In the Interest of E.C., L.C. and J.C., Minor Children ( 2022 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 22-0516
    Filed October 5, 2022
    IN THE INTEREST OF E.C., L.C., and J.C.,
    Minor Children,
    F.H., Mother,
    Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal    from    the    Iowa    District   Court   for   Clinton   County,
    Kimberly K. Shepherd, District Associate Judge.
    A mother appeals the termination of her parental rights to three children.
    AFFIRMED.
    Patricia A. Rolfstad, Davenport, for appellant mother.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Dion D. Trowers, Assistant
    Attorney General, for appellee State.
    Victoria D. Noel of the Noel Law Firm, P.C., Clinton, attorney and guardian
    ad litem for minor children.
    Considered by Ahlers, P.J., and Badding and Chicchelly, JJ.
    2
    BADDING, Judge.
    A mother pushing for a “second chance” appeals the termination of her
    parental rights to her three children—born in 2010, 2012, and 2015—under Iowa
    Code section 232.116(1)(d), (f), and (i) (2021). Considering the chances the
    mother has already been given, we affirm the termination of her parental rights
    upon our de novo review of the record.1
    I.     Background Facts and Proceedings
    In June 2020, the mother’s oldest child witnessed a fight between her
    mother and stepfather that ended with her mother being knocked to the floor
    unconscious. Around the same time, the Iowa Department of Human Services2
    received a report that the mother was using methamphetamine and marijuana.
    During its investigation of this report, the department learned the stepfather had
    slapped the youngest child and given her a bloody nose.
    Family-preservation services were offered, but the mother declined drug
    testing, continued using drugs, and kept associating with men who had been
    violent in the past. The mother also missed appointments for her mental health,
    did not register the children for school, was about to lose her housing, and left the
    children alone while she drove around smoking marijuana. As a result, the State
    1 In conducting this de novo review, we are not bound by the juvenile court’s factual
    findings, although “we accord them weight, especially in assessing witness
    credibility.” In re A.B., 
    956 N.W.2d 162
    , 168 (Iowa 2021) (citation omitted). Our
    primary concern is the best interests of the children. 
    Id.
    2 We note the department has since merged with the Iowa Department of Public
    Health, thus culminating in the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services.
    See In re D.B., No. 22-0979, 
    2022 WL 3906768
    , at *1 n.3 (Iowa Ct. App. Aug. 21,
    2022).
    3
    filed child-in-need-of-assistance petitions in September. By the end of October,
    the mother had lost her apartment and moved several times.
    In early November, the court adjudicated the children as in need of
    assistance. The court warned the mother, on the record and in its adjudication
    order, “that if anything happens in this case that does not comply with the safety
    plan or any of the testing that is required these children will be removed.” Two
    days after the adjudication hearing, the mother violated the safety plan. The
    department’s application to temporarily remove the children was granted, and
    removal was confirmed after a hearing. The children were first placed with suitable
    others but then moved to foster care in December because of safety concerns.
    The mother was told that for the children to return to her care, she needed
    to “demonstrate her ability to meet” her children’s needs, “demonstrate sober
    living, address her mental health and be able to identify healthy relationships.” By
    the time of the disposition hearing in January 2021, the mother had not done any
    of those things. She had completed a substance-abuse evaluation but did not
    participate in the recommended treatment or drug testing—though she admitted to
    recent use of methamphetamine. The mother made mental-health appointments
    but failed to show up for them. She also failed to show up for her children,
    attending only one visit after they were placed in foster care in early December.
    The mother’s situation was no better by mid-March. At a review hearing
    that month, the mother admitted that she was still using marijuana and
    methamphetamine. She tried inpatient substance-abuse treatment but left after
    just two days because “she was using with others there.” The department had no
    idea where the mother was living, and her interactions with the children continued
    4
    to be inconsistent. A report from the department noted the mother “is able to say
    what she needs to work on and know that she needs to make changes” for her
    children and herself, but “she is not taking the steps to do this.”
    A few bright spots emerged by July. The mother started taking medications
    for her mental-health diagnoses and attended a few therapy sessions. She also
    attended some outpatient substance-abuse sessions after a second attempt at
    inpatient treatment failed again. And her visits with the children became more
    consistent. Yet, while the mother professed to be clean and sober, she tested
    positive for methamphetamine in mid-June. The mother told a provider that she
    relapsed with her boyfriend, who she also said choked her during a fight. Later
    that month, the mother was arrested on several drug charges.
