Bearden v. Arkansas Department of Human Services

351 S.W.3d 186, 2009 Ark. App. 754, 2009 Ark. App. LEXIS 964
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 11, 2009
DocketCA 09-455
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 351 S.W.3d 186 (Bearden v. Arkansas Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bearden v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 351 S.W.3d 186, 2009 Ark. App. 754, 2009 Ark. App. LEXIS 964 (Ark. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinions

RITA W. GRUBER, Judge.

liThis is a termination-of-parental-rights case. Joseph Bearden, Jr., appeals from the Washington County Circuit Court’s termination of his parental rights to his son, T.W., born July 21, 2005.1 The circuit court based its decision on the ground that T.W. had been out of appellant’s home for twelve months and, despite a meaningful effort by DHS to rehabilitate appellant, the conditions that caused the child’s removal had not been remedied by appellant. We affirm the circuit court’s decision.

DHS has a long history with appellant and his family. In a prior proceeding, from August 2005 until November 2006, T.W. was in foster care after being removed from his mother’s care. The court placed him in the legal custody of appellant and that case was closed. | ?DHS has also been involved with appellant’s wife. When this case began, another protective-services case for medical neglect of T.W.’s stepbrother was open. DHS took emergency custody of T.W. on November 29, 2007, along with two of his stepsiblings, after his older stepsister showed up at school with a slap mark, bruises, and scrapes that her mother could not adequately explain. Further investigation revealed that T.W. had bruises on his buttocks and right leg. When the DHS worker attempted to discuss the situation with appellant, he was belligerent and threatening, telling her that she was “messing with the wrong family,” that he was “out for blood,” and that he would “see [her] in the grave.” Appellant was later convicted of terroristic threatening for those statements.

The Madison County Circuit Court entered an order for emergency custody on December 3, 2007, and held a probable-cause hearing on December 7, 2007. Finding probable cause, the court ordered appellant to have a psychological evaluation; to refrain from using illegal drugs and alcohol; to obtain and maintain stable housing and employment; to maintain a clean, safe home for T.W.; and to demonstrate the ability to keep him safe. The court gave appellant one hour of supervised -visitation, twice per week, and ordered him to have no contact with the family-service worker that he had threatened.

DHS moved to terminate reunification services on December 26, 2007, on the grounds that T.W. was subjected to aggravated circumstances, abandoned, chronically abused, and suffered medical neglect, and that there was little likelihood that services to the family would result in successful reunification.

[^Appellant submitted to a psychological evaluation by Dr. Martin Faitak on February 4, 2008. Dr. Faitak diagnosed appellant with antisocial personality disorder and stated that he had poor self-control, feelings of victimization, and an unstable mood. The psychologist described appellant as insensitive to the needs of others, self-focused, irresponsible, hostile, demanding, controlling, distrusting, dominant, and inflexible. Dr. Faitak recommended that appellant participate in individual therapy, adding that, unless he improved, he would have difficulty tolerating special-needs children.

The court considered the motion to end reunification services at the adjudication and first permanency-planning hearing held on February 22, 2008. It found T.W. dependent-neglected as a result of abuse and parental unfitness. The court stated that appellant and his wife were not stable, noting that neither had a job and that they had moved several times. It added that T.W. had special needs he did not have before he was placed in his father’s custody. The court set the goal of reunification and reduced appellant’s supervised visits to once per week; after a month, he could have two visits per week. In addition to the previous requirements, the court ordered appellant to complete parenting classes. It found that DHS had made reasonable efforts and denied its petition to terminate reunification services. It ordered DHS to provide assistance with transportation and in-home intensive family services to appellant; to conduct a home study on his home; and to set up individual counseling if his psychological evaluator recommended it. The court ordered appellant to follow those | ¿recommendations and found that he was not able to pay child support at that time. The court transferred the case to Washington County.

On June 13, 2008, over three months after Dr. Faitak recommended that appellant seek individual counseling, appellant began seeing a therapist, Kathleen Hous-ley. The court held a review hearing on June 25, 2008. It continued the goal of reunification but noted that appellant had not complied with intensive family services; was still unstable in employment and housing; had an unstable relationship with his wife; and had not adequately addressed his anger and mental-health issues.

After another permanency-planning hearing on September 10, 2008, the court changed the goal to adoption and termination, finding that appellant’s housing and employment were unstable and that he had separated from his wife a second time. The court ordered him to pay child support.

DHS filed a petition to terminate appellant’s parental rights, and the court held the termination hearing on January 6, 2009. Appellant attended with his attorney. Tara Marcom, the Washington County family-service worker; Laura Phillips, T.W.’s foster mother; and appellant testified. Among the exhibits admitted were the July through November 2008 reports by Ms. Housley, who stated that appellant had made a lot of progress with his anger issues. The CASA report, however, said that appellant had made very little progress and recommended that his parental rights be terminated.

_JjFrom the bench, the trial court recognized that appellant was in partial compliance and had made some progress in managing his anger, but stated that, looking at the “whole picture” since T.W. was first placed with appellant, he lacked stability in housing, employment, and relationships. Most troubling, the court stated, was T.W.’s lack of a bond with appellant:

[D]uring visits when little T.W. hears Ms. Phillips’s voice, he cries and wants to be with her. So Ms. Phillips now is not the one to transport him to the visits, and she sneaks around if she happens to be in the building so he won’t know.... But T.W. still shows signs that he doesn’t want to be in the room.... And what’s hugely telling is when T.W. is on his way to DHS, he starts to cry because he knows the way. Once he gets there, he clings to Ms. Phillips ... or ... whatever caseworker’s there and doesn’t really want to ... visit. Very telling is that when he goes to DHS for other reasons ... he’s fine. That is a huge, huge telling sign here.

The trial court found that appellant could not meet T.W.’s special needs and that returning him to appellant would not be in T.W.’s best interest:

The testimony is that he clings to the caseworker, he clings to Ms. Phillips when dad comes for visits. After the visits, he’s totally clingy ... a child who already has special needs of occupational therapy, physical therapy, and potty training problems to where he’s ... shaking and crying and ... fear_I believe that it would cause emotional damage to this child. I agree ... with the caseworker that the child would regress and have emotional problems. [W]hen you have young children of T.W.’s age, you look at their actions. You don’t rely on their words to tell you how they’re feeling....

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Related

Bearden v. Arkansas Department of Human Services
351 S.W.3d 186 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
351 S.W.3d 186, 2009 Ark. App. 754, 2009 Ark. App. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bearden-v-arkansas-department-of-human-services-arkctapp-2009.