In the Interest of P.E.B.

708 S.W.2d 315, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 3770
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1986
Docket14176
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 708 S.W.2d 315 (In the Interest of P.E.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri 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 the Interest of P.E.B., 708 S.W.2d 315, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 3770 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

MAUS, Judge.

On November 21, 1981, C.B. gave birth to an illegitimate son, P.E.B. (P.). On April 27, 1983, C.B. gave birth to an illegitimate daughter, B.R.B. (B.). The children had different fathers. Upon a petition filed October 24, 1984, the trial court terminated the parental rights of the first father upon the basis of abandonment and the second father on the basis of disclaimer and consent. The trial court also found C.B. had knowingly permitted another to abuse those children causing physical or mental injuries repeatedly or continuously. It terminated her parental rights in respect to both children. C.B. appeals.

By her first point, C.B. contends there was no clear, cogent and convincing evidence that she knew her children were being abused or that she permitted such abuse to occur. The following is a summary of the most relevant facts established by the evidence.

In 1983, C.B. and her two children were living with her parents in a town in Maries County. Sometime after July, 1983, because of intolerable living conditions, at the instance of the Maries County Division of Family Services (D.F.S.), C.B. moved from that house. C.B. received A.D.C. by reason of the two children. She also received food stamps. She rented a mobile home in a mobile home court in that community. In November of that year a male, G.N., moved in to live with her and her children.

In that month the children were left in the care of C.B.’s mother. While helping the two-year-old boy at the toilet, she saw bruises on his back side. The grandmother testified the bruises were actually black and blue, “his whole back side was covered and they looked bad to me.” C.B. told her mother G.N. did it. On that day C.B. threw G.N.’s clothes outside. He spent the day at the tavern, but came back that night. By an unnamed source, a report of the incident was made to the Maries County D.F.S. A service agreement was pre *317 pared whereby C.B. was to abstain from inappropriate discipline and attend counseling. C.B. attended three or four counseling sessions. G.N. attended none.

During the period in question, G.N. drank heavily. He became violent. One night he was drunk and by his fists held C.B. up against the refrigerator. During the three days before May 1, 1984, he broke a door in the mobile home in two, he broke a crib and a window.

In a written statement given by C.B., she related that an unspecified time she and G.N.’s mother “talked about the way he treats the kids.” His mother said she would hate to see G.N. get into trouble for the way he treats P. In an attempt to explain this statement on redirect examination, C.B. said they were talking about how G.N. treated his “first” wife and “[s]he ... wanted me to keep my eyes open.”

In that statement C.B. also set forth that on undisclosed dates she saw the following: G.N. toss B. on the bed and say, “take care of the brat”; G.N. grab P.’s “arm and fling him into a corner in the process bruising his head and leaving finger bruises on his arms”; G.N. put B. on the floor and “through [sic] her bottle at her”; B. standing in her crib wanting G.N. to pick her up and G.N. would “slap her but [sic] and yank her tell [sic] she let go of the crib [and] lay her down.” Also a couple of times G.N. would go into the bathroom and find P. taking a bath and she would hear G.N. slap P. She also related “[h]e’d do things to deliberately scare P. like slaping [sic] P. on the cheeks.” On Sunday, April 29, 1984, G.N. had her take a friend home. When she returned, she went into the children’s room. “P. had a bloody nose on the inside he had what looked like a rug burn on his nose and for head [sic].” She pulled his cover down “and his pants were down his knees were sticking up in the air.” When asked what happened P. replied G.N. scared him.

Without objection, evidence was admitted that P. related to a social worker events that established G.N. had at undisclosed times sexually abused P. It was reported that an examination by Dr. Brian Cysew-ski, a psychologist, confirmed this sexual abuse.

On May 1, 1984, the two children were taken to a new baby sitter for the first time. The baby sitter saw signs of what she concluded to be abuse. She reported her opinion to D.F.S. of Maries County. The children were taken into custody and examined by physicians at Phelps County Regional Medical Center in Rolla.

The examining physician testified the examination of P. established the following.

He had an abrasion over his forehead that was about three by two centimeters. He had two abrasions over his nose, one on the tip of his nose and one on the left naris. There was some swelling and bruising of the right ear with a laceration that was quite small and didn’t require stitches. It appeared to be a rather fresh bruise. He had a bruise on his right eyelid. He had a bruise on his right cheek, anterior to his ear. There was a bruise on the left jaw bone that appeared to be quite old. There was a bruise on his left anterior chest. Bruises on the back; three with the lowest just above the buttocks. Most of the bruises were a dark brown with a green tint, which indicated they were not fresh. However, the bruise on the right ear appeared quite fresh; it was dark and there was swelling and tenderness associated with it.

The examining physician, stating her reasons, concluded the injuries she saw were the result of abuse. She added some of those injuries were fresh and some more than two weeks old.

The examination of B. resulted in the following hospital record.

Notable for a markedly bruised left side of the face with green and dark brown bruises throughout. Also, there is a bruised area on her left eye, above and below. Her left ear is also bruised and there are two small fitting light brown bruises along the spinal column on the back. There is also a small, faded brown bruise on her left anterior chest *318 and a green bruise on her left abdomen. On her left hip there is an hemangioma (i.e. birthmark) and also notable on examination is that she holds her left leg abnormally and resists movement and cries when it is touched. In terms of her routine examination, both tympanic membranes are full and red.
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There is a spiral non-displaeed fracture of the left tibia at approximately the junctions between the middle and distal thirds.

The extent of these injuries was graphically shown by photographs of the two children taken on May 1, 1984, and entered into evidence. Those photographs show injuries to the infants from which it could be concluded that those injuries were the result of abuse.

A consulting orthopedic surgeon said it would take much force or major trauma to fracture the tibia and that fracture would immediately result in pain. He also said the injuries appeared to be less than a week old. The initial examining physician noted, “[s]he was not moving her leg normally and she would not let you touch it or move it: she cried.” Both the initial and consulting physician were of the opinion the injuries to B. were the result of abuse. Matter of S.J.Z., 252 N.W.2d 224 (S.D.1977).

When first placed in foster care, P. had a fear of all strangers, particularly men. They both displayed a fear of C.B.

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Bluebook (online)
708 S.W.2d 315, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 3770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-peb-moctapp-1986.