Katlyn Scott and Steven Scott v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child

2024 Ark. App. 517
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 517 (Katlyn Scott and Steven Scott v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Katlyn Scott and Steven Scott v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child, 2024 Ark. App. 517 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 517 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-24-163

Opinion Delivered October 30, 2024

KATLYN SCOTT AND STEVEN APPEAL FROM THE SCOTT SCOTT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT APPELLANTS [NO. 64JV-23-15]

V. HONORABLE TERRY SULLIVAN, ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF JUDGE HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR CHILD APPELLEES AFFIRMED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Chief Judge

Katlyn and Steven Scott separately appeal the circuit court order adjudicating their

son, MC, dependent-neglected. Both parents argue that there was insufficient evidence to

support a finding of dependency-neglect. We affirm.

The Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) first become involved with this

family in 2017 when it opened a protective-services case for Katlyn and two of her children.1

The children were later removed from the home and placed in the permanent custody of

their great-grandparents in March 2019.

MC was born in November 2021. On 8 June 2023, DHS opened a protective-

services case after it made a true finding of environmental neglect as to Katlyn and Steven.

On 25 August 2023, Melissa Dodson, a DHS program assistant, conducted a home visit to

1 Steven is not the father of these children. 1 the Scotts and found twenty-one-month-old MC lethargic, covered in a rash, and with his

eyes rolling back in his head. Dodson asked several DHS family service workers (FSWs) to

visit the home and assess the situation. Katlyn told the FSWs that she had no way to take

MC to the doctor and that he had been to the doctor on August 21. Dodson found

medication prescribed to MC on 15 August 2023, and the bottle was mostly full.

Dodson transported MC and both parents to the emergency room (ER), where MC

was diagnosed with impetigo, strep throat, and a viral infection. The ER noted that MC

was dirty, dressed only in a diaper, and had a foul odor and greasy hair, which indicated he

had not been given appropriate care. The ER confirmed that the severity of the infections

could have been avoided if the parents had given MC the medication prescribed to him.

To ensure MC’s safety, DHS placed a seventy-two-hour hold on him.

On 29 August 2023, DHS petitioned for and was granted emergency custody of MC.

The circuit court found probable cause to continue DHS custody on September 15 and

convened an adjudication hearing on November 14. That hearing was continued, however,

to allow DHS to subpoena medical personnel familiar with MC’s treatment.

The court reconvened the adjudication hearing on November 28, and DHS

presented the following evidence. Caden Hickman, an ER nurse who treated MC on

August 25, testified that MC had presented with a rash over his entire body and some

scabbing on his face to the right side of the nostril. He was also “visibly dirty and disheveled

with bright red rash on inner thighs and genitals.” The parents told Hickman that MC had

been prescribed medication for the past couple of weeks for an infection, but after examining

the medication label and noting the amount of medication still remaining in the bottle,

2 Hickman determined that MC was not receiving adequate medication or treatment. On

cross-examination, Hickman acknowledged that MC’s medical records contain the

notation, “Potential concerns for abuse or neglect: None identified.” Upon questioning by

the court, Hickman explained that while MC had been dirty, he had not felt it necessary to

add an extra notation that MC was not being bathed or cleaned appropriately.

Dr. Jonathan Townley, MC’s treating ER physician, explained that MC had been

seen in the ER ten days prior and had been given a prescription for Keflex to treat infection.

On August 25, ten days later, the Keflex bottle was almost entirely full. As a result, MC’s

infection had not improved, and while his infection was not life-threatening, it could have

spread and gotten worse. Dr. Townley did not identify any other concerns with MC.2 On

cross-examination, Dr. Townley stated that “in and of itself in a vacuum” he did not think

the matter warranted a hotline call, but a hotline call had been made by one of the nurses.

Dr. Townley opined that not promptly filling a prescription would not necessarily rise to

the level of neglect.

FSW Amy Maechler testified that after receiving the hotline call for environmental

neglect in June 2023, she and FSW Anna Noakes visited the home and observed animal

feces and urine on the floor, a large amount of trash and debris in the home, and roaches.

MC was in a dirty playpen with no mattress or other bedding, his diaper was very full, and

2 At one point during his testimony, Dr. Townley refers to what excuse was given for why the prescription was not filled and notes that he had not documented the parents’ excuse for not filling it. It is not clear from the record, but because the prescription was, in fact, filled as evidenced by the bottle of medication that was in the parents’ possession and presented at the ER, this most likely refers to when the prescription was filled or was simply a misstatement by Dr. Townley. 3 he was crying. The FSWs advised the parents that the home needed to be cleaned to a level

that was safe by DHS standards. The parents initially made a “huge cleanup effort,” but

multiple follow-up visits showed those efforts had decline, and the home was falling back

into the condition it had been before. The parents explained that they planned to move,

that they needed trash bags and cleaning supplies, and that the roaches were from

surrounding apartments. The follow-up visits often revealed MC still in a playpen (later, a

crib) or highchair, crying, and not being engaged. Maechler also visited the home the day

of removal and described MC as raspy, coughing, and very hot to the touch. As for the

home, Maechler said that “trash needed to be removed. The floors and things were clearer

but dirty.” She also said that MC’s playpen was dirty and had food in it.

Dodson testified that since the beginning of August, she had worked with the family

on homemaking services and had weekly visits. During these visits, MC usually had a

“pretty full” diaper and was in the crib or the highchair. On the day of removal, Dodson

arrived at the home and found the Scotts’ roommate outside looking for diapers in Steven’s

car. Neither Steven, Katlyn, nor the roommate had a driver’s license at that time. Once

inside, Dodson noticed that MC “did not look very well,” had a rash, and felt very warm.

The parents told her that MC had sinus issues and a skin condition and was on medication.

When she suggested that MC see a doctor again, the parents said they had no way to get

there. Dodson left to buy diapers and wet wipes, called Maechler and Noakes, and returned

to the home. Dodson later transported the family to the ER and waited in the waiting area;

after seeing the doctor, Katlyn reported to Dodson that “it was allergies and a skin

condition” and that “[MC] had a temperature of 102.7.”

4 FSW Erin Hartley, the primary caseworker, testified that she accompanied Dodson

on some of her homemaking visits and referred the parents to SafeCare Parenting. Her

safety concerns with the family were the environmental neglect and the lack of adequate

supervision for MC. She usually found MC in his playpen or his highchair, and “the home

didn’t allow him to run freely” because of the trash and other debris on the floor. On the

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