State v. Nelson

531 P.2d 48, 216 Kan. 271, 1975 Kan. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1975
Docket47,627
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 531 P.2d 48 (State v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nelson, 531 P.2d 48, 216 Kan. 271, 1975 Kan. LEXIS 323 (kan 1975).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harman, C.:

This is an appeal in a proceeding wherein parental rights were severed pursuant to K. S. A. 38-824 and related provisions in our juvenile code. The issues here are the admissibility of one item of evidence and sufficiency of the evidence to support findings of dependency and neglect and parental unfitness.

Appellant Ralph Nelson, Sr. is the natural father of the eight children in question: Ralph Nelson, Jr., bom September 21, 1959; Anita Nelson, born December 8, 1960; Edward Nelson, bom July 18, 1962; Leslie Nelson, bom July 2, 1963; Vianita Nelson, bom December 11, 1964; Larry and Gary Nelson, bom May 28, 1966; and Richard Nelson, bom July 17, 1968.

Appellant became a full time construction worker when he was fourteen years old. He was a heavy equipment operator over eleven *272 years. He ceased work in 1970, citing his health as the reason for quitting. Thereafter he drew social welfare payments for the support of himself and family. His wife, the mother of the eight children, died in 1968, and since then he had sole custody of the children in his home in Topeka until they were removed by court order. He was assisted at times in caring for them by a woman who had mental problems and stayed periodically at the Topeka State Hospital.

The proceeding originated December 15, 1971, when a petition was filed in juvenile court to declare the children dependent and neglected and to terminate parental rights. The children were removed from appellant’s custody December 17, 1971. After a two-part hearing in juvenile court the children were declared to be dependent and neglected and parental rights were severed. Mr. Nelson appealed this order to district court, where, after de novo hearing, the children were again found to be dependent and neglected, appellant was found to be unfit to have their custody and his parental rights were terminated. Appellant brings the matter here for review.

At the hearing on June 21 and 22, 1973, in district court testimony pro and con on the issues involved was heard. Our summary of it will be in the aspect most favorable to the findings made by the trial court. A county welfare social worker testified as to conditions in the Nelson home observed by her during several visits: The house was small, in poor repair and had been converted into a three bedroom home by placing beds in the living and dining rooms; the bedrooms had no closets and there was just room to walk between the beds; the children’s clothing, which was in poor condition, was lying on the floors and piled in comers; there was neither space nor chairs for everyone to sit down for a meal together; the kitchen utensils were insufficient; three of the children appeared not to be getting adequate food; there were bags of flour and cornmeal in the kitchen which had been broken into' by rodents and roaches and were littered with droppings; she tried to get appellant to move into a larger house which was obtainable at no higher rent but he declined; appellant functioned more as a child; he appeared to be very ineffectual, could not manage money and did not want to make decisions; he was suspicious of doctors; a doctor wanted the youngest child checked for a heart murmur; appellant refused this examination; one girl had a hearing problem; a doctor recommended tonsil and adenoid removal but appellant *273 declined to permit this; Anita had had a stroke when she was sixteen months of age; she needed arm and leg therapy and orthodontia; the witness took her for treatment one time but appellant would not permit her to be taken again; once when the youngest child was ill appellant stated he wasn’t up to taking the child to a doctor and a neighbor who had suggested that the child should have medical attention took him; appellant had a medical card for the entire family; the two oldest boys had a paper route; appellant was uninterested in obtaining work for himself; he did not want the children to play with other children in the neighborhood; the witness saw appellant intoxicated several times; once she roused him with great difficulty; he drank white wine; she discussed his drinking with him but he would not admit any problem although he went once to Alcoholics Anonymous.

A married couple, the Morgans, who were neighbors to appellant for three months prior to the time the children were taken, testified: They saw appellant drinking alcohol many times; he was frequently drunk and was in that condition nearly every day during the latter part of the period; the children requested help of Mrs. Morgan; Mrs. Morgan would clean up the mess in the house three or four times a week and both Morgans would prepare food when appellant was drank; sometimes he was “passed out” on the front porch; appellant was drinking hard liquor secured from a bootlegger; he occasionally would ask the children to take a drink; the Morgans saw appellant strike the children with his fists when he was drank; he required the children to wait on him; he was seen to eat first while the children got the leftovers; he slapped Anita once when she got the wrong pan, causing a braise on her face; he knocked one of the boys down when he came home from his paper route and didn’t turn over the money; appellant struck the smallest child on the face when he was sick and cried; Anita said her father slammed a door on her fingers because she was not working fast enough; the witnesses saw braises on her fingers, shoulders, arms and legs which Anita said appellant had caused.

A family service physician, who was also a psychiatrist, examined four of the children. He testified the twins had retarded speech, were emotionally immature, lacked socialization skills and were preoccupied with concerns of injury and abandonment. He believed the home conditions along with the loss of the mother con *274 tributed to their lack of development. He did not find the same conditions in the two older boys.

A child psychiatrist examined the two girls. He believed they had had adequate upbringing until the death of their mother. He found that Anita had a semi-paralyzed right hand, she was shy, had difficulty in pronouncing words and was afraid of receiving physical punishment from her father. Vianita had the same fear but showed less psychological disturbance than Anita. He believed placement in foster homes had been beneficial to both girls.

A county health department worker had visited the Nelson home in 1970; living condition's were poor, furniture was needed, the house was full of roaches and the two children were poorly dressed and needed clothing.

A Kansas Neurological Institute nutritionist attempted to help appellant learn to prepare commodity food; his tableware and kitchenware were inadequate and he failed to provide more; she made several visits in appellant’s home and to that of another client nearby; she saw appellant in a drunken condition several times; twice he was lying drunk in the yard in the morning and she had also seen him drunk on the front porch; wine bottles were in the yard and the house was a “total wreck”; she heard him arguing with a neighbor several times; on occasions the police were there; Anita said sometimes they had no chance to eat breakfast and sometimes didn’t eat until late at night.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
531 P.2d 48, 216 Kan. 271, 1975 Kan. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nelson-kan-1975.