In Re Ek

20 So. 3d 1216, 2009 WL 3765796
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 2009
Docket2008-CA-00671-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 So. 3d 1216 (In Re Ek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi 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 Ek, 20 So. 3d 1216, 2009 WL 3765796 (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

20 So.3d 1216 (2009)

In the Interest of E.K., A Minor P.K.
v.
Hinds County Youth Court.

No. 2008-CA-00671-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

November 12, 2009.

*1218 Lisa M. Ross, Jackson, attorney for appellant.

Brent Hazzard, Jackson, S. Malcolm O. Harrison, attorneys for appellee.

EN BANC.

DICKINSON, Justice, for the Court.

¶ 1. The Mississippi Department of Human Services in Hinds County ("DHS") received two reports involving a thirteen-year-old boy, E.K. In the first, E.K. was accused of having sexually molested a three-year-old girl, and in the second, E.K. alleged he was the victim of statutory rape at the hands of L.S., the three-year-old girl's mother.

¶ 2. During a shelter hearing regarding the allegations that E.K. had been abused by L.S., the judge ordered E.K. to submit to an interview with the Child Advocacy Center ("CAC"), and the trial judge ordered L.S. to have no contact with E.K. or his mother, P.K. The guardian ad litem then asked P.K., "Do you understand that the purpose of the CAC interview—they will interview him," to which P.K. responded, "Yeah."

¶ 3. On the day the CAC interview was scheduled, P.K. accompanied E.K. to the interview. P.K. and E.K. entered the CAC and completed the required paperwork. Then, P.K. and E.K. left the building and sat in P.K.'s car. When Brandy Kelly, the DHS agent assigned to the case, contacted P.K. on her cell phone to tell her the interview was about to begin, P.K. replied that she and E.K. were "doing our rosary" and would return to the office when they completed it.

¶ 4. Once P.K. and E.K. returned inside the CAC for the interview, P.K. began to say that she did not want E.K. to have the interview. P.K. also stated that E.K.'s father was on the way, and continued to insist that E.K. not have the interview. Kelly explained to P.K. that if she did not allow E.K. to have the CAC interview, she would be in violation of a court order. P.K. then called her attorney, who informed Kelly that if Kelly did not have the court order with her, E.K. would not participate in the interview. Accordingly, P.K. and E.K. left the CAC.

¶ 5. After these events were reported to the judge, he verbally ordered Kelly to remove E.K. from his mother's custody. The sheriff's department picked up E.K. from P.K., after which Kelly learned that E.K. had been instructed by his mother not to talk to her. Another shelter hearing was held the following day, during which Kelly stated that CAC interviews are:

where we are able to obtain the information—the time line in which the events took place as far as sexual abuse or physical abuse, and it's very mandatory for us to obtain that interview. That's the child's way of telling what happened.

Kelly also stated that neither parents nor lawyers were allowed in the room during interviews "because they can coach the child and ruin the whole interview, or the child could shut down and not disclose anything."

¶ 6. Kelly opined that damage had been done because P.K. and E.K. abruptly had left the CAC before allowing E.K. to be interviewed. In her opinion, "when [P.K.] *1219 took [E.K.] out to the car, I feel as if she told him not to say anything." Kelly testified that, "This child has been coached." Furthermore, Kelly added that E.K. "disclosed to neighborhood children that [he] and his mother made up this story because he supposedly had touched a three-year-old child and that if he sticks to the story, when the investigation is over, he's supposed to get paid for it." Kelly then requested that the court issue a no-contact order between P.K. and E.K. through the remainder of the investigation, and leave E.K. in the custody of DHS.

¶ 7. After Kelly completed testifying, the trial judge addressed P.K., who was unrepresented by counsel at the hearing, saying:

[P.K.], you have an opportunity to make a statement now if you want to do so, and I want to caution you on how this works. You have to be sworn in, and once you get through making your statement, then you are subject to cross-examination from the county prosecutor... and the guardian ad litem, who represents E.K. in this case[.] ... Do you understand?

P.K. responded, "Yes, sir," and explained the facts leading to the sexual-abuse charges. She did not, however, explain the events surrounding the CAC interview.

¶ 8. The guardian ad litem asked P.K. if she "allow[ed] this child to be interviewed at CAC," to which she responded, "I did not." P.K. then adamantly denied knowing the court had ordered that E.K. have the interview at CAC. The guardian ad litem asked, "Well, why was there testimony presented today that you called some lawyer, and your lawyer mentioned that if the court order was not present at the CAC interview, that the child couldn't have [the interview]—if you didn't know there was an order?" P.K. responded by saying, "Ms. Kelly told Mr. McNeal [P.K.'s lawyer] that it was a court order and the court order was in her mailbox, so them two had a conversation. I did not know."

¶ 9. The guardian ad litem then addressed P.K. and the court, saying:

I believe that you have clearly and purposely frustrated the attempts for this child to be interviewed by CAC. There's a purpose for those interviews. There's a purpose for a child being interviewed alone without the parent being there, so the child is not coached or coerced, so that the child can fully disclose. Number one, I believe that you clearly frustrated on purpose. Number two, I clearly believe that you would bring up this whole story for your own personal benefit. What I'm asking this Court to do is lock you up today, because you are clearly in contempt of this Court. There's no question about it. There's no question about it, and I do believe that you are not going to do anything but try to further frustrate this process. My recommendation, number one, is that you are locked up today. Number two, I ask that when you are released, that you have no contact whatsoever with this child.

(Emphasis added.) The guardian ad litem further requested that E.K. remain in DHS's custody; that a no-contact order be issued between P.K. and E.K.; and that P.K. be made to submit to "psychological counseling, psychological testing, psychological analysis, examination, assessments, whatever." The guardian ad litem also stated, "I have a fear for this child's well-being."

¶ 10. The prosecutor and the trial judge had a discussion as to whether the request by the guardian ad litem was for civil or criminal contempt, and whether notice to P.K. was required. The trial judge concluded that "because youth court cases are in fact civil," that P.K. could be placed in custody, charged with contempt, and jailed *1220 for forty-eight hours. A contempt-of-court order was entered April 4, 2008. Further, legal and physical custody of E.K. was placed with DHS.

¶ 11. P.K. filed an appeal with this Court, claiming she had been held in constructive criminal contempt, and that because she had no notice of the proceedings, her constitutional due process rights were violated. She asks this Court to "set aside the complete [contempt] order, including but not limited to [the trial judge's] commands that E.K.'s mother `enter into and complete [a] service agreement to include full psychological evaluation and drug testing and parenting classes before [she is] allowed even visitation with [E.K.].'"

DISCUSSION

¶ 12. The parties dispute whether the contempt matter at issue is a civil contempt or a constructive criminal contempt. This Court has stated:

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Related

Mississippi Department of Human Services v. S.W.
111 So. 3d 630 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 So. 3d 1216, 2009 WL 3765796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ek-miss-2009.