Sg v. Dc

13 So. 3d 269, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 270, 2009 WL 1477255
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 2009
Docket2007-CA-01909-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of 13 So. 3d 269 (Sg v. Dc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sg v. Dc, 13 So. 3d 269, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 270, 2009 WL 1477255 (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

13 So.3d 269 (2009)

S.G.
v.
D.C.

No. 2007-CA-01909-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

May 28, 2009.
Rehearing Denied August 6, 2009.

*271 James W. Craig, Jane E. Tucker, Jackson, attorneys for appellant.

J. Stewart Parrish, Meridian, attorney for appellee.

EN BANC.

DICKINSON, Justice, for the Court.

¶ 1. This is an appeal of an order denying a maternal grandmother's attempt to intervene in a custody dispute involving her grandchildren, one of whom allegedly was sexually abused by her father. Because of the unusual facts and circumstances *272 presented, we find the grandmother must be allowed to intervene to protect the interests of the minor children. We also take this opportunity to clarify the duties and responsibilities of a court-appointed guardian ad litem.

BACKGROUND FACTS[1] AND PROCEEDINGS

¶ 2. The long and complex history[2] of this case began in December, 2000, when D.C. ("the mother")[3] and D.C. ("the father") were divorced. The court awarded the mother physical custody of the couple's two minor children (Jane, age five, and John, age three)[4] and granted the father liberal visitation.

¶ 3. For nearly four years thereafter, neither parent sought assistance from the court regarding their children. Then, on July 13, 2004, Jane gave her mother a note which stated, "Mama, my privates hurt BAD." The note was accompanied by a drawing which resembled an erect penis. The mother showed the note to David Grantham, Ph.D., a psychologist in Jackson, Mississippi. Dr. Grantham referred the mother and Jane to Dr. Tammy Henderson, a pediatrician in Meridian, Mississippi.

¶ 4. On July 16, 2004, Dr. Henderson met with Jane. When Dr. Henderson invited Jane to talk about the alleged abuse, Jane spontaneously stated, "If my dad came in and did this, I wouldn't know it because I sleep so hard." With her medical assistant present, Dr. Henderson performed a physical examination of Jane, which revealed scabbed abrasions and scars in her genital area, and other physical indications of sexual abuse, including tearing of the hymen. Dr. Henderson concluded, "There is no doubt in my mind that [Jane] has been sexually abused to the point of at least partial penetration of her vagina."

¶ 5. Dr. Henderson referred Jane to the University of Mississippi Rape Crisis Center where the doctor's physical findings were consistent with the injuries observed by Dr. Henderson. The doctor reported that the evidence was inconclusive as to whether a sexual assault had occurred. Nevertheless, a social worker involved in the case contacted the Lauderdale County Sheriff's Department and the Mississippi Department of Human Services ("DHS"), both of which began investigations.

¶ 6. Jane began counseling with Donna Moore at the East Mississippi Sexual Assault Crisis Center at the Wesley House Community Center. Although Jane was reluctant to discuss the alleged abuse, she did on one occasion identify her father as the person who had touched her. Moore then asked Jane if she had seen or felt him touch her, and she replied that she hadn't because she "slept real sound."

¶ 7. In August 2004, the mother and the children moved to Texas, where the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services ("TDFPS") began an investigation. *273 Jane told TDFPS investigators that her father had come into her room several times and scratched her "private part" with his fingernail and touched the "fold part" of her private part. After concluding there was reason to believe that Jane had been molested by her father, TDFPS notified the father of their suspicions by letter.

¶ 8. The mother arranged for Jane to receive counseling at the Collin County Child Advocacy Center ("CCCAC"), where Jane told her counselors that her daddy

did something with his pee pee. When I said stop. And now every time I close my eyes I see his private so I am not going to sleep.... Daddy came into my room and I think he crawled over [my brother] and then he pulled by the covers, pulled my shirt up, pulled my panties down, and started touching the pink part, the floppy things on my private, his fingernail must have been what scratched my private.

¶ 9. Meanwhile back in Mississippi, the father, in an effort to enforce his visitation rights, filed a petition to modify the divorce decree, and a motion for contempt. The mother answered and filed a counterclaim requesting that visitation be held in abeyance until the sexual-abuse allegations could be fully investigated and, in the event the abuse was verified, that visitation be terminated. The trial court appointed a guardian ad litem for the children and ordered the mother to return the children to Mississippi so that the guardian ad litem could have access to them, and so the father could exercise supervised visitation, pending the abuse investigation.

¶ 10. The mother brought the children to Mississippi during spring break in March 2005. The guardian ad litem met with the children for an hour and concluded that the father could visit with the children every day during spring break from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. under the supervision of his new wife. According to the guardian ad litem, when Jane returned to his office from one of the visits she was visibly upset and refused to discuss what had happened during the visit with her father. Jane then went home with her mother.

¶ 11. Later that same night when Jane became hysterical, the mother and her mother, S.G.("the grandmother"), took her to the hospital. Upon being notified, the guardian ad litem went to the hospital, where he found Jane curled in a fetal position and, according to the guardian ad litem, "had obviously been doing a lot of crying." She told the guardian ad litem that her father had touched her in her private parts. When asked by the guardian ad litem what she remembered that her father did, she said that her father "pulled up my shirt and pulled down my panties, and touched me." The guardian ad litem directed that there would be no more visits. The mother and the children returned to Texas where they continued counseling with the CCCAC. The counselor with the CCCAC informed the guardian ad litem that "the advocacy center had successfully performed a forensic interview on both children wherein both had clearly identified the sexual abuse of [Jane] and named the father as the perpetrator."

¶ 12. On June 6, 2005, the father filed a motion in the Mississippi trial court, seeking visitation with the children. On July 7, 2005, without a hearing, the Mississippi trial court entered an order allowing the father a week of visitation with the children to be supervised by his new wife or his mother. The visitation was to begin July 16. The mother refused to comply with the order and, instead, filed for a protective order in Collin County, Texas.

*274 ¶ 13. On August 15, 2005, the guardian ad litem issued a preliminary report expressing numerous personal opinions[5] concerning the evaluations and psychological treatment provided by the healthcare professionals who had treated Jane. For instance, in response to CCCAC counselor Renee Matthews's statement that forensic interviews were conducted later rather than earlier because any mention of the father's name propelled Jane into a panic attack, the guardian ad litem opined:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 So. 3d 269, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 270, 2009 WL 1477255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sg-v-dc-miss-2009.