In the Interest of K.G., Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 27, 2022
Docket21-1384
StatusPublished

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In the Interest of K.G., Minor Child, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 21-1384 Filed January 27, 2022

IN THE INTEREST OF K.G., Minor Child,

S.G., Mother, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Warren County, Mark F. Schlenker,

District Associate Judge.

A mother appeals the grounds for adjudicating her child to be a child in need

of assistance and the child’s removal from her care. AFFIRMED IN PART AND

REVERSED IN PART.

Jacob Van Cleaf of Van Cleaf & McCormack Law Firm, LLP, Des Moines,

for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Mary A. Triick, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

Magdalena B. Reese, Des Moines, attorney and guardian ad litem for minor

child.

Considered by Bower, C.J., and Greer and Badding, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

The mother and the father of K.G. are enmeshed in a contentious custody

battle as part of their ongoing divorce proceedings. In May 2021, the Iowa

Department of Human Services investigated bruising that appeared on K.G.’s leg

after he spent a week in the mother’s care. This investigation led to K.G.’s removal

from her care and formed one basis for the child’s adjudication as a child in need

of assistance. The mother appeals both the removal and adjudication.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

K.G. was born in November 2018. His parents’ custody battle began in

June 2020. A temporary order entered as part of the divorce proceedings granted

the mother and the father joint physical care of K.G. on alternating weeks.

Indicative of the antagonistic nature of their relationship, the order limited the

mother’s and father’s communication to matters involving K.G. through a co-

parenting communication service.

The Iowa Department of Human Services has received about one dozen

allegations of abuse perpetrated by both the mother and the father. Only one of

these reports was founded, and another report was confirmed. The rest were

either rejected for assessment or not confirmed upon assessment. The confirmed

report of abuse was based on an incident that occurred in March 2020 between

the father and the mother’s daughter from a prior marriage.1 A report of abuse by

1 As described in the police dispatch entry and confirmed by a child protective worker at the removal hearing, the daughter “started throwing punches” at the father when he and the mother attempted to take her phone away. The father “had to restrain” the daughter, which caused “some bruising on her wrist and abrasions on her neck.” 3

the mother against K.G. was founded based on a report the department received

in May 2021. This founded report against the mother led to the juvenile court

proceedings forming the basis of this appeal.

The department began investigating the May 2021 report of suspected child

abuse by the mother against K.G. after the child spent a week in the mother’s care

and returned to the father’s care with numerous bruises on his leg. The mother

told the father that the bruising occurred when K.G. slipped and fell exiting the

shower the night before. At the direction of the department, the father brought

K.G. to a clinic where Dr. Robert Hatchitt, an urgent care physician, examined him.

The medical chart record from that visit describes “a 10 cm x 8 cm area of what

appears to be 3-4 individual bruises” along K.G.’s left thigh. The area is described

to be “oblong in shape” with “the lowest bruise run[ning] the length of the leg while

the 2 higher ones run transversely across the thigh.” There were no other areas

of significant bruising on the left side of K.G.’s chest, abdomen, or arm. Although

K.G. also had a number of smaller bruises on his knees and shins, they appeared

to Dr. Hatchitt to be the kind that result from the normal play of a two-year-old child.

But regarding the bruising on K.G.’s thigh, Dr. Hatchitt, who has no specialized

training in child abuse, could not “reliably say that the bruise is a strike from a foot

or a hand.” Yet the father told the child protective worker investigating the incident

that Dr. Hatchitt “said it looks like [K.G.] was struck with a hand or object.”

The department sent photos of the child’s bruises to Dr. Matthew Petty, a

pediatrician who has special training and experience in child abuse and neglect.

Dr. Petty provides in-patient child abuse consults for a hospital when there is

suspected abuse and occasionally consults on specific cases for the department, 4

county attorneys, and defense attorneys. In response to being asked if K.G.’s

bruises were concerning enough to warrant further evaluation, Dr. Petty answered

yes. Dr. Petty testified that he did not believe K.G.’s bruising was consistent with

a single fall: “There was pretty extensive bruising over different parts of the leg, so

I don’t think that would be one fall.” Specifically, Dr. Petty testified that the bruising

was “somewhat concerning and pretty extensive, especially the ones over . . . the

fleshier parts of the leg that are higher up and the fact that they are multiple and

also round in pattern, which I couldn’t definitively [say], but might be suggestive of

a grip or a fingertip bruise.”2

Dr. Petty was then asked, “Is it more likely than not to be a fingertip bruise

or a bruise from falling?” He answered, “because of the number of discrete round

bruises, I’d be concerned it might be more likely than not . . . a fingertip rather than

falling.” But Dr. Petty admitted it was “a little hard to assess” based solely on a

photograph. At several points during his testimony, Dr. Petty emphasized that in

order to provide a more definite opinion, he would need to physically examine a

child in person. Dr. Petty stated he would also want to obtain “a more thorough

history,” which he described as “a conversation with any caretakers that I can talk

to” in order to “discuss pretty much at length, almost ad nauseam . . . both what

occurred that might have [caused the] injuries and also past medical history.”

2Dr. Petty explained that the cause of a fingertip bruise is not limited to a slap or a hit but can be caused by actions like pinching, squeezing, or grabbing: In fact, the patterns that I’m seeing in these pictures would be more consistent with a grip or a grab that . . . was unsafe or was too strong. Since it’s a diapered toddler, it’d be like inappropriate care. So picking up the child or dragging the child around by the limb in a violent or strong way is probably more likely than a slap or a hit. But, again, it’s a little open-ended . . . . 5

During the department investigation, the mother provided several

explanations for the bruises on K.G.’s leg. The mother continued to maintain that

the bruising to the upper leg occurred when K.G. was exiting the shower. She

stated that K.G. slipped on wet tile “with his feet coming up from under him,” striking

the lip of the shower with his hip or upper thigh and hitting the tile with his bottom.

The mother stated that the bruises on K.G.’s shins occurred during normal play,

though she admitted that they could also have occurred when K.G. climbed up and

down her bed frame. Finally, the mother offered that K.G. “does fall down a lot

when playing” and “has fallen in a hole the dogs have dug” while playing in the

yard.

The State applied to remove K.G. from the mother’s care, stating that two

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