State Ex Rel. Zd

2004 UT App 261, 98 P.3d 40, 2004 WL 1687054
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 29, 2004
Docket20030750-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2004 UT App 261 (State Ex Rel. Zd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Zd, 2004 UT App 261, 98 P.3d 40, 2004 WL 1687054 (Utah Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

98 P.3d 40 (2004)
2004 UT App 261

STATE of Utah, in the interest of Z.D. and A.D., persons under eighteen years of age.
S.B.D. and L.D., Appellants,
v.
State of Utah, Appellee.

No. 20030750-CA.

Court of Appeals of Utah.

July 29, 2004.

Sara Pfrommer, Park City, for Appellants.

Mark L. Shurtleff, Atty. Gen., and John M. Peterson, Asst. Atty. Gen., Salt Lake City, for Appellee.

Martha Pierce and Robert N. Parrish, Salt Lake City, Guardians Ad Litem.

*41 Before BILLINGS, P.J., BENCH, Associate P.J., and THORNE, J.

OPINION

BENCH, Associate Presiding Judge:

¶ 1 S.B.D. and L.D. (Father and Mother) challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the juvenile court's determination that Z.D., one of their children, suffered a femur fracture while in Father's care. After receiving evidence,[1] the court determined that "sufficient and clear and convincing evidence has been established ... to conclude it was non-accidental trauma without a reasonable and acceptable explanation from either parent as to its causation." We reverse.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Father took care of his infant son, Z.D., and two-year-old daughter, A.D., for most of the day on Saturday, November 16, 2002, while Mother was away from the home. Early that morning, before leaving, Mother gave Z.D. a dose of Tylenol for the earache, constipation, and teething that Z.D. had been experiencing in the days prior. He was not given another dose of Tylenol until later that evening. Z.D. took a nap in the afternoon. When Z.D. awoke, he was fussy, and Father noticed that he was favoring his left leg by holding his foot up so that it did not touch Father's lap. Father laid Z.D. in his lap and rubbed the leg because Father thought the flu shot Z.D. had received on Friday, November 15, 2002, was bothering him. Z.D. did not like having his leg rubbed and continued to be fussy. Father wrapped him up tightly in what the parents called a "burrito wrap" and held him. Z.D. stopped being fussy and appeared comfortable. When Mother returned home that evening, she also noticed that Z.D. was favoring his left leg. Mother and Father attributed Z.D.'s favoring of his left leg to the flu shot, but called Kids Care just to be sure. Kids Care reassured them that there was no need to worry, and that Z.D. did not need to be examined. That night Z.D. slept normally and did not display fussiness indicative of pain.

¶ 3 On Sunday morning, November 17, 2002, when Z.D. continued to favor his left leg, Father took him to Primary Children's Medical Center (Primary) to be examined. The first doctor at Primary to examine Z.D. moved his leg around some, but could not find anything wrong. Another doctor came and placed Z.D. on an examination table. The second doctor pushed Z.D.'s legs up against his torso, straightened and bent his legs, and wiggled and moved them around. Z.D. cried fairly intensely. After Z.D.'s leg was x-rayed, Father was told that Z.D.'s left femur was fractured just above the knee. Z.D. was described by hospital workers as cheerful, interactive, alert, and slightly fussy, but consolable. At some point, Z.D. was examined by Dr. Bridgette Sipher. Sipher noted that Z.D. was in no apparent distress except when his left leg was manipulated. Additionally, there was no bruising anywhere on Z.D.'s body, and no fever, redness, or swelling. Sipher recommended Tylenol or ibuprofen for pain, with Lortab to be considered if necessary. Although there was decreased movement in Z.D.'s left leg, Z.D. was still moving it independently.

¶ 4 In accordance with Primary's policy to notify the State whenever a fracture is discovered in a nonambulatory child, the emergency room staff immediately notified the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS).[2] The emergency room staff also notified the Center for Safe and Healthy Families, a group at Primary responsible for identifying and investigating suspected cases of child abuse. Dr. Bruce Herman, a pediatrician and member of the Center for Safe and Healthy Families team, took charge of the investigation and examined Z.D. at Primary the following day, Monday, November 18, 2002. After interviewing Father and Mother, Herman concluded that Z.D. had become acutely symptomatic on Saturday, November 16, which would be consistent with *42 the fracture occurring on that day. He also opined that the mechanism causing the fracture would most likely be excessive axial loading of the femur, and that the parents offered no history providing such a mechanism.

¶ 5 Because Father was employed by DCFS as an in-home child welfare worker, DCFS retained an independent investigator, Paul Dean, to conduct an investigation of the circumstances surrounding Z.D.'s fracture. Dean first saw Z.D. at Primary. Z.D. was wearing only a diaper, shirt, and fabric splint on his left leg. No marks were visible on Z.D.'s exposed body parts. When Dean interviewed Father and Mother, neither of them could provide an explanation consistent with the mechanism Dr. Herman had described.

¶ 6 On Tuesday, November 19, 2002, Mother, Father, and Z.D.'s grandparents were at the hospital when Herman stopped by the hospital room. Mother's mother (Grandmother) asked Dr. Herman whether the fracture could have occurred during an incident with a baby walker on the previous Wednesday, November 13, 2002, where Z.D.'s leg became stuck in the walker and Grandmother released his leg by pulling it through the hole of the walker. Herman did not acknowledge the question and, instead, continued to talk. Grandmother asked the same question again. Herman continued to write on his notepad and then left the room. The next day, Grandmother again posed the walker question to Herman, who then said that the walker incident was not a possible cause of the fracture. He did not follow up on Grandmother's question at that time.[3]

¶ 7 Later, on December 11, 2003, the family requested a meeting with Herman and other members of the Center for Safe and Healthy Families in order to present the walker incident as a possible mechanism for the fracture. Grandmother gave a demonstration of how she had tried to place Z.D. in his walker, but his left leg became stuck, his knee bent with his foot behind him. In her attempt to extricate his wedged leg, she placed her left hand and thumbs on his left leg above his knee and pushed, and then pulled his foot down through the hole of the walker with her right hand. Z.D. let out a shrill, vigorous cry, but calmed down within fifteen seconds.

¶ 8 In a separate meeting, after Grandmother demonstrated the walker incident, the Primary doctors met and agreed that their opinions were unchanged by the demonstration. Kari Cunningham, Primary's liaison to DCFS and a child protective services worker with DCFS, was present at the meeting with the doctors. She observed that the doctors agreed that someone could have caused the fracture using their hand, but that the force involved in the walker incident would not have been sufficient to cause the fracture. Cunningham testified that, in discussing the mechanism and forces involved, the doctors did not discuss the medications Z.D. had been taking, the fact that he was often placed in a burrito wrap, and Z.D.'s activities in the days between Wednesday and Saturday.

¶ 9 Dr. G. William Nixon, a pediatric radiologist at Primary, did not participate in this meeting. Nixon had earlier opined that the fracture was not caused by direct axial loading, consistent with Herman's opinion, but rather was caused by angular leverage. Dr.

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State Ex Rel. Z.D.
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Bluebook (online)
2004 UT App 261, 98 P.3d 40, 2004 WL 1687054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-zd-utahctapp-2004.