In re J.E.

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 2025
Docket24-389
StatusPublished

This text of In re J.E. (In re J.E.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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 J.E., (W. Va. 2025).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS FILED May 14, 2025 released at 3:00 p.m. In re J.E. C. CASEY FORBES, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA No. 24-389 (Berkeley County CC-02-2024-JA-59)

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Petitioner Father Q.E.1 appeals the June 29, 2024, order entered by the Circuit Court of Berkeley County, West Virginia, dismissing the abuse and neglect petition filed in this case.2 He argues that the court erred: 1) in finding that the DHS failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence the allegations of sexual abuse committed against his child, J.E. (“J.E.” or “the child”), by the mother’s boyfriend, despite the fact that the court’s order included some of the child’s disclosures of sexual abuse; 2) in finding that the DHS’s burden of proof had not been met, notwithstanding the evidence adduced during the adjudicatory hearing; 3) by including findings of

1 The petitioner appears by counsel Debbie Flowers Payne. Respondent J.R. (“the mother”) appears by counsel Jason Michael Stedman. Respondent W.Z. (“the boyfriend”) appears by counsel John J. Balenovich. The West Virginia Department of Human Services appears by counsel Attorney General John B. McCuskey and Assistant Attorney General Lee Niezgoda. Because a new Attorney General took office while this appeal was pending, his name has been substituted as counsel. Counsel Tracy Weese appears as the child’s guardian ad litem.

Additionally, pursuant to West Virginia Code § 5F-2-1a, the agency formerly known as the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources was terminated. It is now three separate agencies—the Department of Health Facilities, the Department of Health, and the Department of Human Services. See W. Va. Code § 5F-1-2. For purposes of abuse and neglect appeals, the agency is now the Department of Human Services (“DHS”). 2 We use initials where necessary to protect the identities of those involved in this case. See W. Va. R. App. P. 40(e).

1 fact in the order that are not consistent with the actual sworn testimony presented at the adjudicatory hearing; and, 4) in dismissing the abuse and neglect petition.3

The respondent mother and the petitioner, who is a nonoffending father, are the biological parents of the child, J.E. The mother testified that she and the petitioner instituted divorce proceedings in August, 2021, in the family court of Berkeley County, West Virginia, and have shared 50/50 custody of the child since 2022. The mother and her boyfriend, who have lived together for about four years, now reside in Virginia. They have two other children together, who are J.E.’s younger half-siblings.4

On January 3, 2024, the father filed a “Motion for Ex Parte Relief” in Berkeley County Family Court, seeking temporary sole physical custody of the child and suspension of any visitation between the child and the mother; the petition was based on various incidents and statements that were conveyed to the father by J.E., who was then five years old. The disclosures included, inter alia: that the mother’s boyfriend had pushed him down the stairs and injured his chin; that a “bad guy comes in the night at his mommy’s house”; that the child asked the petitioner’s wife to “touch” his penis; that the boyfriend would poke the child in his private areas with his fingers; that the child stated, in response to seeing a pair of “candy cane themed” underwear, that “O[]’s daddy puts his candy cane penis” in the child’s mouth; and that the child didn’t want either the mother or the boyfriend to know he had told the petitioner about these things. In the motion the petitioner also described an incident where the child tried to pull down the petitioner’s wife’s shorts and underwear, and when reprimanded stated that “O[]’s daddy” does that to him. The petitioner’s motion further represented that the child no longer wanted to see his therapist because “his mommy told him that she will go to jail if he talks” to her, and that the petitioner was “concern[ed] for the safety and well-being of the child during the visits” with mother. The petitioner asked the family court to place the child in his temporary sole custody, suspend visitation until the child’s statements had been investigated, and order that neither party speak with the child about the disclosures.

The petitioner’s motion detailing the child’s disclosures of the boyfriend’s sexual contact with him resulted in an overlap referral to Child Protective Services (“CPS”). In January, 2024, the DHS arranged for a forensic interview of the child at a Child Advocacy Center (“CAC”) as part of its investigation. During the CAC interview the child disclosed, among other things, that the boyfriend: got “super mad” and put the child in the corner; smacked the child’s head and “did something wrong, something bad”; smacked the child’s back; touched the child’s “pee-pee” while he was in the shower; touched the child when he had no clothes on more than one occasion; touched

3 Because the petitioner’s assigned errors are duplicative, we have consolidated them for purposes of this appeal. See Corey D. v. Travis R., 245 W. Va. 232, 234, n.4, 858 S.E.2d 857, 859 n.4 (2021). 4 The younger half-siblings are O.Z. and B.Z. They were originally named in the abuse and neglect petition but were dismissed from the action at the preliminary hearing on jurisdictional grounds, as they reside in Virginia with their parents and have no contact with West Virginia.

2 the child’s “pee-pee” while the child was sleeping; came into the child’s room and touched the child’s “pee-pee” and butt after shutting the door; and pulled the child’s pants down and touched his body everywhere. Further, the child stated that both the mother and the boyfriend smacked each other.

The DHS filed an abuse and neglect petition in March, 2024, alleging, in part, that based on the child’s disclosures to his father, a CPS worker’s interviews of the petitioner, the stepmother, the mother, the boyfriend, and the child’s therapist, Dr. Gail Shade; and the CAC interview of the child, the mother’s boyfriend sexually abused the child;5 that the mother “abused and neglected” the child by “knowingly allow[ing] another to commit sexual abuse” upon the child and “fail[ing] to protect” the child from harm;6 that the boyfriend physically abused the mother while the child was present in the home; and that the mother and the boyfriend “failed to take appropriate action to prevent the abuse of the Infant[] . . . by engaging in domestic violence in the presence, including hearing, of the Infant.” In its “Order Upon Filing Petition” entered on March 25, 2024, the circuit court found that the allegations contained in the petition “constitute[d] substantial danger to the health and welfare of the child[] and remaining in the home of [the mother and the boyfriend] [wa]s contrary to the child[]’s welfare[.]” The court gave the father temporary full custody of the child, with no visitation to the mother and the boyfriend unless approved by the multidisciplinary team (“MDT”).

On two different days in May and June, 2024, the circuit court conducted an adjudicatory hearing in which five individuals testified: the boyfriend, the mother, the petitioner, the CPS worker,7 and Dr. Shade, the therapist8 who began seeing the child in 2022 after a referral was made in the family court proceeding for her to assist with the development of a parenting plan. The CAC

5 See W. Va. Code § 49-1-201(1)(B) (defining “[a]bused child” to include “[a] child whose health or welfare is being harmed or threatened by . . . [s]exual abuse . . . [.]”); see also id. § 49-1- 201(defining “sexual abuse” to include “sexual intrusion” and “sexual contact”). 6 See id. § 49-1-201(1)(A) (defining “[a]bused child” to include “[a] child whose health or welfare is being harmed or threatened by . . . [a] parent, guardian, or custodian who . . .

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In re J.E., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-je-wva-2025.