In re K.B., Juvenile ( 2014 )


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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. 2014-114
    JULY TERM, 2014
    In re K.B., Juvenile                                  }    APPEALED FROM:
    }
    }    Superior Court, Chittenden Unit,
    .                                                     }    Family Division
    }
    }    DOCKET NO. 63-2-11 Cnjv
    Trial Judge: Kevin W. Griffin
    In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:
    Mother and Father separately appeal the superior court’s order terminating their parental
    rights with respect to their son, K.B. We affirm.
    Neither mother nor father challenges any of the superior court’s findings, which reveal
    the following facts. Prior to K.B.’s birth, the Department for Children and Families (DCF) had
    become involved with mother in connection with K.B.’s half-sister, born January 19, 2009,
    because of mother’s severe opiate addiction. Eventually, parental rights and responsibilities of
    the half-sister were awarded to her biological father because of mother’s failure to comply with
    DCF’s plan of services. Mother has a criminal history dating back to 2006. In July 2010, she
    pled guilty to six misdemeanor charges and received an aggregate sentence of six-to-twelve
    months, all suspended except fifty days. The main focus of her rehabilitative programming has
    been substance-abuse treatment. Father has a criminal history dating back to 2005, including
    convictions for aggravated domestic assault, domestic assault, violation of an abuse-prevention
    order, unlawful trespass of an occupied building, petty larceny, possession of stolen property,
    and multiple violations of conditions of release.
    K.B. was born on February 15, 2011 at a time when mother was homeless and staying
    with friends on a temporary basis. Three days after K.B.’s birth, as a result of mother’s
    homelessness and her failure to comply with the case plan concerning K.B.’s half-sister, DCF
    filed a petition alleging that K.B. was a child in need of care or supervision (CHINS). At an
    emergency hearing, the superior court approved a conditional custody order allowing mother to
    retain legal custody subject to certain conditions, including that she discuss with DCF
    participating in a residential treatment program with K.B. at the Lund Family Center. At the
    time of the hearing, father had a pending criminal case in which he was accused of aggravated
    domestic assault against mother.
    In March 2011, DCF filed a request for an emergency hearing when it learned that
    mother had not secured suitable housing and was believed to be homeless with K.B. At the
    hearing, the court denied DCF’s request that it be given custody of K.B., but instead issued
    another conditional custody order allowing mother to retain custody subject to the condition that
    she interview at the Lund Center and participate in a residential program there if accepted.
    Although mother completed an interview with the Center and was accepted for a two-to-four-
    week residential program, she elected not to participate in the program and instead began living
    at a shelter with K.B.
    Following the emergency hearing, mother admitted on March 29, 2011 that K.B. was
    CHINS because of her ongoing homelessness and drug addiction and her noncompliance with
    the case plan concerning K.B.’s half-sister. A disposition hearing was held on June 21, 2011, at
    which time father’s paternity was established. The court’s disposition order allowed mother to
    retain custody of K.B. conditioned upon her complying with the case plan, which required her to
    complete a parent education course, continue with substance abuse and anger management
    counseling, maintain stable housing, abide by probation conditions, and execute releases for
    DCF to monitor compliance with the case plan. Father was permitted parent-child contact and
    was ordered to complete a parent education course, participate in a substance-abuse evaluation,
    engage in anger management counseling, secure appropriate housing, remain employed, sign
    relevant releases, and maintain consistent parent-child contact with K.B. In July 2011, father
    pled guilty to aggravated domestic assault and received a one-to-three-year sentence, all
    suspended, except for twelve days on a pre-approved furlough.
    At an August 30, 2011 post-disposition review hearing, father asked that mother be held
    in contempt for not following the court’s parent-child contact schedule. During that period,
    mother had moved multiple times to different motels without notifying DCF, and she had tested
    positive twice for amphetamines. In response to father’s motion for contempt, the court issued
    an order requiring the parties to comply with the parent-child contact order. Father had
    supervised visits with K.B. on September 14 and 21, 2011, but the following five scheduled
    visits did not take place. Mother was responsible for four of the five missed visits. Father filed
    additional motions for contempt. Following a hearing in December, the court denied those
    motions, stating that father had not established that mother was in contempt of the court’s orders.
    In January 2012, mother lost the housing she had obtained through a shelter program. In
    April 2012, she advised her social worker that she had relapsed and was using illegal drugs
    again. Arrangements were made to have mother enter a residential treatment program but she
    was discharged after six days for rule violations. K.B’s maternal great-grandmother had agreed
    to care for K.B. while mother was in residential drug treatment, but after mother failed to
    complete the program, DCF sought an emergency hearing, which was held on July 27, 2012.
