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2. Child Abuse and Neglect-_neglect--findings of fact
The trial court did not err by concluding the juveniles were neglected as defined by
N.C.G.S. § 7B-101(15) in that the minor children do not receive proper care, supervision, or
discipline from respondent mother and stepfather, and live in an environment injurious to their
welfare, because: (1) a parent's conduct in a neglect determination must be viewed on a case-by-
case basis considering the totality of the evidence; and (2) all of the findings, and not simply the
finding of fact regarding the thumping game that left a bruise on one child's face, show that the
children's physical, mental, and emotional well-being was, at a minimum, at substantial risk of
being impaired based on improper care.
3. Child Abuse and Neglect-_best interests of child--custody awarded to father
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in a child abuse and neglect case by
determining that a return to respondent mother's home was not in the best interests of the two
minor children, because given the evidence establishing abuse and neglect in this case, the trial
court's decision to award custody of the children to their father, to limit respondent mother's
visits with the children by requiring them to be supervised, and to prohibit any contact between
the children and respondent stepfather, was the result of a reasoned decision guided by the best
interests of the juveniles.
4. Child Abuse and Neglect-_findings of fact--clear, cogent, and convincing evidence
The trial court did not err in a child abuse and neglect case by its findings on adjudication
and disposition, because: (1) although respondent stepfather challenges finding of fact 7 based on
the fact that it incorrectly states the birth month of the two minor children, these errors are
immaterial to the court's adjudication decision; (2) although respondent stepfather challenges
finding of fact 11, the Court of Appeals has already addressed the ample evidence finding that
respondent struck one of the minor children with a brush; (3) with respect to finding of fact 12 in
the adjudication order and finding of fact 8 in the disposition order, there was no evidence which
would suggest or prove that the minor child's biological father caused the bruise on the back of
the child's right thigh; (4) with respect to finding of fact 15, the mother admitted the minor child
sustained a bruise on her face after a thumping game, and findings of fact which are supported
by competent evidence are conclusive on appeal even in the face of conflicting evidence; (5) with
respect to finding of fact 20, DSS records were admitted into evidence at the adjudication and
disposition hearings, and included a report that case planning and family preservation services
were offered to the family at three intervals; (6) in regard to the finding of fact about the minor
child's bathing routine, respondent father gave his implied consent to this evidence by failing to
object to the evidence when it was offered; and (7) although respondent contends the findings of
fact in the adjudication and disposition orders are really conclusions of law, all but two of the
challenged findings are statutorily required to be included, and the two remaining conclusions are
supported by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence.
Haywood County Department of Social Services, by Ira L. Dove,
for Petitioner-Appellee.
Michael E. Casterline for Respondent-Mother.
Appellate Defender Staples Hughes, by Assistant Appellate
Defender Keischa M. Lovelace and Duncan B. McCormick, for
Respondent-Stepfather.
STEPHENS, Judge.
Respondent-Appellants (Respondents) are the biological
mother and the stepfather of the minor children, L.T.R. and J.M.R.
Respondents appeal the 17 June 2005 order of Judge Leslie
adjudicating L.T.R. as abused and neglected, and J.M.R. as
neglected. They also appeal the 28 June 2005 disposition order of
Judge Letts granting custody of both children to their biological
father. For the reasons discussed herein, we affirm the trial
court's determinations.
The evidence tended to show that after a report was made to
the Haywood County Department of Social Services (DSS), Allison
Holmes, an investigator, observed a six-inch bruise on L.T.R.'s
right thigh on 31 October 2004. She took pictures and asked L.T.R.
about the bruise. L.T.R., who was almost four years old at the
time, reported that Respondent Stepfather hit him with a brush.
When Ms. Holmes asked the child why he had been hit, he responded
that he gets in trouble a lot. He told Ms. Holmes that he was
frightened of his stepfather. Ms. Holmes also observed a bruise on
the face of J.M.R., who reported that she received the bruise after
falling in the bathtub. Ms. Holmes, however, believed the bruise
looked like a fingerprint. J.M.R., who was five years old at the
time, told Ms. Holmes that Respondent Stepfather call[ed] [L.T.R.]
stupid and yell[ed] at [L.T.R.]. The biological father of the children testified that L.T.R.
did not want to tell him about the bruise, but did so after being
prompted by J.M.R. He said he became angry upon observing the
bruise because the bruise was a little too big of a bruise to see
on a kid and not get irate. He further testified that he heard
Respondent Mother tell L.T.R. on the phone to say that the bruise
was the result of falling in the bathtub.
Lucy McFarland, a social worker and investigator with DSS,
testified that Respondent Mother and Respondent Stepfather
adamantly denied that they had left a bruise on [L.T.R.].
Respondent Mother stated that J.M.R.'s bruised face was a result of
a thumping game. On 5 November 2004, Ms. McFarland took L.T.R.
to Dr. Stephen Wall for a medical examination.
