in-the-matter-of-the-termination-of-the-parent-child-relationship-of-qm ( 2013 )


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  • Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D),                                            Dec 20 2013, 5:58 am
    this Memorandum Decision shall not be
    regarded as precedent or cited before
    any court except for the purpose of
    establishing the defense of res judicata,
    collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS:                           ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:
    JENNIFER A. JOAS                                   GREGORY F. ZOELLER
    Joas & Stotts                                      Attorney General of Indiana
    Madison, Indiana
    ROBERT J. HENKE
    AARON J. SPOLARICH
    Deputies Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    IN THE MATTER OF THE TERMINATION OF                )
    THE PARENT-CHILD RELATIONSHIIP OF:                 )
    Q.M. and E.M., Minor Children,                     )
    )
    B.M., Father,                                      )
    )
    Appellants-Respondents,                     )
    )
    vs.                                )       No. 15A04-1303-JT-142
    )
    INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF CHILD                        )
    SERVICES,                                          )
    )
    Appellee-Petitioner.                        )
    APPEAL FROM THE DEARBORN CIRCUIT COURT
    The Honorable James D. Humphrey, Judge
    Cause Nos. 15C01-1209-JT-23, 15C01-1209-JT-24
    December 20, 2013
    MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    MAY, Judge
    B.M. (Father)1 appeals the involuntary termination of his parental rights to his
    children, Q.M. and E.M. (Children). Father’s parental rights had previously been terminated,
    but we reversed that order on September 11, 2012. In Re Q.M., 
    974 N.E.2d 1021
     (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2012). Soon afterward2 the Dearborn County office of the Department of Child
    Services (“DCDCS”) filed a second petition, which the trial court granted. Father argues on
    appeal:
    1.      DCDCS violated Father’s right to due process because it did not provide Father with
    additional services between our reversal of the first termination order and the filing of
    the second termination petition;
    2.      The trial court committed fundamental error when it proceeded to a second
    termination hearing based on DCDCS’s prematurely-filed second petition; and
    3.      There was insufficient evidence to support the involuntary termination of Father’s
    parental rights.
    We affirm.3
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The facts of the underlying CHINS adjudications and the earlier proceedings were set
    forth in our earlier opinion:
    Father is the biological father of Q.M., born in July 2007, and E.M.,
    born in August 2009. The facts most favorable to the trial court’s judgment
    1
    Mother voluntarily relinquished her parental rights to the Children.
    2
    The petition is dated September 17 and the court, in its final order, indicates the petition was filed on that day.
    However, the Chronological Case Summary and the handwritten notation on the petition in the Appendix
    indicates the petition was filed on September 24.
    3
    We held oral argument on this matter on November 19, 2013, at the Indiana Statehouse. We commend
    counsel on their advocacy.
    2
    reveal that the local Dearborn County office of the Indiana Department of
    Child Services (“DCDCS”) became involved with this family in March 2010
    after receiving a report of injuries suffered by then two-year-old Q.M.
    Although Q.M. had been taken to Dearborn County Hospital by his mother for
    uncontrollable vomiting, hospital personnel noticed Q.M. had sustained
    multiple injuries including a bruise to the tip of his penis, bilateral bruising on
    both hips, small bruises on his face, and a laceration to his chin. Q.M. was
    transported to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital where it was further discovered
    that Q.M. also had suffered damage to his small intestine requiring surgery to
    remove a portion of the injured organ.
    While Q.M. remained at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, Dr. Shapiro,
    Medical Director of the hospital’s Child Abuse Team, informed the DCDCS
    assessment case manager that Q.M.’s injuries, including the injury to his small
    intestine, were indications of abuse. Dr. Shapiro further disclosed that the
    injury to Q.M.’s small intestine was a result of “blunt force trauma” that could
    have been caused by “a punch or a kick.” Appellant’s Appendix at 50.
    As a result of its investigation, DCDCS filed petitions, under separate
    cause numbers, seeking emergency custody of both Q.M. and E.M. The
    emergency custody petitions were granted, and DCDCS thereafter filed
    petitions alleging Q.M. and E.M. were children in need of services (“CHINS”).
