In Re Interest of Hollenbeck

322 N.W.2d 635, 212 Neb. 253, 1982 Neb. LEXIS 1198
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1982
Docket81-758
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 322 N.W.2d 635 (In Re Interest of Hollenbeck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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 Interest of Hollenbeck, 322 N.W.2d 635, 212 Neb. 253, 1982 Neb. LEXIS 1198 (Neb. 1982).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The appellant, Ruth Dorothy L. Hollenbeck, who is the mother of the child in interest, appeals from an order of the separate juvenile court terminating her parental rights in her youngest daughter. The father’s parental rights were also terminated by this order, but he has not appealed.

*254 On September 11, 1980, a petition was filed in the separate juvenile court, alleging the child in interest, who was born December 13, 1974, was a child within the meaning of Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 43-202(2) (b) and 43-209(2) (Reissue 1978), in that she was a child under 18 years of age lacking proper parental care by reason of the fault or habits of her parents. The petition specifically alleged that the father had sexually abused the child; that the mother was aware of the father’s propensities to sexually abuse his daughters, yet refused to remove or protect the child; that the child, at age 5, displayed inappropriate sexual behavior; and that both parents had on numerous occasions left the child without adult supervision or protection for prolonged periods of time. On the date the petition was filed the child was placed in immediate temporary foster care.

At the detention hearing held on September 22, 1980, the child in interest testified in chambers, in the presence of the court and her guardian ad litem, that her mother worked all day and that her father was her babysitter, and that from the time she was 4 or 5 years old her father would leave her at home alone for periods of time during the day. On one of these occasions, during the winter, she was locked out of the house and had to remain outside approximately an hour until he returned home. Also at this hearing an 8-year-old neighbor child testified that on one occasion she saw the child in interest, the father, and another unrelated child in the pool in the Hollenbeck’s backyard and that the father removed the swimming suits of both the child in interest and the neighbor child and fondled their breasts and vaginal areas. Following this hearing the court ordered that the child remain in foster care pending an adjudication hearing.

The appellant’s answer, filed March 2, 1981, denied the allegations of the petition and alleged that divorce or separation from her husband was con *255 trary to her religious faith, that she was employed, and that her husband had a 100 percent service-connected disability. It further alleged that the child’s inappropriate sexual behavior could be attributed to the normal curiosity of a small child “and should not be interpreted in any other way.”

An adjudication hearing was held on March 9 and 10, 1981. The evidence adduced at this hearing showed that the child in interest was the youngest of the four children of the parents and that a petition filed in the interest of all four children in 1977 alleged acts of sexual abuse by the father upon the two older daughters and refusal by the mother to acknowledge the incest problem in the family. All four children were removed from the home at that time. Later, the allegations of sexual abuse were stricken from the petition by the county attorney. The parents then admitted the remaining allegations that the three older children were homeless or destitute, or without proper support through no fault of the parents, and the three older children were placed in foster care. The child in interest here was returned to the parents.

At the time of the present case the middle daughter remained in foster care, the oldest daughter was emancipated, and the son was incarcerated in the Lincoln Correctional Center.

At the adjudication hearing both of the older daughters testified as to the father’s sexual abuse of them. The oldest daughter testified that she had told her mother about these occurrences at one time, but that the mother did not appear to understand. Thereafter, this daughter did not attempt to again discuss the problem with her mother. However, this daughter did testify in her mother’s presence at a mental health board hearing, well before the events alleged in the instant petition, that her father had sexually abused her. At one point she told the appellant that, in order to get the older children back, *256 the appellant would have to divorce the father. The appellant’s only comment to this was that she did not know what to do. The middle daughter also testified that she had been sexually abused by the father, but did not attempt to discuss it with the appellant because the appellant had seemed to ignore the older daughter. The middle daughter further testified that the child in interest had told her that she had been sexually fondled by the father. The child in interest testified in chambers that her father had sexually abused her.

The foster mother of the child in interest testified the child had told her that the father had molested her. In addition, the foster mother testified that the child would have nightmares after visits with both parents, during which she would cry out, “Daddy, don’t. Please don’t do that.” When awakened, she would not remember the dreams. The nightmares did not occur when she visited only with her mother.

Several witnesses testified to unusual sexually oriented behavior on the child’s part, both before and after she had been placed in foster care. Testimony on this issue came from playmates, the playmates’ parents, and the child’s foster mother. From the relating of these activities at the hearing, it can hardly be said that these activities and the child’s vocabulary of sexual idiom were attributable “to the normal curiosity of a small child.” The foster mother testified that she had worked with many children who were the victims of incest, but she had never seen one with as much “acting-out” behavior as demonstrated by this child.

Several neighbors testified that they often saw the child in interest, at age 4 or 5, walking around the neighborhood and crossing busy streets by herself. One neighbor, her former babysitter, testified that on several occasions she saw the child cross arterial intersections by herself when, according to the child, she had been sent by her father to mail a letter. This *257 witness stated that she spoke to the appellant about these incidents but the pattern continued. Another neighbor testified that the child in interest was at her house, playing with the neighbor’s son, for long periods of time 3 or 4 days a week, without either parent checking on her whereabouts. This neighbor also testified that at times she would feed the child lunch, because other times when she had sent the child home for lunch, she saw her “zigzagging” back and forth across the street to other neighbors’ houses until she found one that would feed her lunch. A neighbor also testified that the child once said that she did not want to go home because her father made her take naps all the time and that she did not want to go home to take naps.

The mother testified that this was the first time she had heard anything about sexual abuse of any of the children by the father.

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Bluebook (online)
322 N.W.2d 635, 212 Neb. 253, 1982 Neb. LEXIS 1198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-interest-of-hollenbeck-neb-1982.