T.J. v. Missouri Department of Social Services, Children's Division

305 S.W.3d 469, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 229
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 2010
DocketNo. ED 93105
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 305 S.W.3d 469 (T.J. v. Missouri Department of Social Services, Children's Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.J. v. Missouri Department of Social Services, Children's Division, 305 S.W.3d 469, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 229 (Mo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

KURT S. ODENWALD, Presiding Judge.

Introduction

This case involves a single mother who left her six-year-old daughter home overnight in St. Charles County, without any supervision, while she spent the night away from her home somewhere in the City of St. Louis. T.J. (Mother) appeals from the Order and Judgment of the Family Court Division of the Circuit Court of St. Charles County upholding the ruling of the Child Abuse and Neglect Review Board (the Board), and finding by a preponderance of the evidence that Mother neglected her six-year-old daughter, G.J. (Daughter), under these circumstances. Finding no error in the judgment, we affirm.

Background

On the morning of July 20, 2007, at approximately 7:30 a.m., the St. Peters Police Department received a call from an alarm company indicating a residential alarm was going off at both the garage and front door of a home in St. Peters. Officers Cheryne Flint (Flint) and Todd Lewis (Lewis) were dispatched to the home. Upon arriving, Flint went to the front door, which she found neither latched or [471]*471locked. Flint was able to push open the door without turning the doorknob. As Lewis walked to the front of the house and the two officers prepared to enter the home, a neighbor from across the street approached the officers and stated that she turned the alarm off. The neighbor explained that the homeowner, Mother, called her with the alarm code and asked her to watch Daughter for a few minutes. The neighbor told the officers that when she went to the home to turn off the alarm, Daughter met her at the front door. Daughter told the neighbor that she did not know where her mother was and that she was scared. The neighbor then took Daughter to her home. Flint believed the alarm sounded when Daughter entered the garage to look for her mother’s car, and again went off at the front door when the neighbor entered the house to turn off the alarm.

Flint spoke with Daughter, who said she did not know where her mother was. Daughter told Flint that it was her second day of first grade. Daughter did not know her mother’s cell phone number and told the officers that she had been left home alone on one or two prior occasions.

At around 8:15 a.m., Mother arrived home. The officers then asked the neighbor to watch Daughter while they talked with Mother inside the house. Flint wrote in the police report that:

[Mother] approached me and said she was sorry about the alarm and said she appreciated the police coming to check on her house. [Mother] appeared to be dressed in her pajamas and her hair was disarrayed. I asked where [Mother] had been and [Mother] said she had gone to the store. I asked which store. [Mother] did not answer. I said did you go to Shop and Save right over here on Jungerman? [Mother] said ‘no, I was a little farther away than that.’ I asked again ‘where were you?’ [Mother] said that she was not at the store but at a friend’s house. I asked what friend. [Mother] said just a friend. I asked for the name of the friend. [Mother] would not answer. I asked [Mother] how long she had been gone. [Mother] said not long. I asked again what the name and phone number of the friend was. [Mother] started to cry and said please just give me a warning. I asked if the friend was male or female. [Mother] said female. I asked where her friend lived and [Mother] stated 270 and Dor-sett. I asked [Mother] how long she was really gone. [Mother] said she left about midnight. I asked if [Daughter] was left at home by herself while [Mother] was at her friends. [Mother] said yes but she was only planning on being gone a couple of hours while [Daughter] was sleeping but she fell asleep at her friends house.

Flint continued to interview Mother, who eventually admitted that she was at a male friend’s house. The officers contacted Mother’s male friend who said that Mother came to his house sometime between 11 p.m. and midnight.

Flint then contacted the Child Abuse Hotline. The police report also indicates that Flint “contacted Juvenile” and it was decided to leave Daughter in Mother’s custody because there was no history with the police department or DFS. Flint then retrieved Daughter from the neighbor’s house and got her ready for school. Lewis then transported Daughter to her elementary school.

Jessica Patsaros (Patsaros), a hotline investigator with the Children’s Division of the Department of Social Services (Children’s Division), then arrived at the home. Patsaros and the officers spoke with Mother in her home. Flint noted that the “house was very messy and there were dishes piled up in the sink, counters and [472]*472the stove. There were toys, mail and clothing on the floors and hallway.” Pat-saros interviewed Mother who admitted “that it was bad judgment on her part and that it would never happen again.” Mother also admitted that her male friend lived close to Interstate 70 and Union in the City of St. Louis. Mother “said that she did not mean to fall asleep at her friend’s house and that she had planned on only being gone for a couple of hours.” Patsa-ros concluded her interview and made an appointment with Mother for the next week. Patsaros advised Mother to clean up the house in the meantime. Patsaros returned to Mother’s home on July 26 and noted the house to be very clean, put together, and that the dishes were done.

After concluding her discussion with Mother on the morning of the incident, Patsaros went to Daughter’s school and spoke with Daughter in the presence of a school counselor. Daughter told Patsaros that her mother had gone to the store before while she was sleeping.

On July 30, 2007, after completing its investigation pursuant to Sections 210.110-210.165, RSMo.20001, the Children’s Division determined that the report of neglect was substantiated, and found by a preponderance of the evidence that Mother neglected Daughter by leaving her alone overnight without supervision.

At Mother’s request, on April 22, 2008, the Board 2 met to review the child abuse and neglect investigation. After reviewing the information, the Board upheld the Preponderance of the Evidence finding of the Children’s Division and placed Mother’s name on the Central Registry.3

Mother filed an application for de novo review of the Board’s decision with the Circuit Court of St. Charles County. A hearing on Mother’s application was held on April 28, 2009. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court noted:

—[T]he fact remains that there was a child, six years old, who was left at a house unsupervised, unattended for a significant period of time, during which a number of dangerous things could have happened.
Now, you know, God intervened and protected this child from anything weird happening, like a fire or the child waking up and walking out the door and a sex offender walking by at the same time. I mean, any number of weird things could have taken place here. Freak things maybe in the mind of some, but they certainly can take place. And if a child that age is left alone, that’s the kind of things you hear about tragically on news reports of things that — terrible that happen when children are by themselves and have no one to protect them.
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305 S.W.3d 469, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tj-v-missouri-department-of-social-services-childrens-division-moctapp-2010.