Dr. Wall, stipulated as an expert in pediatrics and the
diagnosis and treatment of child abuse, examined L.T.R. and
observed a faint bruise about six inches long over his right
posterior upper thigh. He testified that L.T.R. told him that
Respondent Stepfather hit him on the leg with a purple brush. Dr.
Wall reviewed the photographs of the bruise that were taken by Ms.
Holmes and opined that the bruise was [a]t least several days old
when the photographs were made. He testified further that it was
[v]ery unlikely that L.T.R.'s bruise was the result of a fall in
the bathtub. Regarding the amount of force it would take to causesuch a bruise, Dr. Wall stated: I would say that's considerable
force to use on a child of that age to leave a bruise like that.
And I would call it quite inappropriate. Elaborating, he likened
the amount of force necessary to cause such a bruise to someone
[falling] from a pretty considerable height with great velocity
. . . like an eight foot fall onto an edge[.]
Respondent Mother testified that she did not see the bruise on
L.T.R. until a social worker told her about it. She further
testified that L.T.R. told her he got the bruise when he slipped
and fell in the bathtub. Respondent Mother denied that she
instructed L.T.R. on how to explain the bruise. However, Catherine
Scott, the social worker who supervised visits between the children
and Respondent Mother, testified that L.T.R. told her Respondent
Mother had called Respondent Stepfather on the phone during a
visit, and both of them told L.T.R. to say that he had fallen on a
plastic toy boat in the bathtub and caused the injury. L.T.R. told
Ms. Scott that Respondent Stepfather promised him a big wheel if
he said that he had fallen on a boat. L.T.R. also told Ms. Scott,
however, that Respondent Stepfather had hit him with a brush.
At the conclusion of the adjudication hearing, the trial court
found and concluded that L.T.R. was an abused and neglected
juvenile and that J.M.R. was a neglected juvenile. At the
subsequent disposition hearing, Ms. Scott, on behalf of DSS,recommended that custody of L.T.R. and J.M.R. be given to the
biological father. At the conclusion of the disposition hearing,
the trial court ordered that Respondent Stepfather have no contact
with the juveniles and that the biological father have custody of
the children, with weekly supervised visitation by Respondent
Mother. From the adjudication and disposition orders, Respondents
appeal.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-101(1) (2005). Section 7B-101 does not define
serious physical injury. However, this Court has recently
considered what constitutes serious physical injury for purposes of
felony child abuse charges in State v. Romero, 164 N.C. App. 169,
595 S.E.2d 208 (2004). We find the reasoning in Romero instructive
here.
In Romero, we held that evidence that the defendant hit his
one-year-old son at least once with a belt, that the child began to
cry after being hit, and that the child suffered a visible bruise
to his forehead as a result of being hit was sufficient to prove a
serious physical injury and, therefore, to support the defendant's
conviction of felony child abuse. This Court was not persuaded by
defendant's argument that the child's bruise was not a serious
injury because it was small and there was no evidence of the nature
of the injury and degree of pain associated with the injury.
Noting that neither the statute nor case law requires that the
injured child receive immediate medical attention to sustain adetermination that the injury is serious, this Court reasoned that
whether an injury is serious is generally a question for the jury
because the nature of an injury is dependant [sic] upon the
relative facts of each case[.] Id. at 172, 595 S.E.2d at 211
(citations omitted).
For this reason, we find Respondents' reliance on Scott v.
Scott, supra, unpersuasive.
(See footnote 2)
The child in Scott was old enough to
be in school and to have been suspended from school for fighting.
He was old enough to have challenged his mother's authority by
physical and verbal intimidation and mature enough to manipulate
the estranged relationship between his parents to his favor. By
contrast, L.T.R. had not yet reached his fourth birthday when the
spanking at issue occurred. Instead of temporary red marks,L.T.R. had a dark, six-inch bruise, which lasted well over one
week, on his right thigh. Ample convincing evidence established
that L.T.R. received the bruise from a severe blow delivered by
Respondent Stepfather with a brush. Moreover, although the
evidence is silent as to the nature and amount of pain L.T.R. may
have experienced when the blow was delivered, the child was still
experiencing sufficient discomfort to utter Ow several days later
while rolling around on a bed watching cartoons. Given the
description of the bruise when it was discovered [a]t least
several days later, the fact that L.T.R. experienced discomfort at
that time from simply playing on a bed, and Dr. Wall's testimony
that it would have taken considerable force to cause such a
bruise, it strains reason and credulity to suggest, as Respondents
do, that the infliction of this injury on this little boy cannot
constitute abuse as a matter of law, because there is no direct
evidence of great pain or suffering.
