Care & Protection of Elaine

764 N.E.2d 917, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 266, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 369
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMarch 20, 2002
DocketNo. 01-P-905
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 764 N.E.2d 917 (Care & Protection of Elaine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Care & Protection of Elaine, 764 N.E.2d 917, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 266, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 369 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Dreben, J.

This is an appeal by a father and his three minor children from a judgment placing the children in the permanent custody of the Department of Social Services (department) on the ground that their parents are currently unfit and the children are in need of care and protection.2 The children, whom we refer to as Elaine, Frank, and Maureen, also appeal from the denial by the judge of their motion for a new trial. Their appeals have been consolidated.

The father and children claim that the evidence and the judge’s findings are insufficient to find him unfit. Although the judge’s subsidiary findings are supported by the record and are [267]*267not clearly erroneous, the findings, taken together, do not prove parental unfitness by clear and convincing evidence. Custody of Eleanor, 414 Mass. 795, 800 (1993). Accordingly, we reverse the judgment.

The findings arose in connection with a petition for care and protection brought by the department on September 15, 1999, seeking custody of Elaine (bom on November 7, 1988), Frank (born on June 24, 1990), and Maureen (bom on January 14, 1992). The accompanying affidavit of a social worker of the department claimed that the children, who had been living with the mother but not with the father, had been neglected by the mother as she had left them unsupervised at a shelter. The affidavit described various improper actions of the mother as well as her history,of dmg abuse, but did not mention the father other than to identify him and to request termination of the rights of both parents.

Represented by counsel, the parties on September 21, 1999, entered into a stipulation accepted by the court, in which they agreed that the department would retain temporary custody of the children, would develop a service plan for the parties, would facilitate visitation, and that a court investigator would be appointed. After a two-day trial in October, 2000, the judge issued findings, which we summarize as they relate to the father, supplemented on occasion (as will be indicated) by uncontested evidence that was introduced at trial, primarily by the department.

At the outset of his memorandum, before setting forth any facts, the judge declined to accede to the department’s request to terminate the rights of the father stating:

“Although the evidence will show that both the mother and the father are unfit to parent these children at this time, there is sufficient evidence to show that the father has the capacity to change and to make plans for parenting these children.”3

[268]*268The judge next proceeded to describe each of the parents and the children. Although her appeal is not before us, we mention some of the findings relating to the mother in order not to omit any unfavorable Tacts concerning the father. The department first became involved with the family in August, 1989, a time when the mother was using drugs. In summarizing and quoting frpm a number of “screening narratives” relating to G. L. c. 119, § 51 A, reports, almost all of which dealt with substance abuse and neglect by the mother, the judge listed one screening narrative dated May, 1995, which raised a question of domestic violence on the part of the father. The department investigation did not support that allegation, and the judge did not elaborate or make reference to this matter again.4-5

Although not specifically mentioned by the judge, the adoption plans prepared by the department indicate that the department had temporary custody of the children on two occasions, from June 1, 1994, to September 6, 1994, and from August 15, 1995, to October 24, 1997. On both occasions the children were returned to their parents.

After the children were returned in 1997, until June, 1999, the children and their mother lived with the mother’s sister in Cambridge. In June, 1999, when they were forced to move because the mother’s sister rented a smaller apartment, the mother and the children moved to a shelter in Somerville. A § 51A report filed on June 16, 1999 alleging drug use by the mother led to the filing of the present petition in September, 1999.

After setting forth the foregoing narrative and finding neglect by the mother, the judge turned to a discussion of the father. The father was arrested once in 1988 and twice in 1989 for possession with intent to distribute drugs. He served ninety days in the house of correction and received a suspended sentence and probation to January 24, 1992, at which time probation on all cases was terminated. He was charged with crimes unrelated to drugs in 1993 and 1994, but there was no indication that there were any subsequent arrests.

[269]*269The judge made additional subsidiary findings. After the children were returned to their parents’ custody in 1997, the family had trouble finding housing. While the mother and the children lived with her sister in the sister’s apartment in Cambridge, the father also lived in Cambridge with a daughter of his previous marriage. When the mother moved to the shelter, the father had minimal contact with the children, although he saw them occasionally in the community.

After the department received custody in September, 1999, the father visited monthly with the children at the department’s office. On a visit in June, 2000, he brought a birthday cake for his son Frank. He also brought a few gifts, including a wiffle ball with which he played with his son. After the festivities, the father “mostly sat in a chair during the visit while the children pretty much played on their own.”

The father lives in one room, sharing an apartment with F.H. and her nineteen year old son. If the children are returned, “he plans to move in with [K.M.] until he can find a suitable apartment.”

The father, who was bom on February 24, 1931, was sixty-nine at the time of trial and undergoes dialysis two times a week for two to three hour sessions. “[He] assert[ed] that his kidney problem would not affect his ability to care for his children.”6 He said that he would be able to work to support the children and that there would be family members who would step in to care for the children if he is held up because of his work.

The judge next discussed the children, indicating that then twelve year old Elaine was described by the guardian ad litem as very attractive, very articulate and proud of her schoolwork. She saw her father every month and enjoyed those visits. She said her mother was the one that spoiled them, while her father was more strict and set clearer limits for them. Frank was described as a very cute boy, very engaging and very playful. [270]*270He told the guardian ad litem that he wanted to return to live with his parents. He thought that his mother was out of the home working a lot and that his father did most of the caretaking around the house. Maureen was described as appearing younger than her five and a half years and told the guardian ad litem that she loved her foster mother and called her “mommy.”

The judge determined that the mother had neglected her children at the shelter and that she has a serious drag problem which impairs her ability to parent her children.7 “In contrast to [the mother’s] behavior in her parenting role,” the judge concluded, “[the father] has overcome his problems with the law and with drugs. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
764 N.E.2d 917, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 266, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/care-protection-of-elaine-massappct-2002.