Jake Wajed Inam v. Roanoke City Department of Social Services ( 2023 )


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  •                                             COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Huff, Malveaux and Chaney
    UNPUBLISHED
    JAKE WAJED INAM
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 1379-22-3                                      JUDGE GLEN A. HUFF
    NOVEMBER 8, 2023
    ROANOKE CITY DEPARTMENT
    OF SOCIAL SERVICES
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF ROANOKE
    David B. Carson, Judge
    (John S. Koehler; The Law Office of James Steele, PLLC, on brief),
    for appellant. Appellant submitting on brief.1
    (Timothy R. Spencer, City Attorney; Jennifer L. Crook, Assistant
    City Attorney; Sarah Jane Newton, Guardian ad litem for the minor
    children, on brief), for appellee. Appellee and Guardian ad litem
    submitting on brief.2
    Jake Wajed Inam (father) appeals the circuit court’s order terminating his parental rights to
    his children, H.W. and S.W. Father argues that the circuit court abused its discretion by not
    granting him a continuance after his subpoenaed witnesses failed to appear at trial. This Court finds
    no error and affirms the circuit court’s judgment.
    *
    This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
    1
    Appellant waived oral argument.
    2
    Appellee waived oral argument so long as this matter was not scheduled for hearing.
    BACKGROUND3
    “On appeal, ‘we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most
    favorable to the prevailing party below, in this case the Department.’” Joyce v. Botetourt Cnty.
    Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    75 Va. App. 690
    , 695 (2022) (quoting C. Farrell v. Warren Cnty. Dep’t of
    Soc. Servs., 
    59 Va. App. 375
    , 386 (2012)). Father is the biological parent of four children:
    W.W., Z.W., S.W., and H.W. Only father’s two younger children, S.W. and H.W., are minors
    and the subject of this appeal.4
    On July 8, 2020, the Roanoke City Department of Social Services (the Department) received
    a report that father’s oldest child, W.W., called the police after locking herself in the bathroom
    because father was following her around the house and cursing at her. Father had been drinking
    alcohol and “broke down” the bathroom door. After the incident, the Department interviewed father
    and the four children. Father claimed that he was “being harassed by an ‘Anglo-Indian’
    organization” that was “broadcasting things from inside his house.” To cope with “being harassed,”
    father admitted to consuming alcohol daily. All four children confirmed that father was drinking to
    excess and claimed that he was “prone to outbursts of anger.” The children reported that father’s
    behavior had become “increasingly unstable.” After being unable to find a viable relative
    placement, the Department sought to remove the children from father’s care and place them in
    3
    The record in this case was sealed. We unseal only the specific facts stated in this
    opinion, “finding them relevant to our decision.” Daily Press, LLC v. Commonwealth, 
    301 Va. 384
    , 393 n.1 (2022). “The remainder of the previously sealed record remains sealed.” Simms v.
    Alexandria Dep’t of Cmty. & Hum. Servs., 
    74 Va. App. 447
    , 452 n.1 (2022) (quoting Levick v.
    MacDougall, 
    294 Va. 283
    , 288 n.1 (2017)).
    4
    Father and the children’s biological mother divorced in 2014, and he and the children
    moved from Pakistan to the United States. The children’s mother signed permanent entrustment
    agreements for S.W. and H.W. Father’s older two children, W.W. and Z.W., are over the age of
    18, and therefore the lower court’s proceedings concerning them are not addressed herein.
    -2-
    foster care. At the time of the removal, W.W. was 17 years old, Z.W. was 15 years old, S.W. was
    12 years old, and H.W. was 9 years old.
    The Roanoke City Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court (the JDR court) entered
    emergency removal orders and preliminary removal orders for all four children. The JDR court
    subsequently adjudicated that the children were abused or neglected and entered dispositional
    orders.
    After the children entered foster care, the Department established requirements father had to
    complete before he would be reunited with them. The Department required father to regularly
    attend visitations with the children, maintain contact with the Department, and comply with its
    recommendations. Father also had to obtain and maintain sobriety, complete a substance abuse
    assessment, attend Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meetings on a weekly basis, and participate in
    alcohol and drug screens. In addition, father had to participate in outpatient counseling and the
    Department referred father for a psychological and parental capacity evaluation.
    Initially, the Department offered father weekly supervised visitation with the children.
