Cleveland v. State

2012 OK CIV APP 49, 276 P.3d 1054, 2011 WL 7827489, 2011 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 9, 2011
DocketNo. 107,367
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2012 OK CIV APP 49 (Cleveland v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland v. State, 2012 OK CIV APP 49, 276 P.3d 1054, 2011 WL 7827489, 2011 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 142 (Okla. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

LARRY JOPLIN, Judge.

11 Appellants, Christopher and Huyen Cleveland (parents/father/mother), appeal the trial court's June 26, 2009 orders terminating their parental rights pursuant to 10 0.$.2001 § 7006-1.1(A)(6), which determined HT. was a deprived child due to the parents' failure to correct the conditions which led to the termination of their parental rights to H.T.'s four oldest siblings.1

1 2 Mother asserts the verdiet which found H.T. deprived and terminated the parental rights of both parents is not supported by sufficient evidence; the court erred in failing to sustain Mother's motion to sever the jury trial from Father's proceedings; and the court permitted improper comment regarding Mother's exercise of her fifth amendment right to remain silent when she was questioned by Appellee's counsel during the proceedings.

T3 Father similarly asserts there is insufficient evidence to find H.T. deprived and insufficient evidence to support the verdict terminating his parental rights; termination [1056]*1056of his parental rights is not in the child's best interests; Father's request for pretrial transcripts at the state's expense was improperly denied; Appellee's counsel should not have been permitted to comment on Father's exercise of his fifth amendment right to remain silent; and the court should not have permitted the attorney for the children to read transcripts of previous testimony to the jury in lieu of having the children testify at these proceedings.2 Having reviewed record, we affirm.

4 In 2001, H.T.'s older siblings, T.T. and M.T., were removed from Mother's home upon allegations of physical abuse. The children were returned and the case was dismissed after Mother agreed to treatment, counseling and voluntary services. In 2008, the children were again removed from the home upon allegations of physical abuse. As a result, four children (T.T., MT., C.C. & T.C.)3 were adjudicated deprived in July 2004. The parents, Appellants, were given individual service plans in order to correct the cireumstances that led to the deprived adjudication of the four children and they received deferred sentences as a result of plea agreements arising from the criminal charges of abuse.

5 In May 2005, the state initiated a petition to terminate parental rights with respect to TT., MT., C.C., & T.C., due to the alleged failure of parents to correct the cireum-stances that led to the children being adjudged deprived in 2004. The matter was tried to a jury in April 2006. The jury determined the children were deprived, conditions were not remedied and parental rights of Appellants were terminated in 2006.

T6 The jury trial regarding the deprived status and termination of rights with respect to H.T. was had from June 15 through 24, 2009. The present case regarding H.T. is based upon the previous adjudications of the first four children and parents' continued failure to correct deprived conditions.

17 A termination of parental rights case must be supported by clear and convine-ing evidence. In re S.B.C., 2002 OK 83, 64 P.3d 1080. To affirm the trial court's findings, the appellate court's review must demonstrate the presence of clear and convincing evidence to support the first instance decision. Id. at 1082.

T8 Both parents assert there is insufficient evidence to support a deprived determination regarding H.T. and therefore no basis upon which to terminate their parental rights with respect to this child. The parents repeatedly argue the allegations of abuse are old, dating to 2008, and do not involve H.T., but instead involve other children who are no longer under the parents' care.

19 Oklahoma's children's code provides:

A. A court shall not terminate the rights of a parent to a child unless:
1. The child has been adjudicated to be deprived either prior to or concurrently with a proceeding to terminate parental rights; and
2. Termination of parental rights is in the best interests of the child.
B. The court may terminate the rights of a parent to a child based upon the following legal grounds:
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6. A finding that:
a. the rights of the parent to another child have been terminated, and
b. the conditions that led to the prior termination of parental rights have not been corrected[.] 4

[1057]*1057It is due to the deprived status and termination of rights with respect to the four oldest children that the state sought the deprived adjudication and termination in H.T.'s case, claiming the conditions had not been corrected.

{10 The record below contains clear and convincing evidence that parents did not correct the conditions which led to the termination of their parental rights to their four oldest children. Neither one of the parents has completed the required counseling, anger management, parenting classes or compassion workshops that might have helped them deal with their parenting responsibilities. It is especially troubling that both parents deny any need to engage in the training which D.H.S. once sought to provide. Mother testified she did not see a need to repeat courses she had already taken. Mother repeatedly argued that she had completed the courses, but the record does not bear this out. And Father admitted he learned a number of things in the few classes he took, but did not complete any of the courses, nor did he have plans to do so.

11 Mother quit her counseling after having requested at least two changes in counselors. The supervising counselor indicated Mother was not empathetic to her children, had not internalized the counseling and had not corrected the issues that the counseling center was attempting to address with her. There is nothing in this record to indicate that has changed. In addition, Mother was not particularly forthcoming or specific about the counseling she received with her pastor and did not provide a requested release so that D.H.S. personnel could evaluate the services she received within her church. At trial, Mother denied domestic violence was an issue within her home, despite having stipulated to the fact her four oldest children were deprived, listing domestic violence as one of the many factors of deprivation. This denial or disconnect with respect to Mother is evidence that the conditions alleged by the state exist currently, and continue to be unacknowledged and uncorrected conditions within the parents' home and not simply old, irrelevant allegations from 2008.

T 12 Particularly troubling with respect to Mother's care is that she originally denied Father's abuse of the children in 2003, admitting it later, only after the criminal charges had been disposed of. She has also failed to acknowledge responsibility for abuse perpetrated by Father, saying she was not there and was not responsible for those injuries. Throughout the first deprived and corresponding termination proceeding, Mother demonstrated a lack of understanding of her duty to protect the children from Christopher Cleveland's abuse, seeming to believe she owed no duty to protect the children if Christopher Cleveland abused them outside her presence. This mind-set was evident in her testimony during H.T.'s proceeding as well.

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Related

In Re Ht
2012 OK CIV APP 49 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 OK CIV APP 49, 276 P.3d 1054, 2011 WL 7827489, 2011 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-v-state-oklacivapp-2011.