In re E.A. , 2015 Me. LEXIS 38 ( 2015 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                         Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:   
    2015 ME 37
    Docket:     And-14-251
    Submitted
    On Briefs: February 26, 2015
    Decided:    March 24, 2015
    Panel:          SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, and JABAR, JJ.
    IN RE E.A. et al.
    MEAD, J.
    [¶1] The mother and father of E.A. and E.A. appeal from a judgment of the
    District Court (Lewiston, Beliveau, J.) finding jeopardy and the existence of
    aggravating factors pursuant to 22 M.R.S. §§ 4002(1-B)(B)(3), 4002(1-B)(B)(5),
    4002(1-B)(A)(1), and 4035 (2014). We conclude that the court did not err when it
    found aggravating factors as to the father or admitted in evidence an autopsy report
    of the parents’ son. Because the evidence supports the court’s findings, we affirm
    the judgment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2]    The following facts are supported by competent record evidence.
    See In re M.E., 
    2014 ME 98
    , ¶ 16, 
    97 A.3d 1082
    . On October 3, 2013, premature
    twins E.A. and E.A. were born at Maine Medical Center in Portland. Six days
    later, the Department of Health and Human Services (Department) petitioned for a
    child protection order, alleging that the twins were in circumstances of immediate
    2
    risk of serious harm based on the mother’s infliction of fatal injuries to the parents’
    adopted son in February 2003, and the father’s infliction of serious bruising to the
    son two days before his death. The court granted the petition. After spending
    several weeks in Maine Medical Center’s neonatal intensive care unit, the twins
    were discharged into a foster home. In an early December 2013 visit with their
    pediatrician, the mother and father declined to give consent for vaccinations for the
    twins. In January 2014, the twins received only two of the five recommended
    vaccines. On February 25, 2014, the court ordered that the twins be administered
    any and all vaccinations recommended by the pediatrician. The twins are currently
    healthy.
    [¶3] On May 30, 2014, the court concluded that E.A. and E.A. would be in
    circumstances of jeopardy to their health and welfare if returned to the custody of
    their parents.   The court found that the parents have failed to acknowledge
    responsibility for the injury and death of their adopted son.
    [¶4] The sequence of events that started in 2003, and which loomed large in
    the court’s consideration, are as follows: On February 13, 2003, when the son was
    less than two years old, the father beat him at least three times with a wooden
    spoon on his buttocks, leaving substantial bruises. The next night, the mother
    called 9-1-1 because the son had stopped breathing. She told the police that he had
    fallen several times during the day and hit his head on the bathtub and the floor.
    3
    The son died on February 15, 2003, after suffering retinal hemorrhages, optic nerve
    sheath hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage, cerebral edema, hemorrhage in
    muscle and soft tissue surrounding the upper cervical vertebrae, and a subdural
    hematoma. The Chief Medical Examiner determined that cranio-cervical trauma
    was the cause of death, and ruled the son’s death a homicide.
    [¶5] The mother was indicted for manslaughter in the son’s death. In her
    2005 jury trial, Dr. Lawrence Ricci testified for the State and concluded that the
    son’s injuries were not consistent with the mother’s statement of the events.
    Dr. Ricci opined that the son’s injuries were consistent with violent shaking and
    that the extent of his injuries could not be produced by a fall or a group of minor
    falls. The mother was convicted and sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment, with
    all but forty-two months suspended.      In a separate jury trial, the father was
    convicted of assault (Class C) for hitting the son with a wooden spoon and causing
    severe bruising. He was sentenced to eighteen months’ imprisonment, with all but
    six months suspended. We affirmed both convictions. State v. Allen, 
    2006 ME 20
    ,
    ¶ 1, 
    892 A.2d 447
    ; State v. Allen, 
    2006 ME 21
    , ¶ 1, 
    892 A.2d 456
    .
    [¶6] In its jeopardy order, the court concluded that the father’s inability to
    grasp the severity of the violence to which the son had been subjected, based
    primarily on the parents’ continued belief that his death was caused by an
    undiagnosed seizure disorder brought on by a vaccination, “present[s] a threat of
    4
    serious harm or serious injury to [the twins].” The court also found that the father
    “has not admitted to any wrongdoing” in the spanking that left severe bruising on
    the son two days before his death. It determined that the father’s “recent actions,
    including refusing to vaccinate his highly susceptible premature infants, show utter
    disregard for the health and welfare of [the twins].” The court similarly concluded
    that the mother is unable to show remorse for her actions, has not admitted to
    wrongdoing, and still maintains that the son died of an undiagnosed medical
    condition. After finding aggravating factors as to both the mother and father, the
    court relieved the Department of its obligation to provide the parents with
    reunification services. It ordered the twins to remain in foster care and established
    a permanency plan of adoption. Both parents timely appealed.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A.    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    [¶7] The parents argue that the evidence was insufficient to support the
    court’s findings and assert that their failure to take responsibility for the death of
    their son does not establish jeopardy. Jeopardy is defined as “serious abuse or
    neglect, as evidenced by . . . [s]erious harm or threat of serious harm” or
    “[d]eprivation of necessary health care when the deprivation places the child in
    danger of serious harm.”       22 M.R.S. § 4002(6)(A) and (B-1) (2014); see
    In re M.E., 
    2014 ME 98
    , ¶ 17, 
    97 A.3d 1082
    . We review a court’s factual findings,
    5
    which “must be supported by a preponderance of the evidence,” for clear error.
