In re Z.L.

2020 IL App (1st) 200151-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 30, 2020
Docket1-20-0151
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2020 IL App (1st) 200151-U (In re Z.L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Z.L., 2020 IL App (1st) 200151-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2020 IL App (1st) 200151-U No. 1-20-0151 September 30, 2020

First Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________ IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________ IN THE INTEREST OF Z.L., N.L., S.L., and E.L., Jr., ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Minors-Respondents-Appellees, ) Cook County. ) (The People of the State of Illinois, ) No. 18 JA 877 Petitioner-Appellee, ) 18 JA 878 v. ) 18 JA 879 KANDICE G., ) 18 JA 880 Mother-Respondent-Appellant.) ) ) Honorable ) Demetrios Kottaras, ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE WALKER delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Hyman and Pierce concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: When the State presents evidence that a father who no longer lives with the mother and his children shook a child, the evidence does not support a finding of neglect unless the State shows that the mother should have known that she imperiled her children by leaving them in their father’s care. When a court grants full unsupervised custody of children to their father, a prior finding that the father caused an injury does not support a finding that the mother should have known the September 30, 2020

father endangered the children unless the State shows that the court returned the children to their father’s custody without effectively overturning the prior finding that the father caused an injury.

¶2 The trial court made K.G.’s children wards of the court and found K.G. an unfit mother.

The parties agree that we must vacate the trial court’s order and remand for notifications required

by the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA). 25 U.S.C. § 1912(a) (2012). K.G. argues that the State

also failed to prove her children suffered neglect. We agree with K.G. We vacate the trial court’s

order and remand for proceedings in accord with this order.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 K.G. and E.L. Sr., had two sons: E.L. Jr., born October 1, 2005, and T.L., born December

23, 2006. T.L. died at five weeks of age in January 2007. The Department of Children and Family

Services (DCFS) took custody of E.L. Jr., and he remained a ward of the court until March 30,

2010, when the DuPage County Court, over the objection of the State, terminated the wardship

and ordered DCFS to close the case. The court’s order left E.L. Jr. in the care of his parents.

¶5 K.G. and E.L. Sr. later had two daughters, S.L., born August 31, 2010, and N.L., born

March 16, 2014. E.L. Jr., S.L., and N.L. flourished in their parents’ care. On May 10, 2018, K.G.

gave birth to the couple’s third daughter, Z.L. Z.L. emerged at only 26 weeks of gestation and

weighed less than a kilogram at birth. Z.L. remained in the hospital’s intensive care unit for 19

days. Doctors diagnosed apnea, respiratory failure, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, anemia,

hyponatremia, and retinopathy of both eyes, with most of the conditions closely related to Z.L.’s

premature birth. The hospital discharged Z.L. to her parents’ care on July 18, 2018.

¶6 On August 28, 2018, K.G. left the children in E.L. Sr.’s care when she went to a job

interview. E.L. Sr. called K.G. and told her that Z.L. had stopped breathing after a feeding. E.L.

-2- September 30, 2020

Sr. had performed CPR and Z.L. resumed breathing. E.L. Sr. later explained to a social worker

that he did not immediately call for medical help because he and K.G. had been calling doctors

about Z.L. “every day and were eventually instructed to stop calling.” K.G. came home and took

Z.L. to the office of her pediatrician, Dr. Manju Akhand, but K.G. arrived after the office closed.

Dr. Akhand advised K.G. to take Z.L. to the hospital if she needed immediate medical care. K.G.

went to the hospital, but on seeing the long wait for emergency care, and finding that Z.L. looked

well, she went home. K.G. brought Z.L. to Dr. Akhand’s office the next day. K.G. fed Z.L. in the

office, and Z.L. projectile vomited. K.G., following Dr. Akhand’s advice, took Z.L. to the

emergency room of a nearby hospital.

¶7 Dr. Mary Jones examined Z.L. and concluded that abusive head trauma caused Z.L.’s

condition. DCFS took custody of E.L. Jr., S.L., N.L., and Z.L. on September 6, 2018. The circuit

court granted the State’s motion for temporary custody of the four children on September 10, 2018.

The State filed petitions to make the four children wards of the court.

¶8 At the trial on the petitions, Dr. Jones testified that Z.L.’s projectile vomiting suggested

that she had suffered head trauma. Dr. Konrad Lebioda, a radiologist, reported to Dr. Jones that

an MRI taken on August 31, 2018, showed restricted diffusion in the corpus callosum and subdural

hemorrhages. Dr. Jones listed several possible causes of the damage to the corpus callosum and

she ruled out most of them. She explained that she ruled out the possibility of a stroke:

“[I]f there was a stroke, you would see more findings -- I'm probably speaking

above my level of expertise -- so other than clinical symptoms that I would

recognize as a pediatrician, I wouldn't want to go any further than saying symptoms.

Q But -- so basically there would be other signs and symptoms?

-3- September 30, 2020

A Yes.”

¶9 Dr. Jones concluded that the damage to the corpus callosum resulted from “shaking or

abusive head trauma.” Dr. Jones testified, “The injuries that we often see in abusive head trauma

are injuries to the ligaments or bleeding within the muscles of the neck,” and Z.L. “didn't show

any symptoms of a neck injury.” Despite the lack of such symptoms, Dr. Jones concluded that

Z.L. must have suffered abusive head trauma. She testified, “My conclusion's based on the

findings of subdural hemorrhages; bilateral sub-arachnoid hemorrhage; the restricted diffusion on

the MRI; the lack of any history of any injuries or trauma; and the differential diagnosis that I went

through and was able to rule out all of the other potential causes.” She added that hospitals teach

parents of premature infants to call for emergency medical help whenever the child stops

breathing.

¶ 10 Dr. Lebioda testified that in Z.L.’s MRI, “the bright signal in diffusion-weighted imaging

is what you typically see in a stroke. The size of it, the location of it are very typical for stroke.”

Despite the MRI, Dr. Lebioda concluded that abuse and not a stroke had caused the damage,

because of the rarity of strokes in children so young, and because of the subdural hemorrhages.

He explained:

“[T]he cause of subdural hemorrhaging is the tearing of very small, what we call,

bridging veins that kind of go across that space. And when they [tear], they cause

hemorrhage in the subdural space. So when you have trauma and tearing of those

bridging veins, you have subdural hemorrhages.”

-4- September 30, 2020

¶ 11 Dr. Akhand testified that she found no signs of abuse or neglect of K.G.’s children. She

noted the evidence of subdural hemorrhages and said, “Premature babies are prone to that because

the blood vessels are immature, and they can break easily.”

¶ 12 Dr. Joseph Scheller testified as an expert on behalf of K.G. He concluded that Z.L. suffered

a small stroke.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2020 IL App (1st) 200151-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-zl-illappct-2020.