20231130_C365553_29_365553.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 2023
Docket20231130
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20231130_C365553_29_365553.Opn.Pdf (20231130_C365553_29_365553.Opn.Pdf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
20231130_C365553_29_365553.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

UNPUBLISHED In re LHH, Minor. November 30, 2023

No. 365553 Shiawassee Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 22-004038-AY

In re HCH, Minor. No. 365554 Shiawassee Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 22-004039-AY

Before: LETICA, P.J., and HOOD and MALDONADO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In these consolidated appeals,1 respondent-father appeals as of right the trial court order terminating his parental rights to his two children under MCL 710.51(6) of the Michigan Adoption Code, MCL 710.21 et seq. We reverse and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

This case originates from a stepparent adoption involving an incarcerated noncustodial parent. Petitioner-mother met respondent-father when she was 15 years old and he was 18. Though the date is unclear from the record, the two married at some point. The couple had two children together, LHH and HCH, who were born in 2014 and 2016, respectively. In 2017, respondent-father pleaded guilty to third-degree criminal sexual conduct, MCL 750.520d(1)(a), and accosting a child for immoral purposes, MCL 750.145a, after sexually assaulting petitioner-

1 In re LHH, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered April 17, 2023 (Docket No. 365553); In re HCH, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered April 17, 2023 (Docket No. 365554).

-1- mother’s minor sister. See People v Hargrove, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued July 25, 2019 (Docket No. 344352) (affirming sentences). Petitioner-mother’s sister was around 13 to 14 years old when respondent-father started sexually abusing her. See id. The abuse included at least 20 instances of sexual penetration (by respondent-father’s estimation at his sentencing hearing), or as many as 50 instances (according to the victim’s claims). See id. Respondent-father’s earliest release date is in late October 2027.

Respondent-father and petitioner-mother maintained contact for a few years after his imprisonment. Petitioner-mother visited respondent-father in prison once or twice a month in 2018 and 2019, and they communicated by telephone and “JPay,” a fee-based service available to prisoners that is similar to e-mail. Petitioner-mother indicated that she started therapy in 2018, which led to less visits with respondent-father. According to respondent-father, the last time petitioner-mother visited him was in late January 2020. In October 2021, petitioner-mother divorced respondent-father. The judgment of divorce awarded petitioner-mother sole legal and physical custody of the couple’s children. Petitioner-mother then married petitioner-stepfather in mid-November 2021, after approximately a year of dating.

In early June 2022, petitioner-mother and petitioner-stepfather petitioned the court for a stepparent adoption to allow petitioner-stepfather to adopt LHH and HCH. Petitioner-mother petitioned the court to terminate respondent-father’s parental rights to HCH and LHH on June 9, 2022, and July 6, 2022, respectively. In mid-July 2022, the trial court signed the petitions for stepparent adoption, authorizing an investigation of the proposed adoptions.

In late February 2023, the trial court held a trial on petitioner-mother’s petition to terminate respondent-father’s parental rights. Petitioner-mother and respondent-father testified at trial. Respondent-father testified that although he had not seen HCH since he went to prison in 2017, petitioner-mother last took LHH to visit respondent-father in early 2020.2 Petitioner-mother did not take HCH to visit respondent-father because he was not allowed to visit with “any female under” 18 years old. Respondent-father admitted that he had not sent any mail to petitioner-mother since 2021, though he claimed to not have her then-current address. He also testified that he sent two letters to petitioner-mother’s grandparents’ house in late 2020 or early 2021, but never received a response. He could not recall the children’s mailing address, and he lost a piece of paper with the address on it at some point during the COVID-19 pandemic. Petitioner-mother testified that the proper address to reach the children was her grandmother’s house, which was respondent-father’s own current mailing address and the address on his driver’s license. Respondent-father testified that until 2019, petitioner-mother allowed him to talk on the telephone with the children on some Sundays. He testified, however, that since July 2020 he had “tried to call without answer.”

Respondent-father never provided any financial support for the children. The court did not order him to pay support during his incarceration. Rather, in the judgment of divorce, uniform child support order, and child support deviation addendum, the trial court set his support at “$0.00”

2 Petitioner-mother disputes this date. She testified that she last took LHH to the prison in 2019 before the COVID-19 pandemic.

-2- and directed respondent-father to contact the friend of the court following his release from prison. Respondent-father testified that, regardless, he could not send money for the care or support of his children because he was “legally not allowed to . . . .”3 Though he took opportunities to earn money while incarcerated, respondent-father could not earn more than $15 per month. He testified that he typically used $10 for phone calls and $5 for JPay “stamps.” He estimated that he had earned less than $200 since his incarceration and never kept more than $50 in his prison account.

After the testimony at the termination hearing, the trial court ruled from the bench. The court noted that the question was whether respondent-father paid “any form of reasonable support having had the ability to do so[.]” It observed that respondent-father “didn’t have the ability to pay what would have been owed under the guidelines,” and that, regardless, he was uncollectible while incarcerated. The trial court noted, however, that respondent-father was “one of the higher earners” it had “gotten testimony from at [$15] a month.” It also opined that “two of the things to be a parent is consistency and sacrifice.” The trial court found “neither one of th[o]se here,” noting that under the relevant statute, “you have to pay substantial support based on the ability to do so,” meaning “paying support based on the . . . greatest income you can receive which now is approximately [$15] a month.” The court suggested this “mean[t] sacrifice”—fewer phone calls and “JPays” so he could send a dollar a week to his children. It therefore found that respondent- father had “the ability to pay some support,” despite recognizing that respondent-father’s payments would “have been a very small flow of money that [would not] change their lifestyle but demonstrated [his] commitment.” The trial court also rejected respondent-father’s claim that he did not know his own address. It further found there was no substantial contact between respondent-father and his children after January 2020, and that he made no “great effort to maintain . . . contact with [his] kids.”

In concluding its findings, the trial court found “by clear and convincing evidence that [respondent-father] had the ability to provide consistent support though not ample support” and that he “had the ability to maintain some type of contact with the kids.” It therefore terminated respondent-father’s parental rights to LHH and HCH. This appeal followed.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

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