In re J.D.K.

685 S.W.2d 876, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4252
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1984
DocketNo. WD35099
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 685 S.W.2d 876 (In re J.D.K.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re J.D.K., 685 S.W.2d 876, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4252 (Mo. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

DIXON, Judge.

The natural mother appeals the trial court’s order terminating her parental rights. The issue is the sufficiency of the evidence.

For comprehension of the facts necessary for evaluating the sole issue, a chronology of the living arrangements and location of the child must be understood. The child was born in March, 1980. He and his mother, Patty, lived with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Humes in Weston, Missouri, until mid-September, 1980. In September, because of arguments with the Humes and their relatives, Patty and her son left the Humes' home and moved into an apartment in Weston. The child stayed with Patty until October 24, 1980, when he was first placed in foster care where he remained until October 23, 1981. Patty stayed in Mrs. Paula Schnell’s home in Beloit, Kansas, from No[877]*877vember 12, 1980, to January 25, 1981. Although the record is far from clear, it appears that Patty returned to the Humes’ home in January, 1981, and remained there for five months. She then moved in with Linda and Tony Allison in Leavenworth, Kansas, where she remained until mid-February, 1982, except for three or four days in January, 1982, when she again stayed with the Schnells in Beloit. The child was returned to Patty’s care in October, 1981, and stayed with her in the Allison home until he was again placed in foster care in mid-February, 1982. Since then, he has not been in Patty’s care.

Patty again stayed in Weston with the Humes from February 18, 1982, to March 15,1982. She then stayed with Pat Crooks in Weston until March 29, 1982, when she moved into an apartment in Leavenworth. On May 26, 1982, Patty married Dennis Beatty, but they separated on June 15, 1982. In June, while still in Leavenworth, Patty moved in with Wesley Sutton, the child’s father, by whom she subsequently became pregnant and had a second child in 1983. In July, 1982, Patty and Wesley moved to Weston but split up soon after and Patty then moved in with Kathy Rai-ney, a friend from Leavenworth, with whom she stayed until October, 1982. The record does not reflect Patty’s whereabouts from October, 1982, to January, 1983, and a social worker testified that, during that period, her office lost track of Patty. From February, 1983, to the time of trial, Patty again lived with the Allisons in Leavenworth.

Karoline Zerger, a counselor who evaluated Patty, stated Patty had a demonstrated inability to protect her son and to provide him with a safe and secure environment. Mrs. Humes, with whom Patty and her son stayed for his first six months, stated Patty did not take good care of him; that she did not change his diapers nor feed him on time. She also stated that Patty often spanked him on his lower back and bottom to make him stop crying. Patty admitted to Mrs. Humes that she had beaten her son to the point of bruises. After leaving the Humes’ home, on at least one occasion the child was left alone and unattended in the apartment for one hour. Mrs. Humes said Patty felt put-upon for having to raise a child. She did not believe Patty was capable of raising her son, even if she were in a stable environment.

Patty has a history of lack of credibility. While staying in the Humes’ home, she lied about where she went when she left the home, on occasion playing truant from work. While with the Schnells she lied about her father’s being ill and requiring her presence at the hospital. Patty told Mrs. Humes, Mrs. Schnell, and Tamara Hatheway, a social worker, that Linda Allison, with whom she and her son lived in late 1981 and early 1982, had beaten her up and physically abused her son by burning his face with a cigarette, hitting him, tieing his hands behind his back and then putting him in a cold shower, and possibly, breaking his arm. At trial, she said those prior statements were lies but reiterated that she was, at times, afraid of Linda Allison.

When the child was placed in foster care for the second time in 1982, the service agreement into which Patty entered provided for monthly visits with her son. During the last six months of 1982, Patty and the child had no contact. The record reflects the child’s drastic behavioral changes in and around his mother’s visits. Judith Woods, the child’s foster mother, stated that when the child was placed with her for foster care, he was terrified, did not cry aloud, but whined all through the night. When picked up, he slapped adults in the face and threw his head into theirs. When his diaper was changed, he made sexually explicit gestures, accompanied by the request, “do butt”. He also was terrified of the shower and for months refused to approach it. Mrs. Woods testified that, in time, the little boy’s behavior became more moderate but, after each visit with his mother, those behavior patterns returned [878]*878and only subsided after at least one week. During the emotional and tense visits, the child one time spit at his mother and she spit back, he became frightened when playing with her, and he usually acted aloof toward her unless she had presents for him. After the visits he also soiled his pants, regressing from his ordinary toilet habits. He screamed in his sleep, vomited repeatedly although he had no fever, and attacked the Woods’ family dogs. In the six months when Patty did not contact her son, his behavior improved drastically but when she began to visit him in 1983, he again exhibited the same retrogressive behavior patterns. The background of the second foster care placement is as follows:

In December, 1981, because of an anonymous tip about the child’s condition and the treatment he received, two social workers visited the Allison home, where Patty and the child were staying. They noted a cigarette burn on the child’s face, a broken arm that allegedly had occurred when Linda Allison’s niece dropped him, and bruises on his face, legs, and other parts of his body. One of the social workers stated, "... I had some, you know, concerns.” These were Kansas social workers requested by Missouri authorities to undertake courtesy supervision for the Missouri court. Patty later called the other social worker and stated she was scared of Linda because Linda had beaten her and had mistreated her son. She also told Jean McNearney that she suspected Linda had broken her son’s arm. Because the Missouri authorities had not heard further from the Kansas workers, the Missouri social workers contacted Kansas and when it was discovered that the mother and child had “disappeared” the second time, a Missouri court order was entered to terminate the mother’s custody. The Kansas court and officers assisted the Missouri officials in regaining custody.

The child was placed in foster care with a Mrs. Woods on February 18, 1982. When he arrived at her house, his color was poor (grey), there was a burn mark above his left eye, he was skinny, bruised across his back, bruised and pinched on his face and he had smashed toenails. Dr. Jay Kimball, who examined the little boy on February 19, 1982, found multiple bruises over the child’s body, a six-month deficiency in immunizations, poor oral hygiene, a blood-caked detached toenail and a flattened growth curve, which he believed indicated long-term nutritional deprivation. Although Patty stated her son’s size was due to colds he had had in the fall, Dr. Kimball stated routine viruses and childhood illnesses would not cause the extreme flattening of the growth curve. He also found no evidence of illness that would cause such a flattening. The dramatic increase in the child’s growth curve just one month later suggested his nutritional status was greatly improved. Mrs. Woods stated that as soon as the child arrived in her home he began to eat ravenously but Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
685 S.W.2d 876, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jdk-moctapp-1984.