20250220_C370823_29_370823.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 2025
Docket20250220
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20250220_C370823_29_370823.Opn.Pdf (20250220_C370823_29_370823.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.

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20250220_C370823_29_370823.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

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UNPUBLISHED February 20, 2025 10:52 AM In re J. L. HOYT, Minor. No. 370823 St. Joseph Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 2022-000942-NA

Before: GARRETT, P.J., and RICK and MARIANI, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent appeals by right the trial court’s order terminating his parental rights to the minor child, JLH, pursuant to MCL 712A.19b(3)(j) (reasonable likelihood of harm to the child if returned to the parent). We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In December 2022, the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) filed a petition requesting that the trial court take jurisdiction over JLH and remove her from respondent’s care. 1 DHHS alleged that respondent regularly physically abused and emotionally controlled JLH’s mother, particularly as it related to JLH’s feeding and care, while in JLH’s presence, and the domestic violence had been severe and ongoing since before JLH’s birth in October 2022. DHHS alleged that a particularly severe domestic-violence incident occurred in JLH’s presence in November 2022, during which respondent had repeatedly assaulted JLH’s mother with his fists, a belt, and a knife, leaving her with a black eye, swelling and bruises all over her body, a cut, and a stab wound requiring stitches. Immediately thereafter, respondent was arrested and charged with four counts of felonious assault and two counts of aggravated domestic violence. A no-contact order was also issued between respondent and JLH’s mother, but following respondent’s release from jail, respondent and JLH’s mother repeatedly violated the no-contact order. Following a

1 JLH’s mother was also a respondent in this case, and her parental rights to JLH were also terminated by the trial court’s order, but she is not involved in this appeal.

-1- preliminary hearing, the trial court authorized the petition, removed JLH from her parents’ care and placed her in protective care,2 and granted respondent supervised parenting time.

The trial court conducted a pretrial hearing a few weeks later, and respondent pleaded to the allegations in the petition and to the court’s exercise of jurisdiction under MCL 712A.2(b)(2) (unfitness of parental home). Respondent admitted to ongoing domestic violence in JLH’s presence as detailed in the petition and admitted that it was contrary to JLH’s welfare to live in such an environment. The trial court accepted respondent’s pleas, exercised jurisdiction, continued respondent’s supervised parenting time, and ordered DHHS to engage in reasonable efforts toward reunification. DHHS created a case service plan, which the trial court adopted. The court ordered respondent to comply with his case service plan and to participate in and benefit from domestic- violence services, anger-management services, mental-health services, substance-abuse treatment, and parenting education. The trial court also ordered respondent to complete a psychological evaluation and follow all recommendations from that evaluation, submit to random drug screenings, and obtain and maintain suitable housing, transportation, and a legal source of income.

In January 2023, DHHS filed an ex-parte motion to suspend respondent’s parenting time. DHHS alleged that shortly after JLH was placed with her maternal uncle, the placement’s home burned down “under suspicious circumstances.” JLH’s mother later admitted to the police that she set the house on fire and was criminally charged as a result, but she reported to the investigating officer that she only committed the arson because respondent directed her to “burn down the house or kill everyone inside” and then “leave [JLH] in the house and anonymously call police after she had killed everybody else.” DHHS asked that the court suspend all parenting time because, given the admissions of JLH’s mother, “it would be extremely dangerous to allow her or [respondent to] have parenting time with [JLH] at this time.” The same day, the trial court issued an ex-parte order granting DHHS’s motion and suspending all parenting time. Respondent objected to the order and a hearing was held in February 2023 to further address the matter, but after hearing additional testimony from a CPS investigator, the trial court continued the suspension of respondent’s parenting time “[t]o safeguard the minor child and her foster placement[.]”

Throughout the proceedings, respondent made minimal progress in addressing his domestic-violence issues, which DHHS considered to be the primary barrier to reunification. In August 2023, respondent pleaded no contest to one count of aggravated domestic violence in exchange for dismissal of the remaining felonious-assault and aggravated-domestic-violence charges, and he was thereafter incarcerated for approximately two months until his release on November 6, 2023. Additionally, although respondent completed a psychological evaluation and participated in some counseling and self-guided parenting education, he struggled with obtaining and maintaining suitable housing and employment and failed to consistently participate in anger- management and domestic-violence services. During the review hearings, the caseworker acknowledged that respondent’s lack of participation in one domestic-violence program was due to no fault of his own, noting that both she and respondent struggled to communicate with the program about available services for months, but she indicated that she had referred respondent to

2 JLH was initially placed in a nonrelative foster home, but she was moved to a relative placement with her maternal uncle a few weeks later. JLH remained in a relative placement until termination.

-2- other programs for domestic-violence services and provided him with information regarding other available resources before, during, and after this time. The trial court also reconsidered the suspension of respondent’s parenting time at each review hearing, but based on DHHS’s court reports submitted as evidence, testimony at each hearing indicating that respondent had not substantially addressed his domestic-violence issues, and DHHS’s recommendations that respondent show two to three months of consistency and progress in addressing his domestic- violence issues before supervised parenting time was reinstated, the court continually found that even supervised parenting time presented a risk of harm to JLH and ordered that respondent’s parenting time remain suspended.

In December 2023, DHHS filed a supplemental petition requesting termination of respondent’s parental rights under MCL 712A.19b(3)(j). At the termination hearing in April 2024,3 respondent’s caseworker testified that DHHS provided numerous services to respondent and although respondent participated in some of them, including some counseling and parenting education, respondent had not overcome his barriers to reunification. The caseworker testified that respondent still had not obtained suitable housing or employment, and domestic violence was still “a very significant barrier” to reunification because respondent minimally participated in and had not demonstrated any benefit from the domestic-violence services. Both the caseworker and the officer who investigated the November 2022 domestic-violence incident testified that the domestic violence had been severe and ongoing, and it involved physical abuse and extremely controlling behavior.

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