Minor Child By His Court-Appointed Guardian Ad Litem v. Roijo E. Ellis and Robert E. Ellis, Jr.
This text of Minor Child By His Court-Appointed Guardian Ad Litem v. Roijo E. Ellis and Robert E. Ellis, Jr. (Minor Child By His Court-Appointed Guardian Ad Litem v. Roijo E. Ellis and Robert E. Ellis, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Judges Petty, Beales and Senior Judge Coleman Argued at Richmond, Virginia
MINOR CHILD, 1 BY HIS COURT-APPOINTED GUARDIAN AD LITEM MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY v. Record No. 1167-10-2 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES MARCH 8, 2011 ROIJO E. ELLIS AND ROBERT E. ELLIS, JR.
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF POWHATAN COUNTY Buford M. Parsons, Jr., Judge Designate 2
Todd M. Ritter (Daniels & Morgan, on brief), for appellant.
(Maureen L. White, on brief), for appellee Roijo E. Ellis.
No brief or argument for appellee Robert E. Ellis, Jr.
The minor child (hereinafter referred to as “the child”), through his guardian ad litem
(hereinafter referred to as “the GAL”), appeals the decision of the Circuit Court of Powhatan
County, which granted Roijo E. Ellis’s (hereinafter referred to as “the mother”) motion to strike and
then dismissed the GAL’s petition. After reviewing the evidence in this record, we affirm the trial
court’s ruling.
* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 We have used the designation, “minor child,” rather than the appellant’s given name, in order to attempt to provide some privacy for the child involved in this case. 2 Judge Thomas V. Warren presided over the hearing in this case and made a ruling from the bench. Judge Warren then retired, and Retired Judge Buford M. Parsons, Jr., entered the final order memorializing Judge Warren’s ruling from the bench. I. Procedural Background and Standard of Review3
The child’s GAL filed a petition in the juvenile and domestic relations (hereinafter referred
to as “JDR”) district court, asking that the court find that the child was a “child in need of services”
(sometimes referred to as a “CHINS” petition) pursuant to Code §§ 16.1-228 and 16.1-241(A)(1).
The JDR court granted the petition, and the mother then appealed to the circuit court (hereinafter
referred to as “trial court”) for a trial de novo. See Code § 16.1-296(A). After the GAL presented
her case to the trial court, the mother made a motion to strike, arguing that the GAL had failed to
present sufficient evidence to prove that the child was in need of services. The trial court agreed
and granted the motion. The GAL then noted an appeal to this Court.
When a trial court considers a motion to strike at the conclusion of a petitioning party’s
evidence, that court must “accept as true all evidence favorable to a plaintiff and any reasonable
inferences that may be drawn from such evidence.” James v. City of Falls Church, 280 Va. 31, 38,
694 S.E.2d 568, 572 (2010). On appeal, this Court must examine the record using this same
standard. McGowan v. Lewis, 233 Va. 386, 387, 355 S.E.2d 334, 334 (1987); Chaplain v.
Chaplain, 54 Va. App. 762, 772-73, 682 S.E.2d 108, 113 (2009). However, we review the
application of the law de novo. See Shilling v. Baker, 279 Va. 720, 724, 691 S.E.2d 806, 808
(2010) (noting that, if “[t]he issue is a legal one,” then “we review [it] de novo”).
Because the trial court here ruled on a motion to strike at the conclusion of the GAL’s
evidence, rather than at the conclusion of all the evidence, this Court must review the evidence in
the light most favorable to the GAL’s position. See Chaplain, 54 Va. App. at 773, 682 S.E.2d at
113.
3 Because the facts are familiar to the parties, we forego a general discussion of the evidence in this record in favor of incorporating the relevant facts into our analysis below.
-2- II. Analysis
Under Code § 16.1-228(i), a juvenile is “a child in need of services” if he is engaged in
“behavior, conduct or [has a] condition [that] presents or results in a serious threat to [his]
well-being and physical safety.” As relevant to this case, the GAL needed to prove that “a clear
and substantial danger to the child’s life or health” existed, that the child and/or his family was
“in need of treatment, rehabilitation or services not presently being received,” and that the
court’s intervention was “essential to provide the treatment, rehabilitation or services needed.”
Code § 16.1-228 (defining “child in need of services”).
The trial court found that the evidence presented by the GAL had not met the
requirements of Code § 16.1-228. The court explained that the statute contained “a rather high
threshold I think for the plaintiffs in the case, and I don’t think you’ve reached it. I don’t think
the state [sic] has reached that hurdle of talking about clear and substantial danger to the child’s
life. I just can’t follow that.”
The evidence here, even viewed in the light most favorable to the GAL, failed to prove
that a “serious threat” existed – that the child’s behavior, conduct, or condition presented “a clear
and substantial danger” to his “life or health.” The evidence proved that the child was an
excellent student, who made good grades. He was liked by his peers and his teachers, and he
was involved in extracurricular activities. His mother was a school psychologist who did “very
well” at her job. When the child’s parents separated, the mother took the child to a counselor
because, as she told the counselor, she had become concerned about the child’s reactions to “the
changes that the family was going through because of the dad.” Nothing in this record suggests
that the mother abused or neglected her child. Although one expert had “serious concerns” about
her “ability to appropriately parent this child,” the expert also admitted during direct examination
that this expert did not have enough information to form a definite opinion.
-3- Although the child’s father was an abusive alcoholic who had punched the child once at
some undetermined point in the past, the evidence proved that a protective order prohibited the
father from contacting both the mother and the child. Although the mother had initially allowed
the father to violate the protective order, the evidence proved that she had not allowed the father
to violate the protective order for a number of months before the hearing in the trial court.
The experts testified that the mother and the child had “an adjustment disorder,” which
was characterized as “the lowest of all disorders.” Such disorders, according to the experts,
indicated that a specific situation was creating stress in their lives and “causing some
impairment.” However, the experts never explained what “impairment” existed in the child’s
life or in the mother’s life. They did not explain how this “impairment” in the mother’s behavior
endangered the child, except to say that the child needed counseling and that the mother did not
want to take the child to the current counselor.
The experts recommended that the child receive counseling because he had been exposed
to an alcoholic father and had witnessed his father abusing his mother. However, neither expert
pointed to any behavior by the child that suggested he needed more counseling than he had
already received. The child exhibited no behavior that suggested he might become an alcoholic
or an abusive spouse. One expert even explained that she had done no diagnostic testing of the
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