We agree with the Romero decision that the nature of an injury
is dependent upon the facts of each case and, based on the evidence
before us in this case, we reject Respondents' derogation of the
nature of the injury suffered by L.T.R. We hold that the evidence
is sufficient to sustain the trial court's determination that
L.T.R. is an abused juvenile, as defined by N.C.G.S. 7B-101(1), in
that the Respondent mother . . . and stepfather . . . inflicted orallowed to be inflicted upon the juvenile a serious physical injury
by other than accidental means.
. . . .
11. That [Respondent Stepfather] hit [L.T.R.]
with a brush causing this bruise. The force
to cause such bruising was so considerablethat the bruise was visible at least eight
days after the incident when Dr. Steven [sic]
Wall examined the child on the 5th day of
November 2004.
12. That the bruise on [L.T.R.] was caused by
[Respondent Stepfather] during the week of
October 25, 2004 to October 29, 2004 while the
child was in the custody of Respondent mother
[] and stepfather [].
. . . .
15. That also on the 31st day of October 2004
Social Worker Holmes observed a fingertip-
shaped bruise on the face of [J.M.R.]. This
bruise was caused by the Respondent mother
playing a thumping or flicking game with the
five-year old child, causing bruising to
[J.M.R.].
. . . .
20. That at the time of the filing of
petitions in these matters the Haywood County
Department of Social Services had made the
following reasonable efforts to prevent or
eliminate the need for placement of the
juveniles: family preservation services on at
least four separate occasions; medical exam of
[L.T.R.]; protection plan with Respondent
mother and stepfather.
The disputed finding of fact in the order on disposition is:
8. That regarding the events related to the
abuse and neglect of these children and in the
presence of the children by [Respondent
Stepfather], the abuse and neglect was not
caused or in any way related to any actions by
the [biological] father in this matter[.]
Respondent Stepfather challenges Finding of Fact 7 because it
incorrectly states the birth month of J.M.R. and L.R.P. AsPetitioner DSS correctly points out, these errors are immaterial to
the court's adjudication decision. This argument is wholly lacking
in merit and is rejected.
As for Respondent Stepfather's challenge to Finding of Fact
11, we have previously addressed the ample convincing evidence that
supports the trial court's finding that Respondent Stepfather
struck L.T.R. with a brush. The trial court heard evidence from
the biological father, and DSS investigators Holmes and Scott, who
testified L.T.R. consistently reported to them that the bruise on
his leg was caused by being hit with a brush by Respondent
Stepfather. Dr. Wall, to whom L.T.R. also reported that his
stepfather hit him with a brush, testified that the injury was
consistent with being forcefully struck with an object. This is
clear, cogent and convincing evidence to support this contested
finding of fact. In addition, with respect to Finding of Fact 12
in the adjudication order and Finding of Fact 8 in the disposition
order, Respondent Stepfather argues that clear, cogent and
convincing evidence does not exclude the biological father as a
potential cause of the bruise. This argument, too, wholly lacks
merit inasmuch as there is not a shred of evidence which would even
suggest, much less prove, that L.T.R.'s father caused the bruise on
the back of his right thigh. On the contrary, all the evidence
establishes that the bruise was already several days old by thetime the biological father discovered it, and that it resulted from
the severe blow delivered to L.T.R.'s leg by Respondent Stepfather.
We hold that these disputed findings are supported by sufficient
evidence.
Turning to Respondent Stepfather's challenge to Finding of
Fact 15, the evidence supporting this finding includes Ms. Holmes's
testimony that she observed a fingerprint bruise on the face of
J.M.R. on 31 October 2004, and the testimony of Ms. McFarland that
Respondent Mother told her the bruise was caused by a thumping
game wherein the children were struck in the face by the other
family members. Respondent Stepfather argues this evidence is
insufficient to support this finding of fact because J.M.R. told
the social worker she sustained the bruise when she fell. We
disagree. The clear and convincing evidence to support this
finding of fact was provided by Ms. McFarland, who testified
unequivocally that when she asked how J.M.R. sustained the bruise
on her face, J.M.R.'s mother replied, it was that thumping. We
note again that findings of fact of the trial court which are
supported by competent evidence are conclusive on appeal, even in
the face of conflicting evidence. In re Norris, supra.
As for Respondent Stepfather's argument that Finding of Fact
20 was erroneously entered, we note first that the DSS records were
admitted into evidence at the adjudication and dispositionhearings. The records included a court report, dated 9 June 2005,
which stated that case planning and family preservation services
were offered to the family at three intervals from February to
August 2003, January to April 2004, and November 2004 to May 2005.
Additional documentation revealed family preservation services from
March 2002 to June 2002. Plainly, there was plenary evidence
before the court to support this finding of fact.
Respondent Stepfather additionally argues, however, that
Finding of Fact 20 was erroneously included in the adjudication
order because the trial court did not dictate this finding in open
court, and because the DSS attorney who drafted the written order
was limited by the judge to drafting jurisdictional findings.