    During those visits, father repeatedly discussed how there was “a group of people that were out to
    get him and his children.” Father’s paranoia upset the children. Beginning in June 2021, the
    Department and service providers noticed that “things started to take a [bad] turn” because the
    children were becoming “emotionally dysregulated” after the visits. For example, S.W. expressed
    not wanting to be alone with father because she did not “feel safe” in his presence.
    Considering the children’s reactions and their counselors’ recommendations, the
    Department “paused” the in-person visitations and later moved to virtual visits. The Department
    also ensured that the children continued to receive individual counseling and referred the entire
    family to functional family therapy. The family participated in three functional family therapy
    sessions, but father only attended the first two sessions because of a schedule conflict. The sessions
    -3-
    stopped because Z.W., who was 17 years old at the time, had “thoughts of self harm and suicidal
    thoughts.”
    In addition to visiting the children, father completed a psychological and parental capacity
    evaluation with Dr. Klaire Mundy in March 2021. Dr. Mundy reported that father presented “a
    pattern of . . . paranoid thought and conspiracy.” Father told Dr. Mundy that there were people in
    the community who were spreading “a lot of lies” and “attempting to . . . brainwash him and his
    children.” Considering father’s paranoia and his tendency “to view himself as superior,”
    Dr. Mundy doubted that he would change “his thought patterns” or be “psychologically and
    emotionally available” for his children. Father acknowledged a history of substance abuse,
    including alcohol, methamphetamine, cocaine, “and a couple of others,” but claimed that he was
    sober. Dr. Mundy opined that father had stopped consuming alcohol “for the time being . . . as a
    means of complying with the rules that will allow him to regain custody of his children.”
    Questioning whether father had used alcohol “as a means of self-medicating,” Dr. Mundy
    recommended that father meet with a psychiatrist, who could determine whether medication would
    “get the derealization thoughts, the delusions, the paranoid thoughts back into some sort of . . .
    control.” To best monitor father’s “patterns of behavior” and substance use, Dr. Mundy also
    recommended weekly therapy.
    After the evaluation, the Department referred father to a psychiatrist and recommended that
    he increase his outpatient counseling sessions. Father, however, continued to express concerns
    about “a community or a conspiracy or a network of individuals trying to influence him and his
    children.” Despite the services, father’s paranoia persisted, and he did not make any changes to
    remedy the conditions that led to, or required the continuation of, the children’s placement in foster
    care. As a result, the JDR court terminated father’s parental rights to S.W. and H.W. and approved
    the foster care goal of adoption. Father appealed the JDR court’s rulings to the circuit court.
    -4-
    Before the circuit court trial, father requested four witness subpoenas; three of which were
    served only by posted service. The fourth subpoena was not served because the witness was no
    longer employed at the address listed on the subpoena. None of the witnesses appeared at trial.
    Father requested a continuance, which the circuit court took under advisement until after the
    Department presented its evidence.
    The Department offered evidence about the children and their well-being. S.W. and H.W.,
    who were 14 and 12 years old respectively, were not in the same foster home, but the Department
    had made efforts to keep them in contact with one another and their siblings. S.W.5 started
    counseling with the same therapist as their older sibling, Z.W., in September 2020. According to
    the therapist, both Z.W. and S.W. were “extremely fearful and concerned for [their] safety” because
    of father’s drinking and “unstable behaviors,” such as frequently yelling and screaming and
    slamming doors. The therapist had recommended “pausing” visitation with father because of the
    children’s “increased emotional distress” following those visits.6 In January 2022, S.W. was
    hospitalized because of suicidal thoughts.7 Following their hospitalization, S.W. was placed in a
    new foster home, where they were “doing extremely well,” according to the Department.
    Like his siblings, H.W. participated in counseling, beginning in August 2020. H.W.’s
    therapist described him as “happy go lucky” at the outset, but H.W. also had expressed “sadness
    about missing his father,” even though he “wouldn’t show much affect.” As counseling progressed,
    the therapist realized that H.W. did not understand the confidentiality of the sessions, but once he
    5
    S.W. uses the pronouns “they/their.”
    6
    At the time of the circuit court hearing, S.W. was able to have, but rarely had,
    supervised phone calls with father.
