E.C. v. District of Columbia

589 A.2d 1245, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 99, 1991 WL 64296
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 1991
Docket90-1218, 90-1241 and 90-1242
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 589 A.2d 1245 (E.C. v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E.C. v. District of Columbia, 589 A.2d 1245, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 99, 1991 WL 64296 (D.C. 1991).

Opinion

ROGERS, Chief Judge:

In this expedited appeal, appellant E.C., the natural father of three young boys, appeals from an order terminating his parental rights on the ground that the judge’s findings were not supported by clear and convincing evidence. 1 Specifically, he claims that the trial judge relied on outdated, minimally relevant information regarding E.C.’s emotional condition and current parenting abilities, erred in finding that the children were very adoptable, and abused his discretion in considering a stepdaughter’s testimony about alleged sexual molestation and the attempt to defraud her of insurance money. Upon review of the record, we find no error or abuse of discretion by the trial judge, whose findings and conclusions appropriately address all statutory requirements, and accordingly we affirm.

I

This case involves three children who were first brought to the attention of the District of Columbia Department of Human Services in 1983. After assisting the parents, the Department eventually placed the children in shelter care in 1986. 2 The parents entered into a stipulation of neglect in June 1987. 3 In the next year and a half, the children were placed in five foster homes while the Department continued efforts to reunite the family. 4 When the natural parents failed to follow through on recommended parenting classes, marital counseling and therapy, these efforts ended, and counsel for the children filed a motion to terminate parental rights on October 16, 1989, noting that an adoptive home had been found for the children. Neither parent personally appeared during the five days on which the trial judge heard testimony on the motion, although both were personally served with a summons and complaint notifying them of the termination hearing and counsel appeared for them at the hearing. The judge granted the motion to terminate and issued written findings and conclusions on September 10, 1990. We summarize the evidence relevant to the issues raised on appeal.

Two expert witnesses offered testimony about E.C.’s mental condition and its effect on the children. Dr. Michael Spevak, a psychiatrist who had evaluated E.C. in 1987 *1247 at the request of the court in connection with the neglect petition, testified that E.C. suffered from a character disorder which caused him to view everyone around him with deep suspicion and to deny any personal responsibility for events in his life, and hindered his ability to have any insight into his problems. Dr. Spevak explained the various ways in which a parent who suffers from such a character disorder could cause severe emotional damage in his or her children. The emotional problems that he observed in E.C. were, in Dr. Spe-vak’s opinion, virtually intractable; even prolonged therapy would be unlikely to have more than a “minimal” effect in improving E.C.’s abilities as a parent. 5

Psychologist Rachel M. Petty, an expert in child psychology and the evaluation of parent-child relationships, testified about the damaging effect the parents’ behavior had on the children. Dr. Petty evaluated the two younger boys following their removal from the home and observed the parents during their visits with the children. Dr. Petty found the children “significantly” developmental^ impaired in a number of ways, exhibiting deficiencies in verbal and interpersonal skills. The parents, in turn, appeared “overwhelmed” by the children during the visits; they were unable to relate to their children in an appropriate manner, appearing, for example, unable to pay attention to each of the three children in turn, instead lavishing attention on whichever child “screamed the most” during a particular visit, while ignoring the other two, and allowing the children to gorge on food until they vomited. After the visits, the children appeared very upset, and Dr. Petty was of the opinion that the two younger children did not appear to have bonded with their parents. The impact of the youngest child’s failure to bond was so severe that, although only fifteen months old, he would not allow people to hold him and did not respond to his name.

Four foster mothers with whom the children were subsequently placed testified that the placements, which otherwise worked well, were marred by the conduct of the natural parents, causing two foster mothers to insist that the children be removed from their homes, while another made such a request but later withdrew it. The foster parents testified that the parents made harassing telephone calls, as many as ten in one night to one foster parent, in which they threatened foster parents with physical harm and promised to kidnap the children