    Following the hearing, mother entered into another residential treatment program, but was
    discharged three days later. When K.B.’s maternal grandmother informed DCF that she could no
    longer care for K.B., DCF requested another emergency hearing, after which custody of K.B.
    was transferred to DCF, and the child was placed in a legal-risk foster home. Father had not
    been in contact with DCF since the December 2011 hearing. Shortly thereafter, mother was
    incarcerated after another relapse.
    On November 26, 2012, the court approved a modified disposition case plan that called
    for concurrent goals of adoption or reunification with mother or father. In December 2012,
    mother was furloughed to another residential program focusing on substance-abuse treatment.
    She completed the program and was released in March 2013. Because K.B.’s then-current foster
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    parents were not willing to adopt the child, DCF decided to focus, one final time, on
    reunification with mother. DCF urged mother to apply to the Lund Center, where she could
    participate in a residential treatment program with K.B., but mother declined to do so. Due to
    mother’s refusal to consider that program and her inability to maintain sobriety on a long-term
    basis, DCF moved K.B. to a pre-adoptive home in April 2013. K.B. has remained in that home
    since then.
    At the time of the May 6, 2013 post-disposition review hearing, mother had participated
    in a parenting program and, for the most part, was compliant with the Department of
    Correction’s supervision. DCF still had not heard from father since December 2011. At the next
    post-disposition review hearing held on July 22, 2013, DCF filed an updated case plan calling for
    adoption of K.B. Despite mother’s recent progress in certain programs, housing continued to be
    a problem, and DCF was concerned that mother would not be able to maintain her recovery.
    Given’s mother’s decision not to participate in the Lund Center program, DCF decided to focus
    on K.B.’s permanency.
    On July 24, 2013, DCF filed a petition to terminate mother’s and father’s parental rights.
    Shortly thereafter, mother entered the Brattleboro Retreat after suffering what she described as a
    mental breakdown, which she attributed to a break-up with her partner. Five days later, after she
    was released from the Retreat, mother was incarcerated for lack of housing, which was a
    furlough requirement. Mother was released from the correctional facility on two occasions in
    late September 2013 and early October 2013, only to be returned to jail again after failing drug
    tests. She remained incarcerated until she completed her maximum sentence on December 30,
    2013.
    At the time of the two-day termination hearing held in January 2014, mother was living
    with her uncle and looking for work. She was not taking medication and was not in treatment
    due to transportation problems. She acknowledged that she could not provide for K.B.’s
    reasonable needs. Father appeared at the termination hearing. He admitted being absent from
    K.B.’s life since December 20, 2011, after becoming discouraged with problems surrounding the
    visitation schedule. Following a period of homelessness, he was living with his girlfriend and
    her fourteen-month-old son. He had been working at a restaurant and, after a lengthy period of
    noncompliance with probation conditions, was enrolled in anger management counseling.
    Following the two-day hearing, the superior court granted DCF’s petition to terminate the
    parental rights of both parents. With respect to mother, the court concluded that DCF had
    established by clear and convincing evidence that: (1) mother had not made sufficient,
    substantial, sustained, or ongoing progress since K.B. came under supervision of the court; (2)
    mother’s pattern had been treatment, brief periods of sobriety, and then relapse; (3) she had not
    been consistent with her service providers, with whom she had been involved since 2010; (4) she
    had not been able to successfully address her drug problems in residential treatment; (5) she had
    not been consistent with outpatient treatment; (6) although she loved K.B. and he loved her, she
    was still unable to provide a safe, secure, and nurturing environment for him and had not
    demonstrated an ability to care for him on a sustained basis; and (7) she was incapable of
    resuming her parental duties in the foreseeable future. With regard to father, the court concluded
    that DCF had established by clear and convincing evidence that: (1) father had not made any
    progress since K.B. came under supervision of the court; (2) he had not complied with the case
    3
    plan; (3) he had not seen K.B. since December 2011; (4) he had not played a constructive role in
    K.B.’s life since the child was born; and (5) he was no closer to playing a constructive role in
    K.B.’s life than he was when this case was opened in February 2011. The court further stated
    that: (1) K.B was in a stable and nurturing home where his medical and developmental needs
    were being met; (2) he needed caregivers who can recognize and respond to his emotional needs;
    (3) he needed permanency in a structured and stable environment; and (4) removing him from
    his foster family would detrimentally impact him and thus be contrary to his best interests.
    On appeal, father argues that the superior court improperly held him responsible for his
    lack of contact with K.B., when in fact his efforts to maintain contact with his son were thwarted
    by mother, DCF, and the court. According to father, DCF looked on passively while mother
    denied him a number of visits when she was K.B.’s custodian, and the court took no effective
    action to enforce his right to parent-child contact despite his multiple motions to find mother in
    contempt. Father further complains that when DCF became the custodian, it set unnecessary
    prerequisites for visits, such as requiring him to undergo both substance abuse and anger
    management counseling. Father asserts that these actions discouraged him from exercising his
    right to visitation.
