In re Trapp Children

528 S.W.2d 489
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 2, 1975
DocketNo. KCD 27374
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 528 S.W.2d 489 (In re Trapp Children) 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 Trapp Children, 528 S.W.2d 489 (Mo. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

ANDREW J. HIGGINS, Special Judge.

Appeal from order and judgment terminating parental rights. §§ 211.441 to 211.-511, RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S.

On January 3, 1974, the Juvenile Officer of the 27th Judicial Circuit filed a petition for termination of parental rights on grounds that the natural parents, Robert Emery and Linda Mae Trapp had abandoned the children for more than one whole year; that they had willfully substantially and continuously from and since December 22,1972, refused to support said children or to render them necessary care and protection or demonstrate to the court their willingness or ability to do so; and on February 27, 1973, the Henry County Juvenile Court found that said children were deprived of proper support while in foster care due to the falsification of information on the part of the parents and the court ordered that the parents, “who are gainfully employed,” be made responsible for the financial support of said children in the amount of $198.00 per month or $66.00 per child, but have failed and refused to provide said support.

Hearing on the petition was accorded April 29, 1974. The evidence showed the following pertinent history and chronology preliminary to the year concerned by the petition to terminate:

August 10, 1972. Mrs. Trapp went to the Henry County Welfare Office where she talked with Mrs. Marilyn Whitaker, a caseworker, and requested information regarding public assistance. Mr. Trapp had been unemployed for some time other than occasional employment on Sundays at a filling station at $1.00 an hour. Mrs. Trapp was employed at Rival Manufacturing, but her doctor had advised that her fourth child was due at any time. Eligibility for Aid to Dependent Children and general relief was explained; and, since Mr. Trapp was employable, Mrs. Trapp was not eligible for either program and she was referred to a service worker, Mrs. Jones (Fritts). Mrs. Jones learned from Mrs. Trapp that “West Central” had been attempting to locate a job for Mr. Trapp, and that Mrs. Trapp would return to work after the baby was born.

September 8, 1972. Duane Edwin Trapp was born to Mr. and Mrs. Trapp at Golden Valley Hospital in Clinton, Missouri.

[491]*491October 20, 1972. Mrs. Trapp reapplied for Aid to Dependent Children, representing that Mr. Trapp left her a few days before the baby was born, that his whereabouts were unknown, and that he had obtained his check at Clinton Packing Company September 5, 1972. Her immediate need was for food and she was given commodities.

October 27, 1972. Mrs. Trapp’s application for Aid to Dependent Children was approved at $158.00 per month. She subsequently received checks in that amount for November and December, 1972.

November 2, 1972. Mrs. Trapp went to the welfare office where she talked to Bill Edmonds, a caseworker. She was seeking food for her family and medical attention for the infant child, Duane, who was having trouble digesting his food. Mr. Edmonds procured a grocery order, followed her to her home in Montrose, and brought Mrs. Trapp and Duane to the hospital in Clinton. The child was seen by a doctor on the complaint of inability to retain food. The doctor prescribed medicine for dehydration, after which Mr. Edmonds returned Duane and his mother to the home. Mr. Edmonds noted the home as a 4-room house that had been condemned for construction of the Truman Reservoir, sometimes used as a hunting cabin. It was heated by a Coleman heater. The baby was in cardboard box bed on a divan, there was very little furniture, and there were several dogs present. The weather was beginning to turn cold; the three older children were dressed in shorts. Water supply was a nearby stream. The three older children were ostensibly in the charge of a man identified by Mrs. Trapp as an “uncle.” Subsequent confrontation with Mr. Trapp revealed the true identity of the “uncle” as Mr. Trapp.

December 15, 1972. Mrs. Trapp presented the oldest child, Robert Emery, to the emergency department of the Clinton hospital. He had been ill for two weeks, but Mrs. Trapp had not been aware of any pneumonia until she took him to the hospital. She had been unable to go sooner due to impassable roads. Examination by Dr. James C. Coleberd, the Trapp’s family physician, revealed a severely dehydrated child who was very lethargic. The admitting diagnosis was acute pneumonia, dehydration. The dismissal diagnosis was streptococcal pneumonia in both lung fields. He was otherwise normal, but his condition was critical, life threatening. Dr. Coleberd acknowledged that it is difficult for a lay person to distinguish dehydration as a se-quela of pneumonia in its onset from less serious maladies, such as chest cold or benign fever. Dr. Coleberd saw the three younger children in December, 1972, and found them in normal health and good condition. Dr. Coleberd notified authorities of his feeling that Robert was a neglected child.

December 19, 1972. The juvenile officer filed a petition under Section 211.091, RSMO 1969, V.A.M.S., alleging that the parents legally responsible for the care and support of the Trapp children had neglected and refused to provide them proper support, education, medical, surgical and other care, that they were otherwise without care, custody or support, and that their behavior, environment, or association was injurious to their welfare, all as within the meaning of Section 211.031, RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S. The petition was served on Mrs. Trapp; service was not attempted on Mr. Trapp due to Mrs. Trapp’s position that her husband’s whereabouts were not known. Mr. Ed-monds, upon knowledge of Dr. Coleberd’s complaint, visited the Trapp home which was now in an isolated area east of Deep-water. Two men were present whom Mrs. Trapp identified as uncles. One of them was subsequently identified as Mr. Trapp. Mr. Edmonds went to the home to see if the children were in good health, and they were. They did not seem to be in any apparent danger. They were wearing underwear, but the house was warm. They were well fed and clean, and there was plenty of food. He recommended a further move closer to medical facilities, and the [492]*492family subsequently moved to quarters at the Central Hotel in Clinton.

December 22, 1972. The juvenile court placed temporary custody of the children with the Division of Welfare pending hearing on the neglect petition January 2, 1973.

December (before Christmas), 1972. Robert Emery Trapp, the oldest child, was taken by the Welfare Department to Joplin Diagnostic Center for special treatment of speech and similar problems. The mother was hostile at this move because she was not allowed to accompany her son.

January 2, 1973. Hearing was accorded on the neglect petition with Mrs. Trapp and an assigned attorney present. The court found the children to be neglected within the meaning of Section 211.031, supra, made them wards of the court, and vested their care, custody, and control in the Welfare Department, all until further order. Mrs. Trapp was advised at the hearing by Mr. Edmonds that the welfare people tried to rehabilitate individuals when children are removed from their homes in hopes of preparing them for the return, and that the court was asking the Welfare Department for such assistance. Mr. Edmonds helped her with money and otherwise to move to the hotel in Clinton, and she obtained a job at Wiley’s Cafe. Mr. Trapp returned to Clinton after sustaining an injury and also was trying to secure employment.

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Bluebook (online)
528 S.W.2d 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-trapp-children-moctapp-1975.