    By October, the mother had stopped attending mental-health therapy. Her
    attendance at substance-abuse treatment was sporadic, she declined drug testing,
    and the department observed behavioral indicators of methamphetamine use.
    Those behavioral indicators were confirmed when the mother admitted to recent
    methamphetamine use at the November permanency hearing. Because of the
    mother’s backslide, the department recommended termination proceedings. The
    court agreed with this recommendation and ordered the State to file termination
    petitions.   The State did so in December. The mother was jailed from mid-
    December to early January 2022. Upon her release, she stated that she would re-
    start substance-abuse treatment and mental-health therapy, but she never did.
    Following a termination hearing in February, the juvenile court terminated
    the mother’s parental rights under Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(d), (f), and (i).
    5
    The mother appeals,3 challenging each of the three steps in the termination
    analysis. See In re L.B., 
    970 N.W.2d 311
    , 313 (Iowa 2022); see also 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (1)–(3).
    II.    Analysis
    The first step in our review of the juvenile court’s order requires us to
    consider whether a statutory ground for termination is satisfied. See L.B., 970
    N.W.2d at 313. Although the mother’s rights were terminated under three grounds,
    all of which she challenges on appeal, we can affirm “on any ground that we find
    supported by clear and convincing evidence.” In re D.W., 
    791 N.W.2d 703
    , 707
    (Iowa 2010). That ground is paragraph (f).
    The mother’s argument on this ground is limited to her contention that the
    State failed to show the children could not be returned to her care “in a reasonable
    amount of time” or “in the near future.” But the State only had to show the children
    could not be returned to her custody at the time of the termination hearing. See
    
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (1)(f)(4) (requiring “clear and convincing evidence that at the
    present time the child cannot be returned to the custody of the child’s parents”);
    D.W., 791 N.W.2d at 707 (interpreting the statutory language “at the present time”
    to mean “at the time of the termination hearing”).
    In her testimony at the termination hearing, the mother agreed she needed
    more time to establish sobriety and stability before the children could be returned
    to her.4 “The mother’s concession ‘amounts to clear and convincing evidence that
    3 The father’s rights were also terminated. He does not appeal.
    4 At the termination hearing, the mother requested an extension of time or the
    establishment of a guardianship instead of termination. She does not specifically
    renew her request for an extension on appeal, although she does mention a
    6
    the child[ren] could not be returned to her care at the time of the termination
    hearing.’” In re Z.R., No. 21-1290, 
    2022 WL 1487119
    , at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. May 11,
    2022) (citation omitted). The concession is also supported by the record. Since
    removal, the mother was without stable housing, did not meaningfully address her
    substance-abuse and mental-health issues, and was never able to progress
    beyond fully supervised contact with the children. Clear and convincing evidence
    supports termination under section 232.116(1)(f).
    The mother combines the second and third steps of the analysis, arguing
    “[t]ermination is not in the children’s best interests because these children are
    bonded to their [m]other.” See L.B., 970 N.W.2d at 313 (stating the second step
    in the analysis is whether termination is in the children’s best interests and the third
    is “whether we should exercise any of the permissive exceptions for termination”);
    accord 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (2), (3). We examine these issues separately, starting
    with the children’s best interests.     See, e.g., In re A.A., No. 21-1972, 
    2022 WL 946503
    , at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 30, 2022) (“We choose to separately
    address the often-conflated best-interests and statutory-exception arguments.”).
    On that question, we “give primary consideration to the child[ren]’s safety,
    to the best placement for furthering the long-term nurturing and growth of the
    child[ren], and to the physical, mental, and emotional condition and needs of the
    child[ren].” 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (2). The defining elements of a child’s best
    guardianship. But she provides no argument on the issue, so we consider it
    waived.    See Iowa R. App. P. 6.903(2)(g)(3); L.N.S. v. S.W.S., 
    854 N.W.2d 699
    , 703 (Iowa Ct. App. 2013) (“Where a party has failed to present any
    substantive analysis or argument on an issue, the issue has been waived.”).
    7
    interests are safety and need for a permanent home.                 In re H.S., 
    805 N.W.2d 737
    , 748 (Iowa 2011).
    After the children were removed from the mother and placed into foster
    care, they told their guardian ad litem it was “the first time in their lives they have
    felt such safety.” While they were in their mother’s care, the children were exposed
    to drug use and domestic violence, at times having to care for their mother instead
    of the other way around. Those conditions have not changed.
