In re the Termination of the Parent-Child Relationship of L.R. (Minor Child), K.S. (Mother) v. Indiana Department of Child Services , 2017 Ind. App. LEXIS 295 ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                                     FILED
    Jul 14 2017, 8:43 am
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                      ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Kimberly A. Jackson                                         Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
    Indianapolis, Indiana                                       Attorney General of Indiana
    David E. Corey
    Deputy Attorney General
    Robert J. Henke
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    In re the Termination of the                                July 14, 2017
    Parent-Child Relationship of                                Court of Appeals Case No.
    L.R. (Minor Child),                                         90A02-1612-JT-2846
    K.S. (Mother),                                              Appeal from the Wells Circuit
    Court
    Appellant-Respondent,
    The Honorable Kenton W.
    v.                                                  Kiracofe, Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    Indiana Department of Child                                 90C01-1506-JT-19
    Services,
    Appellee-Petitioner
    Vaidik, Chief Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017                     Page 1 of 16
    Case Summary
    [1]   Indiana Code section 31-35-2-4 authorizes the filing of a petition to terminate a
    parent-child relationship when, among other things, the child has been removed
    from the parent and has been under the supervision of the Department of Child
    Services (DCS) for at least fifteen of the most recent twenty-two months,
    beginning with the date the child is removed from the home as a result of the
    child being alleged to be a child in need of services (CHINS). Here, DCS
    removed a child from her mother’s home and filed a CHINS petition in January
    2014. When it became apparent that a CHINS fact-finding hearing would not
    be held within the 120-day statutory limit, the parties agreed that DCS would
    move to dismiss the petition and refile under a new cause number. DCS did so
    in May 2014.
    [2]   Just over a year later, in June 2015, DCS filed a petition to terminate the
    mother’s parental rights, alleging, in part, that the child had been removed from
    the mother for at least fifteen months. The trial court eventually agreed to
    terminate the mother’s rights, and the mother appeals. Her primary contention
    is that the trial court should have calculated the period of removal starting with
    the filing of the second CHINS action in May 2014 because the original CHINS
    action was dismissed and should be disregarded. Under this view, the child had
    been removed for less than thirteen months when DCS filed its termination
    petition, rendering the petition premature under Section 31-35-2-4. But because
    the mother did not object to the dismiss-and-refile procedure, and instead
    specifically agreed to it, we cannot say that the trial court erred by treating the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017   Page 2 of 16
    two CHINS actions as one continuous proceeding that began in January 2014,
    seventeen months before DCS filed its termination petition. We affirm the
    decision of the trial court in this and all other respects.
    Facts and Procedural History                                    1
    [3]   K.S. (“Mother”) and M.R. (“Father”) are the biological parents of L.R.
    (“Child”), who was born in November 2008. On the night of January 1, 2014,
    Mother and Child were sitting in the living room of their apartment in Markle
    when they heard an explosion—Father had been cooking meth in an adjacent
    bedroom and blew up his lab. There is evidence that Mother had gone to a
    store that day, with Child in tow, to purchase meth ingredients. DCS removed
    Child from Mother and Father and placed her in foster care; Child was later
    placed with her maternal grandparents.2
    [4]   On January 3, DCS filed a petition alleging that Child was a CHINS. At an
    initial/status hearing a few days later, the parties agreed to extend the statutory
    deadline for holding a CHINS fact-finding hearing from sixty days to 120 days,
    see Ind. Code § 31-34-11-1(a), and the trial court set the hearing for April 15.
    1
    Our review of this matter has been hindered by DCS’s failure to adhere to Indiana Appellate Rule
    46(A)(6)(c), which requires that the relevant facts be recounted “in narrative form,” that is, in “the form of a
    story.” Narrative, Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1993). Compliance with this rule is
    particularly important in termination-of-parental-rights cases, where the key issue is often the progress (or
    lack thereof) made by a parent from the beginning of the case to the end.
    2
    In the summer of 2014, Father pled guilty to Class B felony dealing in methamphetamine and was
    sentenced to serve fourteen years in prison. At the termination hearing, he testified that his earliest possible
    release date would be in 2021.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017                             Page 3 of 16
    On April 14, however, Father filed a motion to continue the hearing, stating
    that the parties were “in negotiations regarding an admission[.]” Appellant’s
    App. Vol. III p. 71. The motion indicated that Mother had no objection. The
    trial court granted the motion and scheduled a status hearing for May 5, noting
    that “the fact-finding hearing will be reset if needed.” 
    Id. at 4.
