IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 17-1393
Filed December 6, 2017
IN THE INTEREST OF S.D.,
Minor Child,
C.D., Mother,
Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Webster County, Angela L. Doyle,
District Associate Judge.
A mother appeals the order adjudicating her child as a child in need of
assistance. AFFIRMED.
Neven J. Conrad of Baker, Johnsen, Sandblom & Lemmenes, Humboldt,
for appellant mother.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Mary A. Triick, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee State.
Sarah J. Livingston of Thatcher, Tofilon & Livingston, P.L.C., Fort Dodge,
for minor child.
Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Doyle and Mullins, JJ.
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DANILSON, Chief Judge.
A mother appeals the order adjudicating her child as a child in need of
assistance (CINA) pursuant to Iowa Code section 232.2(6)(c)(2) (2017) (defining
a CINA as an unmarried child who “has suffered or is imminently likely to suffer
harmful effects as a result of . . . [t]he failure of the child’s parent . . . to exercise
a reasonable degree of care in supervising the child”) and 232.2(6)(g) (“[w]hose
parent . . . fails to exercise a minimal degree of care in supplying the child
adequate food . . . and refuses other means made available to provide such
essentials”).
The child, S.D., was born in September 2016 weighing six pounds and
one-half ounce. Wellness checkups indicated the child was gaining weight
adequately, though the child continued to be in a very low weight range. At a
March 23, 2017 checkup the child weighed thirteen pounds, eight ounces, which
is in the first percentile. The mother was instructed to attempt a regular feeding
schedule, was advised about appropriate foods, and was told to have the child’s
weight checked weekly. A follow-up appointment was made but cancelled by the
mother. A weight check was conducted on April 6, 2017; the child then weighed
thirteen pounds, fifteen ounces.1
On May 26, the mother and her new husband2 presented the child to a
Minnesota emergency room. The child was dehydrated from diarrhea and
1
Medical testimony indicated a child should gain approximately five to seven ounces per
week following birth.
2
The mother was not married to the child’s biological father, L.M., who lived in Iowa.
The mother, her two children (S.D. and a three-year-old), and her paramour, J.H., went
to Las Vegas in May 2017. The mother and J.H. were married in Las Vegas and then
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weighed twelve pounds, twelve ounces. The mother indicated she was
breastfeeding the eight-month-old child but the child also ate solid foods such as
pizza and cheeseburgers. The mother did not want any testing done on the child
and did not want the child to be given formula.
The hospital personnel contacted human services. An emergency
removal order was entered, and the child remained hospitalized for two weeks.
A child-abuse assessment was conducted and founded against the mother for
neglect due to malnourishment and failure to provide adequate foods. It was
also noted the mother had not followed up with weight checks on the child
despite medical concerns expressed in March 2017.
S.D.’s biological father, L.M., came to Minnesota and visited the child. A
home study found his home was safe for the child. Following the child’s release
from the hospital, the child was placed in L.M.’s care, under the supervision of
the department of human services (DHS).
A CINA adjudication and disposition hearing was held on August 23, after
which the juvenile court found the State had presented “absolutely
overwhelming” evidence that the child was a CINA. The court noted:
In making my decision, I have relied upon the medical
professionals. The testimony of Kathleen Lee, the pediatric nurse-
practitioner at Unity Point, indicates to me that her findings at the
six month well-baby check were abnormal. Miss Lee specifically
noted poor weight gain. Even if the mother had no clue prior to
March of 2017, that the child’s weight was a concern, she certainly
did after that appointment with Ms. Lee on March 15th of 2017.
Miss Lee indicated that because of the weight concerns, she
wanted the child to have a weekly weight checkup or check. . . .
returned to the Midwest with S.D. but without the three-year-old, who they left in the
maternal brother’s care.
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She also told the mother to start baby cereal and baby
foods. Cheeseburgers, pizzas, pop, hard candy. Those certainly
do not constitute baby cereal and baby foods. Miss Lee indicated
that three meals a day should be provided with bottles and breast
milk in between. Baby foods starting with vegetables before fruits
were recommended. The mother didn’t follow this recommendation
either. . . . Miss Lee also told us that she attempted to teach the
mother at the March appointment. Talked about iron-fortified
cereals, advancing foods one at a time two to three days apart,
spoon-feeding, and especially limiting choking foods and other
foods such as juice, honey, and eggs until the child was older. . . .
