In Re RBS

36 P.3d 300, 29 Kan. App. 2d 1023, 2001 Kan. App. LEXIS 1123
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 30, 2001
Docket87,150
StatusPublished

This text of 36 P.3d 300 (In Re RBS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re RBS, 36 P.3d 300, 29 Kan. App. 2d 1023, 2001 Kan. App. LEXIS 1123 (kanctapp 2001).

Opinion

29 Kan. App.2d 1023 (2001)
36 P.3d 300

IN THE INTEREST OF R.B.S.

No. 87,150.

Court of Appeals of Kansas.

Opinion filed November 30, 2001.

*1024 Robert D. Campbell, of Campbell Law Office, P.A., of Atchison, for appellant.

John R. Kurth, assistant county attorney, and Gerald R. Kuckelman, county attorney, for appellee.

Before GERNON, P.J., KNUDSON and BEIER, JJ.

BEIER, J.:

This appeal from a child in need of care (CINC) adjudication requires us to review the propriety of a newborn's removal from the care of his parents before they took him home from the hospital. His parents challenge the district court's explicit reliance on the previous death of the newborn's older brother at the age of 5 months.

R.B.S. was born on January 31, 2001, at Cushing Memorial Hospital in Leavenworth. His parents, P.S. and L.S., had not made prior arrangements to deliver R.B.S. at Cushing, and L.S. had received no prenatal care. The couple lives in Atchison, but they chose to take a cab from there to Leavenworth after L.S.'s water broke.

Cushing follows a policy of keeping newborns in the hospital for at least 24 hours after their birth to be assured the babies are healthy. P.S. and L.S. attempted to remove R.B.S. from the hospital nursery before 24 hours had elapsed, and P.S. threatened a security officer when the officer and other hospital personnel intervened: "[A]nybody that tries to stop me," the security officer quoted P.S. as saying, "I will knock their teeth down their throat and bash their head in." L.S. told the security officer that P.S. abused her. After this incident, the hospital initiated a 72-hour protective hold on R.B.S.

Before the hold expired, a CINC petition had been filed. The petition was based on L.S.'s lack of prenatal care, the death of R.B.S.'s older brother, the parents' limited intellectual capacity, and P.S.'s threat at the hospital. The State obtained an ex parte protective custody order and placed R.B.S. in the care of the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS) the same day.

At the ensuing CINC hearing, counsel for P.S. and L.S. objected to the introduction of evidence regarding their neglect and the *1025 ultimate death of their older son. The older son had never been the subject of a CINC or termination proceeding. The district judge rejected counsel's K.S.A. 60-455 and due process arguments and permitted the State to introduce the evidence to show the parenting skills of P.S. and L.S. He also noted that the statute setting forth permissible reasons for termination of parental rights included the unexplained injury or death of another child. See K.S.A. 38-1583a(b)(6).

Family practice physician Ryan Thomas, M.D., testified about sepsis caused by streptococcus pneumonia, the reported cause of the older baby's death. He said it was unusual for a 5-month-old to die from that condition, but he did not blame the care or lack of care of P.S. and L.S. for that outcome. Thomas testified the baby probably would not have had difficulty in breathing or other symptoms that were ignored or unappreciated by his parents. More likely, the baby would have had a mild cough.

Ruth Tull also testified at the CINC hearing. She provided child care for the older baby for about 3 months of his life. She testified that several times in cold weather, L.S. brought in the baby clad only in a wet diaper, sitting in a wet car seat, with only one or two thin blankets over him. She also testified the baby was often cold and dirty; occasionally L.S. had no milk for him. Although Tull gave L.S. warm clothes for the baby, Tull never saw the baby wear them.

Officer Tim Robinson testified that he had contact with L.S. approximately a year before R.B.S.'s birth, when L.S. attempted to obtain milk for her older baby from the American Legion. At that time, L.S. said P.S. had left her without any food or money. The baby was wrapped in a T-shirt with his legs exposed to the cold.

Samantha Black, a social worker employed by the hospital, testified that L.S. reported a history of violence between her and P.S. and that the hospital was concerned about sending R.B.S. into a volatile situation.

The district judge found R.B.S. was a child in need of care, explicitly relying at least in part on the death of the parents' older baby:

*1026 "In the absence of the death of the sibling, the Court would candidly say there is not evidence sufficient to find that this is a child in need of care.
"But given the death of a sibling that soon to the birth of this child, the combination of no prenatal care, choosing to, after the water has broke, take a cab from Atchison to Leavenworth where no prior arrangements have been made to give birth to the child, then to try to remove the child from the hospital before the standard 24 hours had lapsed, given the death of a sibling at a relatively young age, is not reasonable to the Court.
....
"That, coupled with the Court's past dealings with both parents, which raise serious issues as to their emotional stability and mental stability to be parents, give the Court no choice but to find this is a child in need of care."

P.S. and L.S. first argue on appeal that the district judge erred by admitting evidence regarding their older baby.

Kansas defines a "child in need of care" as one younger than 18 who, among other things, is "without adequate parental care, control or subsistence and the condition is not due solely to the lack of financial means of the child's parents or other custodian" or "without the care or control necessary for the child's physical, mental or emotional health." K.S.A. 38-1502(a)(1) and (2).

The parents' evidentiary argument involves statutory interpretation, which raises a question of law over which our review is unlimited. In re M.E.B., 29 Kan. App.2d 687, 688, 29 P.3d 471 (2001).

P.S. and L.S. insist K.S.A. 60-455 is controlling. That provision of the civil procedure code limits the admissibility of evidence of a party's prior bad act or crime to specific situations. Because none of those situations was present in this case, P.S. and L.S. argue, the admission of evidence regarding their treatment of their older child or his death was reversible error.

This argument ignores the more specific and thus superseding effect of K.S.A. 38-1583a(b). In re N.D.G., 20 Kan. App.2d 17, 26, 883 P.2d 89, rev. denied 256 Kan. 995 (1994) (specific statute controls over general provision). We agree with the district court that this statute permits, among other things, consideration of a parent's treatment of another child when termination is the issue. K.S.A.

Related

Calver v. Hinson
982 P.2d 970 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1999)
In Re the Adoption of A.P.
982 P.2d 985 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1999)
In the Interest of Kester
228 N.W.2d 107 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1975)
Babe Houser Motor Co. v. Tetreault
14 P.3d 1149 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2000)
Reynolds-Rexwinkle Oil, Inc. v. Petex, Inc.
1 P.3d 909 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2000)
In re Price
644 P.2d 467 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1982)
In the Interest of N.D.G.
883 P.2d 89 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1994)
In the Interest of R.C.
907 P.2d 901 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1995)
In the Interest of M.E.B.
29 P.3d 471 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2001)
In the Interest of R.B.S.
36 P.3d 300 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2001)
In re East
288 N.E.2d 343 (Highland County Court of Common Pleas, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 P.3d 300, 29 Kan. App. 2d 1023, 2001 Kan. App. LEXIS 1123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rbs-kanctapp-2001.