Wood County DHS v. P.R. ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                               NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                           This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    June 24, 2021
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Sheila T. Reiff                petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals           Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.           2020AP947                                                   Cir. Ct. No. 2020JC27
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                            IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT IV
    IN THE INTEREST OF K.M.R., A PERSON UNDER THE AGE OF 18:
    WOOD COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SERVICES,
    PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    P. R.,
    RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.
    APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Wood County:
    GREGORY J. POTTER, Judge. Affirmed.
    ¶1         KLOPPENBURG, J.1 P.R. appeals the circuit court’s order placing
    her daughter outside P.R.’s home. P.R. argues that the court’s following two
    1
    This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(e) (2019-20).
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2019-20 version unless otherwise noted.
    No. 2020AP947
    findings are clearly erroneous: (1) that continued placement of the child in P.R.’s
    home was contrary to the child’s welfare; and (2) that the Wood County
    Department of Health Services made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal of
    the child from her home.       The evidence in the record amply supports these
    findings. Accordingly, the order is affirmed.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     On February 11, 2020, representatives of the Wood County
    Department of Health Services (Department) and the Wisconsin Rapids Police
    Department received a referral indicating that K., an eight-year-old child who
    lived with her mother and her stepfather, had been sexually abused by her
    stepfather in the family’s home.        A representative from each organization
    interviewed the child that same day at the child’s school, and the child reported to
    them that her stepfather, M.R., had sexual contact with her. The Department
    representative, a social worker, met with the child’s mother, P.R., when P.R.
    arrived at school to pick up the child at the end of the day. The social worker
    “tried to develop” a plan with P.R. so that the child “would [have] no contact
    with” M.R., offering “a protective plan having either [M.R.] leave the residence so
    [the child] and [P.R.] could go home or having [P.R.] and [the child] leave the
    residence.” P.R. indicated to the social worker that “neither of those options
    would be appropriate” for several reasons: she had neither “a driver’s license nor
    a car,” M.R. was her “main transportation,” she “didn’t have the money” for M.R.
    to leave, and she “had no friends or family in the area.” When the social worker
    offered a shelter as an “alternative place for the mother and [the child] to go”, P.R.
    refused that plan. The Department removed the child from the family’s home that
    day and subsequently filed a Petition for Protection or Service (CHIPS petition)
    under WIS. STAT. ch. 48.
    2
    No. 2020AP947
    ¶3     The next day, the circuit court held a fact-finding hearing on the
    CHIPS petition and found that the child was in need of protection or services and
    that placement in her mother’s home was contrary to the child’s welfare. The
    court appointed a guardian ad litem, ordered the child’s temporary placement in a
    foster home, and granted P.R. supervised visits with the child.            The court
    scheduled a dispositional hearing for March 24, 2020.
    ¶4     The Department submitted to the circuit court, as required by WIS.
    STAT. § 48.33, a disposition report that contained an account of a forensic
    interview conducted with the child in which she described the duration and details
    of M.R.’s sexual abuse, the Department’s assessment of the serious risks to the
    physical safety and physical health of the child, and the Department’s
    recommendations for continued placement at the foster home and conditions for
    the child to be returned to P.R.’s home.
    ¶5     By the time of the March 24 hearing, M.R. had been arrested in
    connection with the child’s reports of sexual abuse and was held in the Wood
    County Jail. At the hearing, P.R. agreed that the child was in need of protection
    and services but contested the child’s placement outside P.R.’s home. The circuit
    court considered the disposition report described above and testimony from the
    Department social worker, the detective investigating criminal charges against
    M.R., P.R., and the guardian ad litem. I present in some detail this evidence
    presented at the dispositional hearing because it relates to both of the issues raised
    by P.R. on appeal.