    At the status
    hearing, DCS “advise[d] the Court they will be dismissing this cause as they are
    past the deadline date for scheduling a fact-finding hearing and will be
    reopening this matter under another cause number.” 
    Id. In a
    subsequent order,
    the court explained:
    The parties were unable to come to an agreement to settle the
    fact-finding trial. So a further hearing date needs to be
    scheduled.
    The hearing is unable to be held in the One Hundred and Twenty
    day time frame. So [DCS] will be asking to dismiss the current
    [CHINS] Petition and will be re-filing and opening under a new
    cause number. All parties acknowledge the necessity for this.
    
    Id. at 80
    (emphasis added); see also 
    id. at 107
    (“The parties, by counsel,
    consented to the procedure for dismissing and re-filing this child in need of
    services case.”).
    [5]   As agreed, DCS moved to dismiss its first CHINS petition on May 15, and on
    May 30 it filed a new but virtually identical petition under a new cause
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017     Page 4 of 16
    number.3 Mother and Father admitted the allegations in the new petition, and
    the trial court issued a dispositional order that required them to, among other
    things: enroll in and participate in any recommended program, obtain any
    required assessments, keep all appointments, maintain suitable housing,
    maintain a stable source of income, abstain from using alcohol or any illegal
    drugs, complete a parenting assessment and all services recommended as a
    result of the assessment, submit to random drug screens, and attend all
    scheduled visitations with Child.
    [6]   While Mother showed flashes of improvement during the CHINS proceedings,
    she made little meaningful progress toward reunification. During 2014 and the
    first part of 2015, she did not maintain consistent contact with the family case
    manager, who sometimes had to go out of her way to track Mother down;
    Mother was twice referred to counseling that she failed to complete; she missed
    appointments with her home-based case manager; she missed several scheduled
    visitations with Child; she spent time socializing with friends when she could
    have been with Child; she drank alcohol; she lived in as many as twenty
    different places, including several motels; she had at least four different
    boyfriends; and she had and lost four different jobs. Finally, on April 28, 2015,
    and again a week later, she tested positive for synthetic cannabinoids after
    smoking spice. On May 6, DCS filed a progress report in which it changed its
    3
    As discussed below, the trial court did not formally grant the motion to dismiss the first petition until
    September 2015.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017                            Page 5 of 16
    permanency plan from reunification to termination of Mother’s and Father’s
    parental rights and adoption by relatives. The trial court approved the plan.
    [7]   On June 8, DCS filed its termination petition. In accordance with the
    termination statute, Indiana Code section 31-35-2-4, DCS alleged that (1) Child
    had been removed from Mother and Father and under DCS supervision for at
    least fifteen of the most recent twenty-two months, (2) there is a reasonable
    probability that the conditions that resulted in Child’s removal or the reasons
    for placement outside the home will not be remedied and/or that the
    continuation of the parent-child relationship poses a threat to Child’s well-
    being, (3) termination is in the best interests of Child, and (4) there is a
    satisfactory plan for the care and treatment of Child.
    [8]   After DCS indicated its intent to pursue termination, Mother stepped up her
    efforts. Between June 2015 and the termination hearing on November 20,
    2015, Mother began working full-time at a factory, complied with all services,
    passed all of her drug screens, and began dating and then moved in with a
    boyfriend who was supportive. Nonetheless, at the termination hearing, the
    court-appointed guardian ad litem, Child’s counselor, and Mother’s own
    mother all recommended termination. The guardian ad litem, who had been
    involved in the case since the filing of the original CHINS petition, testified that
    Mother had not given her “any sense that [the] stability will be maintained.”
    Tr. p. 204.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017       Page 6 of 16
    [9]   The trial court took the termination matter under advisement, where it
    remained for the next year. In the meantime, the CHINS case remained active
    before the same judge. The chronological case summary for the CHINS case,
    which Mother included in her appendix on appeal, indicates that in 2016, a
    progress report was filed on April 8, a permanency hearing was held on April
    14, another progress report was filed on October 17, and another permanency
    hearing was held on October 20. See Appellant’s App. Vol. II pp. 101-03. In its
    October 17 progress report, DCS explained that “[s]ince the termination trial,
    [Mother] rarely keeps in contact with [the family case manager], occasionally
    presents herself at the office for drug screens, and cancels, attempts to
    reschedule, or reschedules several supervised visitations with her daughter.” 
    Id. at 210.
    The family case manager noted her concern that Mother “is not sincere
    with her participation in services and has only been participating for appearance
    matters and has manipulated service providers.” 
