Dinkins v. Arkansas Department of Human Services

34 S.W.3d 366, 71 Ark. App. 451, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 739
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 22, 2000
DocketCA 00-385
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 34 S.W.3d 366 (Dinkins v. Arkansas Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dinkins v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 34 S.W.3d 366, 71 Ark. App. 451, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 739 (Ark. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

JOSEPHINE Linker Hart, Judge.

Tiffany Dinkins appeals a J court order that terminates her parental rights pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341 (Supp. 1999). She argues that the chancellor’s finding that she failed to correct the conditions that caused the children’s removal are clearly erroneous and that he erroneously concluded that she failed to provide significant material support for her children. We agree with appellant and reverse and remand.

On March 24, 1997, Dinkins was nine-months pregnant and applied for assistance from the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS). At this time a DHS agent, Juanita Turner, noticed a facial bruise on the right cheek and right ear of appellant’s four-year-old daughter, K.D., who stated she was hit by Dinkins. On the following day, Turner conducted a two-hour at-home interview with Dinkins, who was living in a two-bedroom trailer with her eighty-year-old godmother and her three children — K.M., aged twenty-two months; K.R.D., aged three; and K.D. Turner reported that the trailer was disheveled — two garbage cans overflowing with dirty diapers and garbage; pots, pans, and dishes with food cluttering the stove, sink, and counter areas; a strong odor of soured food emanating from the kitchen; clothes on the floor of every room; dried pieces of food and other debris embedded in the carpet of every room; empty beverage cans on the bedroom floor; and dressers overflowing with clothes. During the visit, K.M.’s feces-fifled diaper was not changed and K.D. revealed numerous multi-colored bruises on her neck, face, right ear, arms, and legs along with scratch marks under her chin. Turner further observed a red welt on the palm of K.D.’s hand that she said was caused when Dinkins stuck her with a tweezer. K.D. and K.R.D. said that Dinkins slapped them in the face and hit them with a stick.

The children were taken to Mainline Health Systems by Turner for an examination on March 26. At this time, Turner noticed that K.D. and K.R.D. had bruises on the left side of their chests that were, according to them, caused by Dinkins hitting them with a belt. K.R.D. also stated that she was hit in the face by a shoe thrown at her by Dinkins.

Based on the living conditions along with the fact that Dinkins’s first prenatal visit for her pregnancy was several days earlier and her only means of support was her godmother, Turner concluded that the juveniles were in substantial danger of continued maltreatment. An ex parte juvenile court order removed the children from Dinkins’s custody, and thereafter another order found probable cause of dependency/neglect and ordered DHS to retain custody of the children. Although the juvenile court’s adjudication order left the children in DHS’s custody, it allowed Dinkins to visit the children in a manner prescribed by DHS. The court further found that the goal of the case was reunification commensurate with the objectives and tasks contained in DHS’s case plan, and required Dinkins to attend mental health counseling and complete parenting classes. Finally, the court, pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-346 (Repl. 1998), declared that Dinkins did not have the ability to pay child support although she had an obligation to do so.

During the following two years, the children remained in DHS’s custody, and the case was reviewed nine times.1 Except for the July 8, 1999, order following the final review, every order found that the goal of the case would be reunification. The court further found that Dinkins had substantially complied with the orders of the court and DHS’s case plan in orders dated November 5, 1997; April 13, 1998; October 7, 1998; December 15, 1998; and April 27, 1999. In fact, the chancellor found that her progress was so substantial that he ordered DHS to allow unsupervised, at-home visitation following the December 15, 1998, hearing, and, thereafter, DHS consequently granted her at-home visitation with the children every weekend.2

This case took a markedly different tone during the final two review hearings.3 DHS in its February 18, 1999, court report recommended that if Dinkins remained in compliance with court orders and the case plan, then it would recommend at the March 1, 1999, hearing that she be given at-home visitation with the children for thirty days. However, at the hearing, the chancellor refused to allow the children to have any unsupervised visitation after reviewing six photographs taken by a housing authority agent that showed Dinkins’s home in a generally messy condition such as clothes strewn on furniture and dishes in the kitchen sink and, according to him, potentially dangerous because cleaning solutions were on a kitchen counter. The record, however, was silent as to whether the bottle-tops of these items were properly fastened. Nevertheless, the chancellor’s dissatisfaction was apparently so strong that he abolished the weekend visitation that DHS had arranged pursuant to a previous court order.

Approximately three months later, DHS petitioned the court to terminate Dinkins’s parental rights despite the fact that little had changed since its previous effort to obtain the court’s permission to give Dinkins at-home visitation with her children for thirty days.4 The last review hearing was conducted on May 11, 1999. At that hearing, the chancellor found that there was overwhelming evidence that the goal of the case should be termination of parental rights. At the hearing on the termination petition on August 5, 1999, Vickie Gibbs, a family service worker; Turner, the DHS agent; Mark Wargo, a psychological examiner from Delta Counseling Associates; Dinkins; and K.D., one of Dinkins’s children, testified.

Gibbs testified that the children had remained in foster care for over two years and that from the beginning the goal had been reunification. Pursuant to the case plan, Dinkins was responsible for maintaining a clean house, completing counseling, and otherwise cooperating with DHS. She testified that Dinkins acquired an apartment from the housing authority in Crossett, and in the beginning she kept the apartment clean, but later it became inappropriate for children. She was convinced that the apartment was unsafe because of photographs of the apartment depicting a bottle of bleach on the counter along with dete'rgent that the children could reach, a sink filled with dishes, a water-filled bucket on the floor, piles of clothes throughout the house, and a table covered with items. She specifically expressed the opinion that the mop bucket and the bleach were safety hazards, and further testified that Dinkins had been given an eviction notice as a result of these conditions along with her failure to timely pay rent.

Dinkins also had approximately four different jobs during the time the children were in DHS’s care, according to Gibbs. Although she admitted that Dinkins had been financially able to feed and clothe her children, Gibbs opined that Dinkins did not have enough money to support the children in DHS’s care and the two children at home.5 She also admitted that she could not give a documented example in which Dinkins did not cooperate with DHS, and that earlier that year she recommended that the children be placed back in Dinkins’s home.

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Related

Browning v. Arkansas Department of Human Services
157 S.W.3d 540 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2004)
Dinkins v. Arkansas Department of Human Services
40 S.W.3d 286 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W.3d 366, 71 Ark. App. 451, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinkins-v-arkansas-department-of-human-services-arkctapp-2000.