DS v. Department of Children and Families

900 So. 2d 628, 2005 WL 623284
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 18, 2005
Docket5D04-739
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 900 So. 2d 628 (DS v. Department of Children and Families) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DS v. Department of Children and Families, 900 So. 2d 628, 2005 WL 623284 (Fla. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

900 So.2d 628 (2005)

D.S., Mother of D.B., and T.A., Children, Appellant,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES, et al., Appellees.

No. 5D04-739.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

March 18, 2005.

*629 Lauren Zimmerman, Maitland, and J. Manuel Acevedo, Sanford, for Appellant.

Mark A. Skipper, of Dept. of Children and Families, Sanford, for Appellee.

Ryan Thomas Truskoski of Ryan Thomas Truskoski, P.A., Orlando, for Appellee Father—R.A.

SHARP, W., J.

D.S. (the mother)[1] appeals from an order which closed a dependency case of two of her three children, T.A. and D.B., and which granted permanent custody of T.A. and D.B. to their respective fathers R.A. (R.A., the father of T.A.) and T.B. (T.B, the father of D.B.). She argues that the trial court erred in closing the case as to these children and thus denying her reunification with them. We agree and reverse.

On April 19, 2003, at about 6:00 p.m., the mother left T.A., eight years old, and her young child N.B.,[2] asleep in her car while she took D.B. inside a Super Wal-Mart to go shopping. The car windows were left open. She was gone ten to fifteen minutes. When she came outside, she was given a citation by the Sanford Police Department. The mother said she thought it was okay to leave the children in the car because of T.A.'s age and because the children were asleep at the time.

The next day, A CPI investigator came to the mother's home and interviewed her. The investigator reported that the apartment in which the family lived was dirty, disorganized, cluttered, had food on the floor and that the kitchen was filthy with old food and dirty dishes. Dirty clothes were piled in the bedrooms and the children had no clean clothes. There was little food in the refrigerator, but there were dry and canned goods in the pantry.

The mother agreed to take part in Voluntary Protective Services and agreed to participate in the Home Makers Program and Healthy Families Program. However, the mother missed some appointments. On May 14, 2003, the mother was arrested by the Sanford Police Department for harboring, concealing or aiding an escaped prisoner. The charge was later reduced to accessory after the fact, which the state had moved to dismiss. The prisoner was D.B. ("D.B.," the father of N.B.) who had escaped from the Okeechobee Redirection Center. After the mother was arrested, T.A. and D.B were taken into protective custody.

A petition for dependency was filed as to the mother, and a case plan was prepared. The goals of the case plan were reunification of the children with the mother, reunification between D.B. and N.B., and to "maintain and strengthen" T.A.'s ties with R.A, and D.B.'s ties with T.B. The case *630 plan also recited that the children were strongly bonded with the mother. The mother consented to the dependency.

The case plan required the mother to complete a parenting class; to obtain and maintain stable housing; and upon reunification, to successfully complete a permanency planning program. The mother began the latter program on November 11, 2003 and it was to continue for six months. After ninety days, the children could go back into their mother's home and be reunified with her (i.e., on February 3, 2004).

R.A. and T.A. were found to be nonoffending parents, meaning they had done nothing to contribute to the children's dependency. T.A. was placed with R.A, in Jacksonville; D.B. was placed with T.B, in Deltona, and the youngest, N.B. was placed with her paternal grandmother in Sanford.

The predisposition study indicated that T.A. and D.B. both said the mother does not usually leave them unsupervised in the car. Neither were bruised or marked and both said their mother disciplined them by sending them to their bedrooms. D.B. said he went into Wal-Mart with his mother, and his sister and brother were left in the car because they were sleeping. All the children were in good physical health.

On November 19, 2003, a judicial review hearing was held before a general master. The general master found that the mother had substantially complied with the case plan and that all of the tasks had been completed save for the permanency plan, which was ongoing.

At the request of the Department and guardian ad litem (GAL), the general master ordered that the case plan be amended to require the mother to complete a psychological evaluation. The attorneys for the fathers wanted the general master to close the case as to T.A. and D.B., but he at first refused to do so because he said he needed the psychological examination to fully make a decision. He also said that if the mother did not need treatment and there was nothing wrong in the psychological evaluation, he might be reluctant to close the case as to T.A. and D.B.[3]

However, attorneys for R.A. and T.B. continued to argue that because the children were with their natural non-offending parents, they were no longer dependent.[4] The general master questioned whether it was acceptable to close the case as to T.A. and D.B. before the comprehensive assessments[5] were back. Ultimately, the general master was persuaded and decided to close the case as to these children. The mother underwent a psychological evaluation, which was favorable to her and which recommended that the children be reunited with her. This report was filed with the court prior to the January 20, 2004 *631 hearing on the mother's fourth motion for reunification. At that hearing, the court summarily denied the mother's motion, accepted the general master's recommendations, and ordered a change of custody from temporary to permanent in favor of R.A. and T.B.

On appeal, the Department claims that the children have been in the custody of their fathers for six months and have not been harmed.[6] It argues that there was a dual goal in the case plan: strengthening the ties of the children with R.A. and T.B. or reunification with the mother. A goal of strengthening ties of children with their father instead of reunifying them with their mother is permissible. F.M. v. Dept. of Children & Families, 807 So.2d 200 (Fla. 4th DCA 2002)(mother's case plan not required to have goal of reuniting her with daughter). We reject that argument in this case, because the goal was reunification of the children with the mother, reunification of N.B. with D.B. (the father of N.B.), and for T.A. and D.B. to "maintain and strengthen" [ties] with R.A. and T.B. The goals of reunification with the mother and maintaining and strengthening ties with R.A. and T.B. are not mutually exclusive.

We observe that both fathers had failed to pay child support until 2002, and R.A. was subject to garnishment. He was unemployed and he relied on $465 disability income, which was insufficient to meet the family's needs. R.A. had a long criminal history, including carrying a concealed weapon, cocaine possession, drug possession, criminal mischief (property damage) and probation violation. He had visited T.A. only a couple of times in the past and had ignored him and the mother since before birth. After he received temporary custody of T.A., he moved and could not be located by the Department, or his own attorney. He was ordered to appear in court, but failed to do so. And his disappearance had interfered with visitation between the mother and T.A.

T.B, who lived near the mother, was living with his "paramour," a caregiver for D.B., and both had been arrested for domestic violence burglary with a battery against T.B's ex-wife, although the charges were dismissed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
900 So. 2d 628, 2005 WL 623284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ds-v-department-of-children-and-families-fladistctapp-2005.