Cabinet for Health & Family Services v. I.W.

338 S.W.3d 295, 2010 Ky. App. LEXIS 232, 2010 WL 5128716
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 17, 2010
Docket2010-CA-000301-ME
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 338 S.W.3d 295 (Cabinet for Health & Family Services v. I.W.) 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
Cabinet for Health & Family Services v. I.W., 338 S.W.3d 295, 2010 Ky. App. LEXIS 232, 2010 WL 5128716 (Ky. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

LAMBERT, Judge:

This is a termination of parental rights case in which the Cabinet for Health and Family Services appeals from a judgment of the Clark Family Court denying the petition to terminate the parental rights of Appellee, I.W., Jr. For the reasons stated herein, we reverse the family court’s order and remand this matter for termination of the parental rights of Appellee, I.W., Jr.

Appellee, I.W., Jr. has failed to file a brief. Accordingly, we will set forth the Cabinet’s statement of facts and issues, presuming such to be correct. Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 76.12(8)(c).

M.A.W., the child who is the subject of this action, was born on April 15, 2002. The mother of the child is R.S., and the father of the child is R.S.’s stepbrother, I.W., Jr. (Appellee). Appellee’s father, I.W., Sr., and R.S.’s mother, M.W., were married when R.S. was approximately six years old and Appellee was approximately thirteen years old. When Appellee was fourteen, he came to live with his father and M.W., and he lived in the same household with R.S. as a teenager for approximately two and one-half years.

Appellee and R.S. first engaged in a sexual relationship when Appellee was twenty-three or twenty-four years old and *297 R.S. was sixteen. This relationship began when Appellee was married to C.W. and continued over the course of approximately ten years. Appellee described that the relationship was consensual; however, he admitted that at times R.S. had accused him of raping her. Appellee stated in his parenting evaluation that R.S. could not be “raped,” although it is not clear from the record exactly what this statement meant.

Appellee’s father, I.W., Sr., sexually abused R.S. as a child, and they had a sexual relationship as adults. Appellee testified that he did not know that his father was having sexual relations with R.S. At a minimum, however, Appellee knew that his father had engaged in sexual intercourse with R.S. because when he asked R.S. if the baby she was carrying was his, R.S. advised that she thought it was his father’s (her stepfather’s) child. Moreover, Appellee later stated during a parenting assessment that he thought his father was M.A.W.’s father, but that he did not believe his father was a sex offender. However, Appellee admittedly knew that his father had engaged in sexual relations with R.S. since she was a child. Appellee also admitted to a social worker, April Frost-Crowe, that he thought his father was M.A.W.’s father, and that he was aware when he was having sexual relations with R.S. that his father was having sexual relations with her too. Thus, it is clear from the record that Appellee was in denial regarding his father, I.W., Sr., and R.S.’s sexual relationship.

In mid to late 2001, Appellee apparently felt guilty about his own sexual relationship with R.S. and advised his wife, C.W., of the affair. Some months later, upon learning that R.S. was approximately seven months pregnant with M.A.W., Appel-lee and his wife discussed the possibility of whether the child was his. C.W. advised Appellee to determine whether he was M.A.W.’s father. When Appellee inquired about paternity to R.S., she allegedly told him that she had a menstrual cycle after they had sexual relations. Appellee and C.W. then took no further steps to determine whether or not Appellee was M.A.W.’s father, even though they both acknowledged that R.S. was a “habitual liar.” C.W. testified that even though she and Appellee knew they should take further steps, they did not do anything more to determine if he was the father of M.A.W.

In the first four years of his life, M.A.W. lived in a number of placements with his mother, stepfather, relatives, and foster care, and he was placed in five to six placements over the course of four years. Prior to his removal and current placement in March 2007, M.A.W. never lived in a stable home environment. Social worker April Frost-Crowe testified as to the extensive and repeated history of abuse and neglect M.A.W. endured early in his life at the hands of R.S., K.S. (R.S.’s husband and M.A.W.’s stepfather), I.W., Sr. (Appellee’s father), and M.A.W.’s sister, M.S.W. In addition, M.A.W. witnessed domestic violence perpetrated by his stepfather, K.S., against R.S.

M.A.W.’s first placement in foster care occurred in June 2005, when the Cabinet received a referral that M.A.W. and his older half-sister, M.S.W., were left home alone all day. M.A.W., then three years old, was found by police unattended and playing in the street. In January 2006, M.S.W. and M.A.W. were placed in the temporary custody of P.W. and J.W., M.S.W.’s biological father and stepmother. P.W. and J.W. had two biological children, M.E.W. and Z.L.W. (hereinafter “siblings”) 2 , who were living in the couple’s *298 home. In August 2006, the Fayette Circuit Court gave P.W. and J.W. permanent custody of M.S.W. and M.A.W.

In March 2007, the Cabinet received a referral from the police regarding a child fatality at the home of P.W. and J.W. Upon investigation, the Cabinet learned that ten-year-old M.S.W. had extensive injuries, numerous bruises, and scalding on her body, which resulted in her death. On that same date, M.A.W. (then four years old), his siblings, M.E.W. (then six years old), and Z.L.W. (then four years old) were all removed and placed in foster care together. At the time of the removal, M.A.W. was found to have light fading bruises on his upper back and ear. The investigation into M.S.W.’s death revealed that P.W. and J.W. killed M.S.W. in the presence of M.A.W. and his siblings. To date, the children have remained placed together in the same foster home since March 2007 and thus have been together for four years.

In April 2007, R.S. and C.J., Appellee’s sister, came to social worker Frost-Crowe and asked for a home evaluation of Appel-lee’s sister’s home for possible placement of M.A.W. Frost-Crowe conducted a home evaluation and rejected C.W.’s home, due to the fact that R.S. was living on the same property in another trailer, and C.W.’s husband had a conviction for cruelty to animals. Appellee admitted that he had done some work on R.S.’s trailer with the intention of R.S. regaining custody of M.A.W.

In June 2007, after denial of C.W.’s home evaluation, R.S., C.W., and Appellee came to Frost-Crowe’s office and indicated that Appellee might be MAW.’s father. Frost-Crowe advised the Fayette Family Court, who had jurisdiction at that time. The Fayette Family Court ordered DNA testing and transferred the case to the Clark Family Court, where the juvenile court actions regarding MAW.’s siblings were located. In September 2007, DNA test results confirmed that Appellee was the biological father of M.A.W.

On February 7, 2008, the Clark Family Court adjudicated M.A.W. to be an abused and neglected child. On February 28, 2008, M.A.W. was committed to the Cabinet. Reasonable efforts to reunify M.A.W. with R.S. were waived pursuant to KRS 610.127. Appellee then moved the court for custody or visitation, and the Court ordered a parenting assessment by Dr. David Feinberg, a licensed clinical psychologist and qualified mental health professional, on Appellee and his wife, C.W.

Dr. Feinberg’s report was completed on July 10, 2008.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
338 S.W.3d 295, 2010 Ky. App. LEXIS 232, 2010 WL 5128716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabinet-for-health-family-services-v-iw-kyctapp-2010.