If you have a baby who is so small and is told that it is abnormal
and concerning with poor weight gain, it is not reasonable and
certainly not in the child’s best interest to give the child
cheeseburgers and pizza.
Miss Lee also told us that adult table foods would be okay if
they were put through the blender and pureed. . . . The child had
merely two teeth when he was examined in May of 2017 in
Minnesota. The medical reports indicate that the child did not know
how to chew and had to be taught how to chew, how to suck on a
bottle.
The mother’s lack of insight and understanding into this
issue is especially concerning to the court. We have a baby who
should be gaining weight every single week. This baby has not
only not gained weight, this baby has lost weight prior to his
hospitalization in May. I find it amazing and concerning that
because this baby wasn’t fed that he was subject to hospitalization
in Minnesota for two weeks. To say that the mother was confused
or did not understand, we have a problem. Court intervention is
necessary.
It’s in the child’s best interest that he be adjudicated, so that
we can provide not only care for this baby, but also apparently
some education to the mother and until I see some sort of
understanding on the mother’s part about the seriousness of this
issue, I am not comfortable returning this child to the mother’s care.
Miss Lee told us that her safety concerns[] with the lack of weight
gain is a lack of growth and she specifically mentioned the brain. If
the child is not growing, the brain is not growing. There are
delayed milestones, there are also physical effects and this lack of
growth can be permanent.
The parties then waived notice and stipulated to proceeding immediately
to disposition. Additional testimony was presented. It was observed the child
remains in the care of L.M. and is doing well, gaining weight, and meeting
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developmental milestones. The social worker assigned to the case
recommended placement with the biological father and his wife and continued
supervised visitation between mother and child. A detailed written ruling of
adjudication and disposition was entered on August 25.
On appeal, the mother objects to the admission of hearsay in the juvenile
court, contends there is not clear and convincing evidence to support the CINA
adjudication under either statutory provision relied upon, and maintains
adjudication is not in the child’s best interests. Upon our de novo review, In re
J.S., 846 N.W.2d 36, 40 (Iowa 2014), we reject the mother’s contentions, find
CINA adjudication is in the child’s best interest, and affirm.
A report made by the DHS is admissible in a CINA proceeding
“notwithstanding any objection to hearsay statements contained in it provided it is
relevant and material and provided its probative value substantially outweighs the
danger of unfair prejudice to the child’s parent.” Iowa Code § 232.96(6). Here,
we conclude there was no danger of unfair prejudice because the information
about which the mother complains was cumulative or otherwise in the record.
Moreover, there is clear and convincing evidence the child was in need of
assistance as the child was not getting sufficient nutrition, was losing weight, and
was malnourished despite the mother’s claims that the child was breastfeeding
and eating solid foods. We acknowledge the mother faced challenges in her
efforts to properly feed the child—low breastmilk production, moderate tongue-
tie, and two bouts of an illness causing vomiting and diarrhea. No one contends
the mother was deliberately withholding food from the child. There is also
evidence the mother attempted to follow some of the medical advice given to her.
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We also acknowledge the child was a small baby at birth and perhaps under the
best of circumstances may not have gained the average amount expected of a
normal child.
Notwithstanding these challenges and efforts, the mother was unaware or
unable to comprehend the seriousness of the child’s condition and her role in it.
The mother did not want hospital personnel to provide formula to the child nor did
she want to feed the child formula despite the clear evidence the child was not
gaining sufficient weight. When being informed the child needed to be
hospitalized, she stated she wanted the child taken to a different hospital.3
Although she was instructed to feed the child baby food, she informed medical
personnel the child preferred table food; yet the child only had two teeth and did
not know how to chew. The child gained weight when properly cared for, and
continues to gain weight and meet developmental milestones. We affirm
adjudication under section 232.2(6)(c)(2) and (g) and conclude CINA adjudication
is in the child’s best interests.
The mother also challenges the disposition, continued removal, and
placement with the biological father. She contends the disposition was not in the
child’s best interests as the child only knew one parent, herself, because the
father had never seen the child. We acknowledge we do not know of all of the
difficulties the DHS may have faced in their efforts to supervise placement with
the mother. But the mother has not fully followed instructions of medical
personnel in the past, and the DHS recommended placement with the father
3
As noted earlier, the child remained hospitalized for about two weeks.
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because of the concern the mother would again not follow their instructions and
would “fall back into some of the same patterns.” Although a close decision, we
affirm.
AFFIRMED.