Court Opinion

ID: 4022673
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-08-08 21:05:47.800801+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:35:26.765537
License: Public Domain

This opinion will be unpublished and
                        may not be cited except as provided by
                        Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

                             STATE OF MINNESOTA
                             IN COURT OF APPEALS
                                   A16-0281

                     In the Matter of the Welfare of the Child of:
                                     E. P., Parent.

                                Filed August 8, 2016
                                      Affirmed
                                 Kalitowski, Judge

                           Hennepin County District Court
                              File No. 27-JV-15-3545

Scott Cody, Kyle Kosieracki, Tarshish Cody, PLC, Richfield, Minnesota (for appellant
E.P.)

Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Attorney, Cory A. Carlson, Assistant County
Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent Hennepin County Human Services and
Public Health Department)

Jonathan G. Steinberg, Chrastil and Steinberg, P.L.L.P., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for
respondent guardian ad litem)

Mallory Kay Stoll, Blahnik Law Office, Prior Lake, Minnesota (for respondents D.P. and
P.P.)

      Considered and decided by Bjorkman, Presiding Judge; Kirk, Judge; and

Kalitowski, Judge.


 Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
                         UNPUBLISHED OPINION

KALITOWSKI, Judge

       Appellant mother challenges the district court’s adjudication of her son as a child in

need of protection or services (CHIPS) and the court’s denial of her motion for sanctions

against respondent department. We affirm.

                                          FACTS

       Respondent Hennepin County Human Services and Public Health Department (the

department) filed a petition in June 2015 alleging that D.P., born in May 2004, qualified as

CHIPS under Minn. Stat. § 260C.007, subd. 6(3), (8), (9) (2014). The department alleged

that D.P. was being medically abused by being “subject to excessive treatment for minor

medical concerns by his mother [appellant E.P.], to the extent that these interventions are

considered damaging to [D.P.]” The district court signed an emergency order, and D.P.

was removed from E.P.’s custody. E.P. denied the department’s allegations.

       Before trial, E.P. moved for dismissal of the CHIPS petition and sanctions against

the department. E.P. asserted that “it [wa]s abundantly clear that many of the Petition’s

allegations either ha[d] no evidentiary basis or [we]re simply false” and that “in [the

department]’s zeal to protect [D.P.] from suspected abuse, the [d]epartment did a less-than-

thorough investigation of the reported facts before filing the Petition.” The district court

denied E.P.’s motion, stating that the department conducted “a reasonable inquiry under

the circumstances,” that there were “sufficient facts to support a juvenile protection matter

under current law,” and that “the issues raised by [E.P.] may be appropriately addressed

during trial.”

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       The district court held a three-day trial in January 2016, during which the parties

submitted into evidence hundreds of pages of D.P.’s medical records and called several

medical professionals as witnesses. The department called as its primary witness Alice

Swenson, MD, who had worked as a child-abuse pediatrician for nearly ten years. Dr.

Swenson had “conducted nearly a thousand evaluations for suspected child physical abuse,

sexual abuse and neglect as well as thousands of evaluations of children for general

pediatric care” and had testified as an expert dozens of times. Dr. Swenson testified that

“medical child abuse” occurs “when a parent or guardian . . . seek[s] excessive medical

care for their child, even to the point of creating symptoms in the child, or report[s]

symptoms that are not there to medical providers in order to have interventions performed,

and for the child to have the sick role.” Dr. Swenson testified that determining whether

medical child abuse is occurring involves a “very painstaking[]” review of the child’s

medical records and “look[ing] at the whole picture and all the medical information.”

       Dr. Swenson testified that she reviewed all of D.P.’s available records, which

encompassed “[t]housands of pages,” and spoke to some of D.P.’s medical providers. She

stated that D.P. was placed on supplemental oxygen as an infant and remained on oxygen

into childhood due to E.P.’s “frequent complaints of him having desaturations”—low

levels of oxygen in the blood—“on an oxygen monitor at home.” Dr. Swenson asserted

that there was no “reason, that [she could] see, from a review of the records, that [D.P.]

should be on supplemental oxygen now.” She testified that D.P. “ultimately . . . got a

tracheostomy, which is a tube directly into his throat, so that his airway could be kept open

while he was sleeping” because E.P. “reported that he was failing to tolerate the various

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more common interventions used [for sleep apnea], including BiPAP or CPAP.” Dr.