    ¶6     At the dispositional hearing, the Department social worker
    responsible for the child’s case testified that P.R. had made statements that she did
    believe her child was victimized but also that P.R. did not believe that M.R. was
    3
    No. 2020AP947
    “the victimizer.” The social worker recommended that the child “remain in foster
    care at this time” and that P.R. continue to have supervised visitation with the
    child because such recommendations were “in [the child’s] best interest at this
    time.” On cross-examination, the social worker testified that she did not believe
    returning to P.R.’s home with M.R. out of the home was in “[the child’s] best
    interest due to [P.R.] not believing that this has occurred between [the child and
    M.R.]. [The child] needs support and the help getting through this and her mother
    doesn’t understand or believe that that has occurred.” She testified that her
    recommendations included a list of conditions contained in her disposition report
    to the court.
    ¶7       The detective responsible for investigating the criminal charges
    against M.R. related to the child’s reports of sexual abuse testified that, as part of
    his investigation, he interviewed P.R., who “stated that she did believe that
    something had happened [to the child] but that she was unsure of who had done
    it.” The detective testified that after M.R.’s arrest and placement in the Wood
    County Jail he monitored M.R.’s phone calls. He testified that “over the last two
    weeks [M.R. and P.R. have] had an average of 40 to 50 phone calls a day,” adding
    up to a total “average of five hours a day,” that “they most often discuss the
    [criminal] case” against M.R., and that M.R. directed P.R. to tell the child that she
    “needs to tell the truth so this can be over with” and discussed “what questions she
    should ask” the child during visitation.        The detective testified that M.R.
    continued, while incarcerated, to exert control over P.R.’s life, including matters
    such as “when to put money on what accounts and what to pay for, where is she
    going, who is she with, what is she dressed in, et cetera.”
    ¶8       P.R. testified that she had not agreed to move with the child to a
    shelter because:
    4
    No. 2020AP947
    in my past I was in a shelter and I was told that shelter was
    safe for me and I was raped by a staff member there. So
    when I just moved here, we didn't know nobody, I didn't
    know anything or any places and I didn't want to put me
    and my daughter in danger until I knew if that was a safe
    place for us to go.
    P.R. testified that if M.R. were to be released on bail, she would not “allow him
    back into [her] life” “unless the courts say it was all right.” On cross-examination,
    P.R. stated, “I believe [the child’s] been abused but I can’t say who has done it.”
    When asked whether M.R. controls her life, P.R. stated “No, he does not.”
    ¶9      The child’s guardian ad litem testified that it was in the child’s best
    interest to remain placed with foster parents and that he did not recommend
    placement with P.R. because “you’ve got to stand up for your child. Child is
    number one … I don’t think she has done that and I think it’s best for [the child]
    that she be in a foster setting at this time.” The guardian ad litem explained that,
    based on his review of the disposition report and testimony at the hearing, he
    concluded that the child should have supervised visitation subject to the conditions
    set forth in the report.
    ¶10     Through counsel, P.R. requested that the child be placed in P.R.’s
    home under the supervision of the Department. She conceded that the Department
    had made reasonable efforts to prevent the child’s removal from P.R.’s home
    while M.R. still lived there, but argued that it had not made reasonable efforts after
    M.R. was incarcerated and being held on a $100,000 cash bond. P.R. further
    argued that “initially” the Department “didn’t have an objection” to the child being
    placed with P.R. “provided M.R. wasn’t there,” and that now that M.R. was
    incarcerated “that option has come back.”
    5
    No. 2020AP947
    ¶11    The circuit court found that placement with P.R. was contrary to the
    child’s welfare because:     P.R. “was made aware of” the sexual abuse and
    “continued to reside with the abuser” until he was incarcerated; P.R. “didn’t
    know” whether M.R. perpetrated the abuse; P.R. continued to have “daily contact
    with him;” P.R. talked with M.R. about “the investigation and what she is to
    discuss about this case,” and had the “ability to influence the child and the child’s
    testimony”; and P.R. continued a “personal relationship” with M.R. that was
    “ongoing.” The court found that reasonable efforts had been made to prevent the
    removal of the child in that “the worker attempted to work out a protective plan”
    with P.R. but “she declined” and “continued to have contact with the alleged
    perpetrator throughout this matter.”
