In re J.T. and E.T., Juveniles ( 2013 )


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  • Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.
    ENTRY ORDER
    SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2013-340
    DECEMBER TERM, 2013
    In re J.T. and E.T., Juveniles                        }    APPEALED FROM:
    }
    }    Superior Court, Windsor Unit,
    }    Family Division
    }
    }    DOCKET NO. 51-5-09/73-7-11 Wrjv
    Trial Judge: Katherine A. Hayes
    In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:
    Father appeals the superior court’s order terminating his parental rights with respect to
    his two children, J.T. and E.T. We affirm.
    J.T. and E.T. were born in March 2008 and July 2009, respectively. In May 2009, the
    Department for Children and Families (DCF) filed a petition alleging that one-year-old J.T. was
    a child in need of care or supervision (CHINS) based on the neglect of the parents, who were
    living with father’s parents. Based on the petition, the court issued a conditional custody order
    that kept J.T. with her parents but required them to cooperate with DCF, to participate in parent
    education and mental health services, and to refrain from engaging in violence towards each
    other or using corporal punishment against the child. DCF provided a variety of support services
    to the parents, including referrals to other agencies. J.T. was adjudicated CHINS in June 2009
    based on the parties’ admissions. In August 2009, the court approved a disposition plan that
    continued custody with the parents subject to a number of conditions, including that they
    participate in parent education, secure appropriate and stable housing, obtain employment,
    engage in mental health services, refrain from domestic violence, and address J.T.’s medical
    needs.
    At this time, father was on probation for his conviction on three counts of domestic
    assault against mother. In September 2009, the paternal grandmother asked father to leave her
    home after he smashed his father’s windshield and threw a rod at his mother. Based on these
    incidents, he was arrested, charged with violating his probation, and jailed. He was convicted of
    felony aggravated domestic assault in April 2010 and sentenced to serve a term of seven months
    to four years. In the fall of 2009, mother moved out of the paternal grandparents’ home and
    lived temporarily in her car with the children. Father was incarcerated at the time of the
    November 2009 post-disposition hearing. Eventually, he was furloughed into the community,
    and, by February 2011, he was engaged in counseling and cognitive self-change programs.
    The children remained in the conditional custody of their parents until July 2011, when
    DCF filed a CHINS petition concerning two-year-old E.T. DCF also sought to amend the
    disposition order concerning J.T. based on the parent’s continued neglect. The petition indicated
    that the parents had failed to follow through on medical and other services to address the
    children’s medical and developmental needs. The petition also stated that the parents had failed
    to follow through with services offered by a parent-child center, which had closed its case on the
    family. When the children were taken into custody, J.T. was hyperactive and insisted on eating
    on the floor, while E.T. displayed a flat affect and did not speak. A temporary order was issued
    placing the girls in DCF custody, where they have remained since.
    In September 2011, the court adjudicated E.T. CHINS based on the parties’ admissions.
    At the same time, the parents stipulated to a modification of the original disposition order for J.T.
    as well as a disposition order for E.T. The new disposition orders called for continued DCF
    custody with a goal of reunification. The case plan agreed to by father required him to: (1)
    participate in family time coaching; (2) participate in child development and parenting classes;
    (3) demonstrate that he understood and could meet the children’s medical needs; (4) take the
    children to child care daily; (5) work with all recommended services providers and participate in
    treatment team meetings with DCF; (6) participate in all necessary services and inform DCF
    when he had a valid excuse for not attending required services; (7) sign releases when needed;
    (8) maintain a safe and appropriate home for young children; (9) refrain from smoking in the
    home; (10) engage in mental health treatment; (11) comply with probation or parole conditions;
    and (12) not be charged with any new criminal offenses.
    In March 2012, at a meeting attended by the parents, a DCF social worker, and a family
    time coach, father engaged in aggressive and threatening conduct when the DCF worker
    expressed concern about him having missed eight of thirty-two visits with the children. As the
    result of his conduct, father’s parole was revoked and he was incarcerated until he was released
    on furlough in January 2013.
    Meanwhile, in July 2012, DCF filed a petition to terminate the parents’ residual parental
    rights with respect to both children. The mother relinquished her parental rights on April 29,
    2013, and an order to that effect was issued on May 9, 2013. On July 31, 2013, following two
    days of a contested hearing held earlier that month, the superior court terminated father’s
    parental rights, concluding that there was a change of circumstances due to stagnation of his
    ability to care for the children, and that, considering the statutory factors, termination of father’s
    parental rights was in the children’s best interests. Father appeals, arguing that: (1) the superior
    court’s finding of stagnation is clearly erroneous because it fails to credit him for his substantial
    efforts towards satisfying the case plan; and (2) the court’s findings in support of its conclusion
    that father would not be able to resume his parental duties within a reasonable period of time are
    insufficient because they fail to address a timeframe for what is a reasonable period of time
    under the specific circumstances of this case.
    In moving to modify a disposition order from a goal of reunification to termination, DCF
    had the burden to prove by clear and convincing evidence “that a change in circumstances
    require[d] such action to serve the best interests of the child[ren].” 33 V.S.A. § 5113(b). The
    threshold showing of changed circumstances is most often satisfied by demonstrating that “the
    parent’s ability to care properly for the child has either stagnated or deteriorated over the passage
    of time.” In re R.W., 
    2011 VT 124
    , ¶ 14, 
    191 Vt. 108
    (quotation omitted). “Stagnation may be
    shown by the passage of time with no improvement in parental capacity to care properly for the
    child.” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    Here, father argues that the superior court’s findings ignore or
    discount his progress in addressing his anger issues and his ability to work with others since his
    release from jail in January 2013. In support of this argument, father notes, without citing to the
    record, that he and his mother testified that he had made changes since his incarceration in
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    March 2012, that he wanted to be a better person, that he had engaged in therapy, and that he had
    repaired his relationship with his parents.