    In re M.E., 
    2014 ME 98
    , ¶¶ 16-17, 
    97 A.3d 1082
    . “[T]hose findings will be upheld
    unless there is no competent record evidence that can rationally be understood to
    establish as more likely than not that the child was in circumstances of jeopardy to
    his health and welfare.” 
    Id. ¶ 16
    (quotation marks omitted).
    [¶8] We conclude that there is more than sufficient evidence in the record to
    support the court’s findings establishing jeopardy as to both parents. Contrary to
    the parents’ contentions, the evidence supports the court’s findings that (1) the son
    died as a result of inflicted “severe violent shaking,” not an undiagnosed seizure
    disorder, and (2) the parents have not acknowledged wrongdoing regarding his
    death or the bruising inflicted by the father’s spanking. The mother contests the
    sufficiency of the evidence supporting the court’s jeopardy finding by relying on
    testimony of defense witnesses at her manslaughter trial and discounting the
    State’s witnesses, including Dr. Ricci, who concluded that the injuries “certainly
    were consistent with inflicted trauma more than accidental trauma.” Although the
    mother admitted to treating the son “roughly” the day of his death, believed that
    she should have secured medical attention sooner, and grieved after he died, she
    has never admitted that he died as a result of inflicted trauma. Although the father
    acknowledges that he hit the son with a wooden spoon and has promised not to use
    corporal punishment in the future, he also testified that hitting the son “was the
    6
    wrong thing to do because it didn’t work.” The father maintains that he was
    convicted of assault only because the son died and the jury saw a prejudicial photo
    of his injuries.
    [¶9] The court properly considered the parents’ past conduct and whether
    they have sufficiently accepted responsibility for their actions. “In child protection
    proceedings, what is past is often prologue regarding the threat of serious harm
    posed by the parent . . . .” In re E.L., 
    2014 ME 87
    , ¶ 14, 
    96 A.3d 691
    . “Evidence
    of historical behavior is relevant to a finding of jeopardy . . . . [T]he court must
    consider whether there is prospective jeopardy.              And in making that
    determination, . . . the trial court must consider what has happened in the past.” 
    Id. (citation and
    quotation marks omitted); see also In re Kafia M., 
    1999 ME 195
    ,
    ¶ 12, 
    742 A.2d 919
    (“While our inquiry as to ability to protect from jeopardy is
    prospective, the evidence we consider is retrospective.”). As Dr. Ricci testified,
    “the fact that there was a pattern of abusive physical discipline to [the son] . . . is
    relevant to future intervention [and] prediction.”         The parents continue to
    demonstrate a profound lack of insight regarding the cause of their son’s death.
    The court did not err given that, notwithstanding unequivocal testimony to the
    contrary, both parents maintain that the son’s death was caused by an undiagnosed
    7
    seizure condition brought on by a reaction to a vaccination that mimicked
    shaken-baby syndrome.1
    B.       Aggravating Factors
    [¶10] The court determined that the father’s assault conviction constituted
    an aggravating factor pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4002(1-B)(B)(5), which provides
    that an aggravating factor exists if a parent has been convicted of “[f]elony assault
    that results in serious bodily injury” against “a child for whom the parent was
    responsible.”       The father argues that his conviction pursuant to 17-A M.R.S.
    § 207(1)(B) (2014) was for bodily injury—not “serious bodily injury” as provided
    in section 4002(1-B)(B)(5). (Emphasis added.) See 17-A M.R.S. § 207(1)(B)
    (“A person is guilty of assault if . . . [he] intentionally, knowingly or recklessly
    causes bodily injury to another person who is less than 6 years of age.”). “We
    review de novo the court’s interpretation of [a] statute for errors of law, and review
    the court’s application of . . . statutory language to the facts at issue for abuse of
    discretion.” In re Ashley S., 
    2000 ME 212
    , ¶ 11, 
    762 A.2d 941
    , overruled on other
    grounds by In re B.C., 
    2012 ME 140
    , ¶ 14 n.2, 
    58 A.3d 1118
    .
