Daber v. Division of Child Protective Services

470 A.2d 723, 1983 Del. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 19, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 470 A.2d 723 (Daber v. Division of Child Protective Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daber v. Division of Child Protective Services, 470 A.2d 723, 1983 Del. LEXIS 511 (Del. 1983).

Opinion

MOORE, Justice:

Following trial in the Family Court, Emma and Thomas Daber appeal an order terminating their parental rights in their youngest son, Robert. 1 The order was issued because of (a) their inability to plan adequately for Robert’s physical needs or his mental and emotional health and development, and (b) the conditions which led to Robert’s placement still persist, and there appears to be little likelihood of their remedy. Based on these determinations, we conclude that the Family Court properly terminated the Dabers’ parental rights as being in Robert’s best interests. Accordingly, we affirm.

I.

This case has a long and sad history. Robert is a mildly retarded sixteen year old with significant speech problems. He is the youngest of the Dabers’ eleven children. At different times all eleven of them have been in the care of various social agencies. In July 1967, when Robert was four months old, the Family Court awarded temporary custody to the then Department of Public Welfare because of the Dabers’ serious neglect of the child. Medical examination revealed him to be a malnourished infant. Almost immediately, he was placed in a foster home under the care of William and Mary Chadd, who since then have raised him as their own son. At various times Robert visited the Dabers monthly, despite his reluctance to do so. Eventually, his objections to these visits became so strong that he began crawling under a bed and refusing to emerge when the social worker arrived to accompany him.

The present proceedings arose in 1981 when the Chadds sought to adopt Robert— an action which was in accordance with Robert’s ardent desires. However, without the Dabers’ consent, which they fervently withheld, no adoption was possible unless a termination proceeding was instituted. 2

On April 9, 1981, the Division of Child Protective Services (the Division) petitioned to terminate the Dabers’ parental rights in Robert. See 13 Del.C. § 1104(7) (1981). Thereafter, the Family Court entered a stipulated order requiring counseling for and psychological evaluations of Robert, his natural parents, and his foster parents. The order also permitted frequent visitation by the Dabers. After hearing the termination petition, the Family Court entered the order from which this appeal is taken.

The 1981 court-ordered psychological evaluation of Robert revealed that he is in the borderline mentally defective range of intellect, caused by environmental deprivation and lack of proper care during the first four months of his life while he was in the Daber home. On the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children — Revised, Robert received a Verbal Score of 51, a Performance Score of 67, and a Full Scale IQ Score of 55. On the Wide Range Achievement Test (WRAT), Robert has a reading and word-recognition grade level of 2.5 and is in the 0.6 percentile when compared to others - of his physical age group. Results from the WRAT also indicate a spelling ability equivalent to grade level 2.4, i.e., the first percen *725 tile, and an arithmetic ability level equal to grade K.8, i.e., the 0.04 percentile. Apart from Robert’s mental retardation, he also has a significant speech problem which has prevented the development of his interpersonal communication skills and which may contribute to future serious emotional maladjustment. Despite these handicaps, the psychological study of Robert concluded that with proper parental care and speech therapy, he could potentially test in the Low Average to Average range of intellect with respect to performance, as opposed to reading and writing, skills. Robert will need close care, supervision, and special training beyond age twenty-one.

His natural parents were also evaluated psychologically. Emma Daber, age 49, is a mildly retarded woman who relies substantially on her husband for emotional support and requires his close supervision. She is functionally illiterate. While she has provided the physical essentials for her family, she can not effectively meet any atypical need. She admitted that she felt she could manage Robert only because two of her other children were no longer living at home. She does not recognize the special care which Robert will need. Thomas Da-ber, age 65, is borderline mentally deficient. His interpersonal skills are primitive, and he has a low frustration tolerance. He is a rigid individual who is used to getting his own way and has feelings of inferiority and hostility. He resents losing his son to another family because that reflects negatively on his ability to take care of the child.

William and Mary Chadd, Robert’s foster parents, have cared for him since his removal from the Daber home at the age of four months. Mr. Chadd, age 50, is free of psychopathology and is physically stable. He tested creative and has the patience and judgment to meet Robert’s special needs. Similarly, Mary Chadd, age 46, is free of psychopathology with good insight, ability to organize homelife, and patience. Both Mr. and Mrs. Chadd admitted that they had experienced the trauma of discovering that Robert was handicapped and the difficulty of accepting that fact. However, both acknowledge Robert’s limitations and realize that caring for him will be a lifelong obligation. Accordingly, they have arranged for Robert to enter a trade school oriented to the special education of children. They have also provided for parental substitutes should they die or lose the capacity to care for Robert, who has consistently and continuously expressed a desire to be adopted by the Chadds.

II.

The Dabers argue that the record does not support the Family Court findings that .they have failed to adequately plan for Robert’s mental and emotional health and development. They contend that the trial court erroneously relied upon expert witnesses who based their opinions upon circumstances existing when Robert had little or no contact with his parents. Furthermore, these witnesses did not know how the Dabers had coped with or provided for their other children with special needs.

The parents also blame the Division for not giving them any direction or assistance to help correct any failings which negated Robert’s return to them. They claim to be unaware of what these inadequacies may be, and state that the Division had a duty to inform them of the relevant circumstances.

The Dabers further contend that the Division failed to establish at least 2 of the statutory prerequisites for termination of parental rights — (a) an inability to plan adequately for the child’s physical needs or his mental and emotional health and development, and (b) that the conditions which led to the child’s placement still persist, and there appears to be little likelihood of their remedy. See 13 Del.C. § 1103(5)(a)2. (1981).

Finally, the Dabers argue that with their known mental deficiencies, the Division had a “due process” obligation to advise them of their inadequacies, and an “equal protection” duty to give them counseling and psychotherapy before seeking a termination of parental rights.

*726

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470 A.2d 723, 1983 Del. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daber-v-division-of-child-protective-services-del-1983.