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Arkansas Department of Human Services v. Walker

Court: Court of Appeals of Arkansas
Date filed: 2016-04-13
Citations: 2016 Ark. App. 203, 489 S.W.3d 214
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2 Citing Cases

                               Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 203

                ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
                                     DIVISION II
                                    No. CV-15-1032


                                               Opinion Delivered   April 13, 2016
ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES                                 APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
                  APPELLANT                    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
                                               TENTH DIVISION
V.                                             [NO. JN2015-1058]

TORONTO WALKER AND LEVAR                       HONORABLE JOYCE WILLIAMS
ROUNSVILLE                                     WARREN, JUDGE
                  APPELLEES
                                               REVERSED AND REMANDED



                           M. MICHAEL KINARD, Judge

      On July 30, 2015, the Department of Human Services (DHS) took an emergency hold

on three of appellee Toronto Walker’s children: C.W., age fifteen; L.R.1, age eleven; and

L.R.2, age ten.1      DHS filed a petition for ex parte emergency custody and

dependency-neglect based on abuse, neglect, and parental unfitness as to the juveniles or

their sibling. An ex parte order for emergency custody was entered, followed by a probable

cause order.   After the adjudication hearing, the trial court adjudicated only C.W.

dependent-neglected and closed the case as to L.R.1 and L.R.2. DHS now appeals the order

of the trial court denying its petition to adjudicate L.R.1 and L.R.2 dependent-neglected.

We reverse and remand.



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       Appellee Levar Rounsville is the father of L.R.1 and L.R.2. The father of C.W.
was not a party in this case.
                                 Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 203

       Adjudication hearings are held to determine whether the allegations in a petition are

substantiated by the proof.       Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-327(a)(1)(A) (Repl. 2015).

Dependency-neglect allegations must be proven by a preponderance of the evidence. Ark.

Code Ann. § 9-27-325(h)(2)(B). We will not reverse the circuit court’s findings unless they

are clearly erroneous. Turner v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 2014 Ark. App. 655.

A finding is clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing

court on the entire evidence is left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has

been made. Id. In reviewing a dependency-neglect adjudication, we defer to the circuit

court’s evaluation of the credibility of the witnesses. Id.

       Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-303(18)(A) defines a dependent-neglected

juvenile as any juvenile who is at substantial risk of serious harm as a result of, among other

things, abuse of the juvenile or a sibling. The definition of abuse includes any nonaccidental

physical injury; intentionally or knowingly striking a child with a closed fist when physical

injury occurs; and intentionally or knowingly interfering with a child’s breathing with or

without physical injury. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-303(3)(A)(v)–(vii).

       Abuse shall not include physical discipline of a child when it is reasonable and

moderate and is inflicted by a parent or guardian for purposes of restraining or correcting the

child. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-303(3)(C)(i). Reasonable and moderate physical discipline

shall not include any act that is likely to cause and that does cause injury more serious than

transient pain or minor temporary marks. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-303(3)(C)(iii). The age,

size, and condition of the child and the location of the injury and the frequency or


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recurrence of injuries shall be considered when determining whether the physical discipline

is reasonable or moderate. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-303(3)(C)(iv).

       This case originated when police were called to an assault that had just occurred on

July 29, 2015. Little Rock Police Officer Mark Ison testified that both C.W. and Walker

told him that they had argued because Walker believed C.W. was cooking too many burritos

in the toaster oven. C.W. told Ison that Walker had hit him in the head and hands with a

cookie sheet. Walker claimed that she hit C.W. with the cookie sheet because he hit her in

the chest with his hand. Ison observed a small cut above one of C.W.’s eyes and a nick on

one of his hands; he did not see any marks on Walker. Walker was charged with domestic

battery in the third degree.

       C.W. told Ison that Walker had abused him and his siblings for years. C.W. said that

Walker beat him with an extension cord, and he showed Ison older scars, including one in

a loop shape caused by Walker doubling the cord over. Ison also spoke with C.W.’s adult

brother, Damonteago Barnum, who told Ison that Walker had choked L.R.1 and L.R.2.

