Title: In re C.A.

State: maine

Issuer: Maine Supreme Court

Document:

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT 
Reporter of Decisions 
Decision: 
2015 ME 34  
Docket: 
Yor-14-205 
Submitted 
On Briefs: December 18, 2014 
Decided: 
March 19, 2015 
 
Panel: 
SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR, JJ. 
 
 
IN RE C.A. 
 
 
JABAR, J. 
[¶1]  The mother of C.A. appeals from a judgment of the District Court 
(Biddeford, Foster, J.) terminating her parental rights pursuant to 22 M.R.S. 
§ 4055(1)(B)(2) (2014).1  The mother contends that the evidence was not sufficient 
to support the court’s finding of parental unfitness and that the court abused its 
discretion in determining that termination of her parental rights is in the child’s 
best interest.  We affirm the judgment. 
I.  BACKGROUND 
 
[¶2]  The trial court found the following facts, which are supported by the 
record.  See In re Higera N., 2010 ME 77, ¶ 2, 2 A.3d 265.  The child was born ten 
weeks premature on October 12, 2012, and spent the first six weeks of his life in 
the neo-natal intensive care unit.  On December 31, 2012, after the child had been 
in his parents’ home for approximately four weeks, the mother left the child in the 
                                         
1  The father consented to a judgment terminating his parental rights to the child.  He is not 
participating in this appeal and is mentioned in this opinion only insofar as he is relevant to the mother’s 
appeal.   
 
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father’s care to attend an appointment.  When the mother returned, she noticed 
bruises on the child’s feet.  Later that day, the mother took the child to receive a 
scheduled immunization, and the child’s pediatrician observed the bruises and 
directed her to report them to the Department of Health and Human Services.  
After speaking with the father, the mother decided to wait until January 2, after the 
New Year’s Day holiday, to call the Department.  However, the child’s 
pediatrician did not wait.  She reported the bruising on December 31, and the 
Department immediately dispatched a caseworker to see the child and meet with 
the parents.   
 
[¶3]  Staff at the Spurwink Child Abuse Clinic, who evaluated the child with 
the parents’ consent, determined that the bruises could not have been accidentally 
inflicted or self-inflicted and that they were most likely caused by inappropriate 
squeezing of the feet.  Based on this assessment, the Department petitioned for a 
preliminary order of protection, received custody of the child on January 3, 2013, 
and placed him with his maternal grandmother.  On February 8, 2013, the parties 
agreed to the entry of a jeopardy order.  In that order, the court accepted 
Spurwink’s assessment concerning the likely cause of the bruising, and stated, 
“Though this injury itself might be viewed as relatively minor, this infant is 
extremely vulnerable and would be at continued risk for further, perhaps more 
 
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significant and life threatening injury if he were returned to the home environment 
where these injuries occurred.”   
[¶4]  From January to August, the parents worked to satisfy the terms of the 
reunification and rehabilitation plan, see 22 M.R.S. § 4041(1-A)(A), (B) (2014), 
and on August 9, 2013, the Department authorized a trial placement of the child 
with them.  One month later, the Department received a report from the maternal 
grandmother’s wife that the child had bruises on his face that looked like 
fingerprints.   
[¶5]  The Department’s caseworker responded to the report by immediately 
making an unannounced visit to the family home.  When the caseworker asked to 
see the child, the mother told her that the child had fallen against the coffee table 
on September 5 and had bruises on his face.  The father then told the mother not to 
lie for him and related that, while he had been alone with the child on September 5, 
the child had fallen while standing at the coffee table, and that he had accidentally 
inflicted the bruises by grabbing the child’s face in an attempt to break the child’s 
fall.  The mother apologized for being dishonest and stated that she had been afraid 
that the father would be blamed for the injuries. 
[¶6]  The parents had not sought medical attention for the child’s facial 
bruises, and from September 5 to September 9, had kept the child home from 
 
