Court Opinion

ID: 8484507
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-17 16:05:00.417498+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:49:54.059983
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                    No. 21-1913
                             Filed November 17, 2022

K.C. on behalf of T.L.S.,
      Petitioner-Appellee,

vs.

T.D.L.,
       Respondent-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________

       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Warren County, Brendan E. Greiner,

District Associate Judge.

       T.L. appeals the imposition of a protective order for relief from sexual abuse

entered under Iowa Code chapter 236A (2021). AFFIRMED.

       Amy K. Davis of Miller, Zimmerman & Evans, P.L.C., Des Moines, for

appellant.

       Jami J. Hagemeier of The Youth Law Center, Des Moines, attorney and

guardian ad litem for minor child, appellee.

       K.C., self-represented appellee.

       Heard by Tabor, P.J., and Schumacher and Chicchelly, JJ.
                                          2

CHICCHELLY, Judge.

        T.L. appeals the imposition of a protective order for relief from sexual abuse

entered under Iowa Code chapter 236A (2021). He challenges the sufficiency of

the evidence supporting a finding of sexual abuse. He also challenges the ruling

quashing the subpoena of the child victim and allowing a videotaped forensic

interview into evidence in its place.

        Substantial evidence supports a finding that a preponderance of the

evidence shows T.L. committed sexual abuse. T.L. has not preserved error on his

claim that the court erred by appointing the guardian ad litem who moved to quash

the subpoena, and there is no showing that the court abused its discretion in

granting quashal. For these reasons, we affirm.

        I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

        K.C. petitioned for relief against sexual abuse, alleging that T.L. sexually

assaulted her daughter, T.S.1 K.C. claims she learned of the assault after picking

T.S. up from school in September 2021.           Because T.S. has an intellectual

disability,2 K.C. pieced this information together from fragments of statements T.S.

made:

1 T.S. and T.L. are both preteens. T.S. is in her father’s physical custody, and T.L.
is in his mother’s physical custody. Because T.S.’s father and T.L.’s mother
married, T.S. and T.L. shared a residence.
2 A psychological evaluation from September 2020 diagnosed T.S. with “Mild

Intellectual Disability.” T.S. scored in the “very low to extremely low range” on a
test of intellectual functioning. The evaluator concluded that T.S.’s “verbal
reasoning skills are in the extremely low range and indicate that [T.S.] will tend to
have a poorly developed word knowledge and problems with verbal expression.
These deficits are likely to be present in her efforts to communicate with others.”
Testing of T.S.’s adaptive skills functioning showed her ability to communicate was
“significantly below other individuals her age and indicate[d] that she will have
difficulty in all areas of communication.” The evaluator concluded that T.S. “is likely
                                          3

              [T.S.] said that [T.L.] would—first it started with a dream, that
       she kept having bad dreams at her father’s house. And I asked what
       they were about. She stated that she was flying inside her father’s
       house, and she was scared. And I asked what she was flying from.
       And she said a monster—or—and I asked what she was flying from.
              I said, “Are you flying from a monster?”
              And she then stated, . . . that [T.L.] would wake her up in the
       middle of the night, sometimes bringing in a stuffed animal, telling
       her to be quiet, threatening to break her leg if she made a sound.

K.C. went to the local police, who referred her to the STAR Center for a forensic

interview.

       The STAR Center interviewed T.S. about the abuse allegations one week

later. During the videotaped interview, T.S. talks about T.L. doing “this” as she

makes a gesture. The interviewer asked T.S. to explain what she meant:

              Q. What do you mean when you say this? A. When he did
       (gestures).
              Q. What does that mean? A. It’s probably touching your
       private parts, and it’s really disgusting.
              Q. Did that happen? A. Yeah.
              Q. What did he touch your private part with? A. His hand.
       And it was really gross and I felt it.
              Q. Did it touch the clothes or the skin of your private part?
       A. The skin of my private part.