    Although the specific perpetrator of Q.M.’s injuries was never specifically
    identified, Father later signed a Stipulation of CHINS agreement wherein he
    acknowledged that Q.M.’s injuries “would not have occurred but for the act or
    omission of a parent, custodian, or guardian.” Id. at 89.
    The children were adjudicated CHINS, and the trial court entered an
    order directing Father to participate in various services including a
    psychological evaluation, parenting classes, individual counseling, and
    therapeutic visits with the children. Initially, Father participated in several of
    these court-ordered services. He failed, however, to progress in his ability to
    incorporate the things he was learning into his daily life and interactions with
    the children. For example, Father’s evaluation with psychologist Dr. Edward
    Connor indicated Father consistently tried to present a more positive persona
    than what reality would indicate. Father also demonstrated a deficit in his
    ability to be “emotionally attuned” to the children, which was “particularly
    concerning” with regard to Q.M., who had suffered such “severe emotional
    trauma.” Transcript at 121. Additionally, Father did not express his emotions
    in a positive manner and had significant passive-aggressive tendencies. As a
    result of his evaluation, Dr. Connor recommended Father participate in
    individual counseling.
    Although Father initially participated in the recommended individual
    therapy through Lifeworks Counseling, he failed to successfully complete the
    program. Moreover, the therapist working with Father observed that Father’s
    3
    “thoughts” and “perceptions” were “distorted” to such a degree that it rendered
    him incapable of being “effective in any level of interaction with his children.”
    Id. at 23. Father also began expressing obsessive and aggressive behaviors
    with regard to Mother following the couple’s break-up in October 2010. This
    extreme and obsessive behavior by Father was observed by service providers
    during visits with the children and during other interactions with case workers
    and service providers. For example, Father sent 96 text messages and made
    numerous phone calls concerning Mother and her whereabouts to the home-
    based counselor’s personal cell phone and home phone during a single
    weekend, causing the provider to feel threatened and to request no further
    work with Father.
    Father also began showing up at the DCDCS office whenever he
    thought Mother might be there, and a restraining order was later issued against
    Father with regard to [Mother]. Father was also ordered by the trial court to
    limit his contact with certain DCDCS case managers and service providers due
    to his unstable behavior and aggressive telephone calls and texts. Because
    Father’s behavior was viewed as a threat to the children, Father’s visitation
    privileges were also eventually limited.
    As a result of Father’s overall lack of progress in services, refusal to
    accept responsibility for his role in the children’s removal, and inability to
    understand the severe emotional trauma suffered by Q.M. and/or effectively
    deal with the child’s long-term emotional and behavioral issues, DCDCS filed
    petitions seeking the involuntary termination of Father’s parental rights to both
    children on May 20, 2011. Although the children had been removed from the
    family home for approximately thirteen months, no dispositional order
    formally removing the children from Father’s care and custody had been issued
    by the trial court at the time the termination petitions were filed. Upon
    discovering this oversight, DCDCS sought, and the trial court entered,
    dispositional orders formally removing the children from Father’s care and
    custody in July 2011.
    A consolidated, two-day evidentiary hearing on the termination
    petitions as to both children commenced in August 2011 and later concluded in
    October 2011. During the hearing, DCDCS presented considerable evidence
    regarding Father’s failure to successfully complete a majority of the court-
    ordered reunification services, including individual counseling and a Batterer’s
    Intervention [P]rogram. The evidence also confirmed Father remained unable
    to demonstrate that he was capable of providing the children with a safe and
    stable home environment. Specifically, DCDCS presented substantial
    evidence establishing Father’s ongoing distorted self-perceptions, lack of
    emotional attunement with the children, refusal to acknowledge the
    significance of Q.M.’s physical and emotional trauma, and ongoing obsession
    with Mother.
    4
    As for the children, DCDCS submitted evidence showing Q.M., who
    was diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder, intermittent explosive
    disorder, and oppositional defiant disorder, was living and thriving together
    with E.M. in the care of his pre-adoptive foster family. Additional evidence
    established that Q.M.’s significant behavioral and emotional outbursts were
    lessening, and that the child was happy, trusted, and bonded to his foster
    parents, especially his foster mother who had become Q.M.’s primary source
    of emotional security.
    At the close of evidence, the trial court took the matter under
    advisement. On November 7, 2011, the trial court issued its judgment
    terminating Father’s parental rights to Q.M. and E.M.
