Ross Parkhurst v. Chad Belt ( 2009 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 08-2668
    ___________
    Ross Parkhurst, individually and as     *
    guardian and next friend of H. P.;      *
    Amy Parkhurst, individually and as      *
    guardian and next friend of H. P.;      *
    H. P., a minor child under the age of   *
    eighteen,                               *
    *
    Plaintiffs - Appellees,      *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                                 * District Court for the
    * Western District of Arkansas.
    Chad Belt,                              *
    *
    Defendant - Appellant.       *
    ___________
    Submitted: May 13, 2009
    Filed: June 9, 2009
    ___________
    Before WOLLMAN, JOHN R. GIBSON, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    MURPHY, Circuit Judge.
    Ross and Amy Parkhurst, the adoptive father and biological mother of H.P., a
    minor child, asserted claims as next friend against Chad Belt, H.P.'s biological father,
    for outrage and battery based on Belt's alleged sexual abuse of H.P. After a jury trial,
    judgment was entered in favor of the Parkhursts for $250,000 in compensatory
    damages and $750,000 in punitive damages.1 Belt appeals, arguing that there was
    insufficient evidence to sustain the judgment and that the district court erred in
    permitting H.P. to testify by closed circuit television. We affirm.
    I.
    Amy and Belt married in Arkansas in 1993, and H.P. was born in 1994. When
    the couple divorced in 2000, Amy was awarded sole custody while Belt was granted
    visitation rights. Shortly thereafter Amy relocated to Arizona with H.P. and married
    Ross Parkhurst. H.P. first visited Belt in Arkansas for an extended period of time
    during the summer of 2001 when she was seven. Since Belt was a student at the time,
    H.P. spent the majority of her weekdays with her paternal grandmother. Belt testified
    that he and H.P. were alone on weekends, however, and that H.P. was not alone with
    any other adult male.
    H.P.'s maternal grandmother Theresa Williams, who lived near Belt, testified
    that she had received a frantic phone call from H.P. during the summer of 2001,
    pleading "help me, God, help me . . . please help me, come get me." Williams went
    to Belt's home to retrieve H.P., but the doors were locked and the blinds were drawn.
    She was unable to gain entrance to the home. At the end of summer, Belt delivered
    H.P. to Williams who was going to drive her granddaughter back to Arizona.
    Williams testified that H.P. ran into a closet in her house, began crying, and refused
    to say goodbye to Belt. When H.P. rejoined her mother in Arizona, she displayed
    severe behavioral difficulties. Amy Parkhurst testified that H.P. was a "completely,
    completely different child" upon returning from Arkansas. Because she was
    concerned about H.P., Amy Parkhurst took her to a family physician, Dr. Edith Bailey,
    for a "well check up." Dr. Bailey testified to taking a "quick peek" at H.P.'s genitals
    1
    The Honorable Robert T. Dawson, United States District Judge for the Western
    District of Arkansas, presiding.
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    with her "naked eye." Although she did not note any abnormalities indicating child
    abuse, Dr. Bailey testified that her limited examination would not necessarily have
    detected evidence of sexual assault.
    When Belt arrived in Arizona the following summer to take H.P. back to
    Arkansas, she suffered a nervous breakdown and threatened to run away if she were
    forced to go. Belt claims that H.P.'s refusal to return to Arkansas was related to a
    recent forest fire in the vicinity of her Arizona home, and he filed a contempt motion
    against Amy Parkhurst for violation of the custody agreement. Although Belt alleged
    at trial that the Parkhursts pressured H.P. into manufacturing allegations of abuse in
    order to dissuade him from pursuing the contempt proceedings, the record indicates
    that Belt offered to settle them for $1500 before the allegations of abuse first surfaced.
    H.P. returned to Arkansas for a visit during the winter of 2002. In advance of the trip
    she wrote to Santa Claus: "Dear Santa . . . . I want to talk to you about having to go
    to my other dad's house back in Fort Smith. Please don't make me go back this year.
    You are magic, remember. . . . Please Santa, please, just this one Christmas, please,
    Santa." H.P. nevertheless spent the holiday in Arkansas with Belt, apparently without
    event.