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daycare and rescheduled his appointments.  The mother told the caseworker that 
she did this to prevent others from seeing the child’s facial bruises.  
[¶7]  The caseworker immediately took the child to Spurwink for a second 
examination.  After that examination, Spurwink’s staff concluded that the bruises 
were caused by a high velocity injury, likely a slap, to the child’s face.  Based on 
Spurwink’s assessment, the Department immediately ended the child’s placement 
with the parents and returned the child to the maternal grandmother.  
[¶8]  Even after receiving the results of Spurwink’s examination, the mother 
continued to maintain that the father had accidentally injured the child by breaking 
his fall.  On October 11, 2013, the Department filed a petition to terminate both 
parents’ parental rights.  In February 2014, three weeks before the scheduled 
hearing on the petition for termination of parental rights (TPR), the mother 
informed the Department’s caseworker that she had broken up with the father.   
[¶9]  When asked at the TPR hearing about the first injury, the bruises on the 
child’s feet, the mother testified that she had asked the father whether he had 
squeezed the child’s feet, and that the father had told her he became frustrated 
when the baby cried.  This was the first time that the mother provided this 
information to either the guardian ad litem or the Department.  When asked about 
the second injury, the child’s facial bruises, the mother testified that the father had 
discouraged her from bringing the child to daycare or reporting the bruises to the 
 
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Department.  She testified that her biggest concern should have been the child’s 
injury but that she had been more concerned about the child being taken away.  
The mother testified that she had recently begun to question whether the father 
might have inflicted the injuries because he was the only one present when they 
occurred, and that she had come to believe that the father was responsible for the 
child’s injuries. 
[¶10]  At the time of the TPR hearing, the child had spent most of his life 
with the grandmother and was doing well in her home.  The grandmother testified 
that she and her wife were willing to adopt the child, and both the Department and 
guardian at litem expressed support for the adoption. 
[¶11]  On April 2, 2014, the court terminated the mother’s parental rights to 
the child based on its findings, by clear and convincing evidence, that the mother is 
unwilling or unable to protect the child from jeopardy and these circumstances are 
unlikely to change within a time reasonably calculated to meet the child’s needs, 
and that termination of the mother’s parental rights is in the child’s best interest.  
See 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(a), (b)(i).  The mother timely appealed.  See 
22 M.R.S. § 4006 (2014); M.R. App. P. 2(b)(3). 
II.  DISCUSSION 
 
[¶12]  When evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the 
court’s finding of parental unfitness, we review the court’s factual findings for 
 
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clear error.  In re H.C., 2013 ME 97, ¶ 11, 82 A.3d 80.  With respect to the court’s 
best interest determination, we review the court’s factual findings for clear error 
and its ultimate conclusion for an abuse of discretion.  In re A.H., 2013 ME 85, 
¶ 16, 77 A.3d 1012.  If the court’s factual findings are supported by competent 
record evidence, we must sustain them.  In re M.S., 2014 ME 54, ¶ 13, 
90 A.3d 443.   
[¶13]  Here, competent record evidence demonstrates that the mother failed 
to respond appropriately to the child’s bruises, which, as the court noted in its 
termination judgment, were “‘sentinel injuries,’ injuries often observed in children 
who later sustained severe injury.”  The mother failed to recognize the risk that the 
father posed to the child.  She did not seek medical attention for the child’s injuries 
or report them to the Department, but instead took affirmative steps to keep them 
from being discovered.  Until the eve of the TPR hearing, she prioritized her 
relationship with the father over the child’s need for safety and refused to consider 
the possibility that the father was responsible for the child’s injuries, even though 
he was alone with the child when the injuries occurred and both medical 
evaluations indicated that his explanations for the injuries were not plausible.  
Although the injuries themselves were not life threatening, they were injuries 
inflicted on a very young and extremely vulnerable child, and were properly 
deemed to create jeopardy.  Sufficient evidence thus supports the court’s finding, 
 
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by clear and convincing evidence, that the mother is unwilling or unable to protect 
the child from jeopardy and that these circumstances are unlikely to change within 
a time that would meet the child’s needs.  See id. ¶ 14. 
 
[¶14]  The record also contains competent evidentiary support for the court’s 
findings that the child has spent the majority of his life in the grandmother’s home, 
that the grandmother and her wife are able to meet the child’s needs, and that they 
are willing to adopt him.  In light of the child’s stable placement with the 
grandmother and the mother’s consistent failure to recognize and respond 
appropriately to a threat to the child’s safety, the court did not abuse its discretion 
in concluding that termination of the mother’s parental rights is in the child’s best 
interest.  See id. ¶ 15.  
The entry is: 
Judgment affirmed.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
On the briefs: 
 
Wendy Moulton Starkey, Esq., Rose Law, LLC, York, 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 
 
Biddeford District Court docket number PC-13-01 
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY