A.B. v. Lauderdale County Department of Human Services

14 So. 3d 51, 2008 Miss. App. LEXIS 365, 2008 WL 2426805
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 17, 2008
Docket2006-CA-01362-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 So. 3d 51 (A.B. v. Lauderdale County Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.B. v. Lauderdale County Department of Human Services, 14 So. 3d 51, 2008 Miss. App. LEXIS 365, 2008 WL 2426805 (Mich. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinions

GRIFFIS, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. A.B. and B.B.1 appeal from the Lauderdale County Youth Court’s termination of their parental rights, alleging (1) that the court erred in failing to appoint a lawyer for A.B. at the initial hearing on a petition for neglect brought against them by the Lauderdale County Department of Human Services (DHS), (2) that the court erred in not considering less permanent alternatives to termination of their parental rights, and (3) that the court erred in terminating B.B.’s parental rights when B.B. did not receive notice or summons regarding the neglect hearing. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 2. A.B. and B.B. are the parents of three children that are at issue here: two girls, Tonya and Sonya, and a boy, Ned. Tonya and Sonya are twins who were born [52]*52on November 1, 2001. Ned was born on September 20, 2003. At some point while A.B. was pregnant with Ned, the Lauder-dale County Department of Human Services became aware of allegations that Tonya and Sonya were living in a poorly kept house and were being exposed to drugs. After an investigation, DHS took custody of Tonya and Sonya on August 26, 2003, pursuant to an order from the youth court. Around the same time, A.B. admitted that she was currently using drugs even though she was pregnant. DHS took custody of Ned on September 22, 2003, two days after he was born.

¶ 3. Thereafter, A.B. and B.B. entered into a service agreement with DHS that was intended to make A.B. and B.B. fit to rear their children. On May 4, 2004, the court returned custody of the three children to A.B. and B.B. because they had completed their service agreement. Subsequent inquiries by DHS revealed that A.B. and B.B. appeared to be taking adequate care of the children. DHS was relieved of any further' responsibility for the children on June 10, 2004.

,¶ 4. In early November 2004, A.B. attended her father’s funeral. Her actions at the funeral led to concerns that she was once again abusing drugs, and DHS was contacted. On November 9, 2004, after two unsuccessful attempts to locate A.B. and the children, Brenda Snowden, a social worker with DHS, went to A.B.’s home. Peering through a glass in a storm door, Snowden observed the three children, but no adults. One of the girls came over and opened the door. Snowden observed that Ned appeared to be adequately clothed and sufficiently cared for, but she noted that the same was not true of the twins. One of the girls was completely naked, while the other had on a diaper that was so saturated with urine and feces that it hung down to her knees. Snowden called repeatedly for A.B., to no avail. After walking down a hallway, Snowden found A.B. and a man on a bed in another room. The man was not B.B., and A.B. had on nothing but a T-shirt. Snowden stated that she had great difficulty waking A.B., who appeared to be in a deep slumber. Although it was two in the afternoon, A.B. stated that she was in bed because she had just fed the children breakfast and had then gone back to bed. Snowden requested a urine sample from A.B., which A.B. gave. Analysis of the sample revealed that it was too diluted to be useful in determining whether A.B. had been using drugs. Another urine sample taken later in November also came back as diluted.

¶ 5. On November 30, 2004, pursuant to a court order transferring custody of the children to DHS, Snowden, accompanied by Gypsy Ward, a Lauderdale County deputy, went to the home2 where she had found A.B. and the children on November 9. Snowden and Ward did not find A.B. or the children, but Ward found a plastic bag containing what appeared to be a contraband substance.3 Ward testified that the house was “horrible. It was-it was nasty. They didn’t have no [sic] power; didn’t have no [sic] water and they was [sic] using the toilet and couldn’t flush it.” After the discovery of what appeared to be a controlled substance, Ward contacted the [53]*53Drug Task Force, and Anthony Ball, a drug task force agent, came to assist. After finding no one at the home, Snowden proceeded to a trailer on the other side of Lauderdale County where she had reason to believe the children were located.4 At the trailer, Snowden encountered B.B., who claimed that he did not know where A.B. was. However, one of the children told Snowden that A.B. had climbed out of a window of the trailer and had run away in response to Snowden’s approach. After she was located, A.B. denied that she had climbed out of a window of the trailer.

¶ 6. A.B. was arrested for possession of drugs based on the substance that was found in the plastic bag at the house on November 30.5 On December 30, 2004, the court held a neglect hearing. B.B. was not present at the hearing because he could not be located. A.B. was present at the hearing and admitted that she could not take care of her children due to her incarceration. Additionally, she testified that she passed a drug screen on November 30 or December 1 after she was incarcerated. Her probation officer, William Lucy, confirmed the truthfulness of this testimony. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court found that the children were neglected and ordered DHS to “immediately pursue termination of parental rights” of A.B. and B.B. On April 14, 2005, B.B. sent a letter to the court, explaining that he had retained an attorney. On May 26, 2005, DHS filed a petition to terminate A.B. and B.B.’s parental rights.

¶ 7. A hearing on the termination of parental rights was held on July 13, 2006, over a year after the filing of the petition and more than a year and a half after the neglect hearing. A.B. was present at the hearing with counsel. B.B. apparently could not be found and was not present at the hearing. At the hearing, testimony was elicited regarding the November 2004 events, as well as the events that had happened when A.B. and B.B. lost custody of them children in 2003. The court essentially refused to hear any evidence of A.B.’s rehabilitation between December 30, 2004, and the date of the hearing a year and a half later. Specifically, the court refused to allow A.B.’s probation officer to testify that A.B. had tested negative on two drug tests since November 2004.

¶ 8. In its order terminating parental rights, the court found that A.B. and B.B.:

exhibit ongoing behavior which would make it impossible to return the Minor Petitioners to said Respondents’ care and custody because said Respondents have a drug addiction, unlikely to change within a reasonable time, which condition makes said Respondents unable to assume minimally, acceptable care of the Minor Petitioners constituting grounds for termination of their parental rights....
The Court finds that the Respondents ... exhibit and have failed to eliminate ongoing behavior, identified to said Respondents by the Lauderdale County Department of Human Services, which prevents placement of the Minor Petitioners with said Respondents in spite of diligent efforts of the Department of Human Services to assist said Respondents constituting grounds for termination of their parental rights....
[54]*54The Court finds that [Tonya, Sonya, and Ned] have been adjudicated to have been abused or neglected and custody has been transferred from [A.B.

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Related

A.B. v. Lauderdale County Department of Human Services
13 So. 3d 1263 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
14 So. 3d 51, 2008 Miss. App. LEXIS 365, 2008 WL 2426805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ab-v-lauderdale-county-department-of-human-services-missctapp-2008.