Wilkins v. Ferguson

928 A.2d 655, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 462, 2007 WL 2048656
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 2007
Docket05-FM-1555, 05-FM-1556
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 928 A.2d 655 (Wilkins v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkins v. Ferguson, 928 A.2d 655, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 462, 2007 WL 2048656 (D.C. 2007).

Opinion

REID, Associate Judge:

This case involves the challenge of appellant, Cassaundra Wilkins, to the trial court’s order allowing her former husband and father of their biological daughter to have unsupervised visits with the child, despite the court’s prior findings that he had committed an intrafamily offense against his former wife and his child, and even though no health professional recommended unsupervised visits. We are constrained to reverse the order of the trial court because it does not reflect a consid *658 eration of relevant statutory provisions and case law, and because the record evidence does not support it.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

The record reveals that Mr. Ferguson filed for divorce in March 2001, and the trial court awarded him an Absolute Divorce from Ms. Wilkins on February 20, 2002. The court determined that joint legal custody of their sole biological child, A.F., who was born in Summer 1999, was in the best interest of the child, but that Ms. Wilkins should have primary physical custody of the child, with reasonable rights of visitation by Mr. Ferguson. The court also declared: “There is compelling evidence that [Mr. Ferguson] has committed, and [Ms. Wilkins] has suffered substantial physical, verbal and psychological abuse. This pattern of abuse existed throughout the marriage and had a profound impact on [Ms. Wilkins].”

Subsequently, in response to a motion filed by Ms. Wilkins, the trial court issued a temporary protection order on August 2, 2002, suspending all visitation between Mr. Ferguson and A.F., after A.F. had complained to her mother and others that Mr. Ferguson touched her inappropriately during one of her visits with him. 1 Visitation was to be suspended until AF.’s therapist submitted a report concerning whether visitation would be appropriate. The trial court issued a twelve-month civil protection order on October 7, 2002, after hearings and after finding that Mr. Ferguson touched A.F. inappropriately; the order continued suspension of supervised visitation.

The court ordered “a home study” or investigation in October 2002. In response to the trial court’s order, Jeryl McTootle, a Domestic Relations Officer in the Child Guidance and Family Counseling Clinic of the trial court’s Social Services Division, reported the results of the investigation of Ms. Wilkins, Mr. Ferguson, and A.F. on January 13, 2003. The report advised that (1) the Domestic Relations Officer was “uncomfortable proffering any recommendation regarding an unsupervised visitation arrangement” in light of the concern about possible inappropriate touching; (2) “Ms. Wilkins, seemingly a suitable custodian, appears to be providing appropriate care and a suitable home environment for [A.F.]”; (3) due to the restrictions on visitation, the officer “was unable to assess the quality of Mr. Ferguson’s relationship with [his daughter]”; and (4) “the opinion of [A.F.’s] attending therapist should be a *659 primary consideration given the allegations cited.”

On June 16, 2008, Dr. Nicole M. Alford, a Clinical Forensic Psychologist and a supervisor in the trial court’s Social Services Division, provided her views concerning visitation. Her conclusions were based upon her review of pertinent records as well as her observation of one visit between A.F. and Mr. Ferguson. She stated: “I would not recommend an unsupervised visitation arrangement at present.” She also advised: “To protect both child and father, it would be best to consider these visits when [A.F.] is of an age and developmental level where she can verbalize any possible untoward behavior, and where she can verbalize about the specifics of her visit with her father.”

The trial court entered an order on August 5, 2003, which resolved Ms. Wilkins’ request for modification of the trial court’s visitation order based on a report from A.F.’s therapist, Miranda S. Grant, a licensed clinical social worker and the Clinical Director of Grant-Grayton Urban Supports, Inc. Ms. Grant stated: “At this time (November 6, 2002) there is reasonable evidence that contact with father should be limited and monitored until treatment can progress further.” She cautioned against unsupervised visits: “There is significant evidence to support elimination of unsupervised visits with father.” 2 Ms. Wilkins asked for supervised visitation, and Mr. Ferguson advocated unsupervised visits or, in the alternative, visits supervised by his mother or another family member. The trial court recognized that its August 2003 decision was to be guided by D.C.Code § 16 — 1005(c—1) which specifies that a person who has committed an intra-family offense has the burden to show that “visitation will not endanger the child or significantly impair the child’s emotional development,” and that “the child and the custodial parent can be adequately protected from harm inflicted” by a person previously found to have committed an intrafamily offense. The court decided that Mr. Ferguson’s visits with his daughter should resume but should be supervised by his mother, and that at first they should only be day visits but, “absent further objection by either party, the visitation shall progress to overnight visitation after 4 months of day visits.”

Later, in November 2003, the trial court determined that “supervision will be necessary up until the 12/20/03 visit only”; and from January 2004 through April 9, 2004, Mr. Ferguson had unsupervised overnight visits with his daughter. Beginning around October 2003, A.F. was under the care of an associate psychotherapist, Sylvia Rosario of the Afro-American Counseling and Psychotherapy Institute. Ms. Rosario’s education included an undergraduate degree in psychology, a masters degree in education, courses in counseling and psychotherapy, and at the time of her involvement with A.F., she had around thirty years of experience in counseling. Ms. Rosario provided an affidavit for the court, dated December 6, 2004, and later testified during hearings held in 2005.

Ms. Rosario’s therapy notes reveal that she scheduled a session with A.F. following the child’s November 2003 visit with her father. At that session, Ms. Rosario noted that A.F. “was irritable, unresponsive, and *660 generally in an unhappy mood.” A.F.’s mood “was in stark contrast to her mood during sessions that occurred before she resumed visitation with Mr. Ferguson.” Thereafter, in sessions with Ms. Rosario, A.F. “voluntarily made statements [] regarding the sexual abuse that she had suffered, stating, for example, that ‘my Daddy put a stick in my poo-poo.’ ” 3 Ms. Rosario believed that A.F. “mistakenly held her mother, [Ms.] Wilkins, responsible for forcing her to attend visitation against her will.” A.F. made another accusation against Mr. Ferguson during an April 2004 session with Ms. Rosario. She said that her father “had ‘put a stick in her poo-poo.’ ” Ms. Rosario asked A.F. to draw a picture of what happened, and also to demonstrate by using a doll. A.F. drew the picture and pointed to the doll’s buttocks. Ms. Rosario “concluded that A.F. ha[d] been traumatized by sexual abuse during visitation in 2002 and between November 2003 and April 2004.” The therapist “strongly urged Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
928 A.2d 655, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 462, 2007 WL 2048656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkins-v-ferguson-dc-2007.