In the Interest of W.J.D.

756 S.W.2d 191, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 1073, 1988 WL 77649
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 1988
DocketNo. 15296
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 756 S.W.2d 191 (In the Interest of W.J.D.) 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 W.J.D., 756 S.W.2d 191, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 1073, 1988 WL 77649 (Mo. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

MAUS, Judge.

This proceeding was initiated on March 28, 1987, by the petition of the juvenile officer. That petition alleged that W.J.D., a female child age four years eleven months, and H.R.D., a female child age eight years, in the custody of their father, were ip need of care and treatment within the purview of § 211.031.1(l)(b). It specifically alleged that on March 23, 1987, a physical examination disclosed that W.J.D. was suffering from suspected sexual abuse and was in danger of personal harm. It further alleged H.R.D. resided in the same house and was also in danger of personal [193]*193harm. The trial court found it had jurisdiction under the cited subsection. It placed the children with their mother, subject to visitation and summer custody for two months by the father. The father appeals.

Unfortunately, the evidence of the children’s background is sketchy. The marriage of the parents was dissolved at an undisclosed date. They were initially placed in the primary custody of their mother. The decree was modified and on June 5,1986, they were placed in the custody of the father. The reason for the modification is not stated. Apparently the mother filed a subsequent motion to regain custody. This motion was heard and denied. That proceeding involved allegations of the father’s sexual abuse of H.R.D. The children were examined by a social worker specializing in the treatment of sexually abused children. However, because of the mother’s lack of funds, that social worker did not testify in the hearing upon the mother’s motion.

Ten days after the father gained custody of the children, his then wife Patty died. During the father’s working hours the children were cared for by baby-sitters. On Friday, March 20, 1987, the children went to the home of the mother for the Easter weekend. On Sunday, March 22, 1987, at approximately 10:30 a.m., the father got the children to take them to church. He returned them at approximately 6:00 p.m. W.J.D. immediately went into the bathroom and unsuccessfully tried to urinate. The mother found her genital area was bruised and swollen. There was blood on her panties. The mother testified she showed the panties to the father and he appeared extremely nervous. The father explained to her that W.J.D. fell on her foot.

On March 23, 1987, W.J.D. was examined by a doctor. His findings included the following: bruises around the vaginal area, a bruise on the left hip bone, a bruise on the back of the left upper thigh, a bruise on the front of the right upper thigh; the entire vaginal opening was red and bruised; and there was a laceration in the vaginal area. The doctor testified that absolutely those injuries were not caused by a fall on the heel of a shoe. In his opinion the child had suffered from blunt trauma to the vaginal area and had been sexually abused. It was necessary to use a catheter to permit the child to void.

Neither child was called as a witness. The examining doctor said W.J.D. would not discuss her injuries with him. She told her mother she fell on her shoe at the church. A child abuse specialist employed by the sheriff, interviewed both girls on March 27, 1987. W.J.D. told her that the father put his mouth on her vaginal area; he did so when bathing her. She reported other sexual acts by her father. H.R.D. also reported sexual abuse by the father.

The court ordered the children to be examined by a psychologist. This psychologist had seen the children in 1986. She testified in the 1986 hearing. She was paid for appearing as a witness by the father or his deceased wife. This psychologist was called as a witness in the 1987 hearing by the father. The father had employed her for counseling.

The psychologist interviewed the children three times. She stated, “When I saw her [W.J.D.] initially on the first visit in April, I saw many of the same characteristics that are also often found in children who have been through some sort of abuse.” W.J.D. told the psychologist of oral sex and other sex acts by the father. At one time she talked about sexual abuse in the bathroom at the church. She said her dad had hurt her bottom. She also reported he touched her vaginal area when bathing her and touched her vaginal and anal areas in wiping her after she went to the bathroom. However, the psychologist reported that W.J.D. changed her stories. The psychologist could not recall the differences between the stories on the first visit and the second visit. However, the psychologist determined the child indulged in fantasies. Those fantasies included having leukemia, having chicken pox when her father hurt her bottom, and stopping a fight between her parents. The psychologist reported that on the third visit, when she confronted W.J.D. with a fabricated story, W.J.D. admitted she lied about the sexual abuse. [194]*194The psychologist summarized the differences between initial stories and the final story in the following manner:

A. The difference that I saw was that she switched from ‘My dad has been terrible to me by doing all of these awful things and touching me’ to ‘My dad did the wrong thing by touching my bottom when he wiped me and when he bathed me.’ So I saw her change her story from him performing oral sex and the belly grabber game to him touching her when he wiped her and when he bathed her.

The psychologist was of the opinion W.J.D. had been coached during the six days before being placed in a foster home on March 28, 1987. She again summarized, “My conclusion that she had not been sexually abused was based on the fact that there is a host of other behavioral problems that seem to be connected with her difficulty in providing accurate information.” The psychologist had a report of the doctor’s examination on March 23, 1987. She did not discuss the injuries reported with the girls. She could not explain the physical findings related in that report.

The mother called the child sexual abuse expert who had examined the children in 1985. The court excluded that expert’s report because it was before the 1986 hearing and the issues it raised had been litigated. Along the same lines, the court barred questions of the psychologist concerning sexual abuse of H.R.D.

There was in evidence an undisputed report of a foster parent that W.J.D. masturbated excessively and engaged in provocative behavior. Without objection, the child abuse expert called by the mother stated this was a sign that the child had been sexually abused. Also without objection, this expert testified that children in foster care may change their stories to return to the home.

There was placed in evidence a videotape of a protracted interview of W.J.D. The tape was apparently made on April 2,1987. It contains a variety of inconsistent statements made by W.J.D. She initially refused to draw a picture of her father because he was mean. She stated that her father had told her that sometimes little girls were killed. There was also an unclear reference to the father taking the children somewhere without telling their mother. Later in the tape the statements of W.J.D. included the following. The father slept with the two girls. He committed oral sex upon her and had done so at church. He touched H.R.D. He played ‘belly grabber’ with them.

The father testified. He denied any sexual abuse of the children. When first questioned, he had no explanation for the injuries to W.J.D. As far as he knew at the time, W.J.D. had difficulty in going to the bathroom on March 22, 1987, because of a urinary infection. When further questioned, he reported that he wiped W.J.D. after she went to the bathroom.

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Bluebook (online)
756 S.W.2d 191, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 1073, 1988 WL 77649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-wjd-moctapp-1988.