Cabinet for Health & Family v. J.M.G.

475 S.W.3d 600, 2015 WL 9242908
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 2015
Docket2013-SC-000797-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 475 S.W.3d 600 (Cabinet for Health & Family v. J.M.G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court 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 v. J.M.G., 475 S.W.3d 600, 2015 WL 9242908 (Ky. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE ABRAMSON

The Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services (“CHFS” or “the Cabinet”) has requested review of an Opinion by a divided panel of the Court of Appeals upholding the Fayette Family Court’s imposition of criminal contempt sanctions against the Cabinet — sanctions in the form of a $2,000 fine. The Family Court deemed sanctionable the Cabinet’s (a social worker’s or social workers’) failure in sibling Dependency, Neglect, and Abuse (DNA) actions (KRS Chapter 620) to file a statutorily mandated report and, in the subsequent Termination of Parental Rights actions (KRS Chapter 625), the Cabinet’s (an attorney’s) failure to request a pre-hearing conference as mandated by the Family Court Rules. The Cabinet concedes the alleged procedural lapses, but argues that in the circumstances of these cases the lapses do not amount to criminal contempt. We granted the Cabinet's request for review to consider the merits of its concern, a concern shared by the dissenting Court of Appeals Judge, that the Family Court should have ordered compliance with the statute and the rule before resorting to contempt proceedings. We also accepted review to broach important, but unaddressed, questions concerning the Cabinet’s liability for the contempts of its agents, its immunity from fines for criminal contempt, and the procedures to which a party charged with criminal contempt is entitled. Agreeing with the Cabinet that the Family Court’s contempt rulings cannot be upheld as entered, we reverse the Opinion of the Court of Appeals and remand in part to the trial court.

RELEVANT FACTS

, The underlying DNA cases concern two siblings, Janie and Charles Goins,1 the children of Sabrina and Gregory Goins. ■ Janie was born in October 2004, Charles in March 2008. Sometime prior to July 2010, Sabrina and Gregory, were both incarcerated, with Sabrina having been convicted of possession of a forged instrument, fraudulent use of a credit card, and sec[603]*603ond-degree robbery and Gregory having been convicted of possession of a controlled substance and escape. The children were left in the care of Gregory’s sister, Jamie Overpeck, a resident of Lexington.

On July 2, 2010, Ms. Overpeck was herself arrested -on drug charges. The arresting officers contacted the Lexington/Fayette branch of the Department .of Community Based Services, and that Department arranged for the intervention of a social worker. The social worker promptly (that day), on behalf of the Cabinet, sought and was granted a Family Court Order allowing the Cabinet to take the children into its emergency custody.2 The children were placed with a foster couple.

' Over the next eight weeks, a temporary removal hearing, an adjudication hearing, and a disposition hearing followéd in due course. At each stage the Family Court accepted the Cabinet’s representations that, owing to the parents’ and Ms. Over-peek’s incarcerations, the children were “neglected”3 for the purposes' of KRS Chapter 620.4

, Initially, in what it styled a “Dispositional Report,”5 but what was in effect the initial permanency plan coinciding with the disposition hearing in August 2010, the Cabinet recommended that the children be [604]*604kept in temporary foster care with a goal of “Return to Parent” — a goal, essentially, of “Return to Mother,” since Sabrina was serying the shorter sentence. She was due to be released from prison, according to the Cabinet, in about July 2011. Gregory was not due to be released for at least a year beyond that, and therefore the Cabinet sought and was granted a waiver, of its obligation to provide reunification services to him.6

At the August 2010 disposition hearing, however, the children’s guardian ad litem (GAL) objected to a plan that required the children to spend a year with foster parents who were too old (about seventy) to be interested in adoption, when reunification with the mother at the end of that year was unlikely' at best. It was the GAL’s view that even if reunification with the mother remained a .possibility, an adoption alternative could and should be pursued simultaneously in case reunification with the mother did not succeed.

Noting that such “concurrent planning” is indeed a part of the current legal landscape, see Kathleen S. Bean, Aggravated Circumstances, Reasonable Efforts, and A[doption and] Sfafe] F[amilies] A[ct], 29 Boston College Third World Law Journal 228, 250 n.194 (2009) (Aggravated Circumstances) (citing 42 U.S.C. § 675(E)’s requirement that concurrently with reunification efforts the state “identify, recruit, process, and approve a qualified family for adoption”), the court shared the GAL’s concerns. Thus, while accepting provisionally the Cabinet’s plan to reunify the chib dren with their mother, it indicated that it would refer the case for review to the Fayette County Interested Party Review Board,7 would give the Cabinet’s case workers an opportunity to consult with the Cabinet’s Office of Legal Services, and would reconsider the Cabinet’s proposed plans for the children in October.8

In early October 2010, the Fayette County Interested Party Review Board responded to the court’s referral with a report highly critical of both the Cabinet’s plan for the children and its failure to support the foster parents. In the course of recommending that the goal for the children be changed unequivocally to adoption and that the children be provided with medical and dental services, the Board asserted that “[tjhese children have been [605]*605failed by the system.” A video recording of the ensuing October 11/2010 permanency hearing has not been included in the record provided to us, but the upshot of that hearing, on paper at least (see Cabinet reports from October 11 (a revised permanency plan proposal)'■ and November 8, 2010 (a report styled “Review Report,” a sort of progress report9)), was the Cabinet’s recommendation of adoption (not return to parent) as the goal for the children and its facilitating the children’s access’to various social services, including medical and dental .care. •

The Family Court incorporated the Cabinet’s adoption recommendation in' its permanency-plan Order of October 11, 2010. It appears to have been the court’s understanding that a prompt petition to terminate the parents’ parental rights would make adoption possible soon enough to obviate any immediate change in the children’s foster placement, the foster parents by all accounts having provided excellent care for the two children as well as having established affectionate bonds with them. Accordingly; the court also granted a waiver of reunification efforts with respect to Sabrina (a waiver having already been granted with respect to Gregory) and scheduled a “TPR review” (termination of parental rights review) for December 20. In a brief proceeding on December 20, however, the court liaison for the Cabinet reported merely that the TPR petition had not yet been filed. “TPR review” was therefore rescheduled for the end of January 2011.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
475 S.W.3d 600, 2015 WL 9242908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabinet-for-health-family-v-jmg-ky-2015.