Vonner v. State ex rel. Department of Public Welfare

258 So. 2d 93, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5617
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 1972
DocketNo. 11758
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 258 So. 2d 93 (Vonner v. State ex rel. Department of Public Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vonner v. State ex rel. Department of Public Welfare, 258 So. 2d 93, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5617 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

HALL, Judge.

This is an action by a mother for damages arising out of the death of her five year old son who was beaten to death by a foster mother with whom the child had been placed by the Louisiana Department of Public Welfare. Named defendants were the foster mother, Ethel Bradford, her husband, Willie Bradford, and the State of Louisiana, through the Department of Public Welfare. The district court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff, Gracie M. Tensley Vonner, against Ethel Bradford for $4,500. Plaintiff’s demands against Willie Bradford and the Department were rejected. Plaintiff appealed, seeking a reversal of the adverse judgments in favor of Willie Bradford and the Department and seeking an increase in the award. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

Plaintiff is the mother of nine children, most of whom have been removed from her care on one or more occasions by court order. In June, 1968, the court placed several of the children in the custody of the Louisiana Department of Public Welfare. The Department placed 'three of the boys, Michael, Christopher and Johnny, in the home of Willie and Ethel Bradford and shortly thereafter, one of the girls, Pamela, was removed from another foster home and also placed with the Bradfords.

On January 14, 1970, Johnny Lealto Von-ner died at the Bradford home as a result of numerous injuries sustained at a time when only Ethel Bradford was present. She was indicted, tried and found guilty of manslaughter. The criminal conviction was pending on appeal during the trial of the case before us now. That conviction has since been affirmed. See: State v. Bradford, 259 La. 381, 250 So.2d 375 (1971).

There are three issues presented by this appeal:

(1) Was the Department guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of the death of Johnny Lealto Von-ner?
(2) Is Willie Bradford liable as head and master of the community for the acts of his wife which caused the death ?
(3) Is the award inadequate?

The cause of death was an issue at the trial below. Although apparently not an issue on appeal, we feel it is necessary to discuss the trial judge’s findings on this point because the manner in which the death occurred permeates all the issues on this appeal.

Mrs. Bradford testified the child was playing in a room which was being renovated and fell, presumably hitting his head [95]*95on a toy truck. She denied striking him, and contended that she stopped the bleeding and that he appeared to be “all right” until very shortly before her husband arrived from work, even talking and sharing a cold drink with the other children when they came from school. She stated Johnny appeared to “get sleepy” late in the afternoon and became unconscious, but she had no way to get assistance imtil her husband came home. He thought the child was dead when he arrived and called the sheriff’s office.

The coroner testified that he was summoned to the Bradford home and found the floor in the front room freshly scrubbed, clean clothes on the child’s body and the other clothes freshly washed. He observed cuts on the child’s head, pronounced it dead and arranged for removal of the body to a funeral home, where he performed an autopsy. He reported: a one and one-half inch cut on the left side of the scalp; two half inch cuts on the scalp in the right occipital area; bruises and lacerations in the left mastoid area and around the left eyelid; many healed lacerations on the scalp; swelling and discoloration of the right orbit; evidence of an old hematoma in the right temporal area estimated to be five to seven days old; substantial extra-dural hemorrhage in the right occipital area under the previously mentioned cuts; subdural hemorrhage under the cut in the left parietal area; substantial swelling of the brain; blood “in all cavities of the brain”; contusions, bruises and scratches over the front and side of the neck; tranverse brush burns of the chest; large amounts of fresh blood in the left side of the pleural cavity, with fractures of the second and third ribs on the left; contusions or brush burns on the abdomen, arms, back, thighs, and lower legs. He expressed the opinion that death resulted primarily from the internal hemorrhages in the brain and chest. He stated that the multiple injuries, most of which were recent, could not have resulted from a fall. He made a particular point of his observation that all marks or external evidence of trauma were horizontal or “crossways” on the head, body and extremities.

From this evidence the trial judge correctly found that “ . . .in the light of human experience and common knowledge, it is wholly unrealistic to conclude that the multiple physical injuries found by the coroner in his post-mortem could have been caused by a single fall such as that postulated by Mrs. Bradford. It is abundantly clear that the deceased child, shortly before his death received several severe blows to the head, chest and extremities, which must have been separately inflicted. According to all the evidence, no one but Mrs. Bradford was present who could have been responsible. The Court therefore concludes that Mrs. Bradford did strike the child with some object and did inflict injuries which caused or directly contributed to his death.”

There are other background facts pertinent to consideration of the issues raised on appeal. The Bradfords had served as foster parents in the Department’s foster care program for some time, without any problems. They had a good record with the Department and their reputation in their community was good. To all outward appearances, the children living with them were well cared for.

Pamela and Michael had run away from the Bradford home on three occasions. At the time of the runaways, their ages were eleven and thirteen respectively. On these occasions they told the welfare worker they ran away because Mrs. Bradford whipped or beat them. The welfare personnel observed the children and saw no evidence of physical abuse. They talked to Mrs. Bradford who denied abusing the children and gave other reasonable reasons for the children running away. Their running away was not inconsistent with their previous behavior and background. Pamela and Michael were no longer living with the Bradfords at the time of Johnny’s death, having been removed from that home after the last time they ran away.

[96]*96Although the guidelines and policies of the Department were that each foster home be visited by a worker at least once each two months and that the children receive a medical examination at least once a year, the Bradford home had not been visited for approximately three months prior to the date of Johnny’s death. The children had not received a medical examination since being placed with the Bradfords — a period of about a year and a half.

The morning after the tragedy the representatives of the Department took Christopher Vonner, who was still living in the Bradford home, to a pediatrician, Dr. Elaine Fichter, who took X-rays and examined the child completely. Dr. Fichter found the following: a bruise behind the ear, an old abrasion over the rib cage and a tender, welt-like swelling over the right arm and shoulder. As to the history which she obtained, Dr. Fichter testified, “Each time I asked him how it happened, it was his mother hit him with something.” The X-rays were sent to Dr. O. H. Vreeland, a radiologist, who found a healed fracture of a right rib and an old injury to the right humerus.

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Related

Vonner v. STATE EX REL. DEPT. OF PUBLIC WELFARE
273 So. 2d 252 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
258 So. 2d 93, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vonner-v-state-ex-rel-department-of-public-welfare-lactapp-1972.