       K.C. represented herself in the proceedings under chapter 236A, and T.L.

was represented by counsel. The district court appointed a guardian ad litem to

represent T.S. When T.L. subpoenaed T.S. to testify, the guardian ad litem moved

to quash the subpoena and admit the videotape of the forensic interview in place

of live testimony.   The district court granted the motion and allowed K.C. to

introduce the videotaped interview of T.S. as evidence. K.C. also testified in

to lack understanding of information received from others and to have equal
difficulty using words and sentences to express her own thoughts and ideas.”
                                           4

support of her petition. T.L. offered testimony by both T.S.’s father and his father,

as well as a police detective who investigated T.S.’s allegations.

       At the close of the hearing, the guardian ad litem argued a preponderance

of the evidence showed a sex act and sex abuse occurred:

               From the STAR Center interview, Your Honor, and from my
       client’s words, I would support that the evidence has been shown
       that a sex act has occurred. Pursuant to that video, [T.S.] was able
       to say that [T.L.] had come into her room, that he had brought a toy
       with him, she was able to act out what occurred, and was able to
       then talk about what she did in order to have him stop and then what
       she needed to do once the act was concluded. So I think in that
       interview, I think she was very clear with her words, and I believe in
       your order as stated she was interviewed by a forensic interviewer,
       non-leading questions.

The district court agreed that the interview “is compelling and is more than

sufficient to sustain the petition.” It entered an order prohibiting T.L. from having

contact with T.S., and T.L appealed.

       II. Scope of Review.

       Proceedings under chapter 236A “shall be held in accordance with the rules

of civil procedure.” The parties agree the action was tried at law, and our review

is for correction of errors at law. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.907.

       III. Sufficiency of the Evidence.

       T.L. first challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the

allegations in the petition. He argues K.C. failed to show by a preponderance of

the evidence that he sexually abused T.S.

       We begin with our standard of review. “[W]e must view the evidence in the

light most favorable to support the judgment and liberally construe the court’s

finding to uphold, rather than defeat, the result reached.” Papillon v. Jones, 892
                                           5

N.W.2d 763, 770 (Iowa 2017) (citation omitted). We are bound by the district

court’s fact findings if supported by substantial evidence. See Iowa Beta Chapter

of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity v. State, 763 N.W.2d 250, 257 (Iowa 2009). Evidence

is substantial if reasonable minds would find it adequate to reach the same finding.

See Zaw v. Birusingh, 974 N.W.2d 140, 160 (Iowa Ct. App. 2021). We cannot

substitute our own findings for those of the district court simply because the

evidence supports different inferences. See Iowa Beta Chapter of Phi Delta Theta

Fraternity, 763 N.W.2d at 257. The question is not whether the evidence would

support a different finding but whether it supports the finding made by the court.

See id.

       We then turn to the requirements of chapter 236A. The court can issue a

protective order under that chapter only after finding sexual abuse has occurred.

See Iowa Code § 236A.3(2) (“If the factual basis for the alleged sexual abuse is

contested, the court shall issue a protective order based upon a finding of sexual

abuse . . . .”). Sexual abuse occurs when a person commits a sex act “by force or

against the will of the other” or when “[s]uch other person is a child.” Id. § 709.1(1),

(3) (defining sexual abuse); see also id. § 236A.2(5) (stating, in part, that the

commission of any crime defined in chapter 709 is sexual abuse under

chapter 236A). The petitioner bears the burden of showing by a preponderance

of the evidence that sexual abuse occurred. Id. § 236A.3(2). “A preponderance

of the evidence is the evidence ‘that is more convincing than opposing evidence’

or ‘more likely true than not true.’” In re K.D., 975 N.W.2d 310, 320 (Iowa 2022)

(citation omitted). “The evidence may preponderate, and yet leave the mind in

doubt as to the very truth. In such cases the evidence does not fairly set the
                                         6

question at rest, but merely preponderates in favor of that side whereon the doubts

have less weight.” Walthart v. Bd. of Directors of Edgewood-Colesburg Cmty. Sch.