    H.P. returned to Arkansas in the summer of 2003. H.P. and her mother spoke
    frequently while she was at Belt's. Amy Parkhurst testified that during these calls H.P.
    "was a mess, just crying, not doing well at all." As a result she began to record her
    conversations with H.P. On July 21, 2003, H.P. telephoned her mother and informed
    her that she had injured her "private part" in a diving board accident and was bleeding
    vaginally. H.P. told her mother that Belt had not taken her to a doctor and asked her
    mother not to tell Belt that she had mentioned the bleeding. She also asked her mother
    "not to tell the judge" about the "situation" because it would be "embarrassing." A
    recording of this call was entered into evidence at trial and played for the jury. Amy
    Parkhurst traveled to Arkansas on July 24 to investigate the nature of H.P.'s injuries.
    Upon her arrival, H.P. informed her that both her "bottom" and her vagina were
    -3-
    injured. Amy Parkhurst examined H.P. but saw no external bruising or scraping. She
    then examined H.P.'s internal genitalia and testified that "it just looked like she had
    had a baby . . . . She was cut open, ripped open."
    Amy Parkhurst had H.P. examined on July 24 by Dr. Myra Gregory, a family
    practitioner. Dr. Gregory testified that H.P. "had some vaginal discharge and also a
    tear in her vaginal area." She also testified that H.P.'s injuries were consistent with
    sexual abuse, inconsistent with a diving board injury, and that H.P. equivocated about
    their cause. Dr. Gregory then referred H.P. for a sexual abuse examination. On July
    25 H.P. was examined by Barbara Durham, a nurse practitioner experienced in
    pediatric sexual abuse. Durham noted that H.P. had internal genital injuries, including
    a laceration at the base of the vaginal vault and that the "hymen d[id] not appear
    intact." Durham testified that a diving board was inconsistent with H.P.'s injuries
    because she lacked external bruising, abrasions, or other indicia of external contact
    with a diving board. As Durham explained, "when I looked at her story, a corner of
    a [diving] board found its way deep inside her vaginal vault past her hips, past her
    thighs, past her symphysis pubis, it did not match."2 Durham also noted that H.P. had
    difficulty disclosing the cause of her injuries, stating that H.P. was "vague in
    [describing] how this happened . . . ." Durham concluded at the time of the
    examination that sexual abuse was a possibility.
    On July 28 H.P. was examined at the Children's Safety Center (CSC) by Charla
    Jamerson, a forensic nurse who specialized in sexual assault examinations. Jamerson
    noted in her records that H.P. "stated that her father cusses at me and says the F word
    2
    At trial, Brent Turvey, a forensic expert specializing in wound pattern analysis,
    discussed the defense theory. He concluded that H.P. could not have been injured on
    the diving board because "in accordance with the laws of gravity, one of the legs or
    both legs are going to show some injury to the inner thigh . . . we don't have that."
    Turvey also explained that a "diving board is not some narrow device that goes into
    the interior genitals and causes an injury on the inside."
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    to me" and that "out of everybody in her life she felt the most afraid of her dad."
    Jamerson conducted an examination with a colposcope, an intragenital magnifying
    instrument. The examination was recorded and played back for the jury at trial while
    Jamerson narrated. She indicated areas of vaginal trauma, hymenal thinning, and anal
    scarring, and testified that such injuries were consistent with "[i]ntercourse with blunt
    force trauma" to the "vaginal area, the posterior fourchette and to the anus." Jamerson
    also testified to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that H.P. had been vaginally
    and anally penetrated.
    After the CSC examination, H.P. and her mother returned to Washington state,
    where the Parkhursts had recently relocated. In Washington H.P.'s emotional
    condition deteriorated and she was prone to constant "meltdowns." H.P. composed
    a letter in which she stated, "Mom, I'm so sorry. I feel like I could kill myself now.
    I hate myself." Shortly thereafter, H.P. began seeing Patty Kellogg, a psychologist.
    H.P. made it clear to Kellogg that she never wanted to return to Belt in Arkansas. As
    a therapeutic exercise, Kellogg asked H.P. to compose titles to books she would like
    to write. They included "If we don't stop him, he will do this to his other kid Lauren;"
    "I never want to go back there;" "How bad I feel;" "You should love kids not cuss
    them;" "No control of his self;" and "Treat kids the way they should be treated."