Because this finding is unnecessary to the trial court's
determination that the minor children were abused and/or neglected,
it is unnecessary for us to address this argument.
Respondent Stepfather next argues that the trial court erred
in making findings of fact regarding L.T.R.'s bathing routine.
Specifically, he argues that because the juvenile petition filed by
DSS did not contain allegations regarding L.T.R.'s bathing routine
and allege that activity as a basis for neglect of L.T.R., the
finding of fact and conclusion of law regarding the bathing routine
were erroneously entered because they were outside the scope of the
petition. We disagree. The adjudicatory hearing shall be a judicial process designed
to adjudicate the existence or nonexistence of any of the
conditions alleged in a petition. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-802
(2005). In this case, the petition stated in an attachment that
[t]he Respondent mother and her husband maintain that the bruise
on [L.T.R.] is from the child slipping in the bathtub. Therefore,
[L.T.R.] was residing in the home of his mother and stepfather when
this bruising occurred. Petitioner contends that this paragraph
put Respondents on notice that this issue may arise at trial.
Further, the Rules of Civil Procedure are applicable to
Chapter 7B proceedings. In re D.L., 166 N.C. App. 574, 603 S.E.2d
376 (2004). Rule 8 requires that a pleading contain [a] short and
plain statement of the claim sufficiently particular to give the
court and the parties notice of the transactions, occurrences, or
series of transactions or occurrences, intended to be proved
showing that the pleader is entitled to relief[.] N.C. Gen. Stat.
§ 1A-1, Rule 8 (2005). Under the liberal standard of notice
pleading, a claim is adequate if it gives sufficient notice of the
events that produced the claim to enable the adverse party to
understand the complaint's nature and basis and to file a
responsive pleading. Ripellino v. N.C. Sch. Bds. Ass'n, 176 N.C.
App. 443, 627 S.E.2d 225 (2006). Respondent Stepfather did not testify at the adjudicatory
hearing. However, his wife, mother of the children, clearly
defended the allegations against her and her husband by offering
evidence that L.T.R. sustained the bruise on his right leg from
falling in the bathtub. Indeed, on direct examination, Respondent
Mother was asked to describe her bathing procedure for L.T.R.,
and she then explained his nightly bath routine as follows:
I would turn the water on for him, make sure
it was the right temperature and let him have
at it. He would play and he would rough house
in there. He would have a good time and he
would splash the water around and we would go
about our business cooking dinner just playing
around with the other kids and then he would
yell out after about 20 or 30 minutes, I'm
ready to get out. And then I would go in
there and I would make sure his hair was
washed. Because he was three years old at the
time[.]
Respondent Mother then identified and offered into evidence a
plastic toy boat that she contended was responsible for the bruise
on her son's leg. All of this evidence was elicited without
objection by Respondent Stepfather.
Rule 15(b) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure
provides that [w]hen issues not raised by the pleadings are tried
by the express or implied consent of the parties, they shall be
treated in all respects as if they had been raised in the
pleadings. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 15(b) (2005). In thepresent case, Respondent Stepfather gave his implied consent by
failing to object to the evidence when it was offered. In Concrete
Serv. Corp. v. Investors Group, Inc., 79 N.C. App. 678, 683, 340
S.E.2d 755, 759 (citations omitted), cert. denied, 317 N.C. 333,
346 S.E.2d 137 (1986), this Court held that a party attempting to
limit the trial of issues by implied consent must object
specifically to evidence outside the scope of the original
pleadings; otherwise, allowing an amendment to conform the
pleadings to the evidence will not be error, and, in fact, is not
even technically necessary. Accordingly, we hold that Respondent
Stepfather impliedly consented to the adjudication of this issue
before the trial court, and the trial court did not err in making
findings of fact and conclusions of law on the evidence thus
presented. This assignment of error is overruled.
Finally, Respondent Stepfather argues that the trial court
erred in making findings of fact in the adjudication and
disposition orders that are really conclusions of law. All but two
of the findings of fact challenged by these assignments of error
are statutorily required to be included in the trial court's
adjudication and disposition orders. See N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 7B-
507(a)(1)-(a)(2); 7B-807 (2005). The two disputed findings of fact
not statutorily required (that L.T.R. is an abused juvenile, and
that both L.T.R. and J.M.R. are neglected juveniles) are not onlysupported by clear, cogent and convincing evidence as previously
addressed, but are also properly recited as conclusions of law.
This argument has no merit.
In conclusion, we hold that the trial court did not err in
either the adjudicatory or disposition orders finding and
concluding that L.T.R. was neglected and abused and that J.M.R. was
neglected. The orders appealed from are thus
Affirmed.
Judges WYNN and HUDSON concur.
The judges concurred prior to 31 December 2006.
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