In Re Rachel T.

549 A.2d 27, 77 Md. App. 20, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 245
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 1, 1988
Docket400, September Term, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 549 A.2d 27 (In Re Rachel T.) 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 Rachel T., 549 A.2d 27, 77 Md. App. 20, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 245 (Md. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

ROSALYN B. BELL, Judge.

Rachel T. is the six-year-old daughter of George and Kathleen T. In August of 1987, a master determined that Rachel was a Child in Need of Assistance. Rachel’s parents filed exceptions to the master’s decision, and after a de novo hearing, the Circuit Court for Carroll County reversed the master’s decision. The Department of Social Services for Carroll County (Department) and Rachel T. appeal, contending that the trial court should have admitted certain out-of-court statements made by Rachel. The Department also contends that, even in the absence of these statements, the evidence overwhelmingly supported a finding that Rachel needed court protection. We vacate the judgment and remand.

The facts leading up to this appeal are as follows. On March 30, 1987, at about 6:20 p.m., Mrs. T., Rachel’s mother, found Rachel in an upstairs bathroom sitting on the toilet. Mrs. T. discovered blood in the toilet after Rachel *24 left the room. Although Mrs. T. knew that the blood had come from Rachel, she did not ask her any questions, or examine her to ascertain the severity or origin of Rachel’s bleeding. She went instead to the kitchen to wait for her husband to return from work. After Mr. T. arrived home at about 6:50 p.m., Mrs. T. showed him the blood in the toilet, and they returned to the kitchen where she served Mr. T. his supper. Mr. T. suggested to his wife that perhaps Rachel was starting her period early. Rachel was not quite five at this time. When Rachel came into the kitchen 15 or 20 minutes later, Mr. T. noticed blood on the back of her nightgown. Mrs. T. telephoned her own mother, who told her to call Rachel’s pediatrician. The pediatrician’s receptionist told Mrs. T. to locate the source of the bleeding and, for the first time that day, Mrs. T. examined Rachel. In the interim, Rachel’s father discovered more blood in a downstairs toilet. Mrs. T. made an appointment for Dr. Ignatowski, Rachel’s pediatrician, to see her at 8:00 p.m.

When Dr. Ignatowski examined Rachel, he found a fresh tear in her hymen, a significant amount of blood in the vaginal vault, and clotted blood in Rachel’s rectum. He also found that her rectal sphincter muscle was abnormally dilated. Rachel’s vaginal hymenal opening measured 15 millimeters, a serious abnormal finding because a measurement exceeding five millimeters is considered to be significantly enlarged. Dr. Ignatowski knew that he must refer Rachel to a sexual child abuse specialist as soon as he saw the condition of her hymen. Dr. Ignatowski related that, when he had performed a routine examination of Rachel a year earlier, she had presented none of these disturbing abnormalities. Dr. Ignatowski also found remarkable the relaxed ease with which Rachel endured his examination. Based on his own experience as a pediatrician and upon the relevant medical literature, this indicated chronic sexual abuse. After he examined Rachel, Dr. Ignatowski spoke to her parents about his findings, telling them that he would personally make an appointment for Rachel with a pediatric *25 gynecologist. Mrs. T. was reluctant to have Rachel seen by the pediatric gynecologist, denying the possibility of sexual abuse, suggesting instead that Rachel must have somehow injured herself. The parents did, however, bring Rachel the next day to see Dr. Timothy Doran.

Dr. Doran is the Assistant Medical Director of the Chesapeake Clinic at the Francis Scott Key Medical Center. Francis Scott Key is one of three rape centers in the Baltimore area. The center uses an interdisciplinary approach: that is, when appropriate, a female social worker may be asked to interview a young female child to gather a medical history, if the child seems to be uncomfortable with an adult male. In the instant case, Dr. Doran, in accordance with his usual procedure, asked the social worker to take Rachel’s history because she was unwilling to talk to him. When asked about the source of the bleeding, Rachel told the social worker that she had a secret with her Dad and that if she told her Mom her father would be in big trouble. The history was then incorporated into the hospital’s medical record.

Dr. Doran, an expert in pediatric gynecology and the evaluation of sexually abused children, discovered that Rachel’s vaginal opening and hymen were extremely dilated, and the widest he had seen in any child under the age of 10. He also found diminished anal sphincter tone, which is a sign of sexual abuse if found in conjunction with a gaping hymenal orifice. It was Dr. Doran’s opinion that Rachel had been victimized by on-going sexual abuse. Dr. Doran spoke to the Department about his findings, and a Department staff member referred Rachel and her family to Dr. Gladys Sweeney, a clinical psychologist specializing in sexual abuse cases.

Dr. Sweeney saw Rachel and her parents on four occasions. At the first session, Dr. Sweeney presented Rachel *26 with anatomically correct dolls. 1 Rachel took the male adult doll, pulled his pants down, showed Dr. Sweeney the doll’s penis and said, “[T]his is his tutor.” When asked if she had ever seen a tutor, Rachel replied, “Yes, my daddy’s.” Rachel grabbed the male doll’s penis, put it in the female doll’s genitalia and said, “Tutor goes in here, too.” Rachel named the female doll “Cindy” and said that the male doll was Cindy’s daddy. She told Dr. Sweeney that Cindy’s daddy had hurt Cindy by putting his “tutor” inside her. When asked to show what had happened, Rachel depicted intercourse with the dolls.

At the next session with Dr. Sweeney, Rachel spontaneously repeated this sequence with the dolls. She told Dr. Sweeney that her father had on two occasions put his “tutor” in her, and that it had hurt. Rachel told Dr. Sweeney that her father had told her that she was going to cry a lot if she told. Rachel then showed Dr. Sweeney with a doll how her Daddy spanked her with a paddle, and then threw the doll to the floor and screamed, “You’re a bad girl.”

Mrs. T. told Dr. Sweeney that she was convinced that Rachel had been injured at nursery school. Mrs. T. tried to get Rachel to confirm that something had happened at nursery school (and not at home), but Rachel refused to do so. Mr. T. expressed a lot of anger, stating that men were always accused of sexual abuse. He told Dr. Sweeney that he often found it necessary to spank Rachel with a stick.

Dr. Sweeney related that, near the end of a session with Rachel’s parents, Rachel, who had been waiting outside, began knocking on the door to come into the room. Mr. T. looked at the door and stated, “That’s why we have a stick in the house.” It was Dr. Sweeney’s opinion that Rachel had been sexually abused, and she relayed this information to the Department.

*27 On June 18, 1987, the Department filed a petition for shelter care and, after a hearing that same day, Rachel was removed from the house and placed in a foster home. On June 25, 1987, the Department, pursuant to Md.Cts. & Jud.Proc.Code Ann. § 3-801(e) (1974,1984 Repl.Vol.), filed a petition alleging that Rachel was a Child in Need of Assistance (CINA). Specifically, the Department’s petition alleged that medical evidence indicated sexual abuse, that Rachel had indicated that her father was the abuser and had threatened her with corporal punishment.

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Bluebook (online)
549 A.2d 27, 77 Md. App. 20, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rachel-t-mdctspecapp-1988.