Swenson stated that D.P. “has some mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnea,” that he had

“[n]umerous” sleep studies that revealed “occasional concerns about mild desaturations”

but “no major desaturation[] events,” and that it is not common to use a tracheostomy to

treat sleep apnea. Dr. Swenson also testified that D.P. used a wheelchair during childhood,

that there was “no really clear explanation given” for why D.P. was using a wheelchair,

and that D.P. did not have “any diagnoses . . . that would lead him to be placed in a

wheelchair.”

       Based on her review of D.P.’s medical records, Dr. Swenson concluded “[t]hat to a

reasonable degree of medical certainty, medical child abuse did occur.” She testified that

E.P. described symptoms that were not validated by medical providers, misrepresented

“possible diagnoses as definitive diagnoses,” and took D.P. to numerous medical

institutions “seeking opinions that were more in line with what [she] wanted to hear.”

According to Dr. Swenson, this led to significant medical interventions, “[m]ost notably

his being on oxygen and having a tracheostomy,” which “appeared to have no relationship

to the actual issues that [D.P.] has.”

       Kenneth Maher, a department child-protection investigator, and Katie Ueland, a

department child-protection social worker, testified that, after D.P. was removed from

E.P.’s custody, he did not use supplemental oxygen or a wheelchair. D.P.’s uncle, M.P.,

also testified that D.P. had stopped using supplemental oxygen and a wheelchair and that

D.P. was involved in playing lacrosse. Maher testified that doctors determined that D.P.

“probably didn’t need the tracheostomy” and that the size of the tracheostomy tube was

                                            4
being reduced. Ueland testified that a CHIPS adjudication was appropriate and that

ongoing services and court supervision of the family were necessary. Respondent Patricia

Timpane, D.P.’s guardian ad litem, testified that she believed D.P. is in need of protection

and services due to “what has occurred with him during [his] life.”

         E.P.’s witnesses included several doctors who had provided care for D.P. John

Garcia, MD, testified that he performed several sleep studies on D.P. due to D.P.’s sleep

apnea and discussed surgical intervention with E.P. Richard Karlen, MD, performed the

tracheostomy surgery and testified that doctors explored “options for [D.P.] in terms of

improving his airway” and determined “that it was probably best just to allow [D.P.] to

have a very effective and sure airway at night, and the best way to do that is with a

tracheotomy tube.” David Smeltzer, MD, D.P.’s pediatrician, asserted that he never had

“any reason to believe that [E.P.] was falsifying [D.P.]’s symptoms” and that E.P. never

“pressured [him] to make a treatment diagnosis or referral.”

         The district court adjudicated D.P. as CHIPS under Minn. Stat. § 260C.007, subd.

6(3), (8), (9), and transferred legal custody of D.P. to the department. The court found that

D.P. was “a victim of medical child abuse perpetrated by [E.P.]” and “ha[d] been subjected

to multiple unnecessary medical interventions, and as a result ha[d] suffered significant

harm.”

                                     DECISION

                                             I.

         E.P. challenges the district court’s adjudication of D.P. as CHIPS. “The district

court is vested with broad discretionary powers when deciding juvenile-protection

                                             5
matters.” In re Welfare of Child of S.S.W., 767 N.W.2d 723, 733 (Minn. App. 2009)

(quotation omitted). “On appeal of a juvenile-protection order, we review the juvenile

court’s factual findings for clear error and its finding of a statutory basis for the order for

abuse of discretion.” In re Welfare of Child of D.L.D., 865 N.W.2d 315, 321 (Minn. App.

2015), review denied (Minn. July 21, 2015). “A finding is clearly erroneous only if there

is no reasonable evidence to support the finding or when an appellate court is left with the

definite and firm conviction that a mistake occurred.” Id. at 322 (quotation omitted). “A

district court abuses its discretion if it improperly applies the law.” Id. (quotation omitted).

“Considerable deference is due to the district court’s [juvenile-protection] decision because

a district court is in a superior position to assess the credibility of witnesses.” S.S.W., 767

N.W.2d at 733 (quotation omitted).

       If a court finds that a child is in need of protection or services, the court may, among

other dispositions, transfer legal custody to the responsible social services agency. Minn.