    In re Q.M., 974 N.E.2d at 1022-24.
    On appeal, DCDCS conceded it had not filed its dispositional decree removing the
    Children from Father’s home until after it had filed the petition for termination and that the
    Children had been removed from Father’s home for only thirteen of the required fifteen
    months.      Thus, DCDCS’s termination petition had not satisfied “the jurisdictional
    requirements of Indiana Code § 31-35-2-4(B)(2)(a).” Id. at 1024. We, therefore, reversed
    the involuntary termination of Father’s parental rights to the Children and remanded. Our
    opinion was handed down on September 11, 2012.
    Within two weeks DCDCS filed a second petition to involuntarily terminate Father’s
    parental rights. The trial court held a hearing December 18 and thereafter issued another
    order involuntarily terminating Father’s parental rights.4
    4
    The court entered the order terminating Father’s rights on January 14, 2013. However, Father claimed he did
    not receive a copy of that order, and the Chronological Case Summary suggested that order may not have been
    sent to him. To provide Father with an opportunity to appeal, the trial court entered an amended order that
    contained the same findings, conclusions, and judgment as the original order.
    5
    DISCUSSION AND DECISION
    1.     Additional Services after Reversal of First Termination Order
    In a termination of parental rights proceeding, parents have certain due process rights:
    When a State seeks to terminate the parent-child relationship, it must do so in a
    manner that meets the requirements of the due process clause. Santosky v.
    Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 
    102 S.Ct. 1388
    , 
    71 L.Ed.2d 599
     (1982). Although due
    process has never been precisely defined, the phrase embodies a requirement
    of “fundamental fairness.” E.P. v. Marion County Office of Family &
    Children, 
    653 N.E.2d 1026
    , 1031 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995) (quoting Lassiter v.
    Dep’t of Social Servs., 
    452 U.S. 18
    , 26, 
    101 S.Ct. 2153
    , 
    68 L.Ed.2d 640
    (1981)). Citing Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 
    96 S.Ct. 893
    , 
    47 L.Ed.2d 18
     (1976), this court has recently acknowledged that the nature of the process
    due in parental rights termination proceedings turns on a balancing of three
    factors: (1) the private interests affected by the proceeding, (2) the risk of error
    created by the State’s chosen procedure, and (3) the countervailing
    governmental interest supporting use of the challenged procedure. A.P. v.
    Porter County Office of Family and Children, 
    734 N.E.2d 1107
     (Ind. Ct. App.
    2000)[, reh’g denied].
    J.T. v. Marion Co. Office of Family & Children, 
    740 N.E.2d 1261
    , 1264 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000),
    reh’g denied, trans. denied, abrogated on other grounds by Baker v. Marion Co. Office of
    Family & Children, 
    810 N.E.2d 1035
    , 1041 (Ind. 2004).                 In addition, “procedural
    irregularities in a CHINS proceeding may be of such import that they deprive a parent of
    procedural due process with respect to the termination of his or her parental rights.” A.P.,
    
    734 N.E.2d at 1112-13
    .
    Father argues his due process rights were violated when DCDCS did not provide
    services to Father or attempt to reunify him with his Children between our reversal of the
    first termination order and DCDCS’s filing of the second termination petition. Father argues
    that, on remand, DCDCS was required to offer reunification services pursuant to 
    Ind. Code § 6
    31-34-21-5.5(b) (footnote added):
    (b) Except as provided in section 5.65 of this chapter, the department shall
    make reasonable efforts to preserve and reunify families as follows:
    (1) If a child has not been removed from the child’s home, to prevent or
    eliminate the need for removing the child from the child’s home.
    (2) If a child has been removed from the child’s home, to make it
    possible for the child to return safely to the child’s home as soon as
    possible.
    In addition, Father argues the short time before the second termination petition – within two
    weeks of our uncertified opinion – deprived him of the due process required before
    involuntary termination.
    DCDCS was not required to provide Father with services because he did not request
    them. See In re B.D.J., 
    728 N.E.2d 195
    , 201 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000) (“a parent may not sit idly
    by without asserting a need or desire for services and then successfully argue that he was
    denied services to assist him with his parenting”). Regarding this issue, the trial court found:
    [Family Case Manager] Eckstein testified that she spoke multiple times with
    Father on the phone after the [C]ourt of Appeals reversed the termination of
    parental rights. In none of these conversations did Father ask FCM Eckstein
    about the [C]hildren and how the [C]hildren were doing or whether he could
    visit the [C]hildren.