    7
    S.W. had been hospitalized twice due to “gender dysphoria issues” and “increasing
    anxiety about court.” S.W.’s second hospitalization occurred in February 2022, when they
    stayed for “two or three days” for “stabilization.”
    -5-
    did, he “became much more vocal . . . and much more expressive.”8 H.W. confessed having “some
    passive suicidal thoughts,” but he did not have an intent or plan. H.W. became “increasingly upset”
    after visiting with father or talking with him on the phone.9 At the time of the circuit court hearing,
    the Department reported that H.W. was “doing wonderful[ly]” but “struggle[d] with anxiety.”
    The Department explained that it recommended terminating father’s parental rights to S.W.
    and H.W. and a foster care goal of adoption because the children had been in foster care for
    approximately 25 months and father had not demonstrated that he had progressed as a result of the
    services offered. The Department emphasized that the children had experienced “significant
    trauma,” which they were “working through,” and “it would be detrimental to their progress” to
    return to father’s care. According to the Department, as recently as a few weeks before the hearing,
    father continued to use “manipulative tactics when talking with his children or discussing
    concerning suspicions, which really upset his children.”
    At the close of the Department’s evidence, father moved to strike, which the circuit court
    denied. Father then renewed his continuance request. Finding it important to move the case
    forward considering how long the children had been in foster care, and noting the Department’s
    objection, the circuit court denied father’s motion. However, the circuit court allowed father to
    proffer “any testimony” that he had “hope[d] to elicit” from the subpoenaed witnesses. The circuit
    court stated that it would consider father’s proffer as substantive evidence. Father proffered that
    Daniel Kinney was his co-worker and would have testified that father was “of good character and
    steady in his work” at 7-Eleven. Next, father proffered that Amanda and Michael Chestnut, the
    children’s initial foster parents, would have testified that father had a “good relationship” with the
    8
    Around the same time, H.W. switched foster homes and his therapy appointments went
    from virtual sessions to in-person sessions.
    9
    Father continued to have weekly supervised phone calls with H.W. at the time of the
    circuit court hearing.
    -6-
    children. The Chestnuts would have testified that the children wanted to return home before the
    Department transferred them to another foster home. The circuit court accepted the proffers, while
    acknowledging that they deprived the Department and the children’s guardian ad litem of their right
    to cross-examination.
    Father testified that the Department removed the children from his care because of alleged
    neglect but emphasized that the findings were later determined to be unfounded. At the
    Department’s request, father had participated in a substance abuse assessment at Blue Ridge
    Behavioral Center; he told them that he did not have “a problem” with alcohol, and they allegedly
    had “no recommendations” for him. Father participated in alcohol and drug screens, which were
    negative. He also attended AA meetings through December 2021. In addition, after Dr. Mundy’s
    evaluation, father had a one-hour virtual appointment with a psychiatrist. Father told the
    psychiatrist that he “did not feel the need to take medications” and claimed that the psychiatrist did
    not recommend or prescribe any medications for him.
    Furthermore, father asserted that the children became more “aggressive” and “blamed” him
    for “everything” after they moved to their second foster home. According to father, “somebody
    else” was influencing his children. A few months after the children’s move, the Department
    changed the foster care goal from return home to adoption, which “surprised” him. Father
    expressed his desire for the children to return home so they could feel “protected” and “loved.”
    At the conclusion of all the evidence, father renewed his motion to strike, which the circuit
    court denied. After hearing the parties’ arguments, the circuit court took the matter under
    advisement and subsequently issued a letter opinion. The circuit court found that father was “not a
    credible witness” and his testimony was “contrary to the fact[s].” In addition, the circuit court
    found that the Department had met its burden of proving that S.W. and H.W. were “subject to abuse
    and neglect” under Code § 16.1-283(B) and father “failed to remedy the conditions that led to the
    -7-
    placement and continuation of” S.W. and H.W. in foster care under Code § 16.1-283(C)(2). On
    August 25, 2022, the circuit court entered an order terminating father’s parental rights to S.W. and
    H.W. and approving the foster care goal of adoption for them. Father appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    “On review of a trial court’s decision regarding the termination of parental rights, we
    presume the trial court ‘thoroughly weighed all the evidence, considered the statutory
    requirements, and made its determination based on the child’s best interests.’” Joyce, 75
    Va. App. at 699 (quoting Norfolk Div. of Soc. Servs. v. Hardy, 
    42 Va. App. 546
    , 552 (2004)).
