A.M. v. Colbert Cnty. Dep't of Human Res.

236 So. 3d 81
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 4, 2015
Docket2140519.
StatusPublished

This text of 236 So. 3d 81 (A.M. v. Colbert Cnty. Dep't of Human Res.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.M. v. Colbert Cnty. Dep't of Human Res., 236 So. 3d 81 (Ala. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinions

PITTMAN, Judge.

A.M. ("the father") appeals from an adverse final judgment entered by the Colbert Juvenile Court in two cases involving petitions filed by the Colbert County Department of Human Resources ("DHR") seeking termination of the father's parental rights as to two children, A.C. and F.C. ("the children"), born of the father's relationship with L.C. ("the mother"). We affirm.

The record reflects that the children were born in 2009 and 2011 and that they were each removed from the care of the mother in 2011, when they were found dependent and placed in the custody of DHR and into foster care. The mother at that time did not identify the children's father. However, in September 2012, in connection with subsequent proceedings to terminate the mother's parental rights as to the children, the mother identified the father as having sired the children, and he *83submitted to genetic testing in November 2012 that yielded results that demonstrated his parentage. The father, who was then an Ohio resident, was thereafter added to those cases as a defendant; he relocated to Alabama in March 2013. After an ore tenus proceeding, the juvenile court concluded in an October 2013 judgment that the children were dependent and that the mother's parental rights were due to be terminated; however, that court simultaneously opined that it could not, "in good conscience, terminate the rights of" the father before "[a]ppropriate services" were offered to the father "to determine if he [was] willing to place the necessary time and efforts ... to be reunified with [the] children" and stated that "relative resources should be properly investigated and either approved or rejected." The juvenile court advised that, "[b]efore [it] engage[d] in the most drastic act of terminating [the father's] parental rights, a sufficient pattern o[f] his inability to comply with the Individualized Service Plan should be established."

In April 2014, DHR again initiated termination proceedings as to the father. After an ore tenus proceeding, the juvenile court rendered a judgment in July 2014 declining to terminate the father's parental rights, opining that, despite early drug-testing results showing that the father had used marijuana, he had "completed the majority of the [Individualized Service Plan] goals" apart from acquiring stable housing and long-term employment. However, the court cautioned the father that, "[w]hile much progress has been made, much is still required"; that it "d[id] not intend [for] the children [to] continu[e] to languish in the foster care system"; and that the father "need[ed] to continue to remain drug-free." That judgment further noted that no relative resources were available and specifically excluded the father's sister as a potential relative resource.

In September 2014, DHR filed new termination petitions in which it averred that the father had a "history of instability" preventing him from "maintaining stable housing and employment" and, thereby, "from discharging parental duties and properly caring for" the children and stated that, although termination had not been ordered as to the father on DHR's preceding petitions, "the father ... [wa]s not at the present time and w[ould] not be in the foreseeable future ... able or willing to provide for ... support, training, maintenance, or education" of each child. The father, through appointed trial counsel, answered and denied that grounds for termination existed. An initial ore tenus proceeding in December 2014 revealed that the father had received an offer of employment with Wise Alloys that might allow him to offer a stable home for him and the children but that he had tested positive for marijuana use in a hair-follicle test conducted in September 2014; the juvenile court entered an order in January 2015 setting the cases for further testimony in February 2015 and directing a home study of the father's living conditions. However, at that subsequent hearing, the father admitted that he had not been hired by Wise Alloys because he had failed a criminal-background check, and evidence was adduced showing that he had again tested positive for marijuana use and alcohol use approximately three weeks before the hearing. The juvenile court thereafter entered a judgment granting DHR's termination petitions, stating, in pertinent part:

"It has been made clear to [the father] over a period of about two years since March of 2013 through adjudicatory hearings, permanency hearings, [Individualized Service Plan meetings], discussions with case workers, and in the [termination proceedings] that the path *84to gaining custody of these two children lay in obtaining suitable housing, maintaining stable income, and avoiding drug and alcohol problems. While the felony conviction and the child support arrears probably hindered [the father's] efforts to progress, these obstacles were of his own making and not insurmountable. Unfortunately, it appears that there has been a pattern in this case of [the father's] not being able to achieve housing, employment and staying clean all at the same time for an extended period of time. [The father] has been unable to demonstrate significant stability in obtaining [sic ] a[nd] maintaining his [Individualized Service Plan] goals. [The father's] testimony has always been consistent that a new job or home is just days, weeks or months away. In all reality this vision of a new life is just another mirage that has persisted throughout this case."

The father, acting pro se, timely filed a notice of appeal from the juvenile court's judgment entered as to DHR's termination petitions, and new counsel was appointed to represent him on appeal. Because a court reporter was present at the ore tenus proceeding giving rise to the father's appeal and a transcript has been prepared, this court has appellate jurisdiction under Rule 28(a)(1)(c)(ii), Ala. R. Juv. P. The father's appellate brief raises two issues: whether the judgment was consistent with Code sections appearing in the Alabama Juvenile Justice Act ("AJJA"), Ala.Code 1975, § 12-15-101 et seq., and whether the juvenile court's judgment was erroneous based upon the claimed existence of viable alternatives to termination or the absence of an identified adoptive resource. Because the juvenile court's judgment was entered after an ore tenus proceeding, the applicable standard of review is that espoused in Ex parte State Department of Human Resources, 834 So.2d 117, 120-21 (Ala.2002), namely that appellate courts are to presume that trial courts' findings in cases of child custody are correct and that reversal will not obtain absent a clear abuse of discretion or plain error. See also Ex parte State Dep't of Human Res., 682 So.2d 459, 460 (Ala.1996).

In addressing the first issue, the father's brief correctly notes that the AJJA does not mandate the filing by DHR of a termination-of-parental-rights petition solely because a child has been in foster care for 12 of the preceding 22 months if DHR has not provided "such services as [DHR] deems necessary for the safe return of [a] child to his or her home." Ala.Code 1975, § 12-15-317(2) c.

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Bluebook (online)
236 So. 3d 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/am-v-colbert-cnty-dept-of-human-res-alacivapp-2015.