    (App. at 44.) During the hearing on the second termination petition, DCDCS Case Manager
    Amy Eckstein testified:
    [State]:         . . . [W]hat is the reason that any services for [Father] did not begin
    again?
    [Eckstein]:      We had - the case had been open to - since 2010 and he did not
    progress in those services or complete those services and the
    5
    
    Ind. Code § 31-34-21-5
    .6 lists scenarios – including a parent’s conviction of certain crimes, prior termination
    proceedings, and abandonment of an infant – during which DCDCS is not required to comply with 
    Ind. Code § 31-34-21-5
    .5. Neither party asserts one of those scenarios occurred in the instant case.
    7
    Department [of Child Services] did not feel that he would progress in
    any future services?
    [State]:       Did [Father] motion the Court to request any services to begin again?
    [Eckstein]:    Not to my knowledge.
    (Tr. at 12.) Father also testified:
    [Father’s Counsel]: OK. Now, at some point you heard that the [first termination]
    case was overturned by an appeal, correct?
    [Father]:           Yes.
    [Father’s Counsel]: When you learned that the case was overturned on appeal, did
    you make any efforts to try to resume visitations and contact
    with your children?
    [Father]:           No Sir I have not.
    (Id. at 18.) Father then testified regarding his frustration with various parts of the CHINS
    process and his disagreements with service providers, but never testified that he asked for
    reunification services after we reversed the first termination order. Therefore, Father has not
    demonstrated his due process rights were violated when DCDCS did not provide him with
    reunification services and DCDCS was not required to in the absence of his request to do so.
    2.     Premature Filing of Second Termination Petition
    Our Appellate Rules provide: “The trial court, Administrative Agency, and parties
    shall not take any action in reliance upon the opinion or memorandum decision until the
    opinion or memorandum decision is certified.” App. R. 65(E) (emphasis added). An opinion
    is certified “only after the time for all Petitions for Rehearing, Transfer, or Review has
    expired, unless all the parties request earlier certification. If the Supreme Court grants
    transfer or review, the Clerk shall not certify any opinion or memorandum decision until final
    disposition by the Supreme Court.” 
    Id.
     A party must file a petition for rehearing or transfer
    8
    no later than thirty days after the decision. App. R. 54 (B) (rehearing); App. R. 57(C)(1)
    (transfer). Our Indiana Supreme Court recently upheld a trial court’s refusal to act on a
    party’s request for implementation of an appellate holding prior to its certification. Founds.
    of E. Chicago, Inc. v. City of E. Chicago, 
    933 N.E.2d 874
    , 874-5 (Ind. 2010).
    Our opinion reversing the first termination order was issued on September 11, 2012,
    and DCDCS filed its new petition on either September 17 or September 24. See supra at 1
    n.3. The filing therefore occurred before the thirty-day time frame for a petition for rehearing
    or for transfer had passed. Regarding that premature filing, the trial court found:
    22.     [DCDCS] did not begin visits after the Court of Appeals reversed the
    original TPR [termination of parental rights]. It is noted that [DCDCS] re-
    filed a TPR petition within six (6) days of receiving the Court of [A]ppeals
    order. FCM Eckstein acknowledged, however, that [DCDCS] spoke with
    [Q.M.’s] counselor about doing visits and the counselor and DCS believed that
    visits would be detrimental to the child. The child’s behavior has begun to
    stabilize since the original TPR due to the care he has received. FCM Eckstein
    believes, and the Court finds, that the child’s behavior would destabilize if
    visits began again with his father.
    (App. at 43-44.) At oral argument, DCDCS conceded the second termination petition was
    filed prematurely, but argued the error was harmless. We agree.
