Brandy Huggins v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children

2022 Ark. App. 371
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 28, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 Ark. App. 371 (Brandy Huggins v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children) 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
Brandy Huggins v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children, 2022 Ark. App. 371 (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 371 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-22-119

Opinion Delivered September 28, 2022

BRANDY HUGGINS APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, EIGHTH DIVISION V. [NO. 60JV-20-411]

ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HONORABLE TJUANA C. BYRD, HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR JUDGE CHILDREN APPELLEES AFFIRMED

LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge

Brandy Huggins appeals the Pulaski County Circuit Court’s order terminating her

parental rights to her two children, K.B. and C.B. On appeal, she does not challenge the court’s

findings as to statutory grounds. She challenges the court’s best-interest finding but, in doing

so, does not argue that the court’s findings as to adoptability or risk of harm were erroneous.

Instead, she raises only one best-interest argument: that the court’s finding that termination of

her parental rights would be in the children’s best interest was erroneous because the children’s

placement with fictive kin provided a less restrictive alternative to termination that would have

maintained family bonds. We cannot reach the merits of Huggins’s argument because she

failed to preserve it for appellate review. Therefore, we affirm.

On May 4, 2020, the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) exercised an

emergency hold on K.B. and C.B. due to Huggins’s drug use, unstable mental health, and erratic behavior. DHS immediately identified Denita Thomas as a “provisional fictive kin

placement,” and the boys were placed in Thomas’s home. Thomas’s brother, Simon Harris,

was identified as C.B.’s putative father. Harris had voluntarily appeared at the hospital to be

interviewed during the investigation, and he expressed a desire for the children to be placed

in his custody. However, DHS declined to place the children with him because he was not

listed on C.B.’s birth certificate.

On May 7, DHS filed a petition for dependency-neglect and emergency custody, and

the circuit court subsequently entered an order granting that petition. At that hearing, Harris

acknowledged that a paternity test had revealed that he is not C.B.’s biological father, and he

said that while he believed C.B. was his son, he was not shocked by the test results and still

wanted the child to be placed with him. He said he attended all of C.B.’s school meetings and

his choir and sports activities. The court found that Harris could participate in the case as

fictive kin and ordered DHS to conduct a home study and background checks.

On May 13, the circuit court held a probable-cause hearing and found that probable

cause continued to exist for the emergency order to remain in place. The court ordered

Huggins to submit to drug screenings, complete a drug-and-alcohol assessment and follow its

recommendations, complete a psychological evaluation and follow its recommendations,

complete parenting classes, and maintain stable housing and employment.

On June 29, the circuit court held an adjudication hearing. It adjudicated the juveniles

dependent-neglected due to parental neglect and unfitness, citing K.B.’s positive hair-follicle

test for cocaine, Huggins’s positive drug screen for cocaine, and Huggins’s mental instability.

The circuit court also set a case goal of reunification along with a concurrent goal of permanent

2 custody with a fit and willing relative. On October 26, the circuit court held a review hearing,

at which it continued the goals set at the adjudication hearing.

On April 22, 2021, the circuit court held a permanency-planning hearing. At this

hearing, the circuit court changed the goal of the case to adoption with a concurrent goal of

permanent custody with a fit and willing relative. In support of this goal change, the circuit

court cited Huggins’s partial compliance with the case plan. Specifically, the circuit court found

Huggins had not completed drug treatment, that she admitted drug use, that she made excuses

for why she had not completed her hair-follicle test, that she was not addressing her mental-

health issues, that she lacked employment, and that she had not taken advantage of her

opportunities for visitation. The court noted that the children were placed with fictive kin, and

the caseworker testified that DHS wanted to pursue placement of C.B. with Harris. The court

acknowledged Harris’s engagement in therapy with C.B. and the bond they shared.

On May 28, DHS filed a petition to terminate Huggins’s parental rights. On August 5,

the court held a termination hearing. Huggins’s testimony demonstrated that she had entered

a thirty-day inpatient drug-treatment program a few days prior to the termination hearing after

waiting for a spot in the program to become available. She also moved to Texas a month

before the hearing in order to “start over.” She testified that she tried to get in touch with her

caseworker to inform her of the move, including physically making a trip to the caseworker’s

office, but she was unable to get in touch with anyone familiar with her case and was told that

the person she needed to speak to was in court. Huggins testified that she did not know why

a hair-follicle test administered in May was positive for cocaine and methamphetamine; she

stated that she last used the drugs in 2020. Huggins said she had been around a lot of people,

3 and she speculated that the test could be positive because of her contact with them, but she

testified that she did not know anyone in Texas and had therefore removed herself from the

people who might have been exposing her to drugs. She stated that she visited with her

children in person weekly, that the visits went “quite well,” and that although she had “put

them through a lot,” they were happy. She acknowledged that she needs drug treatment and

said it would help her better herself. She also said that she believed the services she had

received in the case had helped her. As to housing, she said she had signed a lease in Texas in

March 2021 and had moved in June. She explained that, while she was not working at the time

of the termination hearing, her eighteen-year-old son lived with her and helped her cover

expenses. She acknowledged she did not have sufficient funds to take care of the children but

stated that she had enough assistance from others to pay her bills and would find employment

to supplement that assistance once she completed drug treatment. She said she was receiving

psychiatric care.

Thomas testified that she is Harris’s sister and was currently serving as the foster

placement for both children. She clarified that Huggins visited the boys approximately two to

three times a month and that Huggins has a close working relationship with Harris and

Thomas. She further clarified that Huggins called the boys several times a week and had

frequent video calls with them.

Jennifer Wunstel testified that she was a substitute caseworker on Huggins’s case. She

stated that she did not believe that Huggins had demonstrated improvement or benefited from

the services to an extent sufficient to remedy the problems that initially caused the children’s

removal from her custody. Wunstel’s safety concerns for the boys centered on Huggins’s delay

4 in getting drug treatment, her positive hair-follicle test three months before the termination

hearing, the fact that there are notable gaps in DHS’s information regarding Huggins’s mental

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Brandy Huggins v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children
2022 Ark. App. 371 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2022)

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