    We find no merit to this argument. The superior court noted the programs in which
    father had participated in 2010 and 2011, and further explicitly found that, at the time of the
    termination hearing, father was working with an individual therapist and was enrolled and
    actively participating in a community-based cognitive self-change program. The court also
    found, however, that overall, father had made no progress towards achieving several necessary
    case plan goals, including that he work with all recommended service providers and not miss
    appointments without a valid excuse, that he maintain a safe home appropriate for young
    children, that he sign releases allowing DCF to speak to his service providers, and that he comply
    with all probation or parole requirements and not be charged with new crimes. The court further
    noted that, several months after his release from jail, father was still living in housing that was
    entirely inappropriate for children and was not taking any steps to find alternative housing.
    Finally, the court cited the lengthy passage of time during which the young children were in
    foster care while father was making little or no progress toward reunification. In short, the court
    was aware of father’s recent efforts to address some of the issues that led to his children being
    taken into state custody, but determined overall that changed circumstances had occurred due to
    his failure to make any significant progress toward the disposition goal of reunification. There is
    sufficient support in the record to support the court’s finding of stagnation.
    Next, father argues that the court’s findings in support of its determination that father
    would be unable to resume his parental duties within a reasonable period of time are insufficient
    because they fail to specify a timeframe for when he could resume his parental duties. Again, we
    find no merit to this argument. As we have stated on numerous occasions, the most critical of
    the statutory best-interest factors is the likelihood that the parent will be able to resume parental
    duties within a reasonable period of time, In re D.C., 
    2012 VT 108
    , ¶ 28, 
    71 A.3d 1191
    , which is
    considered from the perspective of the children, In re B.M., 
    165 Vt. 331
    , 336 (1996). Here, the
    superior court noted that the parents were provided services for a period exceeding two years
    while the children were in their care under a conditional custody order. Yet, at the end of that
    time, their continued neglect of the children required DCF intervention and a court order
    removing the children from their custody. Then, as the court found, during an additional two-
    year period since July 2011, the children remained in foster care while father, despite the
    continued availability of services, failed to make any significant progress towards achieving case
    plan goals aimed at enabling him to reunite with his children. As the court noted, at the time of
    the termination hearing, father was living in housing inappropriate for the children and was
    subject to various furlough conditions as the result of his most recent incarceration.
    When the children were brought into DCF custody, they struggled with emotional and
    developmental issues as the result of being neglected by their parents, exposed to domestic
    violence, and raised in squalor. Meanwhile, father was incarcerated for engaging in violent or
    threatening conduct, both after the conditional custody order was put in place and after the
    children were removed from their parents’ custody. Four years after DCF became involved with
    the family and provided numerous services to enable father to resume his parental duties, he was
    still not ready to do so, as he acknowledged at the termination hearing. Moreover, as the
    superior court found, the girls had made tremendous progress in their physical, emotional, and
    mental development during their time with their foster family. As witnesses testified, the
    children were in need of stability and permanence, having spent a significant part of their lives in
    DCF custody. The trial court may take into account the age of the child and the length of time
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    that they have been in DCF in determining when a reasonable time for resuming parental duties
    has passed. See In re W.L., 
    2009 VT 41
    , ¶ 16, 
    185 Vt. 641
    (mem.) (affirming termination of
    parental rights in part because “the need for stability and permanence was particularly
    pronounced given W.L.’s young age”); In re J.S., 
    168 Vt. 572
    , 574 (1998) (mem.) (upholding
    termination order based on parent’s lack of progress and child’s tender age and exceptional
    needs); see also Payrits v. Payrits, 
    171 Vt. 50
    , 53 (2000) (recognizing that, in determining
    children’s best interests, “the court may draw upon its own common sense and experience in
    reaching a reasoned judgment”). The law does not require the trial court to establish a specific
    timeframe in which a parent must resume parental duties; nor is the court required to wait until
    further harm comes to the children before terminating parental rights.
    We agree with father that the question of the likelihood of a parent resuming parental
    duties is forward-looking. In this case, however, there was overwhelming evidence to support
    the court’s conclusion that father will not be able to resume his parental duties within a
    reasonable period of time, given the age of the children, the significant emotional and
    developmental issues that they have had to deal with due to their parents’ neglect, the length of
    time that they have been in DCF custody, father’s lack of progress toward reunification during
    that lengthy period, his continuing inability to care for the children, and the uncertainty of
    whether he will ever be able to care for them. We recognize that parents have a fundamental
    right to care for their children, but “[p]ublic policy . . . does not dictate that the parent-child bond
    be maintained regardless of the cost to the child.” 
    B.M., 165 Vt. at 342
    (quotation omitted).
    Affirmed.
    BY THE COURT:
    _______________________________________
    Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice
    _______________________________________
    Beth Robinson, Associate Justice
    _______________________________________
    Geoffrey W. Crawford, Associate Justice
    4
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2013-340

Filed Date: 12/18/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021