    ¶12    The circuit court issued, based on its findings that placement in
    P.R.’s home was contrary to the child’s welfare and that reasonable efforts were
    made to prevent the child’s removal, a dispositional order placing the child in
    foster care. It ordered P.R. to cooperate with the Department by: “participating in
    case planning, maintaining regular contact with the social worker”; completing “a
    mental health evaluation” and “full psychological evaluation and/or parenting
    evaluation and follow[ing] all treatment recommendations”; engaging in “regular
    mental health therapy and follow[ing] all recommendations of the provider”; not
    allowing M.R. “to reside in her home … without approval from the Department”;
    participating in a “visitation plan ... which will include regularly supervised
    visitation” and “in parenting education provided by the Department,” and, “when
    deemed appropriate,” in therapy with the child. This appeal follows.
    6
    No. 2020AP947
    DISCUSSION
    ¶13    P.R. argues that the circuit court erred in finding that continued
    placement of the child in the home would be contrary to the child’s welfare and
    that the Department made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal of the child
    from the home. I first explain the standard of review and general legal principles
    governing a circuit court’s decision to order that a child be placed outside the
    parent’s home. I next address each of the challenged findings in turn and explain
    why I conclude that each finding is not clearly erroneous and why I reject P.R.’s
    arguments to the contrary.
    I. Standard of Review and General Legal Principles
    ¶14    This court reviews a circuit court’s dispositional order for an
    erroneous exercise of discretion. State v. Richard J.D., 
    2006 WI App 242
    , ¶5,
    
    297 Wis. 2d 20
    , 
    724 N.W.2d 665
     (citing J.K. v. State, 
    68 Wis. 2d 426
    , 434, 
    228 N.W.2d 713
     (1975)). “The circuit court properly exercises its discretion when it
    examines the relevant facts, applies the proper legal standard, and uses a rational
    process to reach a reasonable conclusion.” 
    Id.
     (citing Garfoot v. Fireman’s Fund
    Ins. Co., 
    228 Wis. 2d 707
    , 717, 
    599 N.W.2d 411
     (Ct. App. 1999)). On appeal, the
    circuit court’s findings of fact “shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous.”
    WIS. STAT. § 805.17(2). “A circuit court’s findings of fact are clearly erroneous
    when the finding is against the great weight and clear preponderance of the
    evidence.” Royster-Clark, Inc. v. Olsen’s Mill, Inc., 
    2006 WI 46
    , ¶12, 
    290 Wis. 2d 264
    , 
    714 N.W.2d 530
    . Under this standard, “‘even though the evidence
    would permit a contrary finding, findings of fact will be affirmed on appeal as
    long as the evidence would permit a reasonable person to make the same
    finding.’” 
    Id.
     (quoted source omitted). “Moreover, we search the record not for
    7
    No. 2020AP947
    evidence opposing the circuit court’s decision, but for evidence supporting it.” 
    Id.
    (citing Mentzel v. City of Oshkosh, 
    146 Wis. 2d 804
    , 808, 
    432 N.W.2d 609
     (Ct.
    App. 1988)); Cf. C.R. v. T.R., 
    2016 WI App 24
    , ¶15, 
    367 Wis. 2d 669
    , 681, 
    877 N.W.2d 408
     (this court will “‘search the record for evidence to support findings
    reached by the trial court, not for evidence to support findings the trial court could
    have reached but did not.’”) (quoted source omitted).
    ¶15    The “paramount goal” of Chapter 48 of the Wisconsin Statutes
    (“The Children’s Code”) is “to protect children.” WIS. STAT. § 48.01(1)(a). “In
    construing this chapter, the best interests of the child … shall always be of
    paramount consideration.” Sec. 48.01(1) “The ‘best interests of the child is the
    polestar of all determinations under ch. 48.’” Prestin T.B. v. Julie A.B., 
    2002 WI 95
    , ¶30, 
    255 Wis. 2d 170
    , 
    648 N.W.2d 402
     (quoted source omitted). Wisconsin
    law establishes a two-part process for ordering protection or services for a child:
    (1) a fact-finding hearing to determine whether grounds have been proven by clear
    and convincing evidence for adjudicating a child in need of protection and
    services; and (2) a dispositional hearing. WIS. STAT. §§ 48.31(1) and (7)(a). Here,
    P.R. challenges only the circuit court’s findings made at the conclusion of the
    dispositional hearing.
    ¶16    The dispositional hearing “emphasize[s] the child’s future well-
    being” and, unlike at the fact-finding hearing, at the dispositional hearing “the
    ordinary burden, the greater weight of the credible evidence” applies. T.M.S. v.
    Rock Cnty. Dep’t of Social Services, 
    152 Wis. 2d 345
    , 357, 
    448 N.W.2d 282
    . The
    circuit court may order the child placed outside the parent’s home only upon a
    finding that continued placement of the child in his or her home would be
    “contrary to the welfare of the child” and that reasonable efforts were made to
    “prevent the removal of the child from the home.” WIS. STAT. § 48.355(2)(b)6.
    8
    No. 2020AP947
    As to the first finding, we follow the lead of the Department and the circuit court
    and use “welfare” and “best interests” of the child interchangeably. See WIS.
    STAT. 48.01 (discussing “best interest of the child,” “welfare of the child,” and
    “child welfare” as the paramount consideration under Wisconsin’s Children’s
    Code). As to the second finding, factors the court considers “shall include, but not
    be limited to” five statutorily enumerated factors at WIS. STAT. § 48.355(2c)(a)1.
    to 5., as follows:
    1. A comprehensive assessment of the family’s
    situation was completed, including a determination of the
    likelihood of protecting the child’s health, safety and
    welfare effectively in the home.
    2. Financial assistance, if applicable, was provided
    to the family.
    3. Services were offered or provided to the family,
    if applicable, and whether any assistance was provided to
    the family to enable the family to utilize the services.
    4. Monitoring of client progress        and   client
    participation in services was provided.
    5. A consideration of alternative ways of
    addressing the family’s needs was provided, if services did
    not exist or existing services were not available to the
    family.
    II. Analysis
    ¶17     The record contains ample evidence supporting the circuit court’s
    findings that placement with P.R. was contrary to the child’s welfare and that the
    Department made reasonable efforts to prevent removal.
    A. Finding that placement with P.R. was contrary to the child’s welfare
    ¶18     P.R. does not dispute that, in considering whether the child should
    be placed in foster care and not with P.R., the circuit court applied the proper legal
    9
    No. 2020AP947
    standard of “the best interests of the child.” The court explained that in making a
    determination as to placement, “I have to look at what’s in the best interest of the
    child” and that “I can’t find that [P.R.] would be looking out for the best interests
    of her child if the child were placed back with her.” See Prestin T.B., 
    255 Wis. 2d 170
    , ¶30 (“The ‘best interests of the child is the polestar of all determinations
    under ch. 48.’”) (quoted source omitted).
    ¶19    The circuit court considered the evidence regarding the child’s best
    interests and found that placement with P.R. would be contrary to the child’s
    welfare. That finding is supported by the evidence related above that P.R. could
    not protect the child because P.R. did not believe the child’s reports that she was
    abused by M.R; P.R. continued an ongoing personal relationship with M.R. even
    after he was incarcerated in connection with criminal charges based on his alleged
    sexual abuse of the child; M.R. continued to exercise control over P.R.; P.R. had
    the potential to, at M.R.’s direction, influence the child’s testimony in the criminal
    case against M.R.
    ¶20    Evidence that P.R. did not believe the child includes not only
    testimony from the social worker and the detective but also her own statement
    under oath that she “could not say” who had abused her child.
    ¶21    Evidence that P.R. continued to have a personal relationship with
    and be controlled by M.R. includes the detective’s testimony that P.R. and M.R.
    had “an average of 40 to 50 phone calls a day with an average of five hours a day”
    through which M.R. exercised control over P.R. in terms of “when to put money
    on what accounts and what to pay for, where is she going, who is she with, what is
    she dressed in, et cetera.”
