Rodriguez v. Wyatt

102 So. 3d 109, 2011 WL 6187083
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 2011
DocketNo. 11-CA-82
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 102 So. 3d 109 (Rodriguez v. Wyatt) 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
Rodriguez v. Wyatt, 102 So. 3d 109, 2011 WL 6187083 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

ON REHEARING

FREDERICKA HOMBERG WICKER, Judge.

pin this child custody case, this Court must decide whether the trial court erred in modifying a consent judgment that the parties stipulated would be governed by the heightened Bergeron standard.1 For the reasons that follow, the judgment of the trial court is reversed in part and affirmed in part.

Facts and Procedural Background

The plaintiff/appellee, Ms. Jennifer Weems,2 and the defendant/appellant, Mr. Jonathan Wyatt, are the parents of a six-year old girl, J.W., who was born in December of 2004. Jennifer and Jonathan’s relationship began to deteriorate shortly after J.W. was born; and though they never married, the parties separated. The litigation in this case arose on August 22, 2005, when Jennifer filed a “Petition for Protection from Abuse,” alleging that Jonathan had physically abused her. A temporary restraining order was imposed against Jonathan, and the parties began proceedings to determine the custody of their daughter.

|sOn May 15, 2006, the parties executed an Interim Consent Judgment whereby Jonathan received supervised visits with J.W. two days per week. Then, on February 26, 2007, the parties executed a Consent Judgment which increased Jonathan’s visitation with J.W. on a gradual basis. Jennifer and Jonathan then filed their final Consent Judgment on March 14, 2008 wherein they agreed to share physical custody of J.W. on a week-to-week basis. The March 14th agreement provided a comprehensive custody schedule and contained a stipulation which provided, “[t]he parties hereto stipulate that the terms and conditions as contained within this ‘Consent Judgment’ shall have the legal effect of a ‘considered decree,’ pursuant to the landmark Supreme Court case of Bergeron v. Bergeron.” (emphasis in original).

In late December 2008, Jennifer dropped J.W. off with Jonathan and his mother, Ms. Martha Wyatt, to allow Jonathan to exercise his custodial period. Jennifer informed Ms. Wyatt that J.W. had a bout of diarrhea. While changing her diaper, however, Ms. Wyatt observed that the diarrhea seemed more like a discharge. Because J.W. had suffered from recurrent yeast infections in the past, Ms. Wyatt telephoned Jennifer on Tuesday, December 30, 2008, and informed her that she thought J.W. might be suffering from a yeast infection. Jennifer called J.W.’s pediatrician, Dr. Patricia Granier, who instructed Jennifer to treat J.W. with Lotri-man AF — an antifungal cream — until she could see her in the office on Friday, January 2, 2009. Jennifer relayed the message to Ms. Wyatt, who treated J.W. with the ointment.

Jennifer met Jonathan, Ms. Wyatt, and J.W. at Dr. Granier’s office on Friday. Dr. Granier’s report indicated that she noticed the vaginal discharge and that she mentioned the possibility of sexual abuse to J.W.’s parents. Jennifer then questioned J.W. and asked if anyone had touched her. Dr. Granier observed that 14J.W. initially shrugged her shoulders re[112]*112peatedly and said “I don’t know,” but later recanted and said, “mawmaw hurts her [me].”3 Jonathan then asked J.W. whether she was referring to when mawmaw put ointment or cream on her rash. J.W. answered “yes, but she hurts me and puts her fingers way up in my potsy.”4

During the examination, Dr. Granier took a vaginal culture for laboratory testing. The specimen tested positive for gonorrhea on January 5, 2009. Dr. Granier informed Jennifer of the results; however, Jonathan was not notified. Jennifer and her immediate family members were tested for gonorrhea — all tests were negative.5

Dr. Granier referred J.W. to the Audrey Hepburn CARE Center (the CARE center) on January 5, 2009, where Dr. Adrienne Atzemis noted “[njeisseria gonorrhea from vagina and urine culture done 01/02/09. This is definitive for intimate contact with infected secretion and for [sic] J.W. is definitive for sexual abuse.” Dr. Atzemis stated, however, that J.W. had not “disclosed contact sufficient to transmit gonorrhea.” Moreover, the doctor was unable to find any evidence of physical damage or trauma, as J.W.’s hymen was still intact. The CARE center reported its findings to the Louisiana Office of Community Sendee (OCS) and law enforcement.6 OCS immediately commenced an investigation, and Jennifer suspended Jonathan’s custodial periods, contending that OCS instructed her to do so.7

Jonathan did not learn J.W. had gonorrhea until Wednesday, January 7, 2009, when an OCS employee visited his home during the course of their investigation. OCS requested that Jonathan and his family members be tested for 1 ¿gonorrhea. Jonathan immediately sought testing at the Jefferson Parish Health Unit but was told the results would not be available for ten days. He then went to an urgent care clinic on January 9, 2009 where he was tested. Jonathan’s results were negative.8 Jennifer testified that OCS called her on January 14, 2009, informed her of Jonathan’s results, and advised her to reinstate Jonathan’s visitation.

On April 6, 2009, three months after reinstating Jonathan’s visitation, Jennifer filed a “Rule to Modify Custody & Ex Parte Motion for Temporary Custody,” alleging that J.W. disclosed to her on March 6, 2009, that Jonathan stuck his fingers up her “potsy.” Due to the seriousness of the allegation, the commissioner issued an order which suspended Jonathan’s custodial periods and granted Jennifer interim temporary sole custody pending the outcome of the custody hearing. The commissioner issued an Interim Judgment, on May 5, 2009, which effectively stayed the April 6th order. The matter was heard before the district court on August 19-20, 2010.9

[113]*113During the trial, Jennifer testified that on March 6, 2009, J.W. told her that “daddy stuck his fingers up my potsy.” She further stated that J.W. told her the incident occurred when she was three years old, even though J.W. was four when she made the disclosure. Upon learning this information, Jennifer drove to her mother’s house and called Ms. Hope Bell10 and her attorney. Jennifer further testified that when her mother, Ms. Maria Rodriguez, asked J.W. what happened, | fiJW. responded, “[d]addy stuck his fingers up my potsy.” Ms. Bell instructed Jennifer to report J.W.’s disclosure to law enforcement.

Jonathan testified that he never touched his daughter inappropriately and that J.W. has never even seen him undressed. He further stated that the only times he touched J.W. in the genital area was after baths or when changing her diaper in order to apply ointment when needed.

Dr. Russell Steele, an expert in pediatric infectious disease, also testified. Dr. Steele did not examine J.W., but he reviewed all the medical records, reports, and other evidence in the record. He opined that children J.W.’s age contract gonorrhea from “sexual contact almost always with an adult or adolescent,” stating that it was impossible to contract the disease from the playground or from kissing. Dr. Steele further opined that, in J.W.’s case, the sexual contact would have occurred by the male genitalia being close to or introduced into J.W.’s vagina. He further explained that the sexual contact likely occurred five to seven days before the infection so that any physical damage would have healed by the time of J.W.’s examination.

Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 So. 3d 109, 2011 WL 6187083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-v-wyatt-lactapp-2011.