Newton v. Berry

15 So. 3d 262, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 959, 2009 WL 1393757
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 20, 2009
Docket44,383-JAC
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 So. 3d 262 (Newton v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. Berry, 15 So. 3d 262, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 959, 2009 WL 1393757 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STEWART, J.

liThe defendant, Roger Berry, appeals a judgment granting a protective order against him under the Domestic Abuse Assistance provisions of the Louisiana Children’s Code, Articles 1564-1575. Because the record supports the trial court’s imposition of the protective order, we affirm.

FACTS

On February 5, 2008, the plaintiff, Michael J. Newton, filed a petition for protection from abuse on behalf of his minor daughter, B.N., who was then four years old. As alleged in the petition, B.N. re *263 ported that Roger Berry, her stepfather, entered the bathroom and urinated while she and sister, H.L., were bathing and that he had taken off his clothes and gotten into the bed with the girls when their mother was not home. The petition also related that B.N. is afraid of Berry and that he spanks her.

Finding probable cause to believe B.N. to be a child in need of care because of alleged sexual abuse, the juvenile court judge signed a temporary restraining order prohibiting Berry from having contact with B.N. Also, Berry was ordered to show cause why he should not be held in contempt of court for violating a protective order issued on August 22, 2007, prohibiting him from interfering with the communications between B.N.’s parents, Michael Newton and Sheri Berry. An attorney was appointed to represent the minor child.

Protective Order Proceedings

The hearing on the protective order took place on February 29, 2008, and August 22, 2008. Michael Newton testified that he and Sheri Berry share custody of B.N. on a seven-day schedule. While in Newton’s custody |gon February 3, 2008, B.N. told him and his sister that she had seen “a boy pee.” She identified the boy as “Daddy Roger.” She also said that he had gotten into the bed with her while he was naked and tickled her. Newton said that B.N.’s statements came “out of the clear blue.” He denied coaching her. Newton admitted to disliking Berry, wishing him harm, and saying that he is a bad man on many occasions in B.N.’s presence.

Carrie Grohalski, Newton’s sister, was living with him and heard what B.N. said about Berry. When Grohalski asked B.N. where her mother was when Berry did these things, B.N. said that she was either at grandma’s or in the bathroom. Grohal-ski denied that she and Newton initiated the conversation with B.N. about Berry, and she stated that she did not consider B.N. to be a child who makes up stories. Grohalski recalled that B.N. said on nu- ' merous occasions that Berry is mean and spanks her.

Newton’s other sister, Leona “Lonnie” Hammons, testified that B.N. reported similar things to her about Berry while staying with her on February 6 and February 7. B.N. told Hammons that Berry had taken off his clothes, gotten into the bed with her, and tickled her stomach. B.N. said her mother was not home when this happened. Hammons also claimed that B.N. later told her twice that Berry had touched her private area.

Jennifer Flippo, an expert in forensic interviewing, conducted a taped interview with B.N. on February 8, 2008, at the Gingerbread House. Flippo testified that B.N. said that Berry was mean and spanked her with a belt. B.N. also said that Berry had taken off his clothes and gotten into bed with her when her mother was gone and that he had used the bathroom while she |sand her sister were bathing. B.N. told Flippo that her mother knew about these occurrences. The only touching reported by B.N. was that Berry had tickled her stomach.

Flippo found no reason to disbelieve B.N. She was particularly concerned about an adult male taking off his clothes and getting into bed with a child. Flippo described such conduct as part of a “grooming” process by which a potential molester begins with small instances and builds up to more serious behaviors. However, Flip-po admitted that she could not say whether that was Berry’s intention, and she agreed that tickling could simply be playing. Flippo later clarified that B.N. discussed the bed instance and tickling as one episode and explained that the occurrence of the two together presented a wholly *264 different dynamic from what would be considered playing. Though Flippo was not alarmed about the report of Berry entering the bathroom to urinate while B.N. and her sister bathed, we note that the trial coui't disagreed with her opinion on this behavior.

When questioned about the possibility of a parent influencing B.N. to say these things about Berry, Flippo answered that Newton’s negative comments about Berry could to some, extent influence B.N. However, she did not believe that Newton’s negative remarks would have caused a young child like B.N. to fabricate stories of a sexual nature about Berry. Flippo found no indication that B.N. was influenced by her father to make up stories about Berry.

Sheri Berry described B.N.’s relationship with Berry as “wonderful.” She denied knowing about any inappropriate occurrences. Explaining that |4she runs errands during the day while Berry is at work, Sheri insisted that she never leaves the girls alone with Berry. She later clarified that the girls might be left alone with him in one room while she is in another. Sheri also claimed that the B.N. and her sister, H.L., never slept together, but she later said that they occasionally slept together on weekends.

Sheri explained that she was present when the bathroom incident reported by B.N. occurred. According to Sheri, she was washing the gii’ls’ hair in the bathtub when Berry entered to use the bathroom. Because a wall separates the tub from the toilet, only his back was visible to the girls. Sheri testified that the other bathroom in the home was inoperable at the time and that she assumed he had some emergency that prevented him from waiting until the girls were done in the bathroom.

Roger Berry also testified about the great relationship he has with B.N. He stated that she is the first to hug him when he gets home from work and that Sheri sometimes has to hold her back for him to get inside. Berry denied the allegation that he got into bed naked with B.N., and he denied any inappropriate touching. He stated that the girls only sleep together on weekends when they ask him to make a tent or arrange a pallet on the floor. Otherwise, they have to sleep in their own rooms. He asserted that the girls would never even be in a bed together during the day. Like Sheri, he also testified that he is never left alone with the girls, but he later admitted that he had been left alone with them in a room while Sheri was elsewhere in the house.

| .-¡Berry admitted that he did use the bathroom in the girls’ presence. He described the layout of the bathroom and said that only his back would have been visible to B.N. and her sister. It was his belief that the stories told by B.N. about him had been “planted in her head” by Newton.

Rhonda Newton Aaron, Newton’s ex-wife, also testified on behalf of Berry. Rhonda and Newton began living together in July 2007, married on August 4, 2007, and separated in October 2007. She denied that her short relationship with Newton was contentious and indicated that she feels indifferent toward him. Rhonda testified that Newton hated Berry and frequently said in B.N.’s presence that Berry was bad and mean. However, B.N. never seemed scared of Roger Berry and was always ready to return to the Berry home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 So. 3d 262, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 959, 2009 WL 1393757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-berry-lactapp-2009.