Dist., 694 N.W.2d 740, 744 (Iowa 2005) (citation omitted).

       With these precepts in mind, we turn to the evidence. Because the sexual

abuse allegedly happened at night in T.S.’s bedroom without witnesses, most of

the relevant evidence comes from the STAR Center forensic interview of T.S. The

limits of T.S.’s ability to communicate are apparent during the interview. T.S. often

meanders from a question mid-answer, interjecting non sequiturs to share her

stepmother’s age or show her painted fingernails.         Her demeanor is casual

throughout the interview, but she uses animated facial expressions and gestures

when recalling events as though acting them out.3

       During the interview, T.S.’s most incoherent answer stems from a question

she does not understand. The interviewer asks T.S., “What is your ocular hue?”

Although the interviewer had just explained that T.S. should say if she does not

understand a question, T.S. tries to answer anyway:

3  As an example, the interviewer asks T.S. what she did from the time she woke
up that morning up to the time she arrived at the interview. The timestamp on the
video shows that the interview begins at 9:30 a.m. T.S. begins by looking around
for a clock before venturing a guess that she woke up at 5:30. T.S. says, “I was
like, ‘Mom, I need to’” and gestures opening her eye with one hand. She then
continues: “So, I took a shower in the morning. And I brushed my hair. Well, [L.]
did but, um.” The next thing T.S. mentions is her arrival at the interview: “We were
a few minutes away from here and then—” T.S. again stops speaking as she
gestures expansively with her arms before continuing: “Here we go, right? And
like, ‘Is that my dad? I can’t believe my dad is already here.’” Her tone of voice
and expression then changes as though to suggest she is repeating another
person’s words when she continues: “Okay, it’s okay. I got this.” T.S. then
concludes her answer by resuming her former demeanor and saying, “So, that’s
the truth.”
                                           7

              T.S.: Okay, my ocular hue is if I asked mom if she can take me
       back tomorrow to school and say, “It’s okay if you go back to school
       for a little bit.”
              Interviewer: Do you know what ‘ocular hue’ means?
              T.S.: Yeah, but my mom said, “I’m going to take you to school.
       I can’t believe your mom—your dad—I don’t know. But they’ll like,
       dramatically arguing a little bit, but not just every time. But
       sometimes I just really feel like my dad wants me to go to his house
       for a little bit and go to my mom’s for a little bit. But I wish my mom
       would say, “Hey, I need you to go away from your dad. I don’t want
       him stealing your money.” Well, actually he doesn’t have my money
       but—I do.

The interviewer then reiterates that T.S. can say, “I don’t know” if she does not

know the answer to a question, adding, “You don’t have to do any guessing.” She

illustrates this by following up with a simpler question, asking, “Do I have a dog at

my house?” This time, rather than guessing at an answer, T.S. shakes her head

to reflect she does not know.

       Unlike in her answer about ocular hue, T.S. is clear in articulating what

happened to her. When asked to explain the gesture she makes when explaining

what T.L. did to her, T.S. answers that T.L. placed his bare hand on her bare

genitals. The district court found the interview “is not only compelling and reliable,

it is believable that an assault with intent to commit sex abuse occurred.” Because

the district court “has the prerogative to determine which evidence is entitled to

belief” and “a better opportunity than we do to evaluate the credibility of witnesses,”

we defer to its determination about T.S.’s interview. See Tim O’Neill Chevrolet,

Inc. v. Forristall, 551 N.W.2d 611, 614 (Iowa 1996) (stating “factual disputes

depending heavily on . . . credibility are best resolved by the district court”).

       The question is whether a reasonable mind would find there is adequate

evidence to support the finding that it is more likely that sexual abuse occurred
                                           8

than did not. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the district court’s

ruling, deferring to its credibility findings, and giving the interview the same weight,

we find that it would. Although a reasonable person could reach a different finding

on the same evidence, that is not relevant to the question before us. Because

sufficient evidence supports the finding that T.L. committed sexual abuse, we

affirm.

