In the Matter of: M.L.H. v. Juvenile Officer

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 19, 2021
DocketWD84193
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of: M.L.H. v. Juvenile Officer (In the Matter of: M.L.H. v. Juvenile Officer) 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 Matter of: M.L.H. v. Juvenile Officer, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT IN THE MATTER OF: M.L.H., ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) WD84193 ) JUVENILE OFFICER, ) FILED: October 19, 2021 Respondent. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of Buchanan County The Honorable Patrick K. Robb, Judge Before Division Two: Mark D. Pfeiffer, P.J., and Alok Ahuja and Anthony Rex Gabbert, JJ. M.L.H. is a juvenile. The Circuit Court of Buchanan County entered a

judgment finding that she committed acts which, if committed by an adult, would

constitute the felony of tampering with electronic monitoring equipment, in

violation of § 575.205,1 and the misdemeanor of assault in the fourth degree, in

violation of § 565.056.1. M.L.H. appeals. With respect to her adjudication for

assault, M.L.H. argues that the circuit court applied the incorrect legal standard in

determining that she had acted recklessly. She also argues that the court’s finding

that she had not acted in self-defense was against the weight of the evidence. With

respect to the adjudication for tampering with electronic monitoring equipment,

M.L.H. argues that the evidence was insufficient to prove that she had been

required by court order to wear such equipment.

We affirm.

1 Statutory citations refer to the 2016 edition of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, updated by the 2020 Cumulative Supplement. Factual Background In June 2020, the Juvenile Officer filed a petition accusing M.L.H., who was

then fourteen years old, of committing acts which would constitute felony stealing

and misdemeanor domestic assault in the fourth degree, if committed by an adult.

M.L.H. admitted the allegations on June 18, 2020. The circuit court took

jurisdiction over M.L.H., placed her on probation in the custody of her legal

guardian (her aunt), and required M.L.H. to take part in an electronic monitoring

program. The court imposed an additional term of electronic monitoring on August

24, 2020.

On September 10, 2020, the Juvenile Officer filed a motion to modify the

court’s previous dispositional order, alleging that M.L.H. had since committed acts

which would constitute the felony of tampering with electronic monitoring

equipment in violation of § 575.205 (Count I), and the status offense of habitual

absence from the home, in violation of § 211.031.1(2)(c) (Count II). On September

14, 2020, the circuit court ordered that M.L.H. be placed in a juvenile detention

facility pending resolution of the motion to modify.

While in juvenile detention in Buchanan County, M.L.H. assaulted Brenae’

Tate, a detention aide, on September 29, 2020. The Juvenile Officer filed a first amended motion to modify, adding an allegation that M.L.H. committed the

misdemeanor of assault in the fourth degree, in violation of § 565.056.1(1) (Count

III) by “recklessly caus[ing] physical pain to [Tate] by striking her multiple times.”

The circuit court held an adjudication hearing on November 18, 2020.

M.L.H.’s aunt testified that on September 3, 2020, M.L.H. had been on house arrest,

but left to spend time with a friend. When M.L.H. failed to return home, her aunt

made a runaway report with the St. Joseph Police Department. M.L.H.’s aunt

testified that M.L.H. was required to wear an electronic monitoring bracelet at the time, and that she was wearing the bracelet when her aunt last saw her. However,

2 when M.L.H. was found on September 9, 2020, she was no longer wearing her

monitoring bracelet. Her aunt testified that M.L.H. told her that someone had cut

the bracelet off, and told her aunt the general area where the bracelet could be

found.

Brenae’ Tate, the victim of M.L.H.’s assault, testified that she was a

detention aide at the Buchanan County facility where M.L.H. was detained. Tate

testified that around 8:45 p.m. on September 29, 2020, she was bringing around a

cart of hygiene products to M.L.H. and the other three female residents of the

facility. The hygiene bags Tate was distributing included toothpaste and a

toothbrush, deodorant, and a hairbrush. When Tate entered the detention dayroom

with the cart, M.L.H. appeared agitated and was kicking the dayroom door.

One of the other detention-facility residents, R.M., testified that M.L.H. had

requested feminine hygiene products from Tate, but that Tate took approximately

two hours to bring the hygiene cart into the dayroom, and did not bring any

feminine hygiene products with her. For her part, Tate testified that she did not

recall anyone making a request for feminine hygiene products.

While Tate was handing another resident her hygiene bag, M.L.H. attempted

to grab her own bag from the cart. Tate told M.L.H. not to touch anything on the cart, and proceeded to distribute the other hygiene bags and put the residents in

their cells for the night. While Tate was putting another resident in her cell,

M.L.H. pushed the hygiene cart over. Tate tried to give M.L.H. her hygiene bag and

put her in her cell, but M.L.H. repeatedly refused to go in.

Tate closed M.L.H.’s cell door and attempted to exit the dayroom. M.L.H.

blocked the dayroom door and the intercom console, preventing Tate from exiting or

summoning help. Tate asked M.L.H. to move, but she refused. When M.L.H. did

not move out of the way following Tate’s second request, Tate pushed M.L.H. to the

3 side to gain access to the door and intercom. When Tate pushed M.L.H., she had

one hand near M.L.H.’s head and another on her arm.

In response to being pushed, M.L.H. grabbed Tate’s hair and began punching

her in the head and in the ribs. Tate grabbed M.L.H.’s hair, stating it “was the only

way [she] could try to get [M.L.H.] to stop.” Tate testified that at some point,

someone in the control room must have opened the dayroom door because she and

M.L.H. fell through the door into the hallway. M.L.H. was then on top of Tate, still

punching her, and banging Tate’s head on the ground. Tate testified that M.L.H.

“wouldn’t get off me. She kept telling me to let go of her hair, but I told her to let go

of my hair.” M.L.H. “let go of [Tate’s] hair[,] all while still punching [her].” Tate

attempted to get out from under M.L.H., but was unsuccessful. Ultimately, another

resident, D.S., was let out of her cell, and pulled M.L.H. off of Tate.

Following the altercation, Tate had pain in her back and ribs, bruising, a

headache that lasted multiple days, and a swollen eye.

A surveillance video of the altercation was admitted in evidence at the

adjudication hearing.

The circuit found the allegations of Counts I-III of the Juvenile Officer’s

motion to modify were true, and set a disposition hearing for the next day. After the disposition hearing, the court ordered that M.L.H. be committed to the

Buchanan County Academy.

M.L.H. appeals. While this appeal was pending, M.L.H. was released from

the Buchanan County Academy, and placed on probation.

Discussion I. We first consider the Juvenile Officer’s claim that M.L.H.’s appeal is moot,

because M.L.H. has been released from the juvenile detention facility and placed on probation.

4 While M.L.H.’s appeal was pending, the Juvenile Officer filed a request for

M.L.H.’s release in March 2021. The circuit court granted the motion, and M.L.H.

was released from the detention facility, placed in her legal guardian’s custody, and

put on probation supervised by the Juvenile Officer.

“An issue is moot if our resolution of a matter on appeal in the appellant's

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