Department of Human Services v. M. R.

283 P.3d 952, 251 Or. App. 387, 2012 WL 3055651, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 941
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 25, 2012
Docket2006806982, 2006806983, 2006806984,2006806985; Petition Number 108263M; A149109
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 283 P.3d 952 (Department of Human Services v. M. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Human Services v. M. R., 283 P.3d 952, 251 Or. App. 387, 2012 WL 3055651, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 941 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

BREWER, J.

The Department of Human Services (DHS) appeals from an order of the juvenile court that denied its motion to unseal mother’s DHS records in a previous juvenile dependency case in which mother was a dependent child. Because we conclude that the court did not in fact seal those records, we find no error in its denial of the state’s motion, and affirm.

When mother was a minor, she was a dependent child within the jurisdiction of the Multnomah County Juvenile Court. In July 2006, mother made admissions in a juvenile court dependency proceeding in the same court involving mother’s eldest child. In the ensuing judgment, the court ordered that “reports and other material relating to mother’s ‘history and prognosis’ contained in mother’s dependency file are privileged and as such shall be removed from any file in this her child’s dependency and any reference to that material shall be redacted from social file in this case.” On September 25, 2010, DHS received a report of possible child abuse or neglect regarding mother’s second eldest child, D. M., who had sustained a burn on her arm. The child was seen at CARES, where a DHS caseworker disclosed information about mother’s juvenile records to the CARES personnel who, in turn, recited it in a report that was provided to the parties.

At some point thereafter, DHS entered into a “voluntary service agreement” with mother which provided for further evaluations and a “safety plan” for the children to remain at home with mother. While mother was unrepresented by counsel and participating in the voluntary service agreement, she agreed to participate in two new evaluations. Among the materials that DHS provided to both evaluators were evaluations of mother that DHS obtained when she was a minor and in DHS’s custody as a foster child.

On February 1, 2011, a DHS caseworker talked to one of the current case evaluators. The next day the caseworker reviewed the other evaluator’s report. On February 3, DHS filed a petition asserting that D. M. and her three younger siblings were within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court. On the same day, the court entered a [389]*389shelter order, and counsel was appointed for mother. The records that DHS provided to the court and all parties at the shelter hearing included the CARES evaluation of D. M. and various assessment documents, which referred to evaluations of mother that occurred while she was a ward of the juvenile court.

On March 14, DHS submitted a court report to all the parties noting that mother had been evaluated by Dr. Basham and Dr. King while she was a ward in 2001. The report stated, “Please see Social File for the above mentioned evaluations.” Before the date set for a jurisdictional hearing on the petition, the state filed two motions to disclose mother’s protected health information from her current case evaluations, which included information pertaining to her earlier wardship evaluations. On April 21, a hearing on the state’s motions to disclose and a case settlement conference were concurrently scheduled. Before the motions to disclose could be heard, mother waived her right to a hearing on the dependency petition and made admissions that established juvenile court jurisdiction over her four youngest children. The admissions were the product of negotiations between mother and the state, and no evidence was offered or taken at the hearing. The admissions were:

“2A. The mothers’[s] cognitive limitations and history of mental illness combine to interfere with her ability to safely parent her children.
“2B. The mother has been subjected to domestic violence by [father], some of which occurred in the presence of the children.
“2C. Mother needs the assistance of the court and social service providers and an array of comprehensive services which will assist her to safely parent.”

The parties and the juvenile court then discussed the 2006 order. The court indicated that its 2006 order applied to both the DHS file and the court’s social file.

“[THE COURT]: Anything, any materials that the agency had in — how do I say this — In [mother’s] child’s or children’s file that they got from her file when she was a child, her dependency case, had to be removed from
“[STATE’S ATTORNEY]: the child’s—
[390]*390“[THE COURT]: I could give — back into her dependency file and treated as privileged. That was my intent.
“[STATE’S ATTORNEY]: Ok.
“[THE COURT]: So just because you happen to, your client happened to have an evaluation that was done when she was, I don’t know, 13 years old, when she was a dependent child, you can’t use that. That was my ruling at the time. You can’t use that — You can’t access that — You can’t do anything with that now.
“[STATE’S ATTORNEY]: For that child.
“[THE COURT]: All children.
“[STATE’S ATTORNEY]: Ok. It says specifically ‘in this her child’s dependency’ case and then again ‘in this case.’ So I guess that would be the agency’s first issue is that this was read to apply to that child. So—
“[THE COURT]: [STATE’S ATTORNEY], is there any dispute that the agency didn’t do what I told them to do? How else would they have this paperwork?
«íjí íjí * * *
“[THE COURT]: Ok, cause I’m not going to re-litigate this. It says that the material is privileged and as such shall be removed from any file in this her child’s dependency case and any reference to that materials shall be redacted from the social file in this case. So there’s an ‘and’ and there’s two different kinds of files.
“[STATE’S ATTORNEY]: So, Ok, so then the court, I’m just trying to make sure I’m understanding correctly. So the court’s position is that we cannot use anything from the person who is now the mom, we cannot use anything from her dependency file when she was a dependent in our care, as we move forward to evaluate safety concerns on her children who have now come in to care.”

The court and parties further discussed the application of the 2006 order to the current case, with DHS taking the position that mother’s earlier wardship evaluations provided pertinent background for any new psychological evaluation in this case:

“If the court were to say you cannot use the evals that were done when this was a voluntary case because you used [391]*391things that I told you not to use. Fine. Then we’ll talk about how do we move forward maybe, and [mother’s attorney] talked about maybe starting fresh with a new evaluator. But then the issue becomes, what can the agency provide to that new evaluator in terms of making sure that the evaluator has what we feel to be a full range of enough information that he understands the history of the case without running afoul of the court’s order * * *. And so that’s where it becomes relevant now.”

In the judgment that it entered following the April 21, 2011, hearing, the court accepted mother’s admissions, took jurisdiction, and ordered mother to

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Bluebook (online)
283 P.3d 952, 251 Or. App. 387, 2012 WL 3055651, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-human-services-v-m-r-orctapp-2012.