In re Edward T.

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 15, 2003
Docket1-02-2664 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of In re Edward T. (In re Edward T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Edward T., (Ill. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION

September 15, 2003

No. 1-02-2664

In re EDWARD T. and ARIEL T. ) Appeal from the

) Circuit Court of

Minors-Respondents-Appellees, ) Cook County

)

(The People of the State of Illinois, )

) 01 JA 1654

Petitioner-Appellee,     ) 01 JA 1655

v.         )

Edward T., ) The Honorable

) Sandra R. Otaka,

Respondent-Appellant).     ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE GORDON delivered the opinion of the court:

Respondent, Edward T., appeals from the circuit court's orders finding his two children neglected due to an injurious environment and finding him unable, for some reason other than financial circumstances alone, to care for, protect, train, or discipline the children.  Respondent contends that the trial court's finding of neglect was against the manifest weight of the evidence and that the court abused its discretion in not granting him custody of the minors .  For the following reasons, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

Respondent is the biological father of the two children involved in this cause of action: Edward T. (hereinafter referred to as Eddie), born September 9, 1997, and Ariel T., born January 27, 2000.  Latrena S., (footnote: 1) the biological mother of the two children, gave birth to a third child, Cassio G. on October 18, 2000.  Brian G. is the biological father of Cassio.  Cassio was born eight weeks premature and was hospitalized until November 21, 2000.

On August 24, 2001, Latrena took all three children to Illinois Masonic Hospital for a doctor's appointment.  Hospital records indicate that Ariel was 17 months old at the time and had not received all of her recommended immunizations.  She was also diagnosed with a speech delay.  Cassio, 10 months, had not received the three sets of immunizations he should have received by six months of age and was diagnosed with a failure to thrive due to his below normal weight of 6,340 grams (in his brief, respondent converts this weight to 13.9 pounds).  The records also revealed that Cassio had a "severe" developmental delay as he had not yet begun to sit up or crawl.  Cassio was admitted to the hospital for treatment and Eddie and Ariel were taken into the custody of the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) on August 30, 2001.  On September 4, 2001, the State filed a petition for adjudication of wardship.  On the same day, temporary custody orders were entered for Eddie and Ariel, which stated that "probable cause does exist the minor is abused/neglected/dependant," and found their removal from their home was an immediate necessity.  The orders were entered with prejudice as to respondent, a noncustodial parent, based on his stipulation to the facts alleged in the State's petition.  The petition stated that Ariel's and Cassio's immunizations were not current, Ariel was developmentally delayed, Cassio was diagnosed with nonorganic failure to thrive and Latrena was not addressing Ariel's and Cassio's medical needs.

An adjudication hearing was commenced on February 26, 2002, and continued to April 18, 2002, and May 17, 2002.  At the hearing, Dr. Silviano Gomez testified that he received his medical degree from the University of Salamanca in Spain in 1967.  He subsequently completed an internship at Illinois Masonic Medical Center, a residency in pediatrics and a fellowship in ambulatory pediatrics.  He served as a staff physician in pediatric and ambulatory care at Illinois Masonic and as an assistant professor in pediatric medicine at the University of Illinois.  The court qualified Dr. Gomez as an expert in pediatric medicine.

Dr. Gomez testified that he treated Cassio in the hospital from August 24 to September 14, 2001.  When Cassio arrived at the hospital, he weighed between 13 and 14 pounds, which was below the fifth percentile for a 10-month-old child.  In addition, he had not received any immunizations and could not sit up, a six-month milestone, or crawl, a nine-month milestone.  Dr. Gomez and Cassio's nurse practitioner, Catherine Tomaka, agreed that Cassio needed to be admitted to the hospital for treatment of his failure to thrive.

Dr. Gomez testified that a failure to thrive is diagnosed by a child's weight.  A failure to thrive is considered nonorganic, and generally the result of neglect, where the child gains around two ounces a day during hospitalization and his blood, lead, urine and neurological tests are normal.  An organic failure to thrive on the other hand is the result of a disease such as anemia, tubular acidosis, lead poisoning or dehydration.  Dr. Gomez stated that Cassio's tests were normal and, during his first week of hospitalization, he gained about one pound.  As a result, Dr. Gomez diagnosed him with nonorganic failure to thrive due to inadequate nutrition.  Although Cassio was premature, Dr. Gomez stated that a premature child will generally be within the normal weight limits by six months of age.

On cross-examination, Dr. Gomez agreed that the Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics is a reliable authority on pediatrics, and admitted it provided that a "corrected age" should be used when measuring the growth of a premature infant until he/she reaches the "corrected age" of one to two years.  He further testified he could not state how many grams Cassio gained in the hospital because he could not convert pounds to grams in his head.  Dr. Gomez was unable to testify as to Cassio's date of admission without referring to the hospital records and did not know Cassio's rate of weight gain prior to being admitted because he was not the child's primary physician.  When diagnosing Cassio, Dr. Gomez did not take into account Cassio's cultural background or diet and did not conduct any endocrinology tests, which would show whether the failure to thrive was due to a gland problem.  He believed, however, that Cassio's ability to gain weight on a proper diet ruled out such a problem.

John Gac testified that he is a child protection investigator with DCFS.  Gac received Eddie's, Ariel's and Cassio's cases on August 28, 2001, one day after a report was made to DCFS for medical neglect and failure to thrive.  Gac stated he spoke with Latrena at the hospital.  She told him she did not believe there was anything wrong with Cassio and that he had, in fact, gained a significant amount of weight over the past two months.  She further stated that she was a trained nurse's assistant and that her opinion regarding her son was just as valid as the doctor's.  According to Gac, Latrena admitted that Ariel's immunizations were not current and that, like Cassio, Ariel had been unable to sit up at 10 months.

Latrena explained to Gac that she worked full-time.  She awoke at 4:30 a.m. to give Cassio a bottle of milk.  She also prepared cereal for her brother to give him later, as her brother cared for the children while she was at work.  When Latrena returned from work, she would give Cassio another bottle and later feed him.  Gac visited Latrena's apartment and met her brother.  He did not see any baby food in the home and, when he asked where the baby food was kept, Latrena's brother was unable to find any.  Gac saw the children during his visit to the apartment and he stated they "showed no emotion whatsoever."  However, he did not see any signs of abuse or neglect.

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In re Edward T., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-edward-t-illappct-2003.