    Several weeks after returning to Washington, the Parkhursts received
    notification that Belt had spontaneously offered to relinquish his parental rights to
    H.P. if the Parkhursts would sign a statement that they were not accusing him of
    molesting H.P. The Parkhursts executed the requested document and Belt consented
    to the termination of his parental rights. Shortly thereafter Ross Parkhurst began
    proceedings to adopt H.P., and H.P. sought and received assurance that she would not
    have to visit Belt in the future.
    Several days after the adoption ceremony H.P. admitted to her grandmother that
    Belt "hurt me . . . down there" by "put[ting] his privates in my privates." H.P.
    -5-
    subsequently disclosed the assault to Kellogg and to Dr. Maureen Adair, a board
    certified psychiatrist who was also treating her. H.P.'s treatment with Dr. Adair
    included art therapy, and she testified that H.P. drew distorted figures, always with a
    penis, and that such a depiction is "very abnormal" for a child her age.
    The Parkhursts filed a complaint against Belt on June 27, 2007, alleging that
    Belt sexually assaulted H.P. Prior to trial they moved for a protective order to allow
    H.P. to testify by live two way closed circuit television rather than in open court. Belt
    opposed the motion. The Parkhursts submitted affidavits from both Kellogg and Dr.
    Adair indicating that H.P. suffered from post traumatic stress disorder and would
    suffer severe psychological and emotional trauma if forced to testify in Belt's
    presence. H.P.'s therapists also opined that the quality of her testimony would be
    greatly improved if she were permitted to testify outside of Belt's presence.
    The motion for protective order was addressed at a pretrial conference on June
    16, 2008. Belt offered to remain outside the courtroom during H.P.'s testimony, but
    the district court expressed concern that H.P. would still be "emotionally
    overwrought" and unable to testify in open court. Acknowledging the need to balance
    H.P.'s welfare with Belt's rights of cross examination and the jury's ability to evaluate
    her credibility and demeanor, the district court met with H.P. in private to determine
    whether she would be allowed to testify by closed circuit television. After the meeting
    the district court stated,
    [H.P.]'s a delightful young woman, articulate and bright and very
    emotional, and I understand, about the events and coming to court . . . .
    I do intend to let her testify by video if she wants. She cried a couple of
    times and was very emotional. It's traumatic just being in court.
    Trial began on June 17 and H.P. testified by live two way closed circuit
    television. Before she took the stand the district court made a record of its reasons for
    allowing her to testify outside the courtroom, explaining "I was convinced after
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    talking with her and discussing with her and having her break down on a couple of
    occasions, that it would not be in her best interests, it would be too traumatic to have
    her testify in the courtroom." H.P.'s testimony on direct examination included the
    following evidence:
    Q: What do you understand this case to be about?
    A: I understand this case to be about him hurting me.
    Q: Who is him, [H.P.]?
    A: Chad.
    Q: And what do you mean by hurt?
    A: Rape.
    Q: What do you understand rape to mean?
    A: Him using his private parts to hurt mine.
    Q: [H.P.], how old were you when you were raped?
    A: Seven to nine.
    ***
    Q: Do you remember, do you remember the first time that you were
    raped when you were seven?
    A: Kind of, yeah.
    ***
    Q: You testified before, [H.P.] that you were raped again that summer
    in 2003 when you were nine, is that correct?
    A: Yes.
    Q: Can you tell me where on your body you were raped?
    A: My front and my back.
    Q: Thank you. [H.P.], what do you recall, if anything, about a fall on a
    diving board?
    A: I was told to.
    Q: Who told you to?
    A: Chad.
    Belt's evidence included: (1) testimony by Belt that "[I] never digitally, never,
    never anything, not only with her, with any child. I'm not a molester. I'm not a rapist
    . . . I never touched her in an inappropriate way, nor any other kid;" (2) testimony by
    Dr. John McClanahan, an obstetrician-gynecologist, who had reviewed H.P.'s medical
    -7-
    records. McClanahan testified that H.P.'s injuries were consistent with both a straddle
    type injury and sexual assault. He could not, however, testify to a degree of medical
    certainty that the diving board caused H.P.'s injuries. Rather, he stated that it was a
    "possibility;" (3) testimony by Belt's mother and wife indicating that H.P. was a
    "happy" and "normal" child during her summer visits to Arkansas; (4) candid
    photographs of H.P. introduced to corroborate their accounts; (5) testimony from
    Belt's wife and neighbor establishing that H.P. had fallen off the diving board (each
    recalled the fall and its aftermath somewhat differently).