    1
    The parents’ initial refusal to vaccinate the twins further confirms their current lack of insight. The
    pediatrician testified that vaccinations were particularly important for premature babies and that the
    parents declined to give consent for the vaccines at the two-month visit. At the jeopardy hearing, the
    father testified that he believed that a hepatitis B immunization had caused the son “to stop developing
    and growing.” That the parents ultimately consented to the vaccines does not render the court’s finding
    clearly erroneous.
    8
    [¶11] There was no error here. First, in addition to its finding pursuant to
    section 4002(1-B)(B)(5), the court also found that the father’s conduct constituted
    an aggravating factor pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4002 (1-B)(A)(1), which includes
    “any . . . treatment that is heinous or abhorrent to society.” The court properly
    concluded that bruising a child with a wooden spoon is “treatment that is heinous
    or abhorrent to society,” and therefore did not err in finding an aggravating factor
    on that basis alone. Further, based on the evidence and photographs presented, the
    court did not abuse its discretion in applying section 4002(1-B)(B)(5) to the facts
    here and concluding that the father committed an assault resulting in serious bodily
    injury to the son.
    C.    Documents of the Chief Medical Examiner
    [¶12]    Finally, the mother argues that documents produced during the
    criminal investigation into the son’s death—the investigative report, the autopsy,
    and the neuropathology report—were hearsay and that admitting them in evidence
    violated her substantive due process rights because she was unable to
    cross-examine their author. “A trial court’s decision to admit or exclude alleged
    hearsay evidence is reviewed for an abuse of discretion,” Walton v. Ireland,
    
    2014 ME 130
    , ¶ 12, 
    104 A.3d 883
    (quotation marks omitted), but we review
    de novo the application of the Confrontation Clause, State v. Johnson,
    
    2014 ME 83
    , ¶ 8, 
    95 A.3d 621
    .
    9
    [¶13]      The Confrontation Clause provides that “[i]n all criminal
    prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the
    witnesses against him.” U.S. Const. amend. VI; see also Me. Const. art. I, § 6.
    This right does not extend to civil matters, however. See, e.g., Covell v. Dep’t of
    Soc. Servs., 
    791 N.E.2d 877
    , 893 (Mass. 2003) (“There is no right of confrontation
    in civil proceedings.”).
    [¶14] “The due process to which a parent in a child custody proceeding is
    entitled does not rise to the same level as that accorded the defendant in a criminal
    prosecution.” In re Jo-Nell C., 
    493 A.2d 1053
    , 1055 (Me. 1985). Child protection
    proceedings, although “deserving of more elaborate procedural safeguards than are
    required for the determination of lesser civil entitlements” due to the
    “constitutional dimension” of the right to parent, 
    id., are nonetheless
    civil matters.
    The Confrontation Clause therefore does not apply in child protection proceedings.
    See, e.g., In re Noah W., 
    813 A.2d 365
    , 371 (N.H. 2002) (“Because an action to
    terminate parental rights is a civil proceeding, the Sixth Amendment confers no
    right of confrontation on the respondent.”); In re A.L., 
    669 A.2d 1168
    , 1170
    (Vt. 1995) (“[P]arents do not have a right to face-to-face confrontation in [child
    protection] proceedings.”).2 The court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the
    2
    See also In re D.B., 
    947 A.2d 443
    , 449 n.11 (D.C. 2008); In re L.K.S., 
    451 N.W.2d 819
    , 822
    (Iowa 1990); In re J.D.C., 
    159 P.3d 974
    , 981 (Kan. 2007); In re S.A., 
    708 N.W.2d 673
    , 679 & n.8
    (S.D. 2005) (citing cases).
    10
    documents, all of which were accompanied by a certificate of the Chief Medical
    Examiner. See 22 M.R.S. § 3022(6) (2014) (“Notwithstanding any other provision
    of law or rule of evidence, the certificate of the Chief Medical Examiner . . . shall
    be received in any court as prima facie evidence of any fact stated in the certificate
    or documents attached to the certificate.”).
    The entry is:
    Judgment affirmed.
    On the briefs:
    Jamesa J. Drake, Esq., Drake Law, LLC, Auburn, for appellant
    father
    Adam P. Sherman, Esq., Paradie, Sherman, Walker &Worden,
    Lewiston, for appellant mother
    Janet T. Mills, Attorney General, and Meghan Szylvian, Asst.
    Atty. Gen., Office of the Attorney General, Augusta, for
    appellee Department of Health and Human Services
    Lewiston District Court docket number PC-2013-73
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY