Beamer v. DFS

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 10, 2019
Docket630, 2018
StatusPublished

This text of Beamer v. DFS (Beamer v. DFS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beamer v. DFS, (Del. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

KAITLYN BEAMER,1 § § No. 630, 2018 Respondent Below, § Appellant, § Court Below—Family Court § of the State of Delaware v. § § File No. CS18-03-03TS DIVISION OF FAMILY SERVICES, § § Petition No. 18-06448 Petitioner Below, § Appellee. § §

Submitted: May 9, 2019 Decided: July 10, 2019

Before STRINE, Chief Justice; SEITZ and TRAYNOR, Justices.

ORDER

Upon consideration of the appellant’s brief filed under Supreme Court Rule

26.1, her attorney’s motion to withdraw, the response of the Division of Family

Services (“DFS”), and the response of the attorney ad litem, it appears to the Court

that:

(1) The respondent below-appellant, Kaitlyn Beamer (“the Mother”), filed

an appeal from the Family Court’s decision, dated December 7, 2018, terminating

1 The Court previously assigned a pseudonym to the appellant under Supreme Court Rule 7(d). her parental rights over her son (“the Child”).2 On appeal, the Mother’s counsel

(“Counsel”) has filed an opening brief and motion to withdraw under Supreme Court

Rule 26.1. Counsel represents that she has made a conscientious review of the record

and the law and found no meritorious argument in support of the appeal. The Mother

has not submitted any points for the Court’s consideration. In response to Counsel’s

submission, DFS and the Child’s attorney ad litem have moved to affirm the Family

Court’s termination of the Mother’s parental rights. After careful consideration, this

Court concludes that the Family Court’s judgment should be affirmed.

(2) The Child was born in May 2015. On July 21, 2016, DFS was awarded

temporary custody of the Child by emergency ex parte order. DFS alleged that the

Mother, who had recently come to Delaware from Florida, was currently homeless

and was suspected to have active substance-abuse issues as well as untreated mental-

health issues. There were also concerns that the Mother would flee to Florida with

the Child.

(3) At the preliminary protective hearing on July 25, 2016, the Family

Court appointed counsel to represent the Mother. The Mother contested whether

there was probable cause to believe the Child was dependent, neglected or abused,

or that there was a substantial imminent risk thereof, in her care. A DFS employee

2 The Family Court also terminated the parental rights of the Child’s father, who is not a party to this appeal. We only recite the facts in the record as they relate to the Mother’s appeal.

2 testified that they received a hotline report in June that the Child was abused and

neglected by the Mother. The employee made contact with the Child’s maternal

grandmother who was living in a debris-crowded residence inappropriate for a child.

The maternal grandmother reported that she had fought recently with the Mother,

the Mother was using synthetic heroin, that the Mother had mental-health problems

and was seeking to avoid DFS, and that the Mother was not caring for the Child well.

The maternal grandmother had recently dropped the Mother and Child off near the

Maryland state line.

(4) DFS made contact with the Mother after receiving a report that she was

acting erratically near a restaurant in Seaford. The Mother, the maternal

grandmother, and the maternal great-grandmother had gotten into a fight at the

restaurant. A DFS employee spoke to all three women at the police station. At that

time, the Mother’s pupils appeared to be pinpoint, which can be indicative of

someone using opiates, and she was shaking and sweating. With the Mother’s

consent, DFS developed a safety plan for the Child to live with the maternal great-

grandmother and for the Mother to have supervised visits. The maternal great-

grandmother was only available as a temporary placement for the Child because of

her age and health issues. In light of this and the Mother’s refusal to comply with

the safety plan as discussed below, DFS obtained emergency ex parte custody of the

Child and placed him with a foster family.

3 (5) DFS learned that the Florida Child Protective Services had received a

medical neglect report for the Child shortly after he was born at home with severe

jaundice. The Florida medical neglect case was closed as unsubstantiated. At the

Mother’s first supervised visit with the Child, she appeared ill and behaved

erratically. She threatened to return to Florida and revoked her consent to the child

safety plan. She also refused to undergo substance-abuse and mental-health

evaluations, despite her previous agreement to do so as part of the safety plan. The

Mother testified that she had no substance-abuse problems, but took Lexapro for her

anxiety. As a pagan, the Mother opposed vaccines and immunizations. The Mother

hoped to move somewhere in Florida where her friends could support her.

(6) The Family Court found there was probable cause to believe that the

Child was dependent, neglected or abused, or that there was a substantial risk

thereof. Probable cause factors included unstable housing, allegations of substance-

abuse and untreated mental-health issues, medical concerns for the Child, and the

Mother’s risk of flight. The Family Court also found that it was in the best interests

of the Child to be in DFS’s custody, that DFS had made reasonable efforts to prevent

the unnecessary removal of the Child from his home, and that DFS exercised due

diligence to identify adult relatives of the Child.

4 (7) On August 22, 2016, the Family Court held an adjudicatory hearing for

the Mother as the suspected father had not yet undergone genetic testing. The

Mother stipulated to a finding of dependency based on her mental-health issues, but

understood that additional elements would be included in the reunification case plan.

She waived her right to an adjudicatory hearing.

(8) The psychologist who evaluated the Mother’s mental health testified

that the Mother met the criteria for generalized anxiety disorder and adjustment

disorder with depression. He was puzzled by some of the Mother’s statements and

believed that six months of counseling might allow a therapist to determine if the

Mother had additional mental-health issues. He also testified that the Mother was

unable to explain why her pagan beliefs included opposition to vaccines and

immunizations. The Mother told a DFS worker that she would become a Jehovah’s

Witness so the Child would not receive shots.

(9) Based on the Mother’s stipulation, the Family Court found that the

Child was dependent and should remain in DFS’s custody. The Family Court also

found that DFS had made reasonable efforts to prevent the unnecessary removal of

the Child from his home and to identify adult relatives of the Child. The Family

Court granted DFS’s motion (supported by the Child’s attorney ad litem and opposed

by the Mother) to schedule the Child for vaccinations.

5 (10) On September 26, 2016, the Family Court held a dispositional hearing.

The Mother’s case plan for reunification was accepted into evidence without

objection. The case plan elements included the Mother’s consistent visitation with

the Child, compliance with the psychologist’s recommendations for mental-health

counseling for at least six months, completion of a substance-abuse evaluation and

compliance with any recommendations for treatment, completion of a parenting

class, employment, and safe housing.

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In Re Heller
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963 A.2d 724 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2008)
Casa v. Department of Services for Children, Youth & Their Families
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Fisher v. Fisher
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Long v. Division of Family Services
41 A.3d 367 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2012)

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