Dep't of Human Servs. v. K. J. (In re K. L. J.)

435 P.3d 819, 295 Or. App. 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 3, 2019
DocketA167859
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 435 P.3d 819 (Dep't of Human Servs. v. K. J. (In re K. L. J.)) 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
Dep't of Human Servs. v. K. J. (In re K. L. J.), 435 P.3d 819, 295 Or. App. 544 (Or. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

AOYAGI, J.

*545This is a dependency case involving a young boy, K. The juvenile court originally asserted jurisdiction over K based on several admissions by mother (including drug use) and an admission by father that father has significant medical issues that interfere with his ability to parent. The court later added as an additional jurisdictional basis that father lacks sufficient and stable housing for the child. In a permanency judgment, the court ordered father to undergo a psychological evaluation. Father appeals that judgment, arguing that the evaluation bears no rational relationship to the jurisdictional bases. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand.

We review the juvenile court's legal conclusions for errors of law and its findings for any evidence. Dept. of Human Services v. B. W. , 249 Or. App. 123, 125, 275 P.3d 989 (2012).

K was born in 2015. In March 2017, the juvenile court asserted jurisdiction over K based on admissions by mother and father. Because mother is not a party to this appeal, we limit our discussion to the jurisdictional bases pertaining to father. The original basis for jurisdiction was that father has "significant medical issues that interfere with his ability to parent and needs assistance from the court and state to ensure the welfare of the child." In March 2018, the court added as an additional basis for jurisdiction that "father currently lacks sufficient and stable housing for the child."1

On April 24, 2018-more than a year after it first asserted jurisdiction over K-the juvenile court held a permanency hearing at which Stan, a DHS caseworker, *546testified about the "barriers" to K returning home to father at that point. Stan's written report also was admitted into evidence.

Stan began her testimony about father by saying that there had been "some concerns about [father's] medical needs in the beginning" but that DHS had "kind of got past that when his doctor signed a release stating that he's only being seen for diabetes, hypertension *821, and chronic back pain." Father had recently provided the release letter at DHS's request. Still, Stan testified, there were "some concerns back to the medical stuff" because, "at least six months" before the hearing, father had told Stan that he needed a double hip replacement and a kidney transplant, which did not appear to be true. Father also had posted on Facebook that he had renal cancer, which did not appear to be true. When Stan spoke with father about the Facebook post, father told her that "he can post what he wants and he doesn't care" and that "he's going to continue to post what he wants; it's freedom of speech." Asked whether father mispresenting the need for a hip replacement was a barrier to reunification, Stan answered that it was "not a barrier" to reunification but was "about truth in his medical since we have that allegation." It was an issue of having "accurate information about [father's] medical condition."

Stan next addressed father's housing, which she identified as the main barrier to reunification: "But it's mainly housing, and we've dealt with the housing now for probably six to eight months." At the time of the hearing, father was living with his mother in a senior living community that does not allow children. Father, who lacks financial resources, was waiting for a decision on his social security application. In the weeks before the hearing, father had followed through on most or all of DHS's housing recommendations, including getting on "the housing list" (which had a four-year wait) and interviewing for Oxford House housing. Stan did not dispute that father had done so but indicated a belief that father should have acted sooner on DHS's recommendations. Father needed "to obtain safe appropriate housing for himself and his child" before DHS would return K to father's care. In response to questioning by DHS's attorney, *547Stan agreed that a psychological evaluation of father "might be helpful to identifying what the barrier is with relation to housing" because "there could be some unidentified barrier that a psychological evaluation might reveal about how best to approach this with Father in such a way that he can fully engage with pursuing housing."

At the end of the permanency hearing, the juvenile court ruled that it was going to continue jurisdiction over K. It then asked whether DHS was requesting a psychological evaluation, and DHS answered affirmatively. Father objected that "there's nothing even close to a rational relationship between [the jurisdictional bases] and a psychological evaluation." Father argued that he had been trying to get housing, had a plan to get housing, and was not at fault for not yet having housing. The court asked K's attorney for K's position. K's attorney conceded that a psychological evaluation was not rationally related to the jurisdictional basis regarding housing but suggested that father's "psychological and emotional wellbeing" could be viewed as a "medical" issue.

The juvenile court ordered father to undergo a psychological evaluation, stating:

"In my reviewing of the case law regarding psychological evaluations, * * * it doesn't require a kind of a specific mental health allegation. It simply needs to have some rational relationship. And frankly, you know, Father does have a right to say whatever he wants to about his medical condition, but if he's talking about medical conditions that would affect his ability to care for a child, then he shouldn't be upset when other people make decisions based on what he's saying.
"And so, it also causes me * * * some concern about what's going on. What * * * is that a reflection of? And as far as his functioning, if he feels like he needs to tell people that he has these medical conditions if he does not have them.
"And so, I am going to * * * order a psychological evaluation for Dad."

On appeal from the permanency judgment, which incorporates that order, father contends that there is no rational relationship between a psychological evaluation and the *548jurisdictional bases.2 The state disagrees *822and argues that there is a rational relationship to both jurisdictional bases.

We recently discussed the origin of the "rational relationship" requirement and our existing case law applying that requirement to orders of psychological evaluations of parents in dependency cases in Dept. of Human Services v. A. F. , 295 Or. App. 69, 78-79,

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Bluebook (online)
435 P.3d 819, 295 Or. App. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dept-of-human-servs-v-k-j-in-re-k-l-j-orctapp-2019.