In the Interest of D. C. N. K

501 S.E.2d 268, 232 Ga. App. 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 6, 1998
DocketA98A0538, A98A0539
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 501 S.E.2d 268 (In the Interest of D. C. N. K) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia 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 D. C. N. K, 501 S.E.2d 268, 232 Ga. App. 85 (Ga. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

McMurray, Presiding Judge.

On February 28, 1997, the Houston County Department of Family & Children Services (“DFACS”) filed a complaint with the Houston County Juvenile Court alleging that the female child, D. C. N. K. (“D. K”), then aged two years, and the female child, M. B. C. B. (“M. B”), then aged six months, were deprived “in that they are without proper parental supervision, support or control, and that the deprivation is likely to continue.” Specifically, D. K. was deprived by reason of being “beat[en] in the head, face, back, chest, and butt by her mother[, Michelle Bennett, nee Kanaly], Youth was not given any medical attention for her injuries for over twenty four (24) hours.” M. B. was deprived by virtue of this “youth’s two year old sister [being] severely beaten by her mother [Michelle Bennett].” According to the complaint, the natural mother is in the Houston County jail; the father of D. K. is appellant Rodney Durrance, whereas the father of M. B. is appellant Terry Bennett. Temporary custody of the children was placed with DFACS, and a subsequent complaint for non-reunification was filed.

The natural mother and both fathers were individually repre[86]*86sented by their own counsel. In October 1996, the natural mother “admitted] to a general deprivation . . .” without admitting the specific allegations of physical abuse of D. K. The children stayed in protective custody until November 18, 1996, when the juvenile court ordered their return to Ms. Bennett and appellant Terry Bennett. Following another episode of violence involving D. K., the juvenile court terminated the parental rights of Ms. Bennett and appellant Rodney Durrance in D. K., and also terminated the rights of Ms. Bennett and appellant Terry Bennett in M. B. Viewed in the light most favorable to the juvenile court’s adjudication and disposition, the evidence revealed the following:

According to Inman C. English, M. D., a pediatrician from Warner Robins, around 11:00 p.m. on February 27, 1997, D. K. was brought into the emergency room at Houston County Hospital “unresponsive,” and either dazed or comatose, with “multiple bruises over her entire body, including her legs, her arms and her head. She had an evulsion of her ear[; that is, the] ear . . . was torn from the facial skin. She had blood in her right ear canal. She had swelling of her left finger, and it was black and blue and swollen, her index finger on her left hand. . . . [H]er right vaginal area was bruised and swollen. Her left foot was swollen and blue, and she was very stiff, very tight ligaments. She had approximately 30 to 40 bruises, anywhere from a dime to a 50-cent size over her body.” Dr. English “did not think [these bruises] probably [occurred at the same time]. [He] thought they had probably occurred within a five, one to five to seven-day period. There were some bruises . . . that were yellow and green[; whereas] some did look red and fresher. . . . [T]hey had to be multiple contusions to different parts of the body. . . .” X-rays revealed D. K. had “a fracture to the clavicle on the right side[,] with some callus formation. . . . [F]or it to have callus formation, it had to be one to two weeks old, or older.” The evulsion of her ear was caused by “[g]rabbing or pulling at the ear.” In Dr. English’s opinion, these contusions were “the result of [D. K] having been hit or punched[,] or pinched.” In her state, the child was “nonresponsive to vocal stimulation or pain stimulation, anything that stimulates the senses.” In D. K.’s case, this was caused by “brain swelling.” In Dr. English’s opinion, there was no accidental explanation for the multiple injuries; rather, D. K. “definitely was abused.”

Paola Tumminello, M. D., a neurologist, examined D. K. and found her “malnourished. Her body was covered by multiple bruises[, which, to Dr. Tumminello,] appeared to be of different ages; the bruises on her face were more bluish in color, so being more recent, while some of the bruises on the back appeared brownish in color and older. The bruises were taken from the face, abdomen, chest, back, legs, and arms, and even on the hands. The scalp also appeared to be [87]*87bruised. The child had clotted blood on the right, on the outside of the right ear. On examination of the head, the child was noted to have blood in both eyes or what is called a retinal hemorrhage, bilaterally, although they were more marked over the left side.” D. K. “had several seizures. They were [a] new onset. The child did not have [a] history of seizures previously. . . . She had several convulsions ... to the point that she required . . . medication. . . . [T]he child had an EEG. That is a test that evaluates brain activity. That EEG showed slowing of [D. K.’s] brain activity . . ., consistent with the fact that the brain had been injured.” On the front left, “beneath the left frontoparietal area, the child had a subdural hematoma[, which] is a collection of blood, and there were two of those. One was on the left frontoparietal area, one was in the occipital area. . . . This, to be explained, is the same type lesion you can find in a person who has had violence against a hard object.” D. K.’s brain injury “[d]efinitely . . . will need long-term care. Children that have seizures following a brain insult have an increased risk of epilepsy with seizures for the rest of their lives.” In Dr. Tumminello’s opinion, D. K. was probably slammed into “[a] wall or a hard object.” She further opined that “[r]etinal hemorrhages occur only in two cases. Case number one, but is rarely, when a patient has a bleeding disorder . . . [such as] hemophilia, or clotting disorder. We tested [D. K.] for that; she does not have such a circumstance. The only other thing that causes retinal hemorrhage in a child is Shaken Baby Syndrome. It means that the child has been violently shaken and the head would be rocking back and forth. This causes a rupture of the little veins in behind the retina.” Dr. Tumminello “ruled out diabetes, hemorrhagic diabetes, . . . definitely . . . think[ing] it’s child abuse.”1

Sergeant Darren Meadows of the Houston County Sheriff’s Department investigated the information that D. K. had been physically abused by her mother. The mother, through counsel, arranged to meet Sergeant Meadows, but arrived only with the infant M. B. Ms. Bennett denied the allegations and told investigators that D. K. was in Savannah with her father, appellant Rodney Durrance. Later that evening, Sergeant Meadows checked again with Ms. Bennett, who privately admitted the “allegations were true. She said she needed some help, and she said she had hurt [D. K.] real bad.” Sergeant Meadows took the infant M. B. into protective custody at that time. In a custodial statement, Ms. Bennett told investigators she was “upset about her divorce with Mr. Bennett, and that she had [88]*88struck [D. K.] in the head at least three times with . . . the side of her hand. . . . [A]nd then she got a belt and beat her with the belt.” Ms. Bennett further informed Sergeant Meadows that “she had already contacted [D. K.’s father,] Mr. Durrance and the child was on her way back from Savannah, and it would take 3 or so hours for the child to return.” When Sergeant Meadows subsequently returned to Ms. Bennett’s home, D. K. was there and, after some initial resistance from Ms. Bennett, Sergeant Meadows “took the child to the emergency room at the Medical Center of Houston County.” The next morning, Ms. Bennett was formally arrested.

When appellant Rodney Durrance was contacted by the authorities, “he said he hadn’t seen his child[, D. K.,] in several months, that he, in fact, was working on Thursday night from ...

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Bluebook (online)
501 S.E.2d 268, 232 Ga. App. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-d-c-n-k-gactapp-1998.