In the Interest of AE, minor child: CE and AE v. The State of Wyoming

2024 WY 28, 544 P.3d 1113
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 2024
DocketS-23-0231
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2024 WY 28 (In the Interest of AE, minor child: CE and AE v. The State of Wyoming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of AE, minor child: CE and AE v. The State of Wyoming, 2024 WY 28, 544 P.3d 1113 (Wyo. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING

2024 WY 28

OCTOBER TERM, A.D. 2023

March 13, 2024

IN THE INTEREST OF AE, minor child:

CE and AE,

Appellants (Respondents), S-23-0231 v.

THE STATE OF WYOMING,

Appellee (Petitioner).

Appeal from the District Court of Hot Springs County The Honorable Bobbi Dean Overfield, Judge

Representing Appellants: Christopher J. King, Worland, Wyoming.

Representing Appellee: Bridget Hill, Attorney General; Christina F. McCabe, Deputy Attorney General; Wendy S. Ross, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Callie R. Papoulas, Assistant Attorney General.

Office of the Guardian ad Litem: Joseph R. Belcher, Director; Kimberly Skoutary Johnson, Chief Trial and Appellate Counsel.

Before FOX, C.J., and KAUTZ, BOOMGAARDEN, GRAY, and FENN, JJ. NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third. Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be made before final publication in the permanent volume. FOX, Chief Justice.

[¶1] Mother challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the juvenile court’s finding that she neglected her infant son, AE. We affirm.

ISSUE

[¶2] This appeal presents one issue: Was the evidence sufficient to support the juvenile court’s adjudication of neglect against Mother?

FACTS

[¶3] AE was born in September 2022. He was the fourth child of Mother and Father who live together in Thermopolis, Wyoming. AE was born about four weeks premature, and at birth, his weight put him in the 25th percentile on the growth chart.

[¶4] Mother took AE for wellness checks to Dr. Peter Sidor, a pediatrician in Cody, Wyoming. In November 2022, Dr. Sidor saw AE and observed him “to be significantly underweight, malnourished, and having an upper respiratory tract infection.” Dr. Sidor directed Mother to take AE to the hospital in Cody, and that hospital referred her to St. Vincent’s Hospital in Billings, Montana. AE was admitted to St. Vincent’s with a failure to thrive diagnosis. He had improved caloric intake and good weight gain during his stay and was discharged about a week after his admission.

[¶5] Mother followed up with Dr. Sidor after AE was discharged from St. Vincent’s, and he directed her to set up a schedule with Public Health to monitor AE’s weight gain. Mother did as instructed, but in February 2023, she rescheduled one of AE’s weigh-ins from Tuesday, February 21, to Thursday, February 23. When Dr. Sidor learned of this, he contacted the Department of Family Services (DFS). On February 22, a DFS employee and a law enforcement officer came to the home and advised Mother to immediately take AE for his weigh-in.

[¶6] After AE was weighed, DFS caseworker Anna Rossler recommended Mother take him to the hospital in Thermopolis because he had gained so little weight since his last weigh-in. Mother took AE to the hospital that day, and doctors there found he was below the second percentile on the growth chart and lacked the head and trunk strength expected of an infant his age. AE was admitted to the hospital with a diagnosis of failure to thrive and malnutrition. The risks associated with failure to thrive include delays in neurologic development, which can be permanent, and an impaired immune system.

[¶7] AE’s attending physician, Dr. Travis Bomengen, evaluated AE to determine whether the cause of his failure to thrive was organic or inorganic. Organic causes are those the child is born with such as problems with the thyroid or adrenal glands,

1 absorption issues, or mechanical issues with swallowing. Inorganic causes are those outside the child such as caloric intake, parent/child interaction, or disruption or stress within the child’s life. Dr. Bomengen found no evidence of an organic cause and determined the cause of AE’s failure to thrive was inadequate caloric intake.

[¶8] AE’s caloric intake was monitored during his stay at the Thermopolis hospital, and with supplemental feeding of formula, he had adequate weight gain. The hospital staff also observed Mother with AE and worked with her on how to position AE to enhance his feeding. Dr. Bomengen and the nursing staff had concerns with Mother’s attentiveness to AE, her patience and persistence in feeding, and her interaction with AE. Dr. Bomengen was also concerned that a lack of bonding between Mother and AE contributed to AE’s failure to thrive.

[¶9] On Saturday, February 25, 2023, Dr. Bomengen took protective custody of AE. His basis for protective custody was that while twice hospitalized, AE gained adequate weight, but in his home, he failed to thrive. His greatest concern was AE’s development and that he be in an environment where caloric intake and weight gain could be monitored and ensured.

[¶10] After taking protective custody of AE, Dr. Bomengen contacted DFS. DFS took protective custody of AE and placed him in non-relative foster care. On February 27, 2023, the State filed a petition in juvenile court alleging that Mother and Father had neglected AE. The petition alleged that Mother and Father had failed or refused to provide adequate care and maintenance necessary for the child’s well-being. The caseworker affidavit attached to the petition attested that AE had gained one ounce over an eight-day period under Mother and Father’s care, and five ounces over a two-day period while hospitalized.

[¶11] Following a combined initial and shelter care hearing, the juvenile court ordered that AE remain in the legal custody of DFS, and that he remain in foster care. The court ordered that Mother and Father were to have “reasonable and liberal supervised visitation,” and DFS was to seek an appropriate family placement. The court also ordered that a Multi-Disciplinary Team (MDT) be formed to monitor visitation and adjust visitation and physical custody of AE as appropriate.

[¶12] On April 17, 2023, AE was transferred from non-relative foster care to foster care with his maternal grandmother. 1 On May 11, 2023, the juvenile court held an evidentiary

1 Sometime in March 2023, while AE was in his first foster home, he became seriously ill with multiple respiratory viruses, including parainfluenza. He was flown to Denver Children’s Hospital where he remained for about ten days. By the time of an April 4 MDT meeting, he was back in his foster home and doing well.

2 hearing on the State’s neglect petition. The court heard testimony from Dr. Bomengen, Ms. Rossler (the DFS caseworker), and Mother and Father. After hearing the evidence, the court concluded the State had met its burden of proving Mother neglected AE. Relevant to that conclusion, the court found:

The evidence before the Court, we have little [AE] who was apparently born early, had some issues from the very beginning; low birth weight, he was maybe not quite four weeks early, substantially early, from no testimony, but just from the Court’s experience we know babies are supposed to come at 40 weeks. So four weeks is a lot of time when we’re dealing with a kid at that developmental stage.

There was evidence that he started out at the 25th percentile. At the time of placement it was testified that he was in the 2nd percentile. That’s a fairly significant drop from 25 to 2 in five to five and a half months, it sounds like, based on the testimony.

...

Neglect in and of itself seems to allude that someone is purposefully doing something wrong, did something wrong. That’s not the legal standard. There’s nothing in there that requires a finding that somebody purposefully did something wrong or intentionally did something wrong, or intentionally was specifically told to do something that they didn’t do.

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2024 WY 28, 544 P.3d 1113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-ae-minor-child-ce-and-ae-v-the-state-of-wyoming-wyo-2024.