State Ex Rel. Jk

764 So. 2d 287, 2000 WL 802968
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 2000
Docket33,878-JAC
StatusPublished

This text of 764 So. 2d 287 (State Ex Rel. Jk) 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
State Ex Rel. Jk, 764 So. 2d 287, 2000 WL 802968 (La. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

764 So.2d 287 (2000)

STATE of Louisiana in the Interest of J.K.

No. 33,878-JAC.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

June 23, 2000.
Rehearing Denied August 17, 2000.
Writ Denied October 6, 2000.

*288 Jack Wright, Jr., New Orleans, Counsel for Appellant.

Richard Ieyoub, Attorney General, Robert W. Levy, District Attorney, S. Andrew Shealy, Assistant District Attorney, Counsel for Appellee.

Before CARAWAY, KOSTELKA and CRIGLER (Pro Tempore), JJ.

CRIGLER, Judge Pro Tempore.

J.K. was adjudicated a child in need of care and continued custody of him was granted to La. Department of Social Services (OCS). J.K.'s adoptive parents, A.K. and L.K., appeal this decision. We affirm.

Facts

On October 2, 1993, soon after his birth, J.K. was adopted by A.K. and L.K. A.K. and L.K. wanted to adopt a special needs child, one who would likely not be adopted by anyone else. J.K.'s natural mother abused drugs and alcohol and was a heavy smoker; J.K. was born severely handicapped with little chance of a long life. J.K. was immediately placed in a body cast because both his legs were broken and for the first month of his life was constantly crying because he was suffering from withdrawals. J.K. was diagnosed with arthrogryposis multiplex congenita and spinal muscular atrophy.[1] J.K.'s adoptive parents were told that SMA was a progressive disease and children with SMA rarely live more than three years, but with love and care he would likely live longer. Notably, even if J.K. lived longer he would be unable to walk.

Part of J.K.'s handicap resulted in contractures in his jaws and legs, making him unable to move his jaws and leading to contractures in his knees, feet and fingers. Additionally, J.K. would not suck and was aspirating. Due to his inability to suck on a bottle, a nasal gastric tube was placed down his throat to supply needed nutrients. Later, J.K. had a gastrostomy performed on him, where a "g-tube" was placed in his abdomen through which he was fed a formula.

*289 J.K. was scheduled to undergo surgery on his legs to correct club feet. Due to J.K.'s inability to open his jaws, the surgical staff determined that he should have a tracheostomy, so that they could intubate him; a tube was placed in J.K.'s throat to breath through. A.K. and L.K. were given a "Go Bag," and were told to carry it with them at all times because if J.K. were to have trouble breathing, they were to suction any mucus out of the tube. They were also told that this would result in J.K. having more respiratory infections. J.K. also suffered through several bouts of pneumonia.

A.K. also reported that J.K. suffered from seizures, up to ten a day, and severe headaches. J.K. had severe medical problems and due to all the reported symptoms, he was placed on a lot of medication; J.K. was on eleven different medications at the time he was removed from A.K.'s and L.K.'s custody.

Dr. Meade O'Boyle (O'Boyle) first treated J.K. when he came into the emergency room on June 4, 1995. That day he was scheduled to be tested for Cystic Fibrosis (CF). According to testimony, J.K. was to undergo a "sweat test." The night before the test, A.K. called one of J.K.'s home health nurses, Ms. Addie Morris, a Registered Nurse, and asked what would result in a positive CF test. Nurse Morris told her that a high sodium level would result in a positive test. The next day, J.K. was taken to the ER and tests showed a dangerously high level of sodium in his system. This caused Dr. O'Boyle concerns because she testified that only two things can cause such a high sodium level, dehydration, which J.K. was not suffering from, and salt ingestion. According to Dr. O'Boyle and A.K., at this time the only thing J.K. ingested was a formula which he received through his g-tube. Dr. O'Boyle testified that the formula did not contain high levels of sodium.

Soon after this incident, Dr. O'Boyle became J.K.'s primary physician because she was the only doctor who would take Medicaid. Dr. O'Boyle testified that J.K. was never very healthy, was a frequent visitor to her office and she would receive calls on a regular basis in regards to his condition. Due to his many health problems, Dr. O'Boyle referred J.K. to the Arkansas Children's Hospital (ACH), where he was evaluated by a neurologist. Due to the reported seizures, J.K. was placed on Dilantin. J.K. was specifically hospitalized for Dilantin intoxication and on another occasion when hospitalized for other reasons he was found to have toxic levels of Dilantin in his system. In addition, the home health nurses documented several incidents of Dilantin intoxication. Due to the difficulty in controlling the levels, J.K. was taken back to ACH and re-evaluated. The doctors there could not find any evidence of seizure disorder and changed his medication. Based on requests from Dr. O'Boyle, soon after J.K. was taken off most of his seizure medications.

Due to the reports of severe headaches, J.K. was prescribed Zanaflex, a powerful muscle relaxant. On November 13, 1998, the home health nurses observed that J.K. was extremely limp and unresponsive. They called their supervisor, Renita Bryant, R.N., to start an I.V., and when she attempted to do this J.K. did not so much as flinch. Due to their concerns, J.K. was taken to the hospital. Dr. O'Boyle testified that when she saw him she felt he was about to die and admitted him into the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, taking him off Zanaflex. Dr. O'Boyle testified that the next day J.K. was in bed bouncing, laughing, and watching television. At this point Dr. O'Boyle surmised that J.K. was being medically abused by his mother. Specifically, Dr. O'Boyle believed that A.K. had put salt in J.K.'s g-tube so that he would test positive for CF, that she had falsified symptoms so that the doctors would put him on more and more medications and would diagnose him with disorders which he did not have, such as seizures, and that she had continued high levels of medication, despite Dr. O'Boyle's *290 concerns and request to eliminate certain medications. In sum, Dr. O'Boyle feared for J.K.'s life if he were to be released from the hospital into A.K.'s care. Dr. O'Boyle testified that at that point she realized that J.K.'s severe, life threatening illnesses were not caused by his handicap but by A.K. As a result, she called OCS and reported her concerns. OCS conducted an investigation and removed J.K. from A.K.'s and L.K.'s custody on November 20, 1998, putting him in foster care thereby specifically choosing not to place him with A.K.'s parents.

Based on evidence presented at the adjudication hearing, the trial court found that J.K. was a child in need of care and that continued custody with the state was warranted. A.K. and L.K. have appealed this decision, arguing that the standard of proof utilized and required by the Children's Code was unconstitutional, that the state did not prove that J.K. was a child in need of care, and that the admission of "stale" psychiatric records was prejudicial.[2]

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764 So. 2d 287, 2000 WL 802968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jk-lactapp-2000.