Parkhurst v. Belt

567 F.3d 995, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 12340, 2009 WL 1586981
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 9, 2009
Docket08-2668
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 567 F.3d 995 (Parkhurst v. Belt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parkhurst v. Belt, 567 F.3d 995, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 12340, 2009 WL 1586981 (8th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Ross and Amy Parkhurst, the adoptive father and biological mother of H.P., a minor child, asserted claims as next friend against Chad Belt, H.P.’s biological father, for outrage and battery based on Belt’s alleged sexual abuse of H.P. After a jury trial, judgment was entered in favor of the Parkhursts for $250,000 in compensatory damages and $750,000 in punitive damages. 1 Belt appeals, arguing that there was insufficient evidence to sustain the judgment and that the district court erred in permitting H.P. to testify by closed circuit television. We affirm.

I.

Amy and Belt married in Arkansas in 1993, and H.P. was born in 1994. When the couple divorced in 2000, Amy was *998 awarded sole custody while Belt was granted visitation rights. Shortly thereafter Amy relocated to Arizona with H.P. and married Ross Parkhurst. H.P. first visited Belt in Akansas for an extended period of time during the summer of 2001 when she was seven. Since Belt was a student at the time, H.P. spent the majority of her weekdays with her paternal grandmother. Belt testified that he and H.P. were alone on weekends, however, and that H.P. was not alone with any other adult male.

H.P.’s maternal grandmother Theresa Williams, who lived near Belt, testified that she had received a frantic phone call from H.P. during the summer of 2001, pleading “help me, God, help me ... please help me, come get me.” Williams went to Belt’s home to retrieve H.P., but the doors were locked and the blinds were drawn. She was unable to gain entrance to the home. At the end of summer, Belt delivered H.P. to Williams who was going to drive her granddaughter back to Arizona. Williams testified that H.P. ran into a closet in her house, began crying, and refused to say goodbye to Belt. When H.P. rejoined her mother in Aizona, she displayed severe behavioral difficulties. Amy Parkhurst testified that H.P. was a “completely, completely different child” upon returning from Akansas. Because she was concerned about H.P., Amy Parkhurst took her to a family physician, Dr. Edith Bailey, for a “well check up.” Dr. Bailey testified to taking a “quick peek” at H.P.’s genitals with her “naked eye.” Athough she did not note any abnormalities indicating child abuse, Dr. Bailey testified that her limited examination would not necessarily have detected evidence of sexual assault.

When Belt arrived in Aizona the following summer to take H.P. back to Akansas, she suffered a nervous breakdown and threatened to run away if she were forced to go. Belt claims that H.P.’s refusal to return to Akansas was related to a recent forest fire in the vicinity of her Aizona home, and he filed a contempt motion against Amy Parkhurst for violation of the custody agreement. Athough Belt alleged at trial that the Parkhursts pressured H.P. into manufacturing allegations of abuse in order to dissuade him from pursuing the contempt proceedings, the record indicates that Belt offered to settle them for $1500 before the allegations of abuse first surfaced. H.P. returned to Akansas for a visit during the winter of 2002. In advance of the trip she wrote to Santa Claus: “Dear Santa____ I want to talk to you about having to go to my other dad’s house back in Fort Smith. Please don’t make me go back this year. You are magic, remember .... Please Santa, please, just this one Christmas, please, Santa.” H.P. nevertheless spent the holiday in Akansas with Belt, apparently without event.

H.P. returned to Akansas in the summer of 2003. H.P. and her mother spoke frequently while she was at Belt’s. Amy Parkhurst testified that during these calls H.P. “was a mess, just crying, not doing well at all.” As a result she began to record her conversations with H.P. On July 21, 2003, H.P. telephoned her mother and informed her that she had injured her “private part” in a diving board accident and was bleeding vaginally. H.P. told her mother that Belt had not taken her to a doctor and asked her mother not to tell Belt that she had mentioned the bleeding. She also asked her mother “not to tell the judge” about the “situation” because it would be “embarrassing.” A recording of this call was entered into evidence at trial and played for the jury. Amy Parkhurst traveled to Akansas on July 24 to investigate the nature of H.P.’s injuries. Upon her arrival, H.P. informed her that both her “bottom” and her vagina were injured. Amy Parkhurst examined H.P. but saw no *999 external bruising or scraping. She then examined H.P.’s internal genitalia and testified that “it just looked like she had had a baby____ She was cut open, ripped open.”

Amy Parkhurst had H.P. examined on July 24 by Dr. Myra Gregory, a family practitioner. Dr. Gregory testified that H.P. “had some vaginal discharge and also a tear in her vaginal area.” She also testified that H.P.’s injuries were consistent with sexual abuse, inconsistent with a diving board injury, and that H.P. equivocated about their cause. Dr. Gregory then referred H.P. for a sexual abuse examination. On July 25 H.P. was examined by Barbara Durham, a nurse practitioner experienced in pediatric sexual abuse. Durham noted that H.P. had internal genital injuries, including a laceration at the base of the vaginal vault and that the “hymen d[id] not appear intact.” Durham testified that a diving board was inconsistent with H.P.’s injuries because she lacked external bruising, abrasions, or other indicia of external contact with a diving board. As Durham explained, “when I looked at her story, a corner of a [diving] board found its way deep inside her vaginal vault past her hips, past her thighs, past her symphysis pubis, it did not match.” 2 Durham also noted that H.P. had difficulty disclosing the cause of her injuries, stating that H.P. was “vague in [describing] how this happened. ...” Durham concluded at the time of the examination that sexual abuse was a possibility.

On July 28 H.P. was examined at the Children’s Safety Center (CSC) by Charla Jamerson, a forensic nurse who specialized in sexual assault examinations. Jamerson noted in her records that H.P. “stated that her father cusses at me and says the F word to me” and that “out of everybody in her life she felt the most afraid of her dad.” Jamerson conducted an examination with a colposcope, an intragenital magnifying instrument. The examination was recorded and played back for the jury at trial while Jamerson narrated. She indicated areas of vaginal trauma, hymenal thinning, and anal scarring, and testified that such injuries were consistent with “[i]ntercourse with blunt force trauma” to the “vaginal area, the posterior fourchette and to the anus.” Jamerson also testified to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that H.P. had been vaginally and anally penetrated.

After the CSC examination, H.P. and her mother returned to Washington state, where the Parkhursts had recently relocated. In Washington H.P.’s emotional condition deteriorated and she was prone to constant “meltdowns.” H.P. composed a letter in which she stated, “Mom, I’m so sorry. I feel like I could kill myself now. I hate myself.” Shortly thereafter, H.P. began seeing Patty Kellogg, a psychologist. H.P. made it clear to Kellogg that she never wanted to return to Belt in Arkansas. As a therapeutic exercise, Kellogg asked H.P. to compose titles to books she would like to write.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
567 F.3d 995, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 12340, 2009 WL 1586981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkhurst-v-belt-ca8-2009.