    10
    No. 2020AP947
    ¶22    Evidence that P.R. had the potential to, at M.R.’s direction, influence
    the child’s testimony in the criminal case against M.R. includes the detective’s
    testimony that, during their phone calls, P.R. discussed “what questions [P.R.]
    should ask” the child regarding the sexual abuse so that the criminal case against
    [M.R.] could be “over with” and the fact that the Department recommended that
    P.R. not have unsupervised visits with the child due to “concerns for [P.R.’s] lack
    of belief in her daughter.”
    ¶23    Given all of this evidence supporting the circuit court’s finding that
    placement with P.R. was contrary to the child’s welfare, P.R. cannot show that that
    finding is “against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence.” See
    Royster-Clark, Inc., 
    290 Wis. 2d 264
    , ¶12 (findings of fact are clearly erroneous
    when against great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence).
    ¶24    P.R. makes two arguments to the contrary. First, P.R. argues that the
    circuit court erred because the circuit court’s reliance on “the idea that [P.R.]
    would influence [the child’s] testimony in M.R.’s criminal case [is] not based on
    any facts appearing in the record.” This argument fails because this “idea” is
    supported by the detective’s testimony regarding repeated daily phone calls
    between M.R. when he was in jail and P.R., from which it can reasonably be
    inferred both that M.R. was telling P.R. to coach the child to testify in a specific
    way about the abuse and that P.R. was in many substantive ways controlled by
    M.R. Testimony by the social worker and guardian ad litem similarly supports
    this inference. P.R. points to other evidence that she asserts would support a
    different inference, but this court does not disturb reasonable inferences supported
    by evidence in the record. Pfeifer v. World Serv. Life Ins. Co., 
    121 Wis. 2d 567
    ,
    571, 
    360 N.W.2d 65
     (Ct. App. 1984) (“An appellate court must accept a
    11
    No. 2020AP947
    reasonable inference drawn by a trial court from established facts if more than one
    reasonable inference may be drawn.”).
    ¶25    Second, P.R. argues that the circuit court failed to address the fact
    that the Department’s initial offer of a protective plan keeping P.R. and the child
    together but separating both from M.R. remained appropriate now that M.R. is in
    custody and “could not possibly harm [the child].” This argument fails because it
    presents only one inference that could be drawn from the change in circumstances
    but ignores the evidence referenced above, including P.R.’s continued contact with
    and control by M.R. and her disbelief of the child’s reporting of abuse by M.R.
    This evidence supports the inference drawn by the court that P.R. continued a
    personal relationship with M.R. even as he was in jail and was susceptible to his
    influence on matters including his abuse of the child and the child’s potential
    testimony about that abuse. P.R.’s contention that the court drew this inference
    without explanation is belied by the record.
    ¶26    In sum, P.R. fails to show that the circuit court’s finding with respect
    to the child’s welfare is clearly erroneous.
    B. Finding that the Department made reasonable efforts to prevent removal
    ¶27    The circuit court’s finding that the Department made reasonable
    efforts to prevent the removal of the child from her home is also supported by
    ample evidence in the record. The Department offered three possible plans to P.R.
    that would allow her to protect the child and maintain physical placement: P.R.
    and the child would either move to a new residence together away from M.R.,
    move to a shelter together away from M.R., or stay in their apartment provided
    that there would be no contact with M.R. In addition, evidence was presented,
    through testimony and through the Department’s report, as to each of the five
    12
    No. 2020AP947
    factors in WIS. STAT. § 48.355(2c)(a) that a circuit court must consider in
    determining whether reasonable efforts were made to prevent removal, as follows.
    ¶28    1. The Department conducted a “comprehensive assessment of the
    family’s situation,” WIS. STAT. § 48.355(2c)(a)1., in that it assessed the child’s
    living situation with P.R. and M.R. and concluded that it presented a threat to the
    child’s safety because of the power imbalance between the child and her stepfather
    and the duration of the abuse.
