In Re VC

867 N.E.2d 167, 2007 WL 1532194
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 2007
Docket49A04-0602-JV-86
StatusPublished

This text of 867 N.E.2d 167 (In Re VC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana 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 VC, 867 N.E.2d 167, 2007 WL 1532194 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

867 N.E.2d 167 (2007)

In the Matter of V.C., Child in Need of Services.
Sarah Thomas, Appellant-Respondent,
v.
Christopher Carlson, Appellee-Respondent,
Marion County Department of Child Services (formerly Office of Family and Children), Appellee-Petitioner,
Child Advocates, Inc., Co-Appellee-Guardian ad Litem.

No. 49A04-0602-JV-86.

Court of Appeals of Indiana.

May 29, 2007.

*170 Melanie Reichert, Broyles Kight & Ricafort, LLP, Indianapolis, IN, Attorney for Appellant.

Carey Haley Wong, Marion County Department of Child Services, Deborah M. Agard, Law Office of Deborah M. Agard, Indianapolis, IN, Attorneys for Appellees.

OPINION

KIRSCH, Judge.

Sarah Thomas ("Mother") appeals the trial court's adjudication of her daughter, V.C., as a Child in Need of Services ("CHINS") as well as the consolidation of the CHINS case with Christopher Carlson's ("Father") paternity action. Mother raises the following restated issues:

I. Whether the trial court erred in consolidating the CHINS action with Father's paternity action;
II. Whether the trial court erred in adjudicating V.C. as a CHINS on grounds different than those set forth in the CHINS petition;
III. Whether there is sufficient evidence to support the CHINS adjudication and the custody modification; and
IV. Whether the trial court erred in awarding Father compensatory and punitive damages.

We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

V.C. was born on December 28, 1999. In October 2000, Father filed a petition to establish V.C.'s paternity. In January 2001, the trial court issued an order granting Father's petition, establishing V.C.'s paternity, and granting Father parenting time with V.C.

Between January 2001 and January 2004, usually just before or just after Father exercised overnight or extended visitation with V.C., Mother made numerous reports to Child Protective Services ("CPS") regarding Father's alleged sexual abuse of V.C. Eventually, in July 2004, the parties executed an Agreed Entry and Order, which provided that if there were further allegations of sexual abuse, Mother would take V.C. to an emergency room, physician, psychologist, or therapist before contacting CPS.

In May 2005, Mother took V.C. to therapist Donna Haram, ("Haram"). V.C. had been a patient of Haram's for over a year. Mother told Haram that V.C. had something to tell her. V.C. told Haram that Father had molested her. On May 11, 2005, Haram contacted CPS and reported the molestation. Later that month, following additional reports to CPS alleging neglect of V.C., the Marion County Department of Child Services ("DCS") filed a petition alleging that V.C. was a CHINS. The petition provided in part as follows:

5. [V.C.] is a [CHINS] as defined in IC 31-34-1 in that: [V.C.'s] physical or mental condition is seriously impaired or *171 seriously endangered as a result of the inability, refusal, or neglect of the child's parent, guardian[,] or custodian to supply the child with necessary food, clothing, shelter, medical care, education[,] or supervision; and [V.C.] needs care, treatment[,] or rehabilitation that [she] is not receiving and is unlikely to be provided or accepted without the coercive intervention of the [c]ourt, as shown by the following, to wit:
A) On or about May 17, 2005, the [DCS] determined, by its Family Case Manager[,] Joseph Combs, this child to be a [CHINS] because [Mother] has failed to protect [V.C.] from being molested by her father . . .

Appellant's App. at 194-95.

At the initial hearing on the petition, Father asked DCS to amend the CHINS petition to add the allegation that V.C. was a CHINS because Mother was endangering V.C.'s mental health. DCS responded that it could add an allegation regarding Mother but that it did not want to amend anything about Father. The trial court stated that it would not tell DCS what to put in the petition, and that DCS was free to amend it. Nothing further was mentioned, and the petition was never amended.

Shortly thereafter, in June 2005, Father filed a petition in the paternity action to modify custody of V.C. In the petition, Father alleged that Mother was coaching V.C. to fabricate the molestation accusations. Father also requested damages due to the alleged willfulness of Mother's actions.

On August 11, 2005, Father filed a motion to consolidate the paternity and CHINS cases, requesting that one fact-finding hearing be held on all issues related to the care of V.C. The trial court granted Father's motion, and on September 7 and 8, 2005, the trial court held a hearing on all matters pertaining to V.C.

On December 30, 2005, the trial court orally granted Father's petition for a custody modification, but ordered that V.C. temporarily be placed with her paternal grandmother pending issuance of the trial court's findings. Thereafter, on January 17, 2006, the trial court entered its judgment, which adjudicated V.C. a CHINS as to Mother, but not as to Father. The judgment is sixty pages long and contains more than four hundred and fifty-eight findings of fact and conclusions of law. We now highlight a portion of those findings and conclusions:

Findings of Fact
A. Relevant History of Paternity Case and Previous Allegations of Abuse
* * *
244. [Mother] has exhibited unstable and/or erratic behavior on a continuing basis, which includes, but is not limited to:
(a) storing dead birds in her freezer;
(b) telling [Father] that she had miscarried his child six (6) weeks into her pregnancy, then showing him the purported fetus and burying it in his yard while performing some type of ceremony around a tree;
(c) drugging [Father] with sedatives she placed into cookies she had baked for him on the same day she allegedly terminated the relationship;
(d) demonstrating self-destructive behavior by slashing her abdomen with a locking blade knife and making a four (4) inch cut after [Alan Driver (Driver), her paramour,] told her his wife was pregnant with twins[;]
(e) telling [Driver's] wife[, Teresa,] that when she was not quite four (4) years old, a cousin or uncle who was *172 babysitting her had her give him a blow job, that this continued any time she was babysat by this person and that basically this is how she learned how to please a man — and that she has continued this pattern of bad behavior [throughout] her life and that she knew she had a problem and she needed help;
(f) [Mother] came to the [Drivers'] home, after [Mother] and Driver's extra-marital affair had ended and [the Drivers] had reconciled their relationship. [Mother] complained to them that they were not communicating with her, even though they had told her [to communicate with them] through their attorneys[.] [Mother] just showed up on their doorstep one day, saying she needed help [with naming Driver's child whom she had just born].
* * *
B. Current CHINS Allegations:
* * *
258. In the videotaped interview of [V.C.], [V.C.] appears to be [in] a school uniform being interviewed by [Linnette Garcia (Garcia), forensic child interviewer with the Child Advocacy Center].

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Bluebook (online)
867 N.E.2d 167, 2007 WL 1532194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-vc-indctapp-2007.