    “Where, as here, the court hears the evidence ore tenus, its finding is entitled to great weight and
    will not be disturbed on appeal unless plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.” Simms v.
    Alexandria Dep’t of Cmty. & Hum. Servs., 
    74 Va. App. 447
    , 470 (2022) (quoting Fauquier Cnty.
    Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Ridgeway, 
    59 Va. App. 185
    , 190 (2011)).
    Father argues that the circuit court abused its discretion by denying his continuance
    request after his subpoenaed witnesses did not appear at trial. “The decision of whether to grant
    a continuance is committed to the discretion of the circuit court. We will reverse ‘a circuit
    court’s ruling on a motion for a continuance . . . only upon a showing of abuse of discretion and
    resulting prejudice to the movant.’” Shah v. Shah, 
    70 Va. App. 588
    , 593 (2019) (quoting
    Haugen v. Shenandoah Valley Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    274 Va. 27
    , 34 (2007)). Prejudice “may not
    be presumed; it must appear from the record.” Cooper v. Commonwealth, 
    54 Va. App. 558
    , 565
    (2009) (quoting Bolden v. Commonwealth, 
    49 Va. App. 285
    , 290 (2007), aff’d, 
    275 Va. 144
    (2008)). “Absent a proffer showing ‘harm was done,’” the appellate court is “‘forbidden [from]
    consider[ing] the question.’” Ray v. Commonwealth, 
    55 Va. App. 647
    , 650 (2010) (quoting Scott
    v. Commonwealth, 
    191 Va. 73
    , 78-79 (1950)).
    -8-
    The circuit court denied father’s continuance request because the children “need[ed] a
    decision after [25] months in foster care.” “[I]t is in the best interests of children to receive a
    permanent placement without languishing in the foster system.” Simms, 74 Va. App. at 464.
    “Given the length of time the case had been ongoing, it was not beyond the pale for the circuit
    court to believe that even a short continuance had the potential to be harmful to the child[ren]
    while providing little in the way of benefit to the parties or the court.” Geouge v. Traylor, 
    68 Va. App. 343
    , 375 n.13 (2017).
    As noted, the circuit court accepted father’s proffer of the witnesses’ testimony and
    treated it as “substantive evidence.” The circuit court found that permitting the proffer was the
    “better decision” because a continuance would not benefit the children.
    On appeal, father now asserts that the circuit court’s approach was insufficient because
    his proffer “consisted of a bare summary of the evidence and lacked the flavor and pathos of live
    testimony.” He contends that the ability to present in-person testimony was “critical to bolster
    his credibility,” especially because the circuit court found that he was not a credible witness.
    To establish the “necessary prejudice,” father must demonstrate that “the decision to deny
    h[im] a continuance prevented h[im] from presenting h[is] case or otherwise caused h[im] to lose
    the case.” Geouge, 68 Va. App. at 374. Father has failed to prove any resulting prejudice from
    the denial of the continuance because the circuit court accepted the proffers as if the witnesses
    had testified. Father’s credibility argument is wholly speculative. The circuit court had the
    opportunity to see and hear not only the Department’s witnesses but also to observe father’s
    testimony. Considering all the evidence, including father’s proffer, the circuit court found that
    father was not credible. “It is well established that the trier of fact ascertains a witness’
    credibility, determines the weight to be given to their testimony, and has the discretion to accept
    or reject any of the witness’ testimony.” Sobol v. Sobol, 
    74 Va. App. 252
    , 272 (2022) (quoting
    -9-
    Anderson v. Anderson, 
    29 Va. App. 673
    , 686 (1999)). This Court “is bound by” the circuit
    court’s credibility findings. Tackett v. Arlington Cnty. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    62 Va. App. 296
    ,
    339 (2013).
    The circuit court’s “ultimate ruling against [father] was the result of its determination of
    the facts of the case and not the result of the denial of h[is] continuance request.” Geouge, 68
    Va. App. at 374. Considering the totality of the circumstances and because father failed to
    “demonstrate the necessary prejudice,” this Court finds the circuit court did not abuse its
    discretion by denying the requested continuance. Id. at 375.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the circuit court’s judgment is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    - 10 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1379223

Filed Date: 11/8/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2023