Stat. § 260C.201, subd. 1(a)(2)(ii) (2014). The term “‘[c]hild in need of protection or

services’” is defined to include a child who “is without necessary food, clothing, shelter,

education, or other required care for the child’s physical or mental health or morals because

the child’s parent, guardian, or custodian is unable or unwilling to provide that care”; a

child who “is without proper parental care because of the emotional, mental, or physical

disability, or state of immaturity of the child’s parent, guardian, or other custodian”; and a

child whose “behavior, condition, or environment is such as to be injurious or dangerous

to the child or others.” Minn. Stat. § 260C.007, subd. 6(3), (8), (9).

                                               6
       The district court made detailed findings regarding D.P.’s documented medical

conditions and necessary medical treatments. The court also made detailed findings

regarding several other medical conditions alleged by E.P. and D.P.’s unnecessary medical

treatments and interventions. On appeal, E.P. focuses on the findings regarding D.P.’s

need for a tracheostomy, supplemental oxygen, and a wheelchair.

       Sleep studies conducted in 2012 indicated that D.P.’s sleep apnea was effectively

treated with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). D.P. switched to using bilevel

positive airway pressure (BiPAP) following another sleep study in 2013, and, as of at least

February 2014, D.P.’s sleep apnea was considered to be effectively treated with BiPAP.

E.P. thereafter began to report that D.P. was experiencing disruptive sleep and was irritable

and tired.

       D.P. underwent tracheostomy surgery in July 2014 without undergoing an updated

sleep study. Dr. Swenson testified: “[T]here were periods where [CPAP or BiPAP] would

be considered to be working well, and then [E.P.] would report that [D.P.] wasn’t tolerating

the masks, or that they weren’t for him. . . . And then ultimately he was reported to not be

able to tolerate CPAP or BiPAP.” According to Dr. Swenson, the tracheostomy surgery

resulted from E.P.’s “report[s] that [D.P.] was failing to tolerate the various more common

interventions used [for sleep apnea], including BiPAP or CPAP.” Dr. Garcia also testified

that the decision that “a tracheostomy was required” was based on “clinical symptoms,”

meaning “symptoms that were related to the doctors by caretakers of [D.P.]” The district

court found that E.P. reported symptoms of sleep apnea that were never observed by

                                             7
medical providers and reported that common treatments for sleep apnea were ineffective,

which eventually led to D.P.’s tracheostomy surgery.

       D.P. was placed on daytime supplemental oxygen as an infant due to initial

difficulty breathing. E.P. continued to assert that supplemental oxygen was needed as D.P.

grew older although D.P. was also active in gymnastics at the time, sometimes participating

in the activity for up to four hours a day. Some medical providers questioned D.P.’s

continued use of supplemental oxygen, noting in medical records, “[D.P.] has a lifelong

oxygen requirement, the reason for which is not well understood,” and, “It is unclear . . .

why [D.P.] needs oxygen, particularly in the daytime as he is quite active and vigorous.”

Maher testified that E.P. indicated to him “that the use of supplemental oxygen was

ongoing” and that D.P. would use oxygen when he “looked tired, . . . if [E.P.] thought that

he was having trouble breathing[,] . . . if they were in for a long day of errands, or being

out and about.”

       After D.P. was removed from E.P.’s custody, medical providers determined that

D.P. did not need supplemental oxygen. Dr. Swenson testified that there was no “reason,

that [she could] see, from a review of the records, that [D.P.] should be on supplemental

oxygen now.” She defended her conclusion that D.P. does not need supplemental oxygen

by stating that “he never had any desaturations while in the hospital,” and that “all of the

desaturations were reported by [E.P. as] occurring at home.” Dr. Swenson asserted that

E.P.’s reports of desaturations were fabrications. The district court found that many of

D.P.’s symptoms reported by E.P. were never observed by medical providers, including

                                             8
D.P’s. breathing difficulties, inability to walk long distances, and inability to maintain

adequate oxygen saturations.

       D.P. began to use a wheelchair at some point during his childhood. E.P. reported to

a physical therapist in 2013 that D.P. could “only walk the distance of a long hallway and

while he walks at home, he doesn’t walk in the community.” D.P. was an active participant

in gymnastics at the same time, and he later became involved in playing lacrosse. After

D.P. was removed from E.P.’s custody, medical providers determined that D.P. did not

need a wheelchair. Dr. Swenson testified that there were no “diagnoses that [D.P.] has that

would lead him to be placed in a wheelchair.” The district court found that, “[a]side from

[E.P.]’s reports, there is no documented medical need for a wheelchair” and that E.P.

succeeded in having D.P. remain in a wheelchair despite the lack of a need for a wheelchair.

