Tania J. v. Esther J.

147 A.D.2d 252, 543 N.Y.S.2d 47, 1989 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7903
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 15, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 147 A.D.2d 252 (Tania J. v. Esther J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tania J. v. Esther J., 147 A.D.2d 252, 543 N.Y.S.2d 47, 1989 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7903 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sullivan, J.

Petitioner, the Commissioner of Social Services of the City of New York, appeals from a Family Court order which dismissed child protective proceedings filed against respondent Esther J. for failure to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that she had abused her daughter, Tania, by allowing her live-in boyfriend, respondent Arthur Leon Little, to abuse the child sexually. Petitioner contends that the Family Court, which found that the child had, in fact, been sexually abused, erred in failing to credit Tania’s out-of-court statements that her mother knew of the abuse and did nothing to protect her, while crediting other of her out-of-court statements that Little had abused her.

The Family Court petition alleged that eight-year-old Tania was, pursuant to Family Court Act § 1012, a sexually abused and neglected child whose mother and "stepfather”, Little, "committed or allowed to be committed a sex offense” against her. Specifically, it was alleged that Tania was diagnosed in April 1986 as having gonorrhea, and 13 months later, after complaining that Little "had been touching her vaginal area”, found to have rectal and vaginal abnormalities. The petition further alleged that the mother, despite her knowledge of Little’s conduct, failed to protect the child.

At the fact-finding hearing, Dr. Leylegian, a senior resident in the emergency room at North Central Bronx Hospital, testified that she had, on May 28, 1987, in the presence of Ms. Gonzalez, a social worker, and Ms. Harrison, a registered nurse and member of the child protection team, performed a head-to-toe physical examination of Tania, which disclosed several abnormal findings, including an anal fissure or tear, an anal tag, or extra piece of tissue around the anus, and a [254]*254synechia, or chronic scar, between the hymenal ring and the labia minora.

According to Dr. Leylegian, the anal tag and the synechia could only have resulted from chronic digital or penile penetration. Dr. Leylegian believed it highly unlikely that the abnormalities could have been either self-inflicted or caused accidentally. Rather, she explained, such injuries were most often the result of chronic sexual abuse. Based on these findings, as well as Tania’s statement that Little had been "hitting her and touching her approximately eight times a week * * * in her vagina and her butt”, Dr. Leylegian concluded that Tania had been sexually abused.

Ms. Ruiz, a counselor at Victim Services Agency, to whom Tania and her family had been referred, met with Tania, her mother and Little on March 17, 1987, and thereafter had approximately 30 weekly counselling sessions with Tania alone. On May 18, after two months of counselling, Tania admitted that Little tounched her vagina and other private parts while she was taking a bath or in bed. The following week, Tania reiterated her account, this time adding that Little would usually touch her on Thursday nights when her mother was away at work. Tania stated that she had told her mother, who said that "she was going to take care of it.” Little, however, continued to touch her, as recently as the Thursday before the May 21 session with Ms. Ruiz.

Dr. Meltzer, an expert in the field of child sexual abuse, testified that in October 1987 she performed psychological examinations of Tania, who told her that one night at the beginning of second grade, while her mother was at work, Little came to her bed, pulled her nightgown up and touched her on her buttocks and vagina. Although Tania recanted this accusation during that same examination, she recalled how she had been taken to a hospital where, after an examination, "they believed her”. Tania told Dr. Meltzer that her mother had instructed her to tell the Judge that the incident never happened, and that if she did, they would all go away together on a trip.

In Dr. Meltzer’s opinibn, Tania’s statements as to what happened to her sexually were genuine. She had spoken about the matter spontaneously and had provided peripheral details, such as the time of year and day of occurrence, the clothes she was wearing, and Little’s actions initially in approaching her, and subsequently, all of which validated her account. Dr. [255]*255Meltzer opined that he did not have any reason to believe that Tania was fabricating. She did not display any hostility toward Little, and, in fact, wanted to return home to him and her mother. Any feelings of fear and sadness on her part, Dr. Meltzer believed, were typical of children who have been abused. Her recantation was also "very typical”. In fact, Dr. Meltzer suspected that, far from lying about the incident, Tania was withholding information during her examination, and that there may have been other incidents of sexual abuse as well. Dr. Meltzer testified that she believed that by the time of her examination five months after the incident, Tania was already under pressure to recant her story and was upset about the consequences of having disclosed it.

Medical records from Martin Luther King, Jr. Health Center indicated that specimens taken from Tania on April 10, 1986 were positive for gonorrhea of the rectum, cervix and pharynx. North Central Bronx Hospital records refer repeatedly to conversations with the mother concerning Tania’s condition. They indicate that on May 28, 1987, at the time of Dr. Leylegian’s examination, Tania stated that she "was touched by her stepfather (and hit by. him) approximately 8 times last week in 'her bajima and her butt * * *’. [Tania] states her stepfather entered her bedroom at night before bedtime and touched her at that time. [Tania] also states she told her mother about her stepfather’s touching her, and one night the mother 'pulled him (the stepfather) off of [her].’ ” That account is reiterated in the social work note signed by Ms. Gonzalez, who noted that Tania stated that "Leon comes into my room at night and hit my vagina.” Ms. Gonzalez further noted Tania’s statement that "one time my mother came in the room and pulled him off me,” adding, "[c]hild states she told mother that Leon had been touching her and mom said she would make him stop. Child appeared frightened, withdrawn.” A further note in the triage evaluation form signed by C. Kagan, RN, indicates, "Mother states that child said her stepfather 'touched her’.”

In her own testimony the mother denied that Tania had ever told her that Little was sexually abusing her. The only time that she heard about any such incidents prior to the instant case was when a representative from Social Services for Children (SSC) informed her that Tania had told her counselor, Ms. Ruiz, that Little had "touched” her. She admitted, however, that her hours of employment were rotated, and [256]*256that when she had the night shift, Tania would stay either at home with Little or at her grandmother’s home.

The mother further testified that at the time Tania was discovered to have gonorrhea in April 1986, both she and Little were tested and that the tests proved negative. She admitted, however, that, prior to the testing she and Little underwent in April of 1986, neither of them had ever been tested for the disease.

The mother admitted that although she suspected someone had done "something” to Tania because she had contracted gonorrhea, she did not attempt to seek counselling for almost a year. Nor did she, on June 1, 1987, when she was informed that Tania had physical signs of sexual abuse, ever contact any of the doctors who had examined Tania to learn more about their findings.

Little also testified.

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Bluebook (online)
147 A.D.2d 252, 543 N.Y.S.2d 47, 1989 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tania-j-v-esther-j-nyappdiv-1989.