In the Interest of J.D. and D.D., Minor Children, S.D., Mother, D.D., Father ( 2017 )


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  •                         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 17-0862
    Filed September 13, 2017
    IN THE INTEREST OF J.D. and D.D.,
    Minor Children,
    S.D., Mother,
    Appellant,
    D.D., Father,
    Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Woodbury County, Julie A.
    Schumacher, Judge.
    Parents appeal the termination of their parental rights. AFFIRMED ON
    BOTH APPEALS.
    Craig H. Lane, Sioux City, for appellant mother.
    Harold K. Widdison of Law Office of Harold K. Widdison, P.C., Sioux City,
    for appellant father.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Kathryn K. Lang, Assistant
    Attorney General, for appellee State.
    Marchelle Denker of Juvenile Law Center, Sioux City, guardian ad litem
    for minor children.
    Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Doyle and Bower, JJ.
    2
    DOYLE, Judge.
    S.D. and D.D. are the parents of two children; their younger child was born
    in 2011. In May 2017, the juvenile court terminated the parents’ parental rights,
    finding statutory grounds for termination under paragraphs (f) and (l) of Iowa
    Code section 232.116(1) (2017). The court also concluded termination of their
    parental rights was in the children’s best interests. Both parents appeal. Upon
    our de novo review, we affirm.
    I. Standard of Review and Statutory Framework.
    Parental rights may be terminated under Iowa Code chapter 232 if the
    following three conditions are met: (1) a “ground for termination under section
    232.116(1) has been established” by clear and convincing evidence, (2) “the
    best-interest framework as laid out in section 232.116(2) supports the termination
    of parental rights,” and (3) none of the “exceptions in section 232.116(3) apply to
    preclude termination of parental rights.”1 In re M.W., 
    876 N.W.2d 212
    , 219-20
    (Iowa 2016). Our review is de novo, which means we give the juvenile court’s
    findings of fact weight, especially the court’s credibility assessments, but we are
    not bound by those findings. See In re D.W., 
    791 N.W.2d 703
    , 706 (Iowa 2010);
    see also In re B.B., 
    440 N.W.2d 594
    , 596 (Iowa 1989). If the juvenile court has
    found more than one statutory ground for termination, as is the case here, “we
    may affirm the . . . termination order on any ground that we find supported by
    clear and convincing evidence.” D.W., 791 N.W.2d at 707. “For evidence to be
    1
    Because the parents do not challenge the juvenile court’s determination that none of
    the exceptions in section 232.116(3) apply to preclude termination of their parental
    rights, we need not discuss that consideration. See In re P.L., 
    778 N.W.2d 33
    , 40 (Iowa
    2010).
    3
    ‘clear and convincing,’ it is merely necessary that there be no serious or
    substantial doubt about the correctness of the conclusion drawn from it.” Raim v.
    Stancel, 
    339 N.W.2d 621
    , 624 (Iowa Ct. App. 1983); see also M.W., 876 N.W.2d
    at 219.
    II. Discussion.
    Here, the record shows that from at least August 2014 until court
    intervention in early 2016, law enforcement officials repeatedly responded to
    alcohol- and domestic-violence-related incidents concerning the parents and
    children. At the termination-of-parental-rights hearing at the end of April 2017,
    both parents claimed they had addressed their alcohol- and domestic-violence
    issues and the children could be returned to their care at that time. However,
    upon our de novo review of the record, we do not find the parents’ claims to be
    credible and agree with the juvenile court that the State showed—by clear and
    convincing evidence—these children could not be returned to the parents’ care at
    the time of the termination-of-parental-rights hearing.
    Ultimately, this case turns on the parents’ credibility—or rather, their lack
    thereof—and their inability to demonstrate they can put their children’s needs
    before their own. Without rehashing all of the parents’ past conduct, a few early
    incidents are indicative of the overall issues facing these parents. In October
    2015, the mother, fleeing an argument with the father, drove while she was
    significantly intoxicated with the children buckled in the front seat of her car. She
    initially denied she was intoxicated, claiming she had “had a couple of shots” but
    “did not feel drunk and that she would never drive drunk with the kids in the car.”
    4
    However, the mother’s preliminary breath test showed her blood alcohol level
    was .239%—three times the legal limit.
    Two more incidents occurred before the State filed a children-in-need-of-
    assistance (CINA) petition in December 2015—it was reported that, among other
    things, during the summer the younger child consumed the father’s alcohol after
    being left unsupervised, and the older child reported another domestic dispute
    between the parents. However, particularly revealing is the father’s arrest for
    public intoxication when he attempted to attend the February 2016 CINA
    adjudicatory hearing and the mother presented with a black eye at the same
    hearing. The children were removed from the parents’ care at that time and have
    not been returned since.
    By the time of the permanency hearing in January and February 2017, the
    parents reported they were both sober—the father since September 2016 and
    the mother since May 2016. However, in October 2016, the parents missed a
    court hearing, among other things, after the mother sustained an eye injury. Both
    parents insisted she fell off the front steps, and they claimed to have missed the
    court hearing, not because she had a black eye and did not want the court to see
    it, but because of a miscommunication by the mother’s attorney.          Then, in
    November 2016, police were called to the parents’ home after the father would
    not let the mother in the house following an argument. Officers indicated the
    father was intoxicated.
    Though things appeared smoother thereafter, the parents still struggled to
    meet other expectations imposed by the court and the Iowa Department of
    Human Services (DHS). In January 2017, the mother admitted that she had
    5
    known since at least November of 2016 that she was expected to attend AA
    meetings, but she still had not done so.        The father had not attended any
    meetings either. The parents were also to re-engage in marriage counseling, but
    they had not done so, testifying they were going to make an appointment.
    Dishonesty was still an issue; at the January 2017 hearing, the mother initially
    testified a friend had driven the parents to the courthouse, only to later admit that
    they actually had driven themselves, even though neither had a valid driver’s
    license. Notably, the mother was asked if she believed her relationship with the
    father needed to be worked upon before the children were returned to her care,
    and she answered, “Not necessarily, no.”        The mother continued to have a
    difficult time admitting that domestic violence had occurred in the parents’
    relationship. She initially described the problems in the parents’ marriage as
    mere “arguing,” and she denied there was actual physical altercations between
    them until pressed on the issue.
    At the April 2017 termination-of-parental-rights hearing, the mother
    testified that since the permanency hearing, she and the father had attended four
    counseling sessions, and she believed they had addressed their relationship
    issues. Yet, she could not state for certain that she or the father had even told
    their marriage counselor there had been domestic violence in their relationship.
    The father testified he believed he and the mother had progressed enough in
    their marriage counseling that “the domestic violence issue [had been]
    addressed,” explaining he now “realized that it’s wrong.” He also believed that so
    long as he was sober, domestic violence was no longer an issue. The mother
    did not believe she was an alcoholic; she stated she just liked to drink. She
    6
    essentially testified she would not be in treatment but for the case requirements
    that she attend. She also initially testified she did not believe the father was an
    alcoholic, but she then qualified her statement, explaining that he was an
    alcoholic but was no longer drinking. Similarly, the father admitted he was an
    alcoholic but did not believe the mother was. Asked what his plan to maintain his
    sobriety was, the father simply answered, “Just to stick with being sober.”
    Neither parent was attending any AA meetings.
    The parents testified at various hearings that most of their shortcomings in
    meeting the court and DHS’s expectations were due to their lack of transportation
    or being too busy. Though their city offers public transportation, the parents
    never considered that as an option. Additionally, as pointed out by the children’s
    guardian ad litem (GAL) at the termination-of-parental-rights hearing, neither
    parent was truly busy; both parents were unemployed.           Even assuming the
    parents’ claimed sobriety date is accurate, they still participated minimally in
    other available and essential services despite their own access to public
    transportation and time.
    While we sincerely hope the parents are now sober and working to mend
    the problems plaguing their marriage, we do not believe the parents were honest
    about the date of their sobriety, if they are truly sober. There is certainly nothing
    in the record but the parents’ own self-serving statements to support their
    claimed dates of sobriety. Given the parents’ history of denying the occurrence
    of domestic violence and alcohol abuse, they are not reliable reporters.
    Throughout the case, the parents have minimized the issues they face. Neither
    seemed to believe there was anything that even needed to be addressed,
    7
    despite blackened eyes and visits by the police.           No mention of domestic
    violence or alcohol issues was made by either parent on their social-history
    reports. They minimized their alcohol use and did not even mention the domestic
    abuse to their counselors. There is no question, as the GAL aptly put it, that the
    parents had “checked off some boxes” in their case; however, there was no
    evidence they “internalized anything that [the service providers and others] tried
    to teach them to better their family and try to reunify their family.” We believe this
    was the juvenile court’s assessment as well; though there are no express
    credibility findings in the termination-of-parental-rights order, it is implicit the
    court, as the trier of fact, did not find the parents to be credible.      See In re
    Sievers Family Revocable Trust, No. 16-1483, 
    2017 WL 2183210
    , at *2 (Iowa Ct.
    App. May 17, 2017); Feuk v. Feuk, No. 12-1699, 
    2013 WL 1749802
    , at *1 (Iowa
    Ct. App. Apr. 24, 2013); see also Schutjer v. Algona Manor Care Ctr., 
    780 N.W.2d 549
    , 560-61 (Iowa 2010) (applying standard to “work backward” and
    ascertain implicit credibility findings in agency’s decision).
    Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(f) provides termination may be ordered
    when there is clear and convincing evidence that a child age four years or older
    who has been adjudicated a child in need of assistance (CINA) and removed
    from the parents’ care for at least twelve of the last eighteen months, or the last
    twelve consecutive months, cannot be returned to the parents’ custody at the
    time of the termination hearing. See 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (1)(f). The first three
    elements of paragraph (f) are not in dispute; rather, the parents assert on appeal
    that the State failed to prove the fourth element.                See 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (1)(f)(4) (“There is clear and convincing evidence that at the present
    8
    time the child cannot be returned to the custody of the child’s parents as provided
    in section 232.102.”). To satisfy its burden of proof, the State must establish
    “[t]he child cannot be protected from some harm which would justify the
    adjudication of the child as a child in need of assistance.”                See 
    id.
    § 232.102(5)(2); see also In re A.M.S., 
    419 N.W.2d 723
    , 725 (Iowa 1988). “The
    threat of probable harm will justify termination of parental rights, and the
    perceived harm need not be the one that supported the child’s initial removal
    from the home.” In re M.M., 
    483 N.W.2d 812
    , 814 (Iowa 1992). “At the present
    time” refers to the time of the termination hearing. In re A.M., 
    843 N.W.2d 100
    ,
    111 (Iowa 2014).
    Here, reviewing the record de novo and the juvenile court’s thoughtful and
    thorough ruling, we agree with the juvenile court that the State proved, by clear
    and convincing evidence, the children could not be returned to the parents’ care
    at the time of the termination hearing.      The concerns that led to the CINA
    adjudication were still concerns at the time of the termination-of-parental-rights
    hearing.   Consequently, we affirm the juvenile court’s finding that the State
    proved the statutory grounds for termination found in section 232.116(1)(f).
    We also agree with the juvenile court, in reviewing the record de novo,
    that termination of the parents’ parental rights is in the children’s best interests.
    “It is well-settled law that we cannot deprive a child of permanency after the State
    has proved a ground for termination under section 232.116(1) by hoping
    someday a parent will learn to be a parent and be able to provide a stable home
    for the child.” P.L., 
    778 N.W.2d at 41
    . Moreover, “[i]nsight for the determination
    of the [children’s] long-range best interests can be gleaned from ‘evidence of the
    9
    parent’s past performance for that performance may be indicative of the quality of
    the future care that parent is capable of providing.’” In re A.B., 
    815 N.W.2d 764
    ,
    778 (Iowa 2012) (citation omitted).     Here, the children have had to witness
    domestic violence almost all of their lives with their parents’ denials thereof.
    Since at least 2014, their children have not had a stable home life, and their living
    conditions only worsened over time. The parents have been given ample time to
    address their issues and demonstrate that they could provide and sustain a safe,
    stable, violence-free home for the children, but they squandered it, only really
    asserting an effort towards the end of the case, and even those efforts were
    limited.     Until the parents are honest with their counselors about their use,
    relapses, fights, and physical altercations, it is unlikely that the parents’ issues
    can be fully addressed and that they can sustain whatever progress they have
    made. These parents still have much work ahead of them, and their children
    cannot wait in limbo hoping someday their parents will put their needs first. See
    In re C.S., 
    776 N.W.2d 297
    , 300 (Iowa Ct. App. 2009).               Giving “primary
    consideration to the [children’s] safety, to the best placement for furthering the
    long-term nurturing and growth of the [children], and to the physical, mental, and
    emotional condition and needs of the [children],” see 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (2),
    we conclude termination of the parents’ parental rights was in the children’s best
    interests.
    III. Conclusion.
    Because we agree with the juvenile court’s finding that the State proved
    the statutory grounds for termination found in section 232.116(1)(f) and
    10
    termination of the parents’ parental rights is in the children’s best interests, we
    affirm the juvenile court’s ruling terminating the parents’ parental rights.
    AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.