Matter of B.N. ( 1990 )


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  •                             NO.    90-297
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    1990
    IN THE MATTER OF B.N. and T.N.,
    and M.M., A.M. and T.G.M.,
    Youths in Need of Care.
    APPEAL FROM:   District Court of the
    In and for the County of Lewis and Clark,
    The Honorable Jeffrey M. Sherlock, Judge presiding.
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Joseph R. Massman, Esq., Massman Law Firm, Helena,
    Montana (Father and Paternal Grandparents)
    William P. Driscoll, Esq., Gough, Shanahan, Johnson
    and Waterman, Helena, Montana (Mother)
    For Respondent:
    Mike McGrath, County Attorney; Leo J. Gallagher,
    Deputy County Attorney, Helena, Montana
    Hon. Marc Racicot, Attorney General; Elizabeth L.
    Griffing, Assistant Attorney General, Helena,
    Montana
    J. Mayo Ashley, Esq., Public Defender, Helena,
    Montana
    Randi Hood, Esq., Public Defender, Helena, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs:       October 26, 1990
    Decided:   December 11, 1990
    Filed:                                       0
    Chief Justice J. A. Turnage delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    R.N.M.     (mother) and T.N. (father), parents of B.N. and T.N.,
    appeal the judgment of the First Judicial District, Lewis and Clark
    County, which terminated their custodial rights of their children
    and awarded legal custody to the Montana Department of Family
    Services.      The paternal grandparents of the children also join in
    the appeal.      We affirm.
    The issue presented on appeal is whether the record lacked
    substantial evidence to support the District Court's order to
    terminate the natural parents1 custodial rights of their two
    children.
    The mother and father married in 1980. The marriage produced
    two daughters, B.N., born November 7, 1980, and T.N., born October
    27, 1981.      The marriage also marked the beginning of a ten-year
    history of family turmoil and parental neglect as recorded by the
    Lewis   &   Clark County Department of Family Services (Department).
    In 1980 and just thirty-two days following B.N.'s birth, the
    Department began receiving reports lodged against either one or
    both of the parents for parental neglect.     Three months following
    T.N.'s birth, T.N. was hospitalized for ''failure to thrive."
    In 1982, Dr. Robert J. Bateen, a clinical psychologist,
    evaluated mother and father at the request of the Child Protective
    Services.      Dr. Bateen found that mother had a low IQ of seventy-
    six and that she was an lloverwhelmedmother who was lacking in
    skills.11 Dr. Bateen found that father had an even lower IQ of
    fifty-nine, rendering him a mental age of a first or second grader.
    Dr. Bateen also established father's history of physical violence
    through accounts given by mother.
    Later in 1982, the Department received a report alleging that
    father was physically abusing his wife and his oldest daughter,
    B.N.    This report was followed by the October 27, 1982, filing of
    an abuse complaint lodged against father by a social worker of the
    Department, who was at St. Peter's Hospital when B.N. was receiving
    treatment for contusions, bruising, and swelling to the head area,
    injuries allegedly inflicted by father.
    No legal action was pursued against the parents at this time
    as mother decided to live apart from father, and father consented
    to evaluation and treatment at Montana State Hospital in Warm
    Springs.     Upon his release from this hospital, however, the
    Department received reports that father had returned to living at
    the family residence, contrary to an informal agreement between the
    Department and the parents.
    On April 14, 1983, the State petitioned the District Court
    for    temporary   custody   and   temporary   investigative   authority
    regarding B.N. and T.N., based on further reports of father's
    violent behavior and both parents' neglectful behavior toward their
    children. The children were temporarily placed in foster care, but
    were eventually returned to their mother, who then departed with
    the children to Wyoming in August of 1983.          Following mother's
    departure,   father petitioned      for dissolution of marriage       on
    September 7, 1983.
    The petition for temporary custody and temporary investigative
    authority resulted in a court-ordered custody investigation by Rita
    Pickering of Lewis   &    Clark County Human Services.   In her report
    to the court, dated February 17, 1984, Pickering recommended that
    1) mother be given custody of the children while she continues
    professional counseling to improve and monitor her parenting
    skills, and, 2) father be given supervised visitation rights.
    Pickering's report stated that mother had few developed parenting
    skills, but she had the potential and desire to learn to care for
    her children.    Pickering's report further stated that father's
    "history of poor     frustration control11 created       a potentially
    dangerous situation for the children.
    In August of        1984, mother and   father signed a custody
    agreement which granted mother sole-custody of the children and
    granted father supervised visitation rights.     On January 16, 1985,
    the court dissolved the parents1 marriage incorporating the custody
    agreement into the decree.       No further action was pursued with
    regard to    the petition     for temporary   custody    and   temporary
    investigative authority, and it was eventually dismissed on July
    7, 1987.
    From the time of the custody agreement through 1988, father,
    along with his parents, regularly contested mother's refusal to
    grant father supervised visitation rights and questioned if mother
    3
    was providing adequate care to the girls.      These disputes resulted
    in three petitions to enforce visitation rights. Meanwhile, mother
    -
    entered a common-law marriage with B.M., a long-haul truck driver,
    and had three more children: M.M., born June 16, 1986; A.M., born
    February 18, 1988; and T.M., born August 19, 1989.          Mother, B.M.
    and all the children resided mainly in Idaho and Washington at this
    time, but eventually moved to Helena in 1989.
    In July, 1988, the State filed a second petition for temporary
    custody   and    investigative   authority   based   upon   an   incident
    involving mother's brother and his girlfriend of Helena.         On July
    16, 1988, mother and B.M. left the children (except T.M., who was
    not yet born), with mother's brother and his girlfriend so mother
    could accompany B.M. on a long-haul trucking trip.      Mother assured
    her brother that they would return in several days.         She gave her
    brother and his girlfriend $20.00 to cover the costs associated
    with the children's care, and left clothing for the children, some
    covered with human feces and so filthy that the clothing was
    discarded.   Additionally, T.N. had head lice, which had been left
    untreated by mother.      Mother and B.M. did not return for the
    children for one month.
    Following    a   preliminary   investigation,    records    of   the
    Department revealed that several reports of neglect and abuse were
    lodged against the family while living in Idaho and that Idaho
    welfare workers reported a consistent lack of success in working
    with mother and B.M. to remedy the problems.
    4
    On August 4, 1988, the District Court granted the State
    temporary custody of all the children and temporary investigative
    authority.   B.N. and T.N. were placed in foster care with their
    paternal grandparents. In December of 1988, all parties stipulated
    to the entry of a treatment plan.        B.M. and mother recovered
    custody of M.M. and A.M. a few days before Christmas of 1988.      On
    January 18, 1989, the District Court adjudicated all the children
    as youths in need of care.
    B.M. and mother once again became parents when T.M. was born
    on August 19, 1989.     Following his birth, the treatment plan was
    extended to include T.M. as well.       Currently, mother and B.M.
    continue to have custody of M.M. , A.M. , and T.M. , and are complying
    with the treatment plan. The District Court approved the treatment
    plan on March 14, 1989.
    Mother and B.M., however, did not recover physical custody of
    B.N. and T.N., and they continued to reside in the home of their
    paternal grandparents until October 27, 1989.      While living with
    their grandparents, the girls began therapy with Mary Grace Black,
    a licensed clinical social worker, who assessed that both girls had
    suffered physical, emotional, and sexual abuse while residing with
    their mother and B.M.     While living with their grandparents, the
    girls' school attendance and performance improved; however, further
    problems ensued.
    Initially, father resided with the paternal grandparents when
    they assumed physical custody of the girls. However, following the
    5
    children's disclosures that father sexually abusedthem, father was
    forced to move out of the grandparents' home.         The children were
    then removed from the paternal grandparents' home on October 27,
    1989, when it was discovered that, on one occasion, they had
    allowed father to see the children unsupervised following the
    children's disclosures of sexual abuse.    Currently, T.N. and B.N.
    are living with a maternal aunt in Billings.          According to Mary
    Grace Black, the children are continually improving emotionally and
    are responding well to their new environment.
    The State petitioned to terminate parental rights of mother
    and father on November 7, 1989.      A hearing was held in District
    Court on January 25, January 30, and February 2, 1990.          Several
    witnesses testified that they felt that mother and B.M. need long-
    term counseling, that it was doubtful that mother could be an
    effective parent to all five of her children at this time, and that
    father was not capable of parenting B.N. and T.N. at this time.
    On March 20, 1990, the District Court terminated the parental
    custodial rights of mother, father and B.M. and awarded permanent
    custody of B.N. and T.N. to the Montana Department of Family
    Services.   The District Court granted visitation rights to the
    parents   and   paternal   grandparents under   the    supervision and
    directives of the Lewis and Clark Department of Family Services.
    From this decision, mother, father, and the paternal grandparents
    appeal.
    Did the record lack substantial evidence to support the
    District Courtls order to terminate the natural parents1 custodial
    rights of their two children?
    The District Court ordered that I1[t]he parental custodial
    rights of [mother, father, and B.M. ] in and to the youths, [B.N.
    and   T.N.],   and   to   their   property,   are    hereby   terminated."
