State, in Interest of Ek

913 P.2d 771, 286 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 1996 Utah App. LEXIS 24, 1996 WL 111360
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMarch 14, 1996
Docket950292-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 913 P.2d 771 (State, in Interest of Ek) 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, in Interest of Ek, 913 P.2d 771, 286 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 1996 Utah App. LEXIS 24, 1996 WL 111360 (Utah Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

BILLINGS, Judge:

Appellant, K.K., appeals from an order of the juvenile court concluding her son, E.K., is a neglected child under Utah Code Ann. § 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) (Supp.1995). We affirm.

FACTS

Appellant is the mother of three children: twins, R.K., Jr. and C.K.; and the infant, E.K. On October 3, 1992, the seven-month-old twins were hospitalized with skull fractures and broken bones. The Division of Family Services (DFS) took the twins into protective custody and filed a neglect petition with the juvenile court. On January 14, 1993, appellant admitted in juvenile court that the children’s injuries were the result of her hitting and throwing the infants. She also testified that R.K., Sr., the children’s father, resides in the home, but due to his work schedule, he is incapable of protecting the children. DFS was granted temporary custody of the twins and they were placed in foster care. Both parents were ordered to undergo psychological evaluations and treatment.

Appellant was also criminally prosecuted in district court for her actions. On January 25, 1993, she pleaded guilty to attempted child abuse, a third-degree felony, and was sentenced to not more than five years in prison. The sentence was stayed and appellant was placed on probation on the condition she seek treatment and have no unsupervised contact with any children without further order of the court.

Ten months later, appellant gave birth to E.K. DFS took custody of E.K. when he was two days old and filed a neglect petition with the juvenile court based on appellant’s conviction for attempted child abuse of the twins, the district court’s probation order prohibiting appellant’s unsupervised contact with children, and R.K., Sr.’s inability to protect the children.

At the hearing on the neglect petition, the State proceeded under section 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) of the Utah Code, claiming E.K. was a neglected child within the jurisdiction of the court because he was “at risk of being neglected or abused because other children in the same home were neglected or abused.” The State requested the court take judicial notice of the adjudicative facts of the previous juvenile and district court proceedings involving Appellant’s abuse of the twins and her conviction and sentence. With no objection from appellant, the court took judicial notice of the adjudicative facts underlying these cases and the State rested its case-in- *773 chief. Appellant then made a motion to dismiss the State’s neglect petition.

The trial court denied appellant’s motion to dismiss. The court concluded the State had established a prima facie case under section 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv), but allowed the parents to produce evidence that'E.K. was not at risk of being neglected or abused.

Neither parent disputed appellant’s abuse of the twins nor R.K., Sr.’s absence when the abuse occurred. R.K., Sr. testified that appellant had not presented a physical risk to any of the children during their DFS supervised visitations. Appellant then testified that during the two days of supervised contact she had with E.K. in the hospital, she had not abused him or put him at risk. Other testimony came from two DFS “trackers” who had monitored the family’s DFS supervised visits. Both trackers testified that they had not witnessed any inappropriate behavior by appellant or R.K., Sr. toward the children during these visits.

After considering the evidence from the State and the natural parents, the trial court concluded the State had proved by clear and convincing evidence that E.K. is a “neglected child” within the purview of section 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) in that E.K. was at risk of being neglected or abused because other children in the same home were neglected or abused. 1

Appellant now appeals.

I. CAN AN AFTER-BORN CHILD QUALIFY AS A “NEGLECTED CHILD” UNDER SECTION 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) OF THE UTAH CODE?

Appellant argues that E.K. cannot, as a matter of law, be a “neglected child” under section 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) of the Utah Code because he was not bom or conceived at the time appellant abused his twin siblings or was criminally sentenced for that abuse, and thus is not in the “same home” as his siblings.

Section 78-8a-16(2) confers on the juvenile court “exclusive original jurisdiction in proceedings: ... (c) concerning any child: ... (i) who is abused [or] neglected.” Utah Code Ann. § 78-3a-16(2) (Supp.1995). Section 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) defines a “neglected child” as a child “who is at risk of being a neglected or abused child ... because another child in the same home was neglected or abused.” Id. § 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv).

We must determine what the legislature intended by the phrase “in the same home.” The State urges us to read the phrase broadly, keeping the entire structure of the Utah child protection system in mind. Appellant contends we should limit the language to only children actually present in the home when the abuse to the sibling occurs or conceived when the abuse or adjudication of abuse occurs.

Both arguments could be supported under the broad language of the statute. However, we conclude appellant’s narrow reading of section 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) is contrary to its legislative intent and defeats the purpose of the act. The legislative history of this section indicates the language was added “to protect the siblings of seriously abused children.” Child Neglect Amendment, 1989: Hearings on H.B. 165, 48th Legislature, General Session (January 31,1989) (statement of Rep. Protzman). This section was also intended to provide an avenue “to allow investigation, monitoring, and supervision of the [siblings of abused] children,” and to “add to the definition of neglected child the child who, because another child in the same home is neglected or abused, now fits under the definition. This allows the safeguard of current child protection ordinances to kick into place.” Id. Nowhere does the legislative history support appellant’s argument. Rather, it supports a broad protective purpose.

Appellant urges us to find a distinction between children born ten months, as opposed to nine months, after the abuse of a sibling is adjudicated. There is no rational distinction for excluding such an after-bom child from protection. A distinction excluding after-born children would leave a large *774 group of.at-risk chdldren outside the provision’s protective reach based only on an arbitrary time limit.

Furthermore, a determination of neglect under section 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) merely allows a juvenile court to take jurisdiction over a child. The court then has the authority to hold a trial and enter a number of possible dispositions appropriate for the given case. 2 Thus, the adjudication of neglect under section 78-3a-2(16)(a)(iv) is only a first step in the process of child protection as set up by Utah law and should be read broadly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
913 P.2d 771, 286 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 1996 Utah App. LEXIS 24, 1996 WL 111360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-in-interest-of-ek-utahctapp-1996.