    ¶29    2. In response to P.R.’s statements that she could not afford to move
    to a new residence with her child, the Department offered free housing in a shelter.
    In addition, the evidence support the reasonable inference that further “financial
    assistance,” WIS. STAT. § 48.355(2c)(a)2. would not have enabled P.R. to protect
    the child because P.R. did not believe the child, continued to reside with M.R.
    following the child’s reporting of the abuse, and maintained a relationship with
    M.R. even after he was charged and incarcerated as a result of the child’s
    reporting.
    ¶30    3. The     Department      offered     “services,”    WIS.       STAT.
    § 48.355(2c)(a)3., in the form of housing for P.R. and the child, and counseling for
    the child.
    ¶31    4. The Department provided “monitoring” of P.R.’s progress, WIS.
    STAT. § 48.355(2c)(a)4., including through supervised visits with the child.
    ¶32    5. The Department considered “alternative ways of addressing the
    family’s needs,” WIS. STAT. § 48.355(2c)(a)5, in offering the three alternative
    protective plans described above.
    13
    No. 2020AP947
    ¶33    Give the evidence as summarized above, P.R. cannot show that the
    circuit court’s finding that the Department made reasonable efforts to prevent the
    child’s removal from her home is “against the great weight and clear
    preponderance of the evidence.” See Royster-Clark, Inc., 
    290 Wis. 2d 264
    , ¶12
    (findings of fact are clearly erroneous when against great weight and clear
    preponderance of the evidence).
    ¶34    P.R. makes two arguments to the contrary. First, she argues that,
    once M.R. was in custody, the Department should have made efforts to keep the
    child in her home different from and in addition to the services it did offer.
    However, while P.R. may not have preferred the services offered by the
    Department, P.R. does not dispute that the Department did offer services and
    continued to offer services to P.R. None of the additional services P.R. suggests
    could have immediately ameliorated the circuit court’s animating concern
    regarding P.R.’s disbelief of her child and continued relationship with her child’s
    abuser. Moreover, the court ordered the Department to provide ongoing services
    for P.R., including case planning, mental health services, visitation, and parenting
    education.
    ¶35    P.R. would draw a different inference from the evidence than the
    circuit court as to whether the Department’s offer of services was reasonable. On
    review of a discretionary decision, this court accepts both the circuit court’s
    findings of fact if not clearly erroneous and reasonable inferences from the
    evidence. Pfeifer, 121 Wis. 2d at 571. P.R.’s disagreement with the court’s
    findings and reasonable inferences, which are supported by evidence in the record,
    does not provide a ground to disturb the court’s exercise of discretion.
    14
    No. 2020AP947
    ¶36    Second, P.R. argues more broadly that the circuit court misused its
    discretion because “none of [the statutory factors listed in WIS. STAT.
    § 48.355(2)(c)] appear in the record and the circuit court gave no reason for their
    finding.” But, the record shows that the court did reference the evidence related to
    the statutory factors. Moreover, as explained above, the record shows that the
    Department provided P.R. with assessment, services, monitoring, and alternative
    plans. In addition, the Department’s disposition report reviews in detail each of
    the five statutory factors and what the Department was doing pertinent to each of
    the factors. To the extent that P.R. intends to argue that the circuit court could not
    have reasonably found that reasonable efforts were made to prevent removal
    because the court did not explicitly identify each of the five factors enumerated in
    § 48.355(2)(c), this argument fails because “we search the record not for evidence
    opposing the circuit court’s decision, but for evidence supporting it.” Royster-
    Clark Inc., 
    290 Wis. 2d 264
    , ¶12.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶37    For the reasons stated, I conclude that P.R. has failed to show that
    the circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion and, therefore, I affirm.
    By the Court.—Order affirmed.
    This    opinion   will   not     be   published.     See   WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)4.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020AP000947

Filed Date: 6/24/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024