    We do not find these arguments persuasive. The superior court found that mother was
    responsible for four of the five supervised visits that father missed. Following a motion hearing
    held in September 2011, the superior court ordered both parties to comply with the existing
    parent-child contact order. The same day, the court issued a progress order indicating that father
    would participate in an anger management program and have a substance abuse assessment. The
    superior court stated that there had to be evidence that father did not have an untreated
    substance-abuse problem before it would consider moving visits to father’s house.
    Father filed another motion for contempt in October but withdrew the motion at a
    November 14, 2011 motion hearing. The court ordered mother to abide by father’s scheduled
    parent-child contact. On December 19, 2011, father filed a request for an emergency hearing,
    and a hearing was held the next day on father’s renewed motion for contempt, but father did not
    attend the hearing. In its order issued the same day, the court stated that contempt was not
    established and denied the motion. Father has not visited with his son since then.
    At the termination hearing, when asked on direct examination why he did not continue
    seeing his son, father responded:
    Well, there was a lot of discrepancies in—between me and his
    mother with the visits and I got discouraged because we would
    argue a lot about—you know, one day she would bring him and the
    next, we’d be fighting. And in between that, she would offer for
    me to come around and be around him while he was with her so I
    got to see [K.B.] on her terms and at her place of residence.
    But pretty much just discrepancy between the visitation and just
    got discouraged because it was inconsistent and overwhelming at
    times when I wasn’t able to see him.
    4
    When asked on direct examination why he did not renew visits after custody of K.B. was
    transferred to DCF in the summer of 2012, father responded that he had talked to the DCF
    caseworker about reinstituting visitation but that:
    I was told I had to do an assessment and all these other things
    after the court order—ordered my visits—in order to start my visits
    back up. Those were the requirements in order for me to see my
    kid again, you know.
    Asked why he did not do a substance abuse assessment, father replied:
    I had a lot of stuff going on in my life. It’s really no real excuse
    or reasoning. I had—I was—I was homeless at the time. I was
    trying to take care of my other son because, you know, it’s really
    hard working and supporting two other people and fighting for a
    place to live pretty much. You know, all my money went towards
    him and, you know, his diapers and his formula and it was just
    hard.
    As such, the record does not establish that father’s failure to remain part of K.B.’s life
    was the fault of mother, DCF, or the court—and thus beyond his control. See In re S.R., 
    157 Vt. 417
    , 421-22 (1991) (acknowledging that stagnation caused by factors beyond parents’ control
    cannot support termination of parental rights, but finding no merit to parents’ argument that
    Department caused stagnation in that case; cf. In re D.S. & M.H., 
    2014 VT 38
    , ¶¶ 19-20, ___ Vt.
    ___ (finding that court order limiting father’s contact with his son was based on father’s criminal
    conduct and incarceration and thus concluding that father’s lack of contact with his son was not
    beyond his control). To the contrary, the record demonstrates that father stopped seeing K.B.
    because he was overwhelmed by circumstances in his life. However, father cannot, years later,
    escape the consequences of his actions with respect to K.B. by blaming mother, DCF, and the
    court system.
    For her part, mother argues that the superior court committed reversible error by not
    giving the proper weight to the bond that had formed between her and K.B. In support of this
    argument, mother notes that both her family time coach and DCF caseworker recognized the
    bond between her and K.B. We find no merit to this argument. As mother acknowledges, the
    court found that mother loves K.B. and he loves her, but nonetheless concluded termination of
    her parental rights was necessary because, despite years of being afforded various services,
    mother had failed to make any substantial or sustained progress in addressing the problems that
    had led to K.B. being taken into state custody. The court stated that K.B. needed consistency in
    parenting, a structured environment, and permanency in a stable home, but that mother had made
    little progress over a significant period of time towards being able to provide such a home to
    K.B.
    This is not a case in which the evidence of a loving parental bond can override the other
    factors strongly supporting termination of mother’s parental rights—in particular, that she would
    not be able to resume her parental duties within a reasonable period of time from the perspective
    of a very young child that had already spent a substantial portion of his life in foster care. The
    5
    court’s termination decision is supported by unchallenged findings and conclusions that, in turn,
    are supported by the evidence. See In re A.F., 
    160 Vt. 175
    , 178 (1993) (stating, with regard to
    termination order, that “[i]ndividual findings of fact will stand unless clearly erroneous, and
    conclusions of law will be upheld if supported by the findings”).
    Affirmed.
    BY THE COURT:
    _______________________________________
    Marilyn S. Skoglund, Associate Justice
    _______________________________________
    Beth Robinson, Associate Justice
    _______________________________________
    Geoffrey W. Crawford, Associate Justice
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2014-114

Filed Date: 7/24/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021