Ison said that he spoke with L.R.1 and L.R.2 based on what he had been told about the

“lifetime of abuse.” When he spoke with L.R.1 and L.R.2 on the front porch of their

home, they looked at the ground and refused to make eye contact; however, Walker was

inside and the door was cracked open. Later at the police station, Ison spoke with L.R.1 and

L.R.2 separately, and they both told him that they had been choked by Walker before.

       Kristie Henderson, a DHS investigator, spoke with the children on July 30. C.W.

told her that, in addition to hitting him with the cookie sheet, Walker had also punched him


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with a closed fist in the head and the stomach. Henderson observed a bruise near C.W.’s

temple and scratches in the center of his chest, as well as older bruising on his arm.

Henderson observed loop-shaped bruising on the backs of both L.R.1 and L.R.2, and the

children told her that the injuries were caused by Walker. Pictures of the children’s injuries

were admitted into evidence.

       Walker admitted to Henderson that she had whipped the children with an extension

cord. Walker told her that the goal was to hit them on their bottoms, but they may have

been hit on their backs because they did not stay still. DHS had several prior contacts with

the family. A protective-services case was opened in December 2008 after an allegation that

C.W. had cuts, welts, and bruises. Other reports to the child-abuse hotline in July 2012 and

June 2015 alleged that Walker had physically abused the children, but these allegations were

deemed unsubstantiated.

       C.W. testified that during the assault, Walker hit him with the cookie sheet several

times and hit him in the head with a closed fist. He denied hitting her or doing anything

that would have caused her to hit him. C.W. said that he had witnessed Walker abuse L.R.1

and L.R.2 and that the abuse occurred almost every day. He said that Walker hit them with

a closed fist and an extension cord.

       The trial court adjudicated C.W. dependent-neglected upon finding that he was at

substantial risk of serious harm as a result of physical abuse by Walker. The court found that

there was no proof that L.R.1 and L.R.2 were at risk of harm, stating that there was no

evidence of recent injuries as the loop marks on their backs were old. The order closed the


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case as to L.R.1 and L.R.2.

       DHS argues that L.R.1 and L.R.2 were at substantial risk of serious harm as a result

of both Walker’s abuse of C.W. and Walker’s abuse of L.R.1 and L.R.2 themselves. We

agree. Even when only one child has signs of physical abuse, the statute is clear that a

juvenile can be at risk of serious harm, and thus dependent-neglected, based on an act of

abuse inflicted on the juvenile’s sibling. Turner v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 2014

Ark. App. 655; see also Arkansas Department of Human Services v. McDonald, 80 Ark. App. 104,

91 S.W.3d 536 (2002); Brewer v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 71 Ark. App. 364,

43 S.W.3d 196 (2001). Here, not only was there evidence of abuse of L.R.1 and L.R.2’s

sibling that placed them at risk of harm, but there was also evidence that they had been

abused themselves.

       The testimony at the adjudication hearing established that Walker admitted to hitting

C.W. with a cookie sheet, admitted to whipping the children with an extension cord, and

admitted that the extension cord hit their backs. All of the children had loop-shaped injuries

that the trial court recognized were from being hit with the extension cord. Pictures showed

that both L.R.1 and L.R.2 had several of these injuries on their backs. Furthermore, L.R.1

and L.R.2 both told a police officer that their mother had choked them. The children’s

adult brother told police the same thing. C.W. testified that Walker had consistently abused

him and his siblings for years, including hitting them with her fists.

       Although the trial court discounted the children’s loop-shaped injuries because they

were “old,” their existence is proof that the bounds of reasonable and moderate discipline


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were exceeded because the whippings caused more than minor temporary marks. Even if

they were old, the loop-shaped injuries demonstrated that the children were at substantial

risk of similar harm in the future. In Turner, supra, this court affirmed the adjudication of six

siblings as dependent-neglected based on the evidence that one child had welts on her back

after being whipped with a belt. Taking into consideration all of the evidence of abuse, we

are left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. The trial court’s

finding that L.R.1 and L.R.2 were not dependent-neglected is clearly erroneous.

Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

       Reversed and remanded.

       GLOVER and HOOFMAN, JJ., agree.

       Jerald A. Sharum, Office of Chief Counsel, for appellant

       Chrestman Group, PLLC, by: Keith L. Chrestman, attorney ad litem for minor children.

       Kimberly Eden, for appellee.




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