M) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re C.M., D.M., and E.M, 782 S.E.2d 763, 236 W. Va. 576, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 63 (W. Va. 2016).

Opinion

LOUGHRY, Justice:

This is an appeal initiated by S.M.‘ (hereinafter “the petitioner mother” or “the mother”) from the April 17, 2015, order of the Circuit Court of Wood County through which thé court dismissed a petition for abuse and neglect filed against the respondent father. 1 The circuit court concluded that the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (“DHHR” or ‘West, Virginia DHHR”) failed to meet its burden, of proving by clear and convincing evidence -that the respondent father was abusive. After a thorough review of the appendix record,, the written and oral arguments of counsel, and the applicable precedent, this Court concludes that- the circuit court committed clear error. Accordingly, we reverse and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The petitioner mother and the respondent father are the parents of a daughter, C.M., who was born in April of 2006, and a son; D.M., 2 who was born in October of 2004. The parents were divorced in West Virginia iii 2009 and the petitioner mother moved to North Carolina. Pursuant to an agreed parenting plan order, the children primarily resided with the respondent father in West Virginia, visiting them mother in North Carolina during their summer recesses ‘ from school and on certain holidays. 3 The respondent father’s girlfriend, T.T., and their infant child together, E.M., also lived in the father’s home. 4

The petitioner mother'testified that during the children’s visit to her home in the summer of 2013, C.M. disclosed that the respondent father made her watch sexually explicit videos. The petitioner mother says that when the children next visited her at Christmas of 2013, C.M. again revealed that her father forced her to watch inappropriate videos. In late December of 2013, the petitioner mother reported this information to the *579 West Virginia DHHR. Pursuant to the terms of the parenting plan, the children returned to the respondent father’s home in West Virginia at the end of their Christmas break.

On February 6,2014, Pamela Hendrickson, a Child Protective Services (“CPS”) Worker with the West Virginia DHHR, went to the children’s elementary school and spoke separately with seven-year-old C.M. and nine-year-old D.M. Ms. Hendrickson did not make an audio or video recording of these interviews. According to Ms. Hendrickson’s testimony, the children told her that their father showed them sexually explicit movies in the living room of their home; that these moyies were on DVDs and were stored in “boxes with numbers after them”,; and that their father and C.M. had “special time” together when D.M. was made to leave the room. C.M. explained that the adults shown in the movies had their clothes off, and C.M. was able to accurately describe oral sex. C.M. also reported that her father made her remove her clothes, but she did not tell Ms. Hendrickson whether anything happened after she removed her clothes. Furthermore, both children, told her that they watched their father, his live-in girlfriend T.T,, and two other adults having sex. C.M. indicated to Ms. Hendrickson that she was afraid her father would hurt her if she told anyone.; D.M. also expressed fear of what would happen if his father learned that he had disclosed these things.

Ms. Hendrickson left the school and went directly to the home of the respondent father and T.T. According to Ms. Hendrickson, the respondent father and T.T. were cooperative and visibly upset by the allegations. - The respondent father denied showing the children sexually explicit videos. Ms. Hendrick-son was permitted to look around the house, but she left the respondent father alone in the living room while she and T.T. went upstairs. Although she declined to look into drawers that were opened by T.T., Ms. Hen-drickson looked at the titles of the DVDs she observed in the home and she reviewed the family’s Netflix viewing history, Ms. Hen-drickson did not find any sexually explicit videos.

Upon learning that the children had password-protected iPods, Ms. Hendrickson returned to the school that same day to unlock the iPods given to her by - the respondent father. The children were called into the principal’s office to meet with Ms. Hendrick-son again; these interviews were not recorded. Ms. Hendrickson testified that when she spoke' with C.M. and D.M. on this second occasion, they recanted the reports they had made earlier in the day. According to Ms. Hendrickson, C.M. said she could not recall any abuse by her father; over Christmas break her mother had continually asked questions about whether the respondent father had touched her; and the information she reported earlier in the day is what her mother had told her to say, Ultimately, Ms. Hendrickson and her supervisor concluded that abuse could not be substantiated, so they closed the ease.

The petitioner mother testified that after the children arrived in North Carolina for the summer of 2014, the now-eight-year-old C.M. again revealed that her father had made her watch a movie with sexually explicit content. According to the petitioner mother, C.M. also made a new disclosure: after watching the movie, the respondent father removed his clothes, made. C.M. remove her clothes, and he then touched his “private part” to her “private part.” 5 In addition, C.M. reported itching on her bottom. The petitioner mother took C.M. to a hospital emergency room in North Carolina, where C.M. was treated for a vaginal yeast infection. The petitioner mother also testified that an adult family member had previously observed C.M. and a young female cousin playing a “mommy/daddy game” where one child was lying on top of the other and they were kissing. A referral was made to the North Carolina Division of Social Services.

On July 10, 2014, C.M. was interviewed by Elizabeth Pogroszewski, a forensic interviewer employed by a Child Advocacy Center in North Carolina. This interview was video recorded. C.M. again revealed that her fa *580 ther showed her a “dirty” movie while they were in the living room of their house. When asked about the movie, C.M. said it involved, “s-e-x,” spelling out the word, and that a woman without clothes was moving up and down on a man without clothes. C.M. said the man in the movie also put his “privates” in the woman’s mouth. According to Ms. Pogroszewski, C.M. gave clear details about the contents of the movie and where C.M. was located — the living room of her father’s home — when watching the movie. .

During the recorded interview, C.M. also described for Ms. Pogroszewski an occasion when her father placed his “privates” on and in C.M.’s “privates,” which she said felt “weird” and hurt ‘a little. The interviewer confirmed that C.M. was referring to her and her father’s genitalia, and C.M. drew three stick figure sketches of her and her father naked together in the living room. ' One drawing depicts the respondent father, with an erect penis, kneeling beside her. C.M. explained that this occurred in the living room of their home after watching the “s-e-x” movie. C.M. said that she and her father put them clothes back on when they heard T.T. and D.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
782 S.E.2d 763, 236 W. Va. 576, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cm-dm-and-em-wva-2016.