    We will not reverse a trial court’s decision on the basis of an “error or defect in any
    ruling or order or in anything done or omitted by the trial court or by any of the parties” when
    that error’s “probable impact, in light of all the evidence in the case, is sufficiently minor so
    as not to affect the substantial rights of the parties.” App. R. 66(A). DCDCS filed its second
    petition before our opinion was certified, but the trial court did not act on the petition until
    two weeks after certification. Father did not bring the issue of the premature filing to the
    9
    trial court’s attention or file a motion to dismiss based on the error, which means this alleged
    error also was waived for appellate review. See In re S.P.H. and H.P.H., 806 N.E.2d at 877-
    78 (failure to first raise an issue at the trial court level waives the issue from appellate
    consideration). As noted above, Father did not request services, so the premature filing did
    not affect his rights. While DCDCS’s premature filing was error, we are unable to find
    prejudice when Father has not demonstrated any impact on the decision of the trial court.
    Therefore, the error was harmless. See Rogers v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 
    745 N.E.2d 793
    , 796 (trial court’s procedural error was harmless when it did not ultimately affect the
    outcome of the case).
    3.     Sufficiency of Evidence Supporting Termination
    We review termination of parental rights with great deference. In re K.S., D.S., and
    B.G., 
    750 N.E.2d 832
    , 836 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001). We will not reweigh evidence or judge
    credibility of witnesses. In re D.D., 
    804 N.E.2d 258
    , 265 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004), trans. denied.
    Instead, we consider only the evidence and reasonable inferences most favorable to the
    judgment. 
    Id.
     In deference to the juvenile court’s unique position to assess the evidence, we
    will set aside a judgment terminating a parent’s rights only if it is clearly erroneous. In re
    L.S., 
    717 N.E.2d 204
    , 208 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999), reh’g denied, trans. denied, cert. denied 
    534 U.S. 1161
     (2002).
    When, as here, a judgment contains specific findings of fact and conclusions thereon,
    we apply a two-tiered standard of review. Bester v. Lake Cnty. Office of Family & Children,
    
    839 N.E.2d 143
    , 147 (Ind. 2005). We determine first whether the evidence supports the
    10
    findings and second whether the findings support the judgment. 
    Id.
     “Findings are clearly
    erroneous only when the record contains no facts to support them either directly or by
    inference.” Quillen v. Quillen, 
    671 N.E.2d 98
    , 102 (Ind. 1996). If the evidence and
    inferences support the juvenile court’s decision, we must affirm. In re L.S., 
    717 N.E.2d at 208
    .
    “The traditional right of parents to establish a home and raise their children is
    protected by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.” In re M.B., 
    666 N.E.2d 73
    , 76 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996), trans. denied. A juvenile court must subordinate the
    interests of the parents to those of the child, however, when evaluating the circumstances
    surrounding a termination. In re K.S., 
    750 N.E.2d at 837
    . The right to raise one’s own child
    should not be terminated solely because there is a better home available for the child, 
    id.,
     but
    parental rights may be terminated when a parent is unable or unwilling to meet his or her
    parental responsibilities. 
    Id. at 836
    .
    To terminate a parent-child relationship, the State must allege and prove:
    (A) that one (1) of the following is 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 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 county office of family and children
    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;
    11
    (B) that one (1) of the following is true:
    (i) There is a reasonable probability that the conditions that
    resulted in the child’s removal or the reasons for placement
    outside the home of the parents will not be remedied.
    (ii) There is a reasonable probability that the continuation of the
    parent-child relationship poses a threat to the well-being of the
    child.
    (iii) The child has, on two (2) separate occasions, been
    adjudicated a child in need of services;
    (C) that termination is in the best interests of the child; and
    (D) that there is a satisfactory plan for the care and treatment of the
    child.
    
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4
    (b)(2). The State must provide clear and convincing proof of these
    allegations. In re G.Y., 
    904 N.E.2d 1257
    , 1260-61 (Ind. 2009), reh’g denied. If the court
    finds the allegations in the petition are true, it must terminate the parent-child relationship.
    
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-8
    .
    Father does not challenge the trial court’s findings regarding 
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2
    -
    4(B)(2)(A) and 
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4
    (b)(2)(D). He disputes only the trial court’s findings
    that there is a “reasonable probability that the conditions that resulted in the child’s removal
    or the reasons for placement outside the home of parents will not be remedied,” 
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4
    (b)(2)(B)(i), and “that termination is in the best interests of the child.” 