    After deliberations, the jury found that Belt was liable for outrage and battery
    and awarded H.P. $250,000 in compensatory damages and $750,000 in punitive
    damages. Judgment was entered on June 24, 2008. Belt appeals, arguing insufficient
    evidence and error in permitting H.P. to testify by closed circuit television.
    II.
    When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a jury verdict in a
    diversity case, we generally apply the same standard that is used by the state in which
    the district court sits. Nat'l Am. Ins. Co. v. Hogan, 
    173 F.3d 1097
    , 1103 (8th Cir.
    1999). Under Arkansas law, "the evidence is viewed in a light most favorable to the
    appelle [and] the jury's findings will be upheld if there is any substantial evidence to
    support it." J.E. Medlock v. R.L. Burden, 
    900 S.W.2d 552
    , 555 (Ark. 1995).
    Evidence is substantial unless "there is no reasonable probability in favor of appellee's
    version." Love v. H.F. Const. Co., Inc., 
    552 S.W.2d 15
    , 17 (Ark. 1977). Our standard
    of review in non diversity matters is not meaningfully different. See, e.g., Craig
    Outdoor Adver., Inc. v. Viacom Outdoor, Inc., 
    528 F.3d 1001
    , 1009 (8th Cir. 2008)
    ("A jury verdict is entitled to extreme deference and we will not set it aside unless no
    reasonable jury could have reached the same verdict based on the evidence
    submitted.") (citation omitted), cert. denied, 
    129 S. Ct. 1000
    (2009).
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    During the course of a four day trial the Parkhursts introduced extensive
    testimonial and documentary evidence. Testimony included: (1) evidence regarding
    a dramatic change in H.P.'s behavior after her 2001 visit to Arkansas; (2) evidence of
    H.P.'s extreme anxiety regarding future visits to Arkansas; (3) evidence from three
    medical professionals who had treated H.P. and concluded that her injuries were
    inconsistent with a diving board accident but consistent with sexual assault; (4)
    evidence from a forensic expert who concluded that a diving board could not have
    caused H.P.'s injuries; (5) evidence from H.P.'s psychologist that the girl had told her
    that her father had raped her; (6) evidence from H.P.'s psychiatrist that H.P. had
    admitted that her father had raped her; (7) evidence from H.P.'s maternal grandmother
    that H.P. identified Belt as the abuser; (8) evidence from H.P. identifying Belt as the
    abuser; and (9) evidence from Belt that he had been alone with H.P. during the
    summers of 2001 and 2003 and that no other adult male had. Documentary evidence
    included: (1) medical records indicating that H.P. had been sexually abused and (2)
    audio recordings depicting H.P.'s mental state.
    Belt did not introduce contrary evidence of sufficient force to indicate that there
    is no reasonable probability in favor of the Parkhursts' view of the evidence. That Belt
    denied raping H.P., presented expert testimony that a diving board conceivably could
    have caused her injuries, and presented eyewitness testimony regarding the alleged
    accident is immaterial. Our review of a jury verdict does not include an assessment
    of the credibility of witnesses, and it is improper for an appellate court to second guess
    a jury's credibility determinations. See United States v. McCarthy, 
    97 F.3d 1562
    ,
    1579 (8th Cir. 1996).
    Belt also argues that the district court erred in permitting H.P. to testify by live
    two way closed circuit television rather than in open court. "Rulings on admissibility
    of evidence will not be reversed absent a clear and prejudicial abuse of discretion."
    First Sec. Bank v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 
    152 F.3d 877
    , 879 (8th Cir. 1998). Moreover,
    a district court is afforded wide latitude in determining the manner in which evidence
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    is to be presented. See Fed. R. Evid. 611(a) ("The court shall exercise reasonable
    control over the mode and order of interrogating witnesses and presenting evidence
    so as to . . . protect witnesses from harassment or undue embarrassment.").
