In re G.W.

2018 MT 192, 423 P.3d 575, 392 Mont. 269
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 2018
DocketDA 18-0061
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 MT 192 (In re G.W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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 G.W., 2018 MT 192, 423 P.3d 575, 392 Mont. 269 (Mo. 2018).

Opinion

Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the Court.

***269¶ 1 G.W.'s mother, S.W. (Mother) appeals from an order of the Eighth Judicial District Court, Cascade County, terminating her parental rights. We affirm and address:

Whether the District Court clearly erred by adjudicating G.W. a Youth in Need of Care.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶ 2 In January 2016, the Department of Public Health and Human Services (Department) petitioned the District Court for Emergency Protective Services (EPS) and Temporary Investigative Authority (TIA)

***270over G.W., then age four. In its petition and *577accompanying affidavit, the Department requested TIA because of: (1) allegations G.W.'s father, S.N. (Father) physically and sexually abused G.W.; and (2) allegations Mother psychologically abused G.W. by fabricating allegations against Father and thereby subjecting G.W. to a harmful amount of unwarranted medical interventions.

¶ 3 The affidavit detailed the Department receiving over a dozen reports, beginning when G.W. was seventeen-months-old, alleging Father abused G.W. As a result, Mother had G.W. examined by several healthcare providers and mental-healthcare providers "without any physical evidence of physical or sexual abuse." The affidavit described Deputy Popelka's questioning of G.W.: "I asked [G.W.] what she did today. [G.W.] stated she was at her dad's house, and she slept in his bed until morning, when he carried her back to her bed. She said her vagina hurt, because he hurt it. Then she said, 'Mom, I don't know the rest.' " (Emphasis omitted.) Further, the affidavit noted Father did not have "any unsupervised contact with [G.W.] since [G.W.'s] birth." The District Court granted the Department EPS and later, upon Mother's and Father's stipulations, TIA.

¶ 4 In March 2016, the Department removed G.W. from Mother's care, placing her in therapeutic foster care and allowing Mother and Father visitation. The Department expressed uncertainty about Father's ability to parent G.W. due to his limited contact with G.W. The Department petitioned the District Court to adjudicate G.W. a Youth in Need of Care (YINC) based on concerns Mother psychologically abused G.W. by subjecting her to ongoing, unsubstantiated allegations Father abused her. The District Court scheduled an adjudication hearing. The parties requested the District Court allocate an entire day for the hearing. The District Court scheduled a three-hour hearing and Mother moved for the court to reconsider its allocation, asking for "eight hours or more." In an order on trial administration, the District Court noted, based on its experience, "[m]ost adjudicatory hearings take 15 minutes or less" because they are "limited" in scope, the burden of proof is the preponderance of the evidence, and "extensive factual and expert testimony" is unnecessary. The District Court invited the parties, upon their agreement, to submit expert witness depositions for the court to consider prior to the hearing and maintained the scheduled three hours for the adjudication hearing. The parties agreed and Mother submitted an expert witness deposition of Dr. Brenda Roche for the District Court's consideration.

¶ 5 Dr. Roche did not evaluate G.W. personally, but reviewed G.W.'s medical record and met with Mother twice. In Dr. Roche's deposition, ***271she questioned the methodology Dr. Michael Bütz, one of the Department's experts, used and opined that G.W. seeing several therapists was not uncommon for a four-year-old. In Dr. Roche's deposition, she also questioned the Department's efforts to prevent G.W.'s removal from Mother's care.

¶ 6 In May 2016, the District Court held G.W.'s adjudicatory hearing. Attorneys for the Department, Mother, and Father appeared in addition to G.W.'s appointed Guardian ad Litem. At the outset, the District Court stated it reviewed Dr. Roche's deposition and, "With that in mind, each party has an hour. I have timers up here, and your cross-examinations will count against your time." Thus, the court determined that the previously allocated amount of time-three hours-would be distributed evenly between the Department, Mother, and Father, with each having one hour to present evidence. Mother did not object to the District Court allocating her one hour, of the three-hour hearing, to present. The Department presented two witnesses, Dr. Bütz and Dr. Patrick Davis. Mother cross-examined both of the Department's witnesses and presented one witness, Dr. Cynthia Brewer. Father did not present any witnesses.

¶ 7 Dr. Bütz testified he performed a psychological examination of G.W. and concluded G.W. was "an average little girl" with "average intellectual ability [and] average adaptive ability," but suffers "delays" because of "distress and regression" caused by multiple presentations to healthcare providers. Dr. Bütz testified:

Well, if we take a look at the records, she's been presented 14 different times for various allegations that have not been proven.
*578She's been through at least three therapists at the age of four, which is highly uncommon, and seemingly been put forward for false allegations. So we've got a child who's been presented to this system repeatedly, and that is causing her distress and regression.

Dr. Bütz described the physical examinations providers performed on G.W. and the examinations' results. Dr. Bütz explained G.W.'s examinations did not reveal indications of physical or sexual abuse (reading an examination note, " 'Perineum is normal in appearance. Labia majora is normal. The hymen is normal. There are no abrasions, lacerations or cuts, erythema, swelling, or ... abnormalities noted in the labia, perineum or rectal area,' " and commenting, "This is an example of the kind of thing that is seen over and over in the record."). Instead of finding evidence of abuse during the examinations, Dr. Bütz suggested the examinations themselves were abusive. As a result of her repeated presentations to healthcare providers because of Mother's ***272allegations, Dr. Bütz diagnosed G.W. with "unspecified trauma."

¶ 8 Dr. Davis testified he performed a psychological examination of Mother. Dr. Davis concluded Mother likely suffers from both Factitious Disorder and Factitious Disorder by Proxy. Dr. Davis described the disorder as one in which a person will "fabricate something as a way of getting attention, or as a way of being involved with the medical or the healthcare system" by either fabricating something about themselves (Factitious Disorder ) or another, such as a child (Factitious Disorder by Proxy). Dr. Davis testified there is a variation of the disorder "in which people will fabricate allegations of sexual abuse." In addition to the allegations Mother made against Father concerning G.W., Dr. Davis described an instance in the past, included in Mother's medical record, in which she "fabricat[ed] reports of sexual assault against herself" in Maine and an instance of Mother recently being "under investigation for making a false report" about being sexually assaulted in Montana.

¶ 9 Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 MT 192, 423 P.3d 575, 392 Mont. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gw-mont-2018.