In Re Dep Of: D.,m.g., Dob: 5/28/13 David Dorsch, App. v. Dshs, Resp. ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •                                                                       iL^iJ
    "c r~ r';1 ;::
    Ji^Ku'/ 10 aH 9: 2i
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    In the Matter of the Dependency of
    No. 71600-0-1
    D.M.G.,
    DOB: 5/28/13,                                  DIVISION ONE
    Minor Child.
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND
    HEALTH SERVICES,                               UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Respondent,                FILED: November 10, 2014
    v.
    DAVID DORSCH,
    Appellant.
    Becker, J. — David Dorsch appeals from the trial court orderfinding his
    daughter D.G. dependent. He contends that the trial court's decision rests on
    inadmissible hearsay. Because substantial admissible evidence supports the
    court's dependency determination, we affirm.
    FACTS
    Carrie Galbreath and David Dorsch are the parents of a daughter, D.G.,
    who was born on May 28, 2013. D.G. was eight months old at the time ofthe
    dependency fact-finding hearing in January 2014.
    No. 71600-0-1/2
    At birth, D.G. tested positive for marijuana, methadone, PCP, and
    benzodiazepines. She remained hospitalized while doctors treated her with
    morphine for significant withdrawal symptoms. The Department of Social and
    Health Services filed a dependency petition on June 25, 2013. Galbreath
    eventually entered into an agreed order of dependency and is not a party on
    appeal.
    D.G. was released from the hospital on June 26, 2013, and admitted into
    the Pediatric Interim Care Center, where she remained until September 26, 2013.
    The center is a highly structured facility, and D.G.'s treatment needs included a
    low stimulus environment. After leaving the center, D.G. moved with Galbreath
    to Genesis House, an in-patient treatment facility.
    Dorsch did not personally appear for the dependency fact-finding hearing,
    which began on January 21, 2014. David Norman, the Court Appointed Special
    Advocate, made several unsuccessful efforts to locate Dorsch before the
    hearing. Dorsch's two telephone numbers were no longer valid. Norman went to
    Dorsch's residence and learned that Dorsch no longer lived there. Norman also
    determined that Dorsch no longer worked at his last known place of employment.
    Dorsch has a substantial history of violent and aggressive criminal
    behavior arising from substance and alcohol abuse. Since 2002, his criminal
    history includes convictions for driving under the influence and possession of a
    controlled substance, as well as a domestic violence assault conviction and two
    No. 71600-0-1/3
    domestic violence no contact orders. Dorsch's most recent conviction occurred
    in 2011.
    Melissa McOmber, a Department social worker, testified that she had
    contact with Dorsch multiple times over the course of several months. On at
    least two occasions, McOmber observed Galbreath and Dorsch together.
    Galbreath appeared "fearful" and "very much reserved" when Dorsch was
    nearby. McOmber was also aware that Galbreath had accused Dorsch of
    domestic violence.
    McOmber was concerned by several aspects of Dorsch's behavior.
    During meetings, Dorsch would repeatedly make the same requests, even
    though he had been told "no." When McOmber once again denied the same
    request, Dorsch would occasionally leave or become upset or nonresponsive.
    On several occasions, Dorsch became upset when McOmber was unable to
    meet with him immediately, even though he did not have an appointment.
    Dorsch repeatedly asked to bring two nieces with him when he visited Galbreath
    at the Pediatric Interim Care Center, even though extended family members were
    not permitted to visit. McOmber concluded that Dorsch did not seem to
    understand that the purpose of the policy was to maintain the facility's low
    stimulus environment necessary for D.G.'s treatment needs.
    In June 2013, just before the Department filed its dependency petition,
    Dorsch's urine tested positive for methamphetamine and alcohol. The
    dependency court directed Dorsch to submit to twice-weekly urine testing. In the
    No. 71600-0-1/4
    initial June 2013 tests, Dorsch's urine repeatedly tested positive for alcohol
    consumption. During July and August, Dorsch submitted several "diluted"
    samples, which the Department considered to be positive for drug or alcohol use.
    Dorsch failed to appear for any tests after September 26, 2013. Norman spoke
    with Dorsch at a court hearing on October 11, 2013. Dorsch claimed that he had
    quit drinking, but Norman noticed alcohol on Dorsch's breath.
    Dorsch visited D.G. 26 times during the three months that she was at the
    Pediatric Interim Care Center. Carolyn Burke, a social worker at the center,
    described Dorsch's visits as generally "appropriate" but noted that he was "very
    high energy" on a couple of occasions and would overwhelm D.G. Although
    Dorsch seemed receptive when told of D.G.'s need for a low stimulus
    environment,
    he would say that he understood that he needed to be calm but he
    would still continue to be loud and hold the baby and be very
    interactive with [her] at times when we asked him to be calm with
    her.
    Based on her observations of Dorsch's interaction with D.G., Burke concluded
    that he was unable to "provide the low stimulus environment and the therapeutic
    techniques without needing to be redirected."
    Dorsch also visited D.G. after she moved with Galbreath to Genesis
    House. By the end of November 2013, however, when Jason Haber became
    Dorsch's caseworker, Dorsch was no longer participating in services and had
    stopped visiting D.G. at Genesis House.
    No. 71600-0-1/5
    The trial court found D.G. dependent as to Dorsch under RCW
    13.34.030(c) (child has no parent or custodian capable of adequately caring for
    the child). The court acknowledged that Dorsch had shown a willingness to care
    for D.G. and demonstrated some positive efforts to bond with her. But based on
    the evidence of Dorsch's criminal history and violent behavior, history of
    substance and alcohol abuse, recent inconsistent and incomplete urinalysis,
    erratic and unreliable behavior, and recent unavailability and lack of any
    participation in D.G.'s life, the court found that the Department had satisfied its
    burden of establishing that D.G. was dependent. The court ordered Dorsch to
    submit to random urinalysis, a drug and alcohol evaluation, a psychological
    evaluation, and a domestic violence assessment, and to participate in parenting
    services.
    ANALYSIS
    Dorsch contends that the trial court erred in admitting inadmissible
    hearsay and that the properly admitted evidence failed to support the trial court's
    dependency determination. In particular, he argues that the trial court improperly
    overruled hearsay objections to testimony by Melissa McOmber, Carolyn Burke,
    and David Norman about "concerns" that staff at the Pediatric Interim Care
    Center had expressed or "indicated" to them about Dorsch's visits with D.G. He
    also challenges testimony that Galbreath told McOmber she did not want to visit
    D.G. at the same time as Dorsch and told Jason Haber that Dorsch stopped
    No. 71600-0-1/6
    visiting D.G. at Genesis House in late November 2013. Finally, Dorsch contends
    the trial court's finding that Galbreath reported she was the victim of Dorsch's
    domestic violence rests solely on inadmissible hearsay.
    Hearsay is an out-of-court statement "offered in evidence to prove the
    truth of the matter asserted." ER 801(c). The trial court sustained Dorsch's
    hearsay objections repeatedly throughout the fact-finding hearing, appropriately
    observing that if a witness was "going to move into what other people have told
    her. . . then that is hearsay. Unless it's being offered for another purpose."
    On other occasions, however, the court overruled hearsay objections
    when a witness testified about what another person had "indicated." For
    example, the court overruled Dorsch's hearsay objection and permitted
    McOmberto testify that Galbreath had "indicated to me that she did not want to
    visit [D.G.] at the same time [as Dorsch]." As Dorsch correctly argues, a witness
    cannot insulate testimony from a hearsay objection merely by avoiding a direct
    quotation and "indicating" the substance of an out-of-court statement. See State
    v. Martinez, 
    105 Wn. App. 775
    , 782, 
    20 P.3d 1062
     (2001), overruled on. other
    grounds by State v. Ranqel-Reves, 
    119 Wn. App. 494
    , 
    81 P.3d 157
     (2003).
    But the Department established the substance of the alleged hearsay
    evidence through nonhearsay sources, and the unchallenged evidence amply
    supports the trial court's material findings and dependency determination.
    Consequently, any error in the admission of the challenged evidence was
    No. 71600-0-1/7
    harmless. See In re Welfare of XT.. 
    174 Wn. App. 733
    , 739, 
    300 P.3d 824
    (2013) (erroneous admission of hearsay not prejudicial unless, within reasonable
    probabilities, the outcome of the trial would have been materially affected had the
    error not occurred).
    To establish dependency, the State was required to prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence that D.G. met one of the statutory definitions of
    dependency. In re Dependencv of Schermer, 
    161 Wn.2d 927
    , 942, 
    169 P.3d 452
    (2007). Here, the trial court found D.G. dependent under RCW 13.34.030(6)(c),
    which requires proof that the child "[h]as no parent, guardian, or custodian
    capable of adequately caring for the child, such that the child is in circumstances
    which constitute a danger of substantial damage to the child's psychological or
    physical development."
    The primary purpose of a dependency hearing "is to allow courts to order
    remedial measures to preserve and mend family ties." In re Dependencv of
    T.L.G., 
    126 Wn. App. 181
    ,203, 
    108 P.3d 156
     (2005). Unlike a parental
    termination proceeding, a dependency hearing is "'a preliminary, remedial,
    nonadversary proceeding' that does not permanently deprive a parent of any
    rights." In re Welfare of Key, 
    119 Wn.2d 600
    , 609, 
    836 P.2d 200
     (1992) (quoting
    In re Dependencv of A.W.. 
    53 Wn. App. 22
    , 30, 
    765 P.2d 307
     (1988)), cert
    denied, 
    507 U.S. 927
     (1993). Consequently, a dependency under RCW
    13.34.030(6)(c)
    No. 71600-0-1/8
    does not turn on parental "unfitness" in the usual sense. Rather, it
    allows consideration of both a child's special needs and any
    limitations or other circumstances which affect a parent's ability to
    respond to those needs. Under RCW 13.34.030([6])(c), it is
    unnecessary to find parental misconduct in order to find a child
    dependent.
    Schermer, 
    161 Wn.2d at 944
    .
    The trial court's determination of dependency is necessarily highly fact
    specific; there are no specific factors that a court must consider when
    determining whether the child is dependent under RCW 13.34.030(6)(c).
    Schermer, 
    161 Wn.2d at 951-52
    . The trial court has broad discretion when
    evaluating all of the evidence. Schermer, 
    161 Wn.2d at 951-52
    . When reviewing
    a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, an appellate court determines
    whether substantial evidence supports the trial court's findings of fact and
    whether the findings support the conclusions of law. In re Dependencv of M.P.,
    
    76 Wn. App. 87
    , 90, 
    882 P.2d 1180
    , review denied, 
    126 Wn.2d 1012
     (1995).
    Here, the alleged hearsay evidence regarding "concerns" expressed by
    staff at the Pediatric Interim Care Center was not prejudicial. Carolyn Burke, a
    caseworker at the center, acknowledged that Dorsch's visits with D.G. were
    "appropriate" for the most part. But she also described without objection her
    concern about incidents that she observed when Dorsch became "very high
    energy" with D.G. and failed to calm down, despite multiple staff requests. In an
    August 7, 2013, letter to Melissa McOmber, which was admitted without objection
    as exhibit 27, Burke also described several incidents reflecting Dorsch's
    "concerning behaviors," including his difficulty in understanding or complying with
    8
    No. 71600-0-1/9
    facility rules and his occasional inability to modify his behavior to respond
    appropriately to D.G.'s special needs.
    The unchallenged evidence was sufficient to support the trial court's
    finding that Dorsch's efforts to bond with D.G. were "variable," that his contact
    with D.G. "had to be redirected on several occasions," and that he had
    "deficiencies providing for the child's basic needs" while visiting at the Pediatric
    Interim Care Center, as well as difficulty modulating his own behavior.
    Dorsch's hearsay challenge to testimony that Galbreath told Haber that
    Dorsch stopped visiting D.G. at the end of November and to Galbreath's
    allegation of domestic violence is also unavailing. Norman testified without
    objection that Dorsch's last contact with D.G. at Genesis House was on
    November 24, 2013, and that he was concerned by Dorsch's failure to visit for
    nearly two months. McOmber testified without objection that she was aware that
    Galbreath had reported that she was a victim of domestic violence. McOmber
    also testified that she discussed the report with Dorsch, who called Galbreath "a
    liar" and told McOmber that she should not believe Galbreath's statements about
    domestic violence. In summary, unchallenged evidence established that Dorsch
    stopped visiting D.G. at the end of November 2013 and that Galbreath had
    reported she was the victim of domestic violence.
    Dorsch further contends that the evidence was insufficient to support the
    trial court's dependency determination. He argues that the evidence of his
    No. 71600-0-1/10
    parental deficiency, criminal history, and substance and alcohol abuse failed to
    establish a substantial risk of harm to D.G.
    The unchallenged findings established that Dorsch has a criminal history
    from 2002 to 2011 that includes assault convictions associated with substance
    and alcohol abuse. In early June 2013, Dorsch tested positive for
    methamphetamines and alcohol. Later that month, the dependency court
    ordered Dorsch to submit to twice-weekly urinalysis. Dorsch then tested positive
    for alcohol on several occasions. Although the trial court noted that the testing
    eventually showed some improvement, Dorsch stopped participating without
    explanation on September 26, 2013. In October 2013, Dorsch told Norman that
    he had stopped drinking but appeared to have recently consumed alcohol.
    Although Dorsch visited D.G. regularly during the three months she was at
    the Pediatric Interim Care Center, social workers at the center became
    concerned by his erratic and unreliable behavior. On several occasions, Dorsch
    was clearly unable to moderate his behavior to meet D.G.'s special needs in the
    facility, despite repeated instructions from the staff. Dorsch also demonstrated
    some difficulty in understanding the nature and purpose of the facility's rules.
    Dorsch exhibited similar erratic behavior in his contacts with Department
    social worker McOmber. He repeatedly made the same requests, even after
    they were denied. Dorsch was "aggressive" and "adamant" in his requests, and
    occasionally became upset, frustrated, and nonresponsive.
    10
    No. 71600-0-1/11
    Finally, Dorsch stopped visiting D.G. nearly two months before the
    dependency fact-finding hearing. At that point, he "basically ... refused to
    participate" in the dependency proceeding. He apparently left his last known
    residence and place of employment without notifying the Department and
    effectively became unavailable to parent D.G.
    In summary, Dorsch's significant criminal history of violent and aggressive
    behavior associated with substance and alcohol abuse was undisputed. The results
    of his recent urinalysis testing were inconsistent, and he failed to complete a full
    round of testing. During some of his visits with D.G., Dorsch had difficulty modulating
    his behavior to respond to D.G.'s specific needs without redirection and
    understanding the facility's rules. On occasion, his behavior became erratic when
    encountering unexpected or frustrating circumstances. Finally, at the time of the
    dependency hearing, Dorsch had failed to participate in the proceeding for two
    months, and he was completely unavailable to provide D.G. with a safe home
    environment. Viewed together, the foregoing circumstances supported a reasonable
    inference that Dorsch's inability to meet D.G.'s current needs posed a substantial
    danger to her physical or psychological development. See Schermer, 
    161 Wn.2d at 952
    .
    The trial court has broad discretion in evaluating the risk of harm, and a
    dependency finding under RCW 13.34.030(6)(c) does not require proof of actual
    harm, "only a 'danger' of harm." Schermer, 
    161 Wn.2d at 951
    . Substantial
    evidence supports the trial court's dependency determination.
    11
    No. 71600-0-1/12
    Dorsch argues that the "enthusiasm for parenting" he demonstrated during
    his visits at the Pediatric Interim Care Center is a positive trait now that D.G. has
    left that facility and that his criminal history, which involved a use of alcohol or
    drugs, is no longer a factor because his last conviction was in 2011. But these
    contentions involve the weight or persuasiveness of the evidence and are not
    subject to review on appeal. See State v. Camarillo, 
    115 Wn.2d 60
    , 71, 
    794 P.2d 850
     (1990) (appellate court defers to the trier of fact on issues of conflicting
    testimony, credibility of witnesses, and the persuasiveness of the evidence).
    Dorsch also contends that the trial court improperly shifted the burden of
    proof when it found that "there is no evidentiary support to show [the father] can
    safely provide care for this child" and that the "evidence does not establish that
    Mr. Dorsch is able to provide a safe environment and to adequately care for [the]
    child." Viewed in context, however, these findings reflect only the statutory
    dependency requirements under RCW 13.34.030(6)(c) and the trial court's
    reliance on Dorsch's complete unavailability for the past two months as a
    significant factor in the dependency determination. During its oral decision, the
    trial court expressly noted that "as all of the parties have acknowledged, it's the
    State's burden to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the child is
    dependent as to the father." The court did not shift the burden to Dorsch to
    disprove dependency.
    12
    No. 71600-0-1/13
    Affirmed.
    d ^ Jt-
    WE CONCUR:
    j/)f4r/i/\f~.j ( Ms
    13