    The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure make express provision for testimony by
    closed circuit television. See Fed R. Civ. P. 43(a) ("For good cause in compelling
    circumstances and with appropriate safeguards, the court may permit testimony in
    open court by contemporaneous transmission from a different location."). Belt argues,
    however, that the district court abused its discretion by failing to establish whether
    H.P. was a competent witness. Although the competency of a witness may be
    presumed in the usual federal case, we evaluate competency in accordance with state
    law when it supplies the rule of decision. See Fed. R. Evid. 601. Under Arkansas law
    competency is also presumed, and a court does not abuse its discretion in allowing a
    witness to testify as long as "the trial judge could find a moral awareness of the
    obligation to tell the truth and an ability to observe, remember and relate facts."
    Modlin v. State, 
    110 S.W.3d 727
    , 729 (Ark. 2003).
    The district court met privately with H.P. prior to deciding whether to permit
    her to testify by closed circuit television and found her to be "articulate and bright."
    The district court discussed with H.P. "in great detail the importance of telling the
    truth" and explained to counsel that "she assured me and I am convinced and finding
    that she knows right from wrong and knows how important it is to tell the truth, and,
    therefore, knows the meaning and the value of an oath . . . ." Because the district court
    found H.P. intelligent and aware of her obligation to tell the truth Belt's competency
    objection is without merit.
    Relying on Maryland v. Craig, 
    497 U.S. 836
    (1990), a criminal case, Belt also
    argues that the district court erred in not issuing specific findings regarding the trauma
    H.P. would suffer if required to testify in the presence of Belt. Before allowing
    testimony by closed circuit television in a criminal case the district court should
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    determine whether (1) the procedure is "necessary to protect the welfare" of a child
    witness; (2) the child witness "would be traumatized, not by the courtroom generally,
    but by the presence of the defendant;" and (3) "the emotional distress suffered by the
    child witness" would be more than de minimis. United States v. Turning Bear, 
    357 F.3d 730
    , 736 (8th Cir. 2004) (quotation omitted); see also 18 U.S.C. § 3509(b)(1)(B).
    Belt's effort to impose in a civil case the requirements of the Sixth Amendment,
    where a defendant enjoys the protection of the Confrontation Clause, is inapposite.
    See Austin v. United States, 
    509 U.S. 602
    , 608 (1993) ("The protections provided by
    the Sixth Amendment are explicitly confined to criminal prosecutions.") (quotation
    omitted). The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure control here and Rule 43 plainly
    permits a district court "[f]or good cause in compelling circumstances and with
    appropriate safeguards" to permit a child to testify by closed circuit television. Belt's
    offer to leave the courtroom prior to H.P.'s testimony is only one factor that the district
    court could consider in making its decision.
    The district court followed Rule 43 by examining H.P. and determining that
    compelling circumstances justified her testimony by closed circuit television. As the
    court explained, "I was convinced after talking with her and discussing with her and
    having her break down on a couple of occasions that it would not be in her best
    interests, it would be too traumatic to have her testify in the courtroom." The need to
    protect the welfare of an abused child qualifies as a compelling circumstance. Cf.
    United States v. Rouse, 
    111 F.3d 561
    , 568 (8th Cir. 1997) (defendant's right to
    confront witness "is not absolute and must accommodate the State's compelling
    interest in the protection of minor victims of sex crimes from further trauma and
    embarrassment") (quotation omitted). The district court also ensured that appropriate
    safeguards were instituted. Indeed, the procedure followed at trial was nearly
    identical to that allowed by federal criminal statute in proceedings involving an
    offense against a child. See 18 U.S.C. § 3509(b)(1)(D). Here, the jury could listen
    to H.P. and observe her demeanor, Belt's attorney was able to cross examine H.P., and
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    the transmission was instantaneous. Moreover, even if it had been error to make use
    of this technology, any error would have been harmless given the overwhelming
    evidence presented at trial. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 61; see also Hall v. Arthur, 
    141 F.3d 844
    , 849 (8th Cir. 1998). Had H.P. been unable to testify, the disclosures she made
    to her grandmother, mother, counselor, and psychiatrist would have been sufficient
    to establish Belt's liability.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    _______________________
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