    Id. The visitation
    supervisor
    was “recommending the visits cease, due to lack of progress made by [Mother]
    and [Child] has become more irritated with her mother the more the visits
    continue.” 
    Id. at 213.
    DCS indicated that it was “no longer going to be
    providing services to this family” absent a court order and that it continued to
    believe that termination and adoption were appropriate. 
    Id. at 214-15.
    On
    November 21, 2016, the trial court issued an order terminating Mother’s and
    Father’s parental rights.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017    Page 7 of 16
    [10]   Mother now appeals.4
    Discussion and Decision
    [11]   Mother challenges the termination of her parental rights on three alternative
    grounds. First, she contends that DCS filed the termination petition
    prematurely and that the trial court should have dismissed it on that basis
    alone. Second, she asserts that the manner in which the CHINS and
    termination cases were litigated deprived her of due process. Third, she argues
    that the termination judgment is clearly erroneous in light of the progress she
    made between the filing of the termination petition and the hearing on the
    petition.
    I. Timing of Petition
    [12]   Mother first argues that DCS filed its termination petition too soon. Under
    Indiana Code section 31-35-2-4(b)(2)(A), DCS was required to allege and then
    prove that, when it filed its termination petition, one of the following was true:
    (i) The child has been removed from the parent for at least six (6)
    months under a dispositional decree.
    (ii) A court has entered a finding under IC 31-34-21-5.6 that
    reasonable efforts for family preservation or reunification are not
    4
    Father initially appealed the termination of his rights but then filed a motion to dismiss his appeal, which
    this Court granted.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017                            Page 8 of 16
    required, including a description of the court’s finding, the date
    of the finding, and the manner in which the finding was made.
    (iii) The child has been removed from the parent and has been
    under the supervision of a local office or probation department
    for at least fifteen (15) months of the most recent twenty-two (22)
    months, beginning with the date the child is removed from the
    home as a result of the child being alleged to be a child in need of
    services or a delinquent child[.]
    DCS alleged only the third fact: that “[t]he child has been removed from the
    parent and has been under the supervision of [DCS] for at least fifteen (15)
    months of the most [recent] twenty two (22) months.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II
    p. 36.5 Mother maintains that DCS failed to prove this allegation.
    [13]   Mother acknowledges that DCS removed Child and filed a CHINS petition in
    January 2014—seventeen months before DCS filed its termination petition, in
    June 2015—but she argues that the period of removal should not be calculated
    starting with January 2014. Noting that the first CHINS matter was eventually
    dismissed, and focusing on the phrase “beginning with the date the child is
    removed from the home as a result of the child being alleged to be a child in
    need of services,” Mother contends that Child’s removal should be treated as
    having begun on May 30, 2014—the day on which DCS filed its second CHINS
    5
    It is unclear why DCS chose not to allege that Child had been “removed from the parent for at least six (6)
    months under a dispositional decree,” since it filed its termination petition on June 8, 2015, more than six
    months after the trial court issued its dispositional decree (on November 3, 2014). In any event, DCS does
    not rely on that provision on appeal, nor could it. See Matter of Bi.B., 
    69 N.E.3d 464
    , 469 (Ind. 2017) (holding
    that DCS cannot rely on six-month provision where it was not alleged in termination petition).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017                           Page 9 of 16
    petition. Mother’s position, in short, is that because DCS ultimately dismissed
    the original CHINS action, the trial court should have proceeded as if that
    action and the removal that accompanied it never happened. Under Mother’s
    analysis, the period of removal was less than thirteen months (May 30, 2014, to
    June 8, 2015), DCS therefore filed its termination petition prematurely, and the
    trial court should have dismissed it.6
    [14]   We see two problems with Mother’s position. First, Section 31-35-2-
    4(b)(2)(A)(iii) does not include any language supporting her contention that the
    only CHINS action that can be considered in calculating the period of removal
    is the one that is pending when the termination petition is filed. The provision
    simply says that the period begins “with the date the child is removed from the
    home as a result of the child being alleged to be a child in need of services.”
    Here, it is undisputed that Child was removed from the home in January 2014
    as a result of being alleged to be a child in need of services.
