C.R.B. v. Jackson County Department of Human Resources

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedAugust 29, 2025
DocketCL-2024-0504
StatusPublished

This text of C.R.B. v. Jackson County Department of Human Resources (C.R.B. v. Jackson County Department of Human Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.R.B. v. Jackson County Department of Human Resources, (Ala. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Rel: August 29, 2025

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS SPECIAL TERM, 2025 _________________________

CL-2024-0504, CL-2024-0505, and CL-2024-0506

_________________________

C.R.B.

v.

Jackson County Department of Human Resources

Appeals from Jackson Juvenile Court (JU-22-281.02, JU-22-282.02, and JU-22-283.02)

On Return from Remand

PER CURIAM.

C.R.B. ("the mother") appealed from three essentially identical

judgments of the Jackson Juvenile Court ("the juvenile court")

terminating her parental rights to three of her children, L.L.B., J.L.B., CL-2024-0504, CL-2024-0505, and CL-2024-0506

and C.J.B. ("the children"). On February 28, 2025, this court issued an

opinion explaining that, although the mother was not an Alabama

resident at the time the termination-of-parental-rights actions were

commenced, the juvenile court's subject-matter jurisdiction was not

challenged and the record did not contain sufficient evidence for us to

determine whether the juvenile court had subject-matter jurisdiction

under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act ("the

UCCJEA"), § 30-3B-101 et seq., Ala. Code 1975. C.R.B. v. Jackson Cnty.

Dep't of Hum. Res., [Ms. CL-2024-0504, Feb. 28, 2025] ___ So. 3d ___ (Ala.

Civ. App. 2025). Therefore, we remanded the actions to the juvenile court

and directed it to hold an evidentiary hearing at which the parties could

develop a record from which such a determination could be made and to

supplement the record with a transcript of that hearing or with any

evidence that the juvenile court had relied on in earlier dependency

actions involving the mother pertaining to subject-matter jurisdiction.

The juvenile court has made a return from remand and has

supplemented the record with a transcript of the evidentiary hearing it

held on remand and the separate judgments it entered addressing

jurisdiction. Having reviewed the supplemental record, we conclude that

2 CL-2024-0504, CL-2024-0505, and CL-2024-0506

the juvenile court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction to consider the

petitions to terminate the mother's parental rights, and we dismiss these

appeals.

Subject-Matter Jurisdiction Under the UCCJEA

Evidence presented at the original trial on the termination of the

mother's parental rights indicated that the Jackson County Department

of Human Resources ("DHR") became involved with the family in

November 2022, when the mother and the children, who were then four

years old, three years old, and four months old, were staying in a motel

room in Bridgeport. C.R.B., ___ So. 3d at ___. The mother allowed a

friend to stay in their motel room overnight, and the friend overdosed on

fentanyl while the children were in the room. Law-enforcement officials

were notified, and the mother was arrested and charged with various

drug offenses. Id. at ___. Alyssa Newsom, who worked for DHR, testified

during the original trial that DHR had received a report about the

mother's arrest and that, after an investigation, the children were picked

up. After a shelter-care hearing, the children were placed in foster care

in Alabama. Id. at ___. Upon her release from the Jackson County jail

four days after her arrest, the mother left Alabama. Id. at ___.

3 CL-2024-0504, CL-2024-0505, and CL-2024-0506

During the evidentiary hearing that the juvenile court held on

remand, the mother testified that she lived in Lebanon, Tennessee. 1 She

said that in the 10 months preceding the children's removal from her

custody -- February 2022 through November 2022 -- she and the children

had lived in Tennessee continuously. We note that the youngest child

was born in July 2022; therefore, according to the mother's timeline, that

child would have lived in Tennessee from birth. Newsom testified during

the hearing on remand that DHR's records indicated that the mother had

told DHR that "she had moved from her mother's house in Georgia to the

motel in Bridgeport." The mother told Newsom that she had rented a

motel room in Bridgeport for a week. At the hearing on remand, the

mother denied moving from her mother's house in Georgia directly to the

motel, saying that she had moved from her mother's "back to Tennessee"

in February 2022. However, her testimony in this regard contradicted

her testimony at the original termination trial that she had been "living

at" her mother's house in Georgia when she came to Alabama. She did

not say at the original trial how long she had been living with her mother

1Z.S.B., the children's father, also lived in Tennessee. C.R.B., ___ So. 3d at ___. He consented to the termination of his parental rights to the children, and he is not involved in this appeal. Id. at ___. 4 CL-2024-0504, CL-2024-0505, and CL-2024-0506

at that point. The mother testified that the reason she was in Alabama

was to "get the children out from where my brother was killed" and that

her sister-in-law lived in South Pittsburg, Tennessee, near the Alabama

state line. The mother said that her four oldest children lived with

relatives in Tennessee. There was no evidence indicating that the mother

had lived in Alabama either before or after the children were removed

from her custody.

At the hearing on remand, the mother agreed that the juvenile

court had had emergency jurisdiction to hold a shelter-care hearing after

her arrest in November 2022. The record reflects that, on December 2,

2022, the juvenile court entered shelter-care orders, one for each child,

removing the children from the mother's custody and placing them

temporarily in the custody of DHR. Less than two months later, on

January 26, 2023, the juvenile court entered three judgments, one for

each child, finding that the mother had admitted that the children were

dependent and awarding DHR legal and physical care and control of the

children. The juvenile court authorized DHR to place the children in

foster care. No evidence was presented regarding where or with whom

the children lived after the juvenile court entered those judgments. All

5 CL-2024-0504, CL-2024-0505, and CL-2024-0506

the orders and judgments entered in the previous actions are contained

in the supplemental record in this matter.

After the entry of the judgments finding the children dependent,

the mother said, she continued to reside in Tennessee. She testified that

she told the juvenile court that any drug testing and counseling that she

needed would have to be done in Tennessee, where she lived. Newsom

testified that the mother was offered services in Jackson County but that

she was unsure whether the mother had enrolled in a family-wellness

program in Alabama or whether she had been offered substance-abuse

rehabilitation in Alabama. It is undisputed that the mother entered

rehabilitation programs in Tennessee after the termination cases began.

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Bluebook (online)
C.R.B. v. Jackson County Department of Human Resources, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crb-v-jackson-county-department-of-human-resources-alacivapp-2025.