In Re Frances

505 A.2d 1380, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 429
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 18, 1986
Docket85-27-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 505 A.2d 1380 (In Re Frances) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Frances, 505 A.2d 1380, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 429 (R.I. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This matter is before the Supreme Court on appeal from a decree of the Family Court terminating parental rights. The Department of Children and Their Families (DCF) had petitioned for the termination of this mother’s parental rights in regard to all five of her children under G.L.1956 (1981 Reenactment) § 15-7-7(b)(2), as amended by P.L.1983, ch. 232, § 1, alleging that the mother is unfit by reason of conduct seriously detrimental to the children, the conduct being of a cruel and abusive nature to her fourth child, an eleven-month-old girl. We affirm.

The mother had four daughters, 1 the oldest born September 4, 1977, the next born *1382 January 29, 1979, the third, born March 12, 1980, and the victim of the mother’s abuse, born March 5, 1982. The fifth child, a son, born after the events that gave rise to the petitions concerning the four older children, was also made the subject of a petition to terminate filed January 18, 1984. 2

On the morning of February 10, 1983, Billie Rae, 3 age eleven months, was admitted to Rhode Island Hospital through the emergency room. She was “unresponsive, having seizures, extremely dehydrated, with bruises over her head, around her head and upper part of her face and arms.” She was “extremely critically ill” in the opinion of the physician who examined her. The infant was unable to breathe on her own; she had a high fever and was comatose. She remains in a permanent vegetative state assisted with breathing and feeding by means of tubes inserted in the lungs and stomach.

About two months earlier, in December 1982, the infant had been admitted to St. Joseph’s Hospital because she “was taking seizures, started jerking her arm and stiffening out, and her eyes were like rolling, and she just passed out.” It looked as if she had stopped breathing, according to the mother. She said the baby “never got better,” although the mother did not follow up on any treatment after that earlier admission.

On February 10, 1983, Billie Rae was brought to Rhode Island Hospital for treatment of severe head injuries. About the events surrounding this admission the mother testified:

“[Tjhat morning, I left. I came back. My brother and Denise was leaving. I walks through the kitchen, and the living room, and the bedroom. The covers was jumping. I pulled the covers back and that’s when I seen her laying there * *. I picked her up. She just collapsed like she was everything was broken, and my brother and them was heading outside, and I yelled for them to come back, and I asked one of them to stay with the kids while I run and take her to the hospital

The pediatric neurologist who examined the infant at Rhode Island Hospital testified that when he first saw the child

“she was intubated for air with a support. * * ” she showed signs of progressive brain swelling, which necessitated further therapy with medication to stop the swelling * ' *. There were multiple bruises about her body, particularly the head and left lip. There was soft tissue swelling of the scalp * * * There was evidence of dehydration, and the skin turgor was very poor. In addition, there was evidence of poor hygiene, in that the child’s body was dirty. There were caked feces on the genital areas, and I should also mention that the bruises were multiple, and also in various stages of healing, such that some appeared relatively fresh and others looked as if they had been present for days or perhaps even weeks.”

Another physician said that there were signs of extreme dehydration suggesting “at least days and days of inadequate intake.”

The extreme brain swelling signified the severest form of brain injury and “infarc *1383 tion or death of large areas of the brain had, in fact, occurred.” The neurologist testified that in his expert opinion the cause of Billie Rae’s injuries was “unlikely to be a mere accident.” He also stated it was extremely unlikely that her injuries could have been caused by “routine disciplinary measures” or by “one of the [other] children” or by a fall from her walker. At the time of trial the child was in “a persistent vegetative state” from which recovery remains unlikely.

One of the admitting physicians filed a battered-child report “[b]ecause it was felt that there was no adequate explanation for this child’s critical presentation and neurological damage.” He explained this by stating that

“the mother had been the primary caretaker of this child, and accordingly, that would have been the person to get any history from, and we had no history that was consistent with the severity of the illness and the degree of brain damage.”

Another physician also filed reports on the three older girls after an examination of them revealed bruises, superficial lacerations, and indications of exposure to heat and cold on the girls’ hands. These factors, coupled with Billie Rae’s critical condition, convinced him that the other children were at risk.

The mother testified that a day or two before the hospital admission Billie Rae had “one little bruise” caused by falling out of her walker. She also said that the child had been vomiting and suffering from diarrhea and that on the evening of February 9 she looked really sick. The mother denied that she had ever abused any of her children. 4

The psychiatrist who testified for the state had examined the oldest child and reviewed reports and the medical history of the entire family. She was of the opinion that the child had been exposed to much disruption, chaos, and possible violence in the home. She recommended that this child and the others not be returned to live with their mother. She said that if the mother had in fact previously been convicted of murder and if she was in fact responsible for Billie Rae’s vegetative state, then in her expert opinion the mother was unfit to parent these children or any other child. It was also her opinion that rehabilitation of the mother was unlikely.

The three older girls were also examined by a clinical social case-worker and a staff team from Bradley Hospital. Their recommendation was that the two older girls were in need of long-term therapy and a stable, nurturing home environment. The third child was found to be psychologically attached to and bonded with her paternal grandparents and therefore not in need of any therapy. The youngest child, the boy, had never lived with the mother and was being adequately cared for by his father’s parents, who planned to adopt him.

On her release from the training school at age twenty-one, the mother had taken charge of and possession of her three younger daughters. The oldest had remained with the paternal grandparents nearby. Living in the home with the mother and three daughters was the mother’s brother and his girl friend. As we noted earlier, the youngest child, the son, had not yet been born. Although the physician who admitted the child said the mother denied ever leaving the baby alone with *1384

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Bluebook (online)
505 A.2d 1380, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frances-ri-1986.