J.C.M., and individual, and J.C.M., Next Friend for W.C.M. and O.H.M., Plaintiff-Appellant/Respondent v. J.K.M., a/k/a/ J.K.E., D.A.N. and D.E.N., Defendants-Respondents/Cross-Appellants

573 S.W.3d 672
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 2019
DocketSD35374, SD35375, SD35376, consolidated
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 573 S.W.3d 672 (J.C.M., and individual, and J.C.M., Next Friend for W.C.M. and O.H.M., Plaintiff-Appellant/Respondent v. J.K.M., a/k/a/ J.K.E., D.A.N. and D.E.N., Defendants-Respondents/Cross-Appellants) 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
J.C.M., and individual, and J.C.M., Next Friend for W.C.M. and O.H.M., Plaintiff-Appellant/Respondent v. J.K.M., a/k/a/ J.K.E., D.A.N. and D.E.N., Defendants-Respondents/Cross-Appellants, 573 S.W.3d 672 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

J.C.M., an individual, and J.C.M., Next ) Friend for W.C.M. and O.H.M., ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant/Respondent, ) ) v. ) Nos. SD35374, SD35375, and SD35376 ) (consolidated) J.K.M., a/k/a J.K.E., D.A.N. and D.E.N., ) ) Filed: Apr. 16, 2019 Defendants-Respondents/Cross- ) Appellants. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF IRON COUNTY

Honorable Randall Head AFFIRMED

Every adult involved in this consolidated appeal challenges the judgment that

awarded money damages to W.C.M. (“WM”) and O.H.M. (“OM”) (“the children”). In a

single point, J.C.M. (“Father”), claims the trial court erred in failing to grant him a new

trial based upon his claim that the defendants’ closing argument was “improper.”1

J.K.M. (“Mother”), along with her parents, D.A.N. and D.E.N. (“Grandparents”), cross-

1 For ease of reference we occasionally refer to Father and the children collectively as “Plaintiffs.”

1 appeal the portion of the judgment entered in favor of Plaintiffs on their claims for

interference with custodial rights and false imprisonment.2

In six points, Defendants claim the trial court erred in: (1) instructing the jury on

the false imprisonment claim; (2) denying their motions for directed verdict or a new trial

on the false imprisonment claim because Plaintiffs did not make a submissible case; and

(3) abusing its discretion in ruling on four separate evidentiary matters.

Finally, Mother’s sole additional point claims instructional error related to her

refusal to answer questions at her deposition and subsequent failure to testify at trial

based upon her assertion of Fifth-Amendment privilege. Finding no reversible error in

any of these points, we affirm.

Background

Mother and Father were married in 2000. The sad series of events that ultimately

led to these appeals began in January 2006. At that time, Mother, Father, and the

children were living together in apparent domestic harmony in Salem, Missouri.

Sometime that month, WM, then four years’ old, said that Father had touched his “root,”

the term WM used for his genitalia. Believing this statement to be an indication that

Father had sexually abused WM, Mother took the children, moved out of the family

home, and began residing in a trailer located on Grandparents’ property in a remote part

of Dent County, Missouri.

After Mother filed a petition for a child order of protection against him, Father

filed for divorce in May 2006. After Mother and Father separated in 2006, and before the

2 The briefs filed by Mother and Grandparents are identical in all respects, except that Mother’s brief contains an additional allegation of error, Point 7 of her brief, that relates to her invocation of her Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate herself. To the extent that their arguments are the same, we analyze their points together and refer to Mother and Grandparents collectively as “Defendants.”

2 dissolution trial in January 2008, various hotline calls were made against Father as a

result of WM’s accusations, and WM attended counseling. During this time period, WM

made statements to several third-party witnesses, including professionals, non-

professionals, and family members, about the alleged abuse. Due to the accusations

against him, Father had only supervised visits with the children. The Children’s Division

investigated WM’s accusations of sexual abuse and ultimately found them to be

unsubstantiated. No criminal charges for sexual abuse were ever filed against Father.

When the dissolution judgment awarded custody of the children to Father, Mother

abducted the children and fled the state.3 Father would not see the children again for

more than three years. When the children were finally returned to Missouri and placed

back into Father’s care and custody in August 2012, Father and the children sued Mother

and Grandparents for, respectively, intentional interference with custody and false

imprisonment.4

The dissolution case took three days to try, and the resulting JUDGMENT,

ORDER, AND DECREE OF DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE (“the dissolution

judgment”) was extremely critical of Mother. For example, it contained the following

findings:

 Mother had made no effort to seek employment;

 Mother had accused Father of having an affair with a co-worker during the marriage, but the court found no credible evidence of that – rather, it found that Mother had embarrassed and disrupted Father at his place of work;

 Mother had accused Father of having a pornography addiction, but the court was not convinced that Father’s actions in that regard were abnormal;

3 WM was born in 2002, and OM was born in 2004, making their respective ages seven and four at the time of their abduction. 4 Father acted as the children’s next friend in the proceedings. Their petition contained a third count for civil conspiracy, but Plaintiffs dismissed that theory of recovery prior to submitting the case to the jury.

3  Mother’s allegations of sexual abuse against Father were investigated by the Missouri Children’s Division and were unsubstantiated;

 Mother repeatedly questioned WM about the sexual abuse, and that repeated questioning rendered any effort to obtain a reliable report nearly impossible;

 Mother had exerted pressure on the children not to attend visits with Father;

 Mother has an inflexible belief system that “prevents her from seeing the evidence of her mistake before her own eyes”;

 There is no credible evidence that Father committed any acts of abuse;

 Mother and her family have a general attitude that they are right and therefore justified in violating court orders;

 Mother blames others for events that put her in a bad light;

 Mother has called the professionals involved in the case liars, and she exaggerates details or makes up stories in order to explain her position;

 Mother fabricates reasons to deny Father’s family members contact with the children; and

 Because of her inflexible belief system, Mother will not comply with future court orders.

The dissolution judgment awarded Father legal and physical custody of the

children, subject to periods of visitation with Mother. Because Mother had the children

at the time the dissolution judgment was entered, the court ordered her to deliver them to

Father in ten days -- May 31, 2009, at 5:00 p.m. at the Dent County Sheriff’s Department.

Father went to the sheriff’s office at the appointed time and waited for over an hour, but

Mother did not appear.

Unbeknownst to Father, instead of bringing them to the sheriff’s office, Mother

had taken the children to a home in Iowa owned by people known to Grandparents. Over

the next three years, Mother moved the children from Iowa to North Carolina, Florida,

4 Texas, Oklahoma, Wyoming, and finally to Kansas, all the while evading the authorities’

attempts to locate Mother and the children. During that three-year time period, the

children were not allowed to attend school, were forced to disguise themselves by getting

haircuts and coloring their hair, and were not allowed to have friends. Grandparents

aided Mother in making these moves, either by providing her with money or by assisting

her in finding places to live in those various states. The children were finally returned to

Missouri in late August 2012 when law enforcement located them in Kansas.

When Mother returned to Missouri, she was charged with two felony counts of

parental abduction. Those charges were eventually amended to misdemeanors, and

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
573 S.W.3d 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jcm-and-individual-and-jcm-next-friend-for-wcm-and-ohm-moctapp-2019.