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4
    (b)(2)(C).
    a.       Remedy of Conditions Resulting in Children’s Removal
    Regarding whether there was a reasonable probability the conditions that resulted in
    the Children’s removal from their home would be remedied, 6 the trial court concluded:7
    6
    Father also challenges the trial court’s conclusion that the continuation of the parent-child relationship posed
    a threat to the well-being of the children pursuant to 
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4
    (b)(4)(B)(ii). However, as Ind.
    12
    3.       DCS has established by clear and convincing evidence that the reasons
    for continued placement outside the home will not be remedied. The
    Court particularly notes that:
    A.     Father has failed to complete therapy and the Batterer’s
    Intervention Program.
    B.     Father has also failed to make considerable progress working
    with caseworkers from George Jr. Republic.8
    C.     Father’s distorted perceptions render him incapable of
    recognizing the necessity of change, and his passive-aggressive
    tendencies have undermined some of the work done with him.
    D.     Father’s obsession with his failed relationship with mother took
    precedence to concerns regarding the children – no progress was
    made as a result.
    (App. at 46) (footnote added). The trial court noted fourteen findings of fact it relied on in
    making its conclusion:
    8.       Father suffers from “distorted perceptions”, [sic] according to Father’s
    Lifeworks therapist, Janelle Batta, which render him incapable of
    seeing the negative sides of his actions.
    9.       In Father’s counseling sessions, he focused obsessively on Mother and
    their relationship rather than on his own issues or on his children.
    10.      Father also displayed obsessive behavior with regard to Mother after
    their breakup in visits with his children and in his interactions with
    caseworkers and service providers.
    11.      Father’s extreme behavior included questioning service providers and
    DCS staff about Mother’s location, including sending nearly one
    hundred (100) text messages about Mother to service provider Jennifer
    Buesing on her personal cell phone, causing her to request no further
    work with [Father]. A restraining order was issued between Father and
    Code § 31-35-2-4(B) is written in the disjunctive, DCDCS needed only prove one of the requirements. See In
    re J.W., 
    779 N.E.2d 954
    , 962 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002) (DCS required to prove one, but not both, of the
    requirements set forth by 
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4
    (B)).
    7
    We note a majority of the trial court’s findings focus on Q.M. and say little about E.M.’s situation. While we
    hold the evidence sufficient to terminate Father’s rights to both children, we encourage the trial court, when
    determining the fate of two children, to present more thorough findings regarding both children.
    8
    “George Junior Republic in Indiana provides a continuum of services including home-based therapeutic
    services, group homes, and independent living across the state of Indiana. GJR Home-Based includes services
    that are provided to families and children in their own homes, schools and communities. These services range
    from home-based casework and therapy, functional family therapy, independent living, supervised visitations
    and homemaker services.” http://georgejuniorrepublic.org/gjr_in_indiana.html (last accessed November 27,
    2013).
    13
    Mother, and Father appeared at the DCS office at times where he
    thought he could run into Mother. The result of this conduct was an
    order from the Court limiting Father’s contact with DCS and service
    providers and likewise limiting his visitation, as his unstable behavior
    was a threat to the children.
    12.   Father demonstrated neither aptitude for nor any progress in gaining
    emotional attunement with his children, according to testimony from
    Batta and George Jr. Republic workers Jon MacMurdo and Jennifer
    Buesing.
    13[.] Father’s deficit in emotional attunement was noted by Dr. Connor in his
    psychological evaluation of Father.
    14.   Father was referred to the Batterer’s Intervention program at Lifeworks
    but failed to recognize any need for the service and did not engage in it
    or successfully complete this service.
    15.   Father continued to blame Mother for the issues that resulted in
    continued placement outside the home and continued to call DCS staff
    to complain about Mother’s behavior up to the date of the original
    termination hearing. He testified about Mother’s employment as an
    exotic dancer and her cheating against [sic] [F]ather to cause the
    breakup of their marriage. While these facts are not desirable, they did
    not make Mother responsible for Father’s unwillingness to engage in
    the services he was offered. It is Father’s obligation to be a fit parent,
    and Father’s obligation to do what is necessary in the CHINS case to
    repair his parenting deficits. Father’s consistent blame shifting
    corresponds to the distorted perceptions noted by Batta and the
    tendency to present himself in the best possible light as noted by Dr.
    Connor.