       E.P. challenges Dr. Swenson’s inferences, opinions, and conclusions in this appeal.

But the district court stated that “Dr. Swenson is an expert in the field of medical child

abuse” and that she had “reviewed nearly all of [D.P.]’s medical records and was

knowledgeable about the facts in this matter.” And the court found that Dr. Swenson’s

testimony was credible “in all respects” and entitled to “significant weight.” In addition,

the court found that medical professionals that E.P. called as witnesses, including Doctors

Garcia, Karlen, and Smeltzer, lacked comprehensive knowledge of D.P.’s medical history

and that their testimony was entitled to little weight. The district court was in the “superior

position” to assess witness credibility during trial, and we defer to the credibility

determinations that the court explained in detail in the CHIPS adjudication order. S.S.W.,

767 N.W.2d at 733 (quotation omitted).

                                              9
       The district court documented the evidentiary support for its findings and inferences

in the CHIPS adjudication order. Based on all of the evidence presented at trial, the court

determined that D.P. was “a victim of medical child abuse perpetrated by [E.P.]” and “ha[d]

been subjected to multiple unnecessary medical interventions, and as a result ha[d] suffered

significant harm.” The record contains reasonable evidence to support the court’s findings,

and those findings support the court’s conclusion that D.P. was in need of protection or

services. See id. at 734 (stating that an appellate court may not reverse a juvenile-protection

decision if “the record contains evidence to support the district court’s findings of fact, and

. . . those findings support the district court’s conclusion”). We conclude that the district

court did not abuse its broad discretion by adjudicating D.P. as CHIPS under Minn. Stat.

§ 260C.007, subd. 6(3), (8), (9).

                                              II.

       E.P. challenges the district court’s denial of her pretrial motion for sanctions against

the department. Whether to impose sanctions is discretionary with the district court. See

Kalenburg v. Klein, 847 N.W.2d 34, 41 (Minn. App. 2014) (stating that district court award

of sanctions is reviewed for abuse of discretion). “A district court abuses its discretion

when its decision is based on an erroneous view of the law or is against the facts in the

record, or when the district court exercises its discretion in an arbitrary fashion.” Id.

                     By presenting to the court, whether by signing, filing,
              submitting, or later advocating, a pleading, motion, report,
              affidavit, or other similar document, an attorney or
              unrepresented party is certifying to the best of the person’s
              knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an inquiry
              reasonable under the circumstances, that:

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                            (a) it is not being presented for any improper
              purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or
              needless increase in the cost of litigation;
                            (b) the claims, defenses, and other legal
              contentions therein are warranted by existing law or by a
              nonfrivolous argument for the extension, modification, or
              reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law;
                            (c) the allegations and other factual contentions
              have evidentiary support or, if specifically so identified, are
              likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable
              opportunity for further investigation or discovery; and
                            (d) the denials of factual contentions are
              warranted on the evidence or, if specifically so identified, are
              reasonably based on a lack of information or belief.

Minn. R. Juv. Prot. P. 16.02 (mirroring language of Minn. R. Civ. P. 11.02). “If a pleading,

motion, affidavit, or other similar document is signed in violation of [Rule 16], the court,

upon motion or upon its own initiative, shall impose upon the person who signed it, a

represented party, or both, an appropriate sanction . . . .” Minn. R. Juv. Prot. P. 16.04.

       E.P. contends that Dr. Swenson’s initial report of medical abuse, which led the

department to file the CHIPS petition, was based on an incomplete review of D.P.’s

medical history and “brimmed with hyperbolic and provably false statements.” E.P. further

contends that a reasonable investigation by the department would have confirmed Dr.

Swenson’s errors, but instead the department “took Dr. Swenson’s word and ran with it.”

       The allegations in the CHIPS petition were based on the conclusions of an expert in

the field of medical child abuse and that expert’s preliminary review of D.P.’s medical

records. And, following a three-day trial and the presentation of numerous witnesses and

hundreds of pages of exhibits, the district court agreed with the department’s allegation

                                             11
that medical abuse had occurred. Thus, we conclude that the district court did not abuse

its discretion by denying E.P.’s motion for sanctions against the department.

      Affirmed.

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