    (Emphasis added. )   The court then awarded Itpermanentlegal custodyf1
    to the Department and gave the Department the right to place the
    children in foster care.          The court also awarded supervised
    visitation rights to the parents and grandparents.
    The State, in its brief, properly addresses that, upon a
    superficial reading of the order, confusion exists with regard to
    the District Court's intent--did the court intend to terminate the
    parties' parental rights or did the court intend to grant the State
    long-term custody?         Termination of parental rights involves
    severing the parent-child legal relationship and after such action,
    the parents have no right to notice or consent to the adoption of
    the child.     Section 41-3-611, PICA.        And, the term "permanent
    custodyI1 vests the person or agency with such custody the right to
    "consent to    the   adoption of     [the ~hild].~'       11.5.508,   ARM.
    Furthermore, under 5 41-3-609, MCA, three requirements must be
    satisfied to terminate parental rights:             1) the child must be
    adjudicated a youth in need of care, 2) a court-approved treatment
    plan must be violated or deemed unsuccessful, and 3) the conduct
    or condition causing the problem cannot be rectified within a
    7
    reasonable amount of time.       The termination of parental rights
    results in the natural parents losing all rights to the child,
    including visitation rights.      Section 41-3-611(1), MCA; Matter of
    C.P. (1986), 
    221 Mont. 180
    , 183, 
    717 P.2d 1093
    , 1095.
    An award of long-term custody, however, does not fully sever
    a parent's rights with regard to the child:
    An award of long-term custody does not totally
    terminate the rights of the natural parent.
    In the present case, although mother's visita-
    tion rights are restricted, she may still
    visit her child, and may possibly petition for
    less restricted visitation in the future.
    Additionally, mother may at some point in the
    future petition the District Court to regain
    custody of R.T.L.P.
    Matter of R.T.L.P. (1989), 
    238 Mont. 384
    , 391, 777 P.2d1 892, 896.
    Under   §   41-3-406, MCA, an award of long-term custody to the State
    only requires that the child be found to be "abused, neglected or
    dependent."        The pertinent term to these facts, "abused or
    neglected child,11 is defined as ' a child whose normal physical or
    '
    mental health or welfare is harmed or threatened with harm by the
    acts or omissions of his parent or other person responsible for his
    welfare.     Section 41-3-102(2), MCA.
    Upon reviewing the record, it is clear that neither the State
    nor the District Court intended to fully sever the parties'
    parental rights to B.N. and T.N., although the court unfortunately
    used the words "termination1'and "permanent custody" in its order.
    ~ u r i n g the hearing, the State asserted that in its request for
    permanent custody, it did not ''envision a total termination of the
    parental rights of either the father or the mother," and recog-
    nized the necessity of continued visitation with the parents and
    grandparents.    The District Court awarded supervised visitation
    rights to mother, father and paternal grandparents, this visita-
    tion award being inconsistent with terminating parental rights.
    And, in its conclusions of law, the District Court cited 5 41-3-
    406, MCA, the statute providing for long-term custody, as authority
    for its actions.    Most noteworthy, as the State asserts in its
    brief, the District Court's order did not authorize the Department
    to allow the adoption of B.N. and T.N.; the order merely gave the
    Department custody of the children.
    Based on the above we hold that the District Court in its
    order, intended to grant the State long-term custody. Accordingly,
    substantial evidence must exist in the record to support the
    premise that the children were abused, neglected, or dependent
    under 5 5 41-3-102 (2), and 41-3-406, MCA.    Clearly, the ten-year
    history of family turmoil as previously recited in this opinion
    provides substantial, if not overwhelming evidence that B.N. and
    T.N. were abused, neglected or dependent while in the custody of
    mother.   In fact, we believe that the evidence supports terminating
    the parental rights of mother and father, even though this harsher
    result was not the District Court's intent.
    And unfortunately, while evidence reflects that the paternal
    grandparents made a noble attempt to provide a stable environment
    to the girls while in their foster care, evidence also reflects
    9
    that because of father's accessibility to the children and the bad
    relations between mother's and father's families, the children's
    physical or mental health or welfare are threatened with harm.
    Therefore, the children still qualified as abused, neglected, or
    dependent.   Furthermore, it is the child's best interest, not the
    parents' or grandparents', that is the paramount concern in child
    custody matters.     Matter of V.B.   (1987), 
    229 Mont. 133
    , 136, 
    744 P.2d 1248
    , 1250 (citations omitted).      From reviewing the record,
    we believe that at the present time, it is in the best interest of
    B.N. and T.N. to be placed in a foster home.     We therefore affirm
    the District Court's order.
    Affirmed.
    I
    .
    ?
    '
    Chief Justice
    We concur:
    Justices           /
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 90-297

Filed Date: 12/11/1990

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016