    16.   Services for Father were stopped at the filing of the first termination of
    parental rights petition in February, 2011; as Father’s rights remained
    terminated throughout the appeal, no services were offered during the
    appeal process. Services were not reinstated after the Court of Appeals
    reversed the original petition. FCM Eckstein believed that Father
    showed an inability to progress from the services previously provided
    and that he had showed no changes such that services would now help
    him progress.
    17.   Consistent with FCM Eckstein’s testimony, despite services offered,
    [F]ather remained unable to understand the severe trauma suffered by
    [Q.M.]. This inability renders Father incapable of dealing with the long
    term issues [Q.M.] continues to suffer with regard to his injuries.
    18.   Father’s visitation was always supervised, usually for one or two hours
    at a time twice a week. These visits took place prior to the original
    termination of parental rights petition.
    14
    19.        Father made little progress in attuning to the children in visits and no
    service provider ever recommended an increase in visitation.
    20.        Father refused to visit his children for a two (2) or three (3) week
    period in March and April, 2011, because DCS required these visits to
    be at the DCS office instead of in the community.
    21.        Father’s refusal to visit indicates self-centered tendencies which appear
    to govern Father’s behavior throughout the case. The Court finds that
    this was shown by his refusal to participate in Batterer’s Intervention
    because he didn’t feel he needed the program and his failure to
    successfully complete counseling with Janelle Batta because he felt she
    was not a good therapist. Father’s priorities are thus centered on his
    own needs to the exclusion of his children’s needs. DCS should not be
    required to incentivize parents to make them want to visit their
    children.
    (Id. at 41-43.)
    To determine whether there is a reasonable probability the conditions justifying a
    child’s continued placement outside the home will not be remedied, “the trial court must
    judge a parent’s fitness to care for her children at the time of the termination and take into
    consideration evidence of changed conditions.” In re J.T., 
    742 N.E.2d 509
    , 512 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2001), trans. denied sub nom. Timm v. Office of Family & Children, 
    753 N.E.2d 12
    (Ind. 2001). Nevertheless, the trial court must also “evaluate the parent’s habitual patterns of
    conduct to determine the probability of future neglect or deprivation of the child.” 
    Id.
     The
    court may consider the parent’s response to services offered by an Office of Family and
    Children when determining whether conditions have changed. M.B. v. Delaware Cnty. Dept.
    of Welfare, 
    570 N.E.2d 78
    , 82 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). Pursuant to this rule, courts have
    properly considered evidence of a parent’s prior criminal history, drug and alcohol abuse,
    history of neglect, failure to provide support, and lack of adequate housing and employment.
    15
    A.F. v. Marion Cnty. Office of Family & Children, 
    762 N.E.2d 1244
    , 1251 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2002), trans. denied. A trial court need not wait until a child is irreversibly harmed by a
    deficient lifestyle such that his or her physical, mental, and social growth are permanently
    impaired before terminating the parent-child relationship. In re E.S., 
    762 N.E.2d 1287
    , 1290
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2002).
    Father argues DCDCS did not present evidence reflecting his fitness and ability to
    care for his Children at the time of the second termination hearing; instead, he asserts
    DCDCS relied “almost solely,” (Br. of Appellant at 19), on evidence presented during the
    first termination hearing. However, during the second termination hearing, Father’s counsel
    said, “the facts [sic] situation hasn’t changed at all since that prior termination hearing,” (Tr.
    at 13-14), and counsel agreed to the incorporation of the transcript and record from the first
    termination hearing. Father testified that he would not “do anything” to change his testimony
    during the prior termination hearing. (Id. at 18.) Thus, to the extent the trial court’s decision
    was based on the evidence from the first hearing, Father and his counsel invited any error
    therein. See Witte v. Mundy ex rel. Mundy, 
    820 N.E.2d 128
    , 133 (Ind. 2005) (“party may not
    take advantage of an error that she commits, invites, or which is the natural consequence of
    her own neglect or misconduct.”).
    Further, there was sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s findings. During the
    second termination hearing, the DCDCS case manager, Amy Eckstein, testified:
    [Father] did not progress in his services, he was unable to address the family
    situations that had led to the removal of the [C]hildren and he - and throughout
    the case he did not put the [C]hildren first. At one point of time in March of
    2011 and April of 2011 he refused to visit the [C]hildren because he did not
    16
    want to visit in an 8 by 8 room. And he was unable to put the [C]hildren first.
