Townsley v. Marion County Department of Child Services

848 N.E.2d 684, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 1062, 2006 WL 1529491
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 2006
Docket49A02-0508-JV-802
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 848 N.E.2d 684 (Townsley v. Marion County Department of Child Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townsley v. Marion County Department of Child Services, 848 N.E.2d 684, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 1062, 2006 WL 1529491 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

SULLIVAN, Judge.

Appellant, Cleveland Townsley 1 (“Father”), challenges the juvenile court’s order determining his child, C.T., to be a child in need of services (“CHINS”). Upon appeal, Father challenges the CHINS adjudication by claiming that the admission of child hearsay evidence during the hearing did not comport with the requirements of Indiana Code § 31-34-13-3 (Burns Code Ed. Repl.2003), and that in light of this inadmissible evidence, there was insufficient evidence to support the CHINS adjudication. 2

We reverse and remand.

C.T. was born on October 7, 1996 and was eight years old at the time of the events leading to the CHINS petition. 3 According to Tashawna Sowell, who was Father’s ex-girlfriend, 4 C.T. called her on January 26, 2005 after she moved out of Father’s house and told her Father had been touching him inappropriately. Sowell testified to the following at the June 30, 2005 fact-finding hearing:

“He in his own words, he said, Mom, I’m tired and I’m ready to tell the truth. And I said tell the truth about what? And he said um he started to cry a little bit, and I was like, now you got to be strong, tell me what? What are you talking about? And he said every time I go to sleep my daddy be playing with me. And I started crying and I said [C.T.] I know you not lying. Don’t lie to me about this cause just don’t be telling me something thinking that you can come with me because I’m not your legal parent. You know you cannot come with me. And he said Mama I promise I’m not lying. And I just told him to go *686 to school and have a nice day and I’ll talk more about it when he get out of school. And once he got out of school that half a day he told me that he didn’t want to go back over there no more. Can I call ... his midtown lady that he was going to go see for his treatment or whatever and I told him that nm I asked him where was he at and he said he was over to his grandmother’s house and I said I’m on my way over there to come get you. And he said Mom well come on cause you know my daddy don’t want, if my daddy find out you talking to me my daddy gonna whoop me.” Tr. at 49-50.

Sowell further testified that “some nights” in the past, when she was staying with Father, C.T. would become jittery about her leaving him there. She further testified that when C.T. was four years old and went to stay with his biological mother, C.T. told her about Father’s “messing” with him but that his mother had not believed him, and that C.T. had begged not to be sent back to Father’s house out of fear that Father would “beat” him. Tr. at 51.

Sowell called Y’Nesha Johnson, who worked as an out-patient therapist with Midtown Community Mental Health Center and who had been seeing C.T. for his ADHD diagnosis. Johnson testified that she interviewed C.T. after Sowell brought him in and that during the interview C.T. spoke to her about being molested. According to Johnson, she first spoke with Sowell about C.T.’s claims, and then she proceeded to ask C.T. what Johnson admitted were probably leading questions about his claims. Johnson testified that C.T. had told her that Father had touched and penetrated his “behind.” Tr. at 64. C.T. further reportedly stated that Father had touched him underneath his clothes. Johnson indicated that C.T.’s answers appeared somewhat contrived and that she could not tell if C.T.’s answers were reliable. Johnson further testified that C.T. expressed fear at the prospect of returning home because of Father’s sexual abuse.

According to Dale Reynolds, an investigator with Child Protective Services (“CPS”) of the Indiana Department of Child Services (“DCS”), 5 he was assigned to investigate the case involving C.T. on January 26, 2005. Reynolds testified that there had been a report to his agency that C.T. had stated he was being made to sleep with Father and that Father had touched his private parts. Reynolds understood that the alleged touching did not include penetration, so he did not seek medical attention for him. In investigating the report Reynolds testified that he went to Children’s Bureau where the child was, talked to a therapist and to Sowell and received authorization to remove C.T. Reynolds ultimately took C.T. to Lynette Garcia for an interview.

Lynette Garcia, a forensic child interviewer with the Child Advocacy Center, testified that she also interviewed C.T. Garcia testified that she used open-ended questions rather than leading questions in the interview. After indicating that she believed C.T.’s statements were reliable, 6 Garcia related that C.T. had told her that Father touched the “outside of his butt *687 with his wee-wee” on more than one occasion, beginning in December of 2004, with the last incident occurring on January 26 of 2005. Tr. at 73. C.T. did not indicate to Garcia that the touching included penetration. Garcia understood that, according to C.T., both he and his father were wearing “drawers and robes” at the time, and that the touching happened on the outside of C.T.’s clothes while C.T. was asleep. Tr. at 73. Garcia further testified that C.T. had told her he wished to live with Sowell.

Father testified that C.T. had lived with him the past eight years, and in that time he had never sexually molested C.T. in any way. Father claimed that Sowell had been living with him, but that he had made her leave because she was “snortin’ and smoking that stuff.” Tr. at 88. According to Father, Sowell responded to Father’s kicking her out with the allegations now at issue. Father also offered into evidence a valentine C.T. had given him during a supervised visit following C.T.’s removal in which C.T. expressed his love for Father and his wish to return home.

At the start of the June 30 fact-finding hearing in which the above testimony was heard, Father objected to the introduction of child hearsay evidence. In response to Father’s preliminary objection, the court stated, “[Y]our second issue is premature because they haven’t offered anything yet. [Wje’ll entertain that objection if and when such evidence is presented.” Tr. at 23. DCS then introduced into evidence as a business record, over objection by Father, an affidavit signed by Clinical Psychologist Dr. Marla Smith stating that there was a substantial likelihood of emotional or mental harm to C.T. if he were to testify in the CHINS proceeding. Throughout the hearing Father objected to the introduction of evidence regarding C.T.’s allegations as testified to by Reynolds, Sowell, Johnson, and Garcia. The court overruled Father’s objections to C.T.’s hearsay evidence. 7 Following the hearing, the court found that the DCS had met its burden of proof with respect to both Father and Mother that C.T. was in need of services. The court continued C.T.’s placement in foster care and gave Father supervised visitation with C.T.

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Bluebook (online)
848 N.E.2d 684, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 1062, 2006 WL 1529491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsley-v-marion-county-department-of-child-services-indctapp-2006.