          IV. Evidentiary Rulings.

          T.L. also challenges the ruling granting the motion to quash the subpoena

of T.S. and allowing the STAR Center interview in place of live testimony. 4

Because only the guardian ad litem moved to quash the subpoena, most of T.L.’s

argument focuses on whether the court could appoint the guardian ad litem. T.L.

admits he lodged no objection to the guardian ad litem’s appointment below and

thus concedes that “error is not necessarily preserved.” “Nothing is more basic in

the law of appeal and error than the axiom that a party cannot sing a song to us

that was not first sung in trial court.” Struck v. Mercy Health Servs.-Iowa Corp.,

973 N.W.2d 533, 539 (Iowa 2022) (citation omitted).           Because T.L. failed to

preserve error by objecting to the appointment of the guardian ad litem in the

district court, we will not consider the propriety of the appointment for the first time

on appeal.

4 In a footnote, T.L. questions “whether the district court had authority to appoint a
guardian ad litem” under Iowa Code section 915.37. But he concedes that “error
is not necessarily preserved” because he never objected to the appointment.
Because T.L. failed to preserve error by raising an objection below, we do not
consider the issue on appeal.
                                           9

       We turn to the question of quashal and the substitution of the STAR Center

interview for live testimony, which are preserved for our review. Iowa Rule of Civil

Procedure 1.1701(4)(d)(1)(4) requires the court to quash a subpoena if it

“[s]ubjects a person to undue burden.” See, e.g., Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.504(1)(a)

(allowing the court to grant an order protecting any person from whom discovery

is sought “from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or

expense”).    An undue burden is “[a] substantial and unjust obstacle to the

performance of a duty.” Burden, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).

       The guardian ad litem argued that requiring T.S. to testify live and in person

would subject T.S. to an undue burden because of her disability. In support of her

motion to quash, she filed as an exhibit the September 2020 psychological

evaluation of T.S. that details the extent of T.S.’s mental disability. In resisting the

motion to quash,5 T.L. argued that there was no showing of undue burden and live

testimony was necessary for the court to determine T.S.’s credibility, which was

central to K.C.’s petition.

       The district court has “wide discretion” in ruling on a motion to quash. See

Morris v. Morris, 383 N.W.2d 527, 529 (Iowa 1986). We also afford the lower court

discretion in deciding whether to allow a child’s in-person testimony when it goes

against the child’s best interests. See Mauk v. State Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 617

N.W.2d 909, 913 (Iowa 2000) (citing In re E.H. III, 578 N.W.2d 243, 246 (Iowa

1998), in which the court found “no abuse of discretion in the juvenile court’s

conclusion that the best interests of the children militated against their testimony

5T.L. did not object to the court considering the videotaped interview as evidence;
he objected only to use of the interview instead of live testimony.
                                           10

in court” based on the beliefs of their mother, guardian ad litem, and therapists that

testifying would traumatize the children); see also In re E.H., No. 02-0453, 2002

WL 31538128, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. Nov. 15, 2002) (“The trial court is given

discretion in determining whether child witnesses must testify.”). In granting the

guardian ad litem’s motion, the district court noted the limitations in T.S.’s ability to

communicate, with the psychological evaluation assessing “socialization skills

similar to children age two to three.”6 The court also shared the guardian ad litem’s

concern that K.C. conducting direct examination of T.S. would cause inherent bias,

while the forensic interview—“[a] neutral examination in a controlled environment,

