Brionna J. v. Dcs, A.V.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMay 24, 2022
Docket1 CA-JV 21-0039
StatusPublished

This text of Brionna J. v. Dcs, A.V. (Brionna J. v. Dcs, A.V.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brionna J. v. Dcs, A.V., (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

BRIONNA J., Appellant,

v.

DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SAFETY, A.V., Appellees.

No. 1 CA-JV 21-0039 FILED 5-24-2022

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. JD530462 The Honorable Connie Contes, Judge Retired

VACATED AND REMANDED

COUNSEL

Law Office of Ed Johnson PLLC, Peoria By Edward D. Johnson Counsel for Appellant

Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Mesa By Lauren J. Lowe Counsel for Appellee Department of Child Safety BRIONNA J. v. DCS, A.V. Opinion of the Court

OPINION

Presiding Judge Peter B. Swann delivered the opinion of the court, in which Judge David D. Weinzweig and Judge Paul J. McMurdie joined.

S W A N N, Judge:

¶1 In this severance case, we are confronted with the sometimes difficult distinction between a history of bad parenting and grounds that justify the permanent termination of a parent-child relationship by the government. We hold that even abundant evidence of bad parenting does not necessarily equate to the parental unfitness necessary to justify permanent termination of the parent-child relationship by the state. In this appeal, we review an order severing Brionna J.’s (“Mother[’s]”) parental rights under A.R.S. § 8-533(B)(8)(c). We vacate the severance and remand for further proceedings. Though Mother was deeply troubled and far from an ideal parent, she improved in response to services and insufficient evidence supported the juvenile court’s conclusion that she was unfit.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 Mother gave birth to A.V. in 2005.1 She was thereafter reported to child protective services multiple times over a period of years. In 2006, she was reported for testing positive for marijuana, for engaging in domestic violence with A.V.’s father, and for permitting A.V. to live with her grandmother in a different state. In 2007, she was reported for not visiting A.V. when the child was hospitalized for pneumonia, for abusing alcohol and illegal drugs, for driving A.V. while under the influence, for leaving drugs and drug paraphernalia in an area accessible to A.V., and for stabbing A.V.’s father and placing A.V. in the road to prevent him from leaving. In 2008, she was reported for going “clubbing” at night while leaving A.V. in the care of her grandmother, a user of alcohol and illegal drugs who spanked A.V. and often slept while A.V. moved unsupervised around a house containing unsecured chemicals. In 2011, she was reported for using marijuana in front of A.V., leaving marijuana in an area accessible to A.V., and not taking A.V. to the doctor when the child had a bad cough.

1 A.V.’s father’s parental rights were severed concurrent with Mother’s, but he is not a party to this appeal.

2 BRIONNA J. v. DCS, A.V. Opinion of the Court

In 2013, she was reported for “always [being] mad” and threatening to kill A.V. and herself.

¶3 In this appeal, we are concerned with the current petition and the circumstances giving rise to it. In 2016, Mother was reported to the Arizona Department of Child Safety for having posed as A.V. to send a message to the child’s grandmother stating that she (A.V.) had ingested nail polish remover. The Department thereafter assumed custody of A.V., and her best-interests attorney filed a dependency petition in November 2016. The petition alleged that Mother was unable or unwilling to provide necessary parental care and control, see A.R.S. § 8-201(15)(a)(i), because:

Mother has untreated mental health issues[,] . . . has physically abused the child by hitting her[,] . . . swears at the child and calls her derogatory names[,] . . . has a history of substance abuse and keeps drugs accessible to the child[,] . . . has a history of domestic violence and has been arrested and convicted multiple times[,] . . . has prior DCS involvement in the state of Georgia and Arizona[, and] . . . has neglected/and or [sic] abandoned the child by leaving her in the care of the Maternal Grandmother for extended periods of time.

¶4 Mother contested the petition. But she failed to appear at the March 2017 evidentiary hearing, so the court found A.V. dependent as to her on the strength of the petition’s allegations and the reports received by the Department.

¶5 The Department offered Mother myriad reunification services. She was not required to participate in substance abuse treatment because she produced a medical marijuana card. She was referred for domestic violence counseling but never participated.

¶6 She did participate in a psychological evaluation in March 2017, which noted suspected child neglect, suspected child physical abuse, and suspected child psychological abuse but resulted in no mental health diagnoses. The psychologist recommended that Mother would benefit from services designed to “increas[e] her frustration tolerance and ability to manage daily stressors.” Mother also participated in a bonding and best- interests assessment in May 2017. In that assessment, during which Mother and the grandmother argued in front of A.V., A.V. disclosed to the psychologist that she feared being hurt by Mother when Mother was angry. Concerned that Mother had trouble both controlling her temper and

3 BRIONNA J. v. DCS, A.V. Opinion of the Court

recognizing that failing, the psychologist opined that anger management or dialectical behavior therapy (“DBT”) might be helpful.

¶7 The Department set up DBT for Mother in July 2017, but she did not begin attending that therapy until September 2017. Her counselor reported that Mother “made behavioral and cognitive improvements.” Still, in January 2018, after Mother “lashed out and became emotionally out of control” on two occasions, the therapy was terminated pending Mother’s successful completion of an anger management program. Mother was referred for an anger management program, but the referral was closed due to her “lack of cooperation and resistance to treatment.” Mother ultimately self-referred for DBT with a different provider in mid-2018, participated in the therapy, and reported completing the program later that year. She further provided a certificate of completion for a one-day self-referred anger management course in late 2018, and she reported in late 2019 that she had self-referred for an anger management program.

¶8 Mother did not begin participating in parenting-skill sessions until late 2017. She stopped participating in visits for a time in late 2017 after her threatening behavior toward the parent aide caused the visits to be moved from her home to the community. In a January 2018 summary report, the parent aide noted that Mother “struggles with acknowledging how responding to [A.V.] in a loud, aggressive, belittling, impatient, badgering, tone places the child in a vulnerable emotional state and causes the child to support and care for [M]other placing [A.V.] in a[n] inappropriate family role.” The parent aide further observed that Mother was “unpredictable as to . . . act[ing] out due to being trigger[ed] by something [A.V.], family members, or state workers say or do, whether founded or not,” that Mother appeared “to have no self regulation once she is angered,” and that Mother had indicated “she is only doing things to get her daughter back not because she feels there is a need to change.”

¶9 A.V. underwent a psychological evaluation in February 2018 in response to concerns that she was lying, stealing, and threatening suicide. The psychologist opined that “there are highly likely issues with anger, sadness, and fear,” and that A.V.

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Bluebook (online)
Brionna J. v. Dcs, A.V., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brionna-j-v-dcs-av-arizctapp-2022.