    Though the mother professed her sobriety at the termination hearing, she
    did not show up for a drug test the week before the hearing. At the hearing, the
    court noted on the record that the mother “had multiple outbursts” and was unable
    to “control her actions and emotions,” which the caseworker testified were signs
    that she was using. In its written termination ruling, the court added the mother
    “was hostile, emotional, and visibly angry throughout much of the hearing. The
    mother was swearing, and making comments while [the caseworker] was
    testifying. While she was testifying, the mother’s speaking was erratic and her
    mood was elevated.” Just a couple of weeks before the termination hearing, the
    mother wrote a letter for a man charged with domestic assault and child
    endangerment in which she called herself his girlfriend and advocated for his
    release. This was the most recent in a long line of relationships the mother had
    with violent men—an issue that she took no steps to address.
    The mother’s drug use and domestically violent relationships have caused
    the children trauma. Each of them suffers from mental-health issues that the
    mother did not address when they were in her care. They were also behind in
    school, largely because of the mother’s multiple moves and housing instability.
    8
    After more than one year with their foster parents, whom they called mom and dad,
    the guardian ad litem observed the children were “more stable, more confident,
    and more secure.” The oldest child told the guardian ad litem the foster parents
    were “the best thing to ever happen to her and her siblings.”
    In a letter to the court written a few days before the termination hearing, the
    mother advocated “for a second chance,” highlighting all the things she planned to
    do so that her children could be “reunited with [her] soon.” But she squandered
    the time that she had been given. While the mother now, on the eve of termination,
    wants to make the changes she was directed to make throughout the proceedings,
    waiting that long is too late. See In re C.B., 
    611 N.W.2d 489
    , 495 (Iowa 2000).
    “[W]e cannot deprive a child of permanency after the State has proved a ground
    for termination” by hoping the parent will rectify the situation sometime in the
    future. See In re A.B., 
    815 N.W.2d 764
    , 777 (Iowa 2012) (quoting In re P.L., 
    778 N.W.2d 33
    , 41 (Iowa 2010)).       Given the mother’s past performance and the
    children’s need for stability and permanency, we conclude termination is in their
    best interests.
    The mother’s bond with the children does not change that conclusion. See
    
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (3)(c). We agree with the assessment of the social worker
    assigned to the case:
    I believe that all three of the [children] have a strong bond with their
    mom, but they need to have stability, and they need to know that they
    are going to be safe and that they’re not going to continue to go back
    and forth and that they know that they’re going to be somewhere safe
    every single night of their life.
    ....
    . . . . The kids need to know that this is where they’re going
    to be forever. One of the things that [the oldest two children] have
    told me is that they want to know every night where they’re going to
    9
    go to bed and every night where they’re going to come home to, and
    where they’re going to eat, and so I think that they need to know that
    for their own mental stability.
    While the children want to be with the mother, they know about her struggles
    with substance abuse and domestic violence and sadly understand they will not
    be safe in her care.     The court’s “consideration must center on whether the
    child[ren] will be disadvantaged by termination, and whether the disadvantage
    overcomes [the mother’s] inability to provide for [their] developing needs.”
    D.W., 791 N.W.2d at 703. We are not convinced that the children “will be so
    disadvantaged by termination that the relationship should be saved in spite of all
    of the considerations weighing in favor of termination.”               In re M.D.,
    No. 21-1690, 
    2022 WL 108540
    , at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. Jan. 12, 2022).                 We
    accordingly conclude this exception does not apply. See In re M.W., 
    876 N.W.2d 212
    , 225 (Iowa 2016) (noting application of a statutory exception to termination is
    “permissive, not mandatory” (citation omitted)).
    We also conclude the exception in section 232.116(3)(b), authorizing the
    court to deny termination when “[t]he child is over ten years of age and objects to
    termination,” does not apply. The mother is correct that “at times, [the oldest child]
    wanted to return home to her.” (Emphasis added.) But the child understood that
    would not be in her best interests because of her mother’s poor choices. We find
    termination is proper despite the oldest child’s wavering hope for her mother. See
    In re J.S., No. 16-0112, 
    2016 WL 899857
    , at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 9, 2016) (“The
    children’s yearning for reunification does not tilt the balance away from
    termination.”).
    10
    The juvenile court’s ruling terminating the mother’s parental rights to her
    three children is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 22-0516

Filed Date: 10/5/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/5/2022