In Re Jertrude O.

466 A.2d 885, 56 Md. App. 83, 1983 Md. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 17, 1983
Docket1908, September Term, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 466 A.2d 885 (In Re Jertrude O.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Jertrude O., 466 A.2d 885, 56 Md. App. 83, 1983 Md. App. LEXIS 368 (Md. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

LOWE, Judge.

A “[c]hild in need of assistance” is one who is not receiving ordinary and proper care and attention and whose parents are unwilling or unable to so provide the child and his problems. Md.Cts. & Jud.Proc.Code Ann. § 3-801(e). Although the statute provides the measure by which a judge must determine whether a child is receiving such care and attention, Cts. & Jud.Proc. § 3-819(d), 1 the juvenile causes subtitle does not suggest what is proper or what is ordinary. *87 Presumably, the judge is expected to make that determination evidentially and empirically.

A judge in the Juvenile Division of the District Court of Montgomery County was called upon to determine whether the “ordinary” customs and mores of Central African Republic parents in raising their children were “proper” when permitted or performed in America. He decided that they were not; and because one of three daughters had bruises and scarring of skin and bone unsatisfactorily explained to him, he declared all three of appellants’ children in need of assistance. The oldest daughter, four-year-old Jertrude, had been taken from her parents pursuant to § 3-815(b) prior to the adjudicatory hearing, and at disposition shelter care in a private home was continued presumably pursuant to § 3-820(b)(2) (now (c)(2)) (1982 Cum.Supp.).

Jertrude’s father was employed as a chauffeur at the Central African Republic’s embassy which paid him neither substantially nor regularly. As a result, his family’s shelter was nomadic, occasionally shared and barely adequate. Except for whatever inferences could be drawn from Jertrude’s scars and her occasional seeming withdrawal from her parents following their six month long separation, there was no evidence at all that her parents were other than loving and caring ones. Although some suspicion by reason of primary custody focused upon the mother as the source of Jertrude’s injuries, extensive and repeated examinations and investigations in home and out, individually and familially, physically, psychiatrically, socially and judicially by the Montgomery County Department of Social Services unearthed nothing that would indicate abuse. Indeed, quite the contrary was pointedly indicated in the sensitive and perceptive observations following examination of the mother by the Department’s Psychiatrist, Rosalie Barr, noted in the Department’s evaluation update prior to the disposition from which this appeal was taken.

“There were no signs of the characterological defects (impatience, easy frustration, inability to stay on task, detached effect, minimizing, evasive or paranoid flavor, *88 etc. etc.), which would predispose to abuse. Her suffering at the emotional as well as physical loss of Jertrude revealed her valuation of and attachment to the child

Because the father spoke English haltingly and the mother not at all, their attempt to explain the possible cause of current bruises, old healed-over hairline bone fractures and epidermal scars on Jertrude was, to state the obvious, unconvincing to the judge who decided that the injury residuals evidenced by pictures and x-rays could not have occurred if “the parents were in any way caring for the child or ... or alert to the child’s care.”

While the judge recognized the absence of evidence of parental child abuse and realized that he could not apply a res ipsa loquitur rationale, he came dangerously close to doing just that.

“[I]t would be the Court’s opinion that any child who has been the subject of physical abuse by one or both parents, is an example of a child who is not receiving ordinary proper care and attention and it would follow, in my view, that the parents would be, in that context, unwilling or unable at least to give proper care and attention of ... if there was concern there would be some ... at least if there was some concern, that they . . . there would be ongoing . . . ongoing mistreatment if the child were to remain in the home of the parents. We do have injuries that have in a sense been unexplained. Explained by the parents. Unexplained in the view of the . . . medical and other professional people involved.”

But absent the physical fact of the scarring and an interpretation of those scars by a medical doctor employed by the Montgomery County Health Department who had “had occasion to actually ... look at [Jertrude’s] body”, but who did not “give her [a] full medical, physical examination”, there was no evidence that anyone had abused Jertrude, much less her parents.

Ironically, the finding that the parents had not provided ordinary or proper care and were unwilling or unable to do *89 so emanated from their having taken the child to a hospital for treatment of an injury discovered by the mother when bathing the child. The numerous fine cut-like scars and circular marks on her body prompted the doctor to x-ray and more carefully examine the child. He then reported what appeared from the examination to be a “battered” child as he is required to do.

When called upon to explain the source of these bruises and scars, etc., the parents (ultimately through an interpreter), although not professing to know precisely when each old injury occurred, explained that the child continuously climbed and fell from furniture and in her bathtub, and pointed to specific episodes which may have caused bruises and the unexplained old injuries. This was substantiated by the County’s evaluation report noting that Jertrude was still noticeably bruised ten weeks after she had been removed from her parents’ custody. The update report also noted her continued propensity at her foster home to climb upon dressers, sofa, top of her closet and banisters as well as the bathtub.

They explained her skin scars as best they could from the nature of the scars. There were apparently three types of scars or marks on the child’s body as revealed in photographs submitted and as described by the Health Department doctor who had “looked at” Jertrude’s body.

“DR. FRANKEL: I saw a child who was covered with scars. From . . . extending from . . . the neck to . . . her toes essentially, from her . . . the whole back, her bottom, the front and back of her body had numerous scars on that. There were a few scars on her face but not significant the ones that I saw on the body.
COURT: Did you say arms and legs or . . .
DR. FRANKEL: Yes.
COURT: Arms and legs including the torso as well?
DR. FRANKEL: Yes.
MR. WRIGHT: Now, when you say a scar, what do you mean by a scar?
*90 DR. FRANKEL: I am describing what is ... the residual of an injury. It’s ... a tissue reaction. And . . . she had different types of scars. She had scars with which showed hypopigmentation and body reaction and she also showed areas where it appeared that the dermis, the full thickness of the skin, was missing and healed and that (Unclear).

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Bluebook (online)
466 A.2d 885, 56 Md. App. 83, 1983 Md. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jertrude-o-mdctspecapp-1983.