from an unbiased interviewer”—lead to more reliable answers. Finally, although

K.C. and T.S.’s father disagreed on the pivotal issue of whether sexual abuse

occurred, they both suggested that requiring in-person testimony would unduly

6 T.S. was ten years old at the time of the hearing. In other circumstances, a child
of that age may be competent to testify at trial. See St. Peter v. Iowa Tel. Co., 131
N.W. 2, 4 (Iowa 1911) (observing “the trial judge has better opportunity to judge of
these than an appellate court” in affirming a district court’s conclusion that a ten-
year-old witness was competent to testify). But as our supreme court has noted,
the competency of a child has less to do with age and more to do with a child’s
maturity and intelligence:
        There is no particular age at which a child becomes competent as a
        witness. The statute fixes no age, and requires only that the witness
        have sufficient capacity to understand the obligation of an oath. A
        child of sufficient maturity and intelligence to receive correct
        impressions from its surroundings, and to remember and correctly
        narrate transactions, is a competent witness, if he also comprehend
        the meaning and obligation of an oath. If a child has the necessary
        intelligence and appreciates the moral duty to tell the truth, he need
        not fully understand the nature of an oath, or have any particular
        religious belief or training to qualify him as a witness.
Clark v. Finnegan, 103 N.W. 970, 970 (Iowa 1905) (internal citations omitted). That
distinction is important here, where T.S.’s intellectual functioning is significantly
lower than her biological age would suggest.
                                         11

burden T.S.7 Because the record supports the court’s reasoning, we find no abuse

of discretion in granting the motion to quash.

       T.L. cites to State v. Skahill, 966 N.W.2d 1 (Iowa 2021), to argue that the

court misplaced its reliance on the STAR Center interview. The court in Skahill

considered the admissibility of a forensic interview of a child victim in a criminal

prosecution for sexual abuse in addition to the child’s live testimony. 966 N.W.2d

at 4. The court found the interviews “were not more probative than the otherwise

available live testimony under which [the child] could be (and was) cross-

examined.” Id. at 15. As a result, the court held the residual hearsay exception

did not apply. Id.

       T.L. never challenged the admissibility of the STAR Center interview below.

Nor does he challenge it on appeal. He instead cites to Skahill for observations

about the difference between taped forensic interviews and live testimony, which

the supreme court made during its harmless-error analysis:

       Forensic interviews can be different from and, sometimes, more
       powerful than trial testimony. The questioner can be—indeed, often
       should be—openly sympathetic to the child. The interviewer and the
       child may be able to develop a rapport. There is no requirement in
       a forensic interview to ask only legally relevant questions or to avoid
       repetition. The narrative may flow more naturally than in the bumpy
       give-and-take of a trial—the setting in which witnesses normally must
       provide their testimony.

7 At the hearing on the motion to quash, T.S.’s father asked the court to examine
T.S. in camera instead of T.S. giving live testimony because he believed testifying
in person would go against T.S.’s best interests. K.C. agreed that giving live
testimony would not be in T.S.’s best interests because “it would be more traumatic
for her to have to go and be interrogated even further, whether it be by me or by a
stranger. Just to have more questions regarding the matter is already hard enough
on her to talk about.”
                                          12

Id. at 16. T.L. argues that for the same reasons, the court gave the STAR Center

interview more weight than it deserved even though T.S. “was incoherent in her

interview, and unable to provide any specific dates or specific instances of alleged

sexual abuse.”8 But this complaint goes to the weight of the evidence rather than

its admissibility.   The district court noted the limitations in T.S.’s ability to

communicate during the interview and still found her statements about the sexual

abuse to be credible and persuasive. As stated above, we defer to the district

court on the question of what weight to give the evidence.

       AFFIRMED.

8 T.L. argues the interview is like the one described in M.W. on behalf of B.W. v.
J.W., No. 19-0574, 2020 WL 4200856, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. July 22, 2020), in which
this court affirmed the denial of a petition for relief from sexual abuse filed against
the father of a two-year-old child. As in this case, a videotaped interview of the
child was admitted into evidence and provided “our only opportunity to directly
observe the child.” M.W., 2020 WL 4200856, at *3. But the child’s interview in
M.W. “largely refute[d] the allegations the father inappropriately touched the child.”
Id.