    [He] [w]as unable to understand [Q.M.’s] diagnosis and would not be able to
    help the [C]hildren.
    (Tr. at 13.) During the first termination hearing, Father’s counselor testified he did not make
    any progress in therapy designed to “work on his parenting deficits, emotional attunement
    with his [C]hildren[.]” (DCDCS Ex. 1, page 15.) Dr. Edward Connor, who conducted
    Father’s psychological evaluations testified Father’s emotional attunement was important
    considering the trauma Q.M. experienced which led to the DCDCS involvement.
    Additionally, Father never progressed beyond supervised visitation with the Children because
    he “missed visitation,” would “not visit with the [C]hildren” and instead would “speak about
    the case and speak about [Mother] during these visits[.]” (Id. at 159.)
    DCDCS presented sufficient evidence to prove the conditions under which the
    Children were removed from Father’s home would not be remedied. Father’s arguments to
    the contrary are invitations for us to reweigh the evidence, which we cannot do. See In re
    D.D., 
    804 N.E.2d at 265
     (appellate court cannot reweigh evidence or judge the credibility of
    witnesses).
    b.     Best Interests of the Children
    Pursuant to 
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4
    (b)(1)(C), DCDCS needed to provide sufficient
    evidence “that termination is in the best interests of the child.” In determining what is in the
    best interests of a child, the trial court is required to look beyond the factors identified by the
    DCS and to consider the totality of the evidence. In re J.S., 
    906 N.E.2d 226
    , 236 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2009). In so doing, the trial court must subordinate the interests of the parent to those
    17
    of the child. 
    Id.
     The court need not wait until a child is harmed irreversibly before
    terminating the parent-child relationship. 
    Id.
     Recommendations of the case manager and
    court-appointed advocate, in addition to evidence the conditions resulting in removal will not
    be remedied, are sufficient to show by clear and convincing evidence that termination is in
    the child’s best interests. 
    Id.
    Regarding the best interests of the Children, the trial court concluded:
    [DC]DCS has established by clear and convincing evidence that termination of
    the parent-child relationship is in the best interests of the child. Both FCM
    Eckstein and GAL Cleary testified in support of termination, and Father has
    done little to alleviate the conditions that resulted in continued placement
    outside the home. There is no evidence to suggest Father can provide the
    stability and nurturing needed by his children. The children are in a stable,
    appropriate, and well-kept home with foster parents, and permanency is
    essential for these children.
    (App. at 47.)
    Father argues DCDCS did not present sufficient evidence because “[a] subjective
    finding that there was a lack of progress despite participation in services does not
    demonstrate clear and convincing evidence.” (Br. of Appellant at 24.) He argues he
    completed the required services and he is not to blame for DCDCS’s failure to accommodate
    his request for a new therapist. Father also contends his supervised visits should not have
    been terminated based on “verbal behavior not directed at the children or occurring in the
    children’s presence, but at service providers.” (Id.)
    As noted above, the evidence presented indicated Father’s supervised visits were
    terminated because he did not visit with the Children when given the time to do so, and did
    18
    not focus on the Children during visits. In addition, Father did not progress in therapy,
    specifically in the areas of proper parenting techniques and emotional attunement to the
    Children.
    DCDCS presented sufficient evidence the involuntary termination of Father’s parental
    rights was in the best interests of the children. Father’s arguments to the contrary are
    invitations for us to reweigh the evidence, which we cannot do. See In re D.D., 
    804 N.E.2d at 265
     (appellate court cannot reweigh evidence or judge the credibility of witnesses).
    CONCLUSION
    DCDCS was not required to offer services because Father did not request them. Any
    error from the consideration of DCDCS’s prematurely filed second termination petition was
    harmless because the violation of the Appellate Rules did not prejudice Father or affect the
    outcome of the case. Finally, DCDCS presented sufficient evidence that involuntary
    termination of Father’s parental rights to the Children was warranted based on evidence that
    the conditions under which the Children were removed would not be remedied, and that
    termination was in the best interests of the Children. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of
    the trial court.
    Affirmed.
    BAILEY, J., and BRADFORD, J., concur.
    19