BH v. Com.

329 S.W.3d 360, 2010 WL 5128713
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 17, 2010
Docket2010-CA-000259-ME
StatusPublished

This text of 329 S.W.3d 360 (BH v. Com.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BH v. Com., 329 S.W.3d 360, 2010 WL 5128713 (Ky. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

329 S.W.3d 360 (2010)

B.H., A Child, Appellant,
v.
COMMONWEALTH of Kentucky, Appellee.

No. 2010-CA-000259-ME.

Court of Appeals of Kentucky.

December 17, 2010.

*361 Gail Robinson, Assistant Public Advocate, Frankfort, KY, for appellant.

Jack Conway, Attorney General, Erin E. Burns, Special Assistant Attorney General, Lexington, KY, for appellee.

Before CAPERTON, MOORE, and VANMETER, Judges.

OPINION

MOORE, Judge:

B.H., a child, appeals the order of the Fayette Family Court finding that he violated KRS[1] 630.020(3), and committing him to the Cabinet for Families and Children (Cabinet) as a status offender. After a careful review of the record, we vacate the court's order because the court did not have jurisdiction over the matter; we remand with instructions for the court to dismiss the action from its docket.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The record in this case reveals that the complaint filed against B.H. in the present *362 case by the Court Designated Worker (CDW) alleged that B.H. was a status offender because he was a habitual truant, in violation of KRS 630.020(3). The CDW contended in the complaint that during an approximately four-month period, B.H. had "accumulated 19.64 unexcused absences and 3 unexcused tardies for [the] 2007-2008 academic school year according to the DPP [Director of Pupil Personnel] report." The CDW's Juvenile Truancy Referral Checklist that was filed the same day as the complaint stated only B.H.'s name, the school he attended, and the number of unexcused absences and unexcused tardies that B.H. had accumulated. This checklist stated "N/A," presumably for "not applicable," in regard to the following: B.H.'s history of truancy; mediation; whether a compulsory education violation had been filed on B.H.'s parent; whether B.H. had participated in any truancy intervention program; and whether a home visit, face-to-face, or telephone contact had been conducted by the DPP, a school social worker, a school counselor, or a school administrator.

Six days before filing the complaint in the family court in this action, the CDW filled out a "Preliminary Inquiry Formal/Informal Processing Criteria and Recommendations" form. That form stated that "[a] preliminary inquiry was conducted" on that day, and the people present at the inquiry were: B.H., his mother, his stepfather, and the CDW. The only other information the form contained was that B.H. had "accumulated over [eleven] unexcused days" and, based on that criteria, the CDW checked a box stating that the case was not appropriate for informal processing. Preprinted language on the form then stated that because the case was not appropriate for informal processing, it was recommended that the "case be referred to court for a formal hearing or an informal adjustment."

Five days later, a docket sheet with the court's signature was filed. Notes that were handwritten on that docket sheet stated: "IOC; appt DPA; stip to HT; VCO; CAP orders." Another handwritten note stated that a review of the case would be held several weeks later. We assume that the term "stip to HT" meant that the court found that B.H. had stipulated to the status offense charge of habitual truancy. Orders were then entered directing B.H. and his mother to submit to drug testing at the Community Alternative Program (CAP) and appointing a public defender for B.H. Additionally, a Juvenile Status Offender Order (JSOO) was entered finding B.H. to be a status offender relating to habitual truancy, pursuant to KRS 600.020(28). Preprinted language on the JSOO stated that the court found the child was subject to the court's jurisdiction pursuant to KRS 630.020. Additionally, the JSOO ordered B.H. to: obey all rules of his home; attend all school sessions on time, have no unexcused absences and no behavior problems at school; not consume, use or possess any alcoholic beverages, tobacco product or illegal drugs; submit to random drug testing; and comply with drug testing orders.

Following the next in-court review, B.H. was ordered to enroll and participate in summer school, and he was referred to the Truancy Assessment Center (TAC). He was also ordered to cooperate with TAC and follow TAC's recommendations. A TAC Assessment and Recommendation report was filed concerning B.H., stating that he had accumulated a total of thirty-four unexcused absences, three tardies and two days suspended for the 2007-08 school year. B.H. had been suspended on those two occasions for skipping class and disruptive behavior. However, the report stated that since his last court review a little over a month before the report date, *363 B.H. had accumulated zero absences, two unexcused tardies and four days suspended (due to disobeying staff and using profanity or vulgarity). The TAC report also provided that B.H. was failing six of his seven classes in high school. It reported that, according to his mother, B.H. had been diagnosed with depression, anger and anxiety, as well as "Crohn's disease (causes inflammation of the digestive tract) and Costochondritis (causes chest pain)." The TAC recommendations were for B.H. to attend and participate in summer school and complete twenty hours of community service.

At a later court review, the court ordered that B.H. not be withdrawn from school; that he "file for homebound" if his doctor thought it was necessary; and that B.H. bring his grades and "point sheet" to his next court appearance.

Subsequently, B.H. was placed on Cabinet supervision; the family court entered an order granting temporary custody of B.H. to his grandmother; B.H. was ordered to continue to work with the Cabinet and diversion,[2] and to have "no UA/UT/Behavior," which we assume means that he was to have no unexcused absences, unexcused tardies, or behavioral problems at school. The court also entered an order allowing B.H. to withdraw from school to pursue his GED.

A predispositional report was later prepared and filed by the Cabinet. In it, the Cabinet noted that B.H. had "made little effort and no progress in working toward or obtaining his GED," and that "Diversion and Impact Services have exhausted their efforts to assist"[3] B.H. The report stated that "IMPACT plus [was] the fourth consecutive in-home intervention for [the] family," and that "IMPACT ha[d] made the decision to exit services with [the] family due to the lack of progress and the high level of noncompliance with both [B.H. and his custodial grandmother]." The Cabinet's report recommended:

1. [B.H.] be drug dropped today to identify any type of drug use and if results are positive:
A. [B.H.] be assessed by the Ridge for possible drug treatment and follow all recommendations.
B. [B.H.] remain in the custody of his guardian, [his grandmother].
2. [B.H.] be drug dropped today to identify any type of drug use and if results are negative:
A. [B.H.] be given FCO's[4] by the court.
B. [B.H.] remain in the custody of his guardian, [his grandmother].

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B.H. v. Commonwealth
329 S.W.3d 360 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
329 S.W.3d 360, 2010 WL 5128713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bh-v-com-kyctapp-2010.