    [15]   Second, there is no indication in the record that DCS moved to dismiss the first
    CHINS petition because it lacked merit or to somehow game the system or
    prejudice Mother. Rather, the record shows that the parties were “in
    negotiations regarding an admission” in the first CHINS action and that the
    dismissal and refiling were merely a means of addressing the 120-day deadline
    6
    Mother frames this issue as one of sufficiency of the evidence, but it is really a matter of interpreting Section
    31-35-2-4(b)(2)(A)(iii). We see no indication that Mother raised this statutory-interpretation argument in the
    trial court, but DCS does not contend that she waived it, so we will address it.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017                             Page 10 of 16
    for holding a CHINS fact-finding hearing. See Appellant’s App. Vol. III pp. 4,
    71. Most importantly, Mother did not object to the dismissal-and-refiling
    procedure; to the contrary, she expressly acknowledged the need for it. 
    Id. at 80
    ; 107. Therefore, while there may be situations in which removal related to a
    CHINS action that is later dismissed should not be counted when calculating
    the period of removal under Section 31-35-2-4(b)(2)(A)(iii), this is not one of
    them.
    [16]   The trial court did not err in concluding that Child had been removed from
    Mother and under DCS supervision for at least fifteen months when DCS filed
    its termination petition.
    II. Due Process
    [17]   Mother also contends that even if the termination petition was timely, certain
    “procedural irregularities” deprived her “of her right to due process” under the
    Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Appellant’s Br. pp.
    25-26. DCS points out that Mother did not raise a due-process claim before the
    trial court and asserts that Mother’s argument is therefore waived. Because
    Mother does not deny that she failed to make her due-process claim in the trial
    court, we agree with DCS that it is waived. See Hite v. Vanderburgh Cty. Office of
    Family & Children, 
    845 N.E.2d 175
    , 180 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006) (“It is well
    established that we may consider a party’s constitutional claim waived when it
    is raised for the first time on appeal.”).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017   Page 11 of 16
    [18]   Waiver notwithstanding, Mother has not convinced us that she was deprived of
    due process. Initially, she takes issue with the manner in which the dismissal
    and refiling of the CHINS proceeding was handled. She notes that the trial
    court did not rule on DCS’s motion to dismiss the first CHINS matter until
    September 2015, sixteen months after DCS filed that motion (on May 15,
    2014); that as a result of the trial court’s delay in dismissing the first CHINS
    matter, it was still pending when the second CHINS matter was opened (on
    May 30, 2014); and that DCS and the trial court erroneously continued making
    filings in the first CHINS matter even after the second CHINS matter was
    opened. Mother is correct that these were mistakes, and easily preventable ones
    at that. However, we fail to see how they negatively impacted her. Mother
    maintains that “[t]he filing of the second CHINS petition while the first was still
    pending appeared to cause multiple referrals and confusion among service
    providers” and that she “was held responsible for that confusion because it
    resulted in Mother not completing the services as expected.” Appellant’s Br. p.
    28. But the transcript pages she cites do not support the notion that her service
    providers were confused as a result of the overlapping CHINS actions. Mother
    also asserts that “new referrals meant making new arrangements, possibly with
    new people, and that only made Mother’s compliance more difficult,” 
    id., but she
    does not cite any evidence in support of that claim.
    [19]   Mother also bases her due-process claim on the fact that the trial court did not
    issue its termination decision until a year after the termination hearing. She
    argues that “[g]iven her constitutional right to parent,” her ability to raise Child
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017   Page 12 of 16
    “should have been based on evidence at the time of judgment, not a year
    earlier.” 
    Id. However, Mother
    has not given us any reason to think that she
    would have fared any better based on “evidence at the time of judgment.” To
    the contrary, the one piece of evidence she has given us—the October 17, 2016
    progress report from the CHINS case—fully supports the trial court’s
    termination decision. In the report, DCS made clear that Mother had not made
    much, if any, progress, since the termination hearing, that her improvement
    before the termination hearing seemed to have been for the sake of appearances,
    that visitation was not going well, and that it still believed that termination and
    adoption were in order. See Appellant’s App. Vol. II pp. 210-15.
    [20]   Mother has failed to establish that either the delay or the other procedural
    irregularities deprived her of due process.
    III. Mother’s Progress After Filing of Termination
    Petition
    [21]   Finally, Mother asserts that the evidence presented by DCS does not justify the
    termination of her parental rights. In reviewing a trial court’s decision to
    terminate a parent’s rights, we will not reweigh the evidence or judge witness
    credibility. In re V.A., 
    51 N.E.3d 1140
    , 1143 (Ind. 2016). We consider only the
    evidence and reasonable inferences that are most favorable to the judgment,
    giving due regard to the trial court’s unique opportunity to judge the credibility
    of the witnesses. 
    Id. We will
    reverse the trial court’s judgment only if it is
    clearly erroneous. 
    Id. Court of
    Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017   Page 13 of 16
    [22]   Mother frames the issue as whether DCS presented sufficient evidence to
    support the trial court’s conclusions that there is a reasonable probability that
    the conditions that resulted in Child’s removal and placement outside the home
    of the parents will not be remedied, see I.C. § 31-35-2-4(b)(2)(B)(i), and that
    termination is in the best interests of Child, see 
    id. at (b)(2)(C).
    Appellant’s Br.
    pp. 29-39. However, her actual argument is much more narrow. She contends
    that termination was improper in light of the fact that, at the time of the
    termination hearing, she was in a relationship with a supportive boyfriend, she
    had a steady place to live (with her boyfriend), she was employed full-time, her
    drug screens were coming back clean, and she was compliant with all services.
    [23]   There is one very critical flaw in Mother’s argument. By her own admission,
    this state of stability did not begin until after DCS changed the plan from
    reunification to termination, and it had existed for only a few months at the
    time of the termination hearing. She did not begin seeing her new boyfriend or
    return to negative drug tests until June 2015; her compliance with home-based
    services did not begin until July 2015; she did not start her new job until July or
    August of 2015; and she did not move in with her boyfriend until September
    2015, two months before the termination hearing. It is undisputed that the
    relative stability between June and November of 2015 was preceded by
    seventeen months of significant instability (from January 2014 through May
    2015).
    [24]   Mother cites our decision in In re S.P.H., 
    806 N.E.2d 874
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2004),
    for the proposition that the trial court should have based its decision on “her
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017   Page 14 of 16
    situation at the time of the termination of parental rights hearing.” Appellant’s
    Reply Br. p. 5. It is true that in In re S.P.H. we said, as we have said in
    countless other cases, that “[t]o determine whether conditions are likely to be
    remedied, the trial court must examine [the parent’s] fitness to care for the
    children as of the time of the termination hearing and take into account any
    evidence of changed 
    conditions.” 806 N.E.2d at 881
    . But Mother carefully
    avoids what we said in the next sentence: that the trial court must also
    “evaluate [the parent’s] patterns of conduct to determine whether there is a
    substantial probability of future neglect or deprivation.” 
    Id. Our Supreme
    Court has since said the same thing. See, e.g., In re K.E., 
    39 N.E.3d 641
    , 647
    (Ind. 2015) (“Changed conditions are balanced against habitual patterns of
    conduct to determine whether there is a substantial probability of future
    neglect.”).
    [25]   Here, Mother’s conduct during the seventeen months before June 2015 plainly
    support the trial court’s decision to terminate her parental rights. She failed to
    stay in touch with the family case manager and failed to fully participate in the
    services she was offered, including counseling and home-based services. She
    missed multiple scheduled visitations and passed up other opportunities to
    spend time with Child. She drank alcohol and smoked spice. And she moved
    nearly twenty times, had multiple boyfriends, and changed jobs several times.
    While there is no question that things appeared to be more stable by the time of
    the termination hearing, our trial courts have discretion to “weigh a parent’s
    prior history more heavily than efforts made only shortly before termination.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017   Page 15 of 16
    In re E.M., 
    4 N.E.3d 636
    , 643 (Ind. 2014). We cannot say that the trial court
    abused that discretion in this case. In addition, the guardian ad litem, Child’s
    counselor, and the maternal grandmother all testified that, even in light of
    Mother’s pre-hearing improvements, termination remained appropriate. This
    testimony weighs heavily in favor of the trial court’s best-interests
    determination and its ultimate judgment.
    [26]   Mother has not convinced us that the trial court’s decision was clearly
    erroneous.7
    [27]   Affirmed.
    Bailey, J., and Robb, J., concur.
    7
    In addition to her broader argument about the changes she had made at the time of the termination hearing,
    Mother specifically challenges sixteen of the trial court’s 133 findings of facts. DCS contends that even if
    those sixteen findings are set aside, the remaining 117 findings are sufficient to support the judgment. Having
    reviewed the unchallenged findings, we agree with DCS.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 90A02-1612-JT-2846 | July 14, 2017                         Page 16 of 16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Court of Appeals Case 90A02-1612-JT-2846

Citation Numbers: 79 N.E.3d 985, 2017 WL 2990186, 2017 Ind. App. LEXIS 295

Judges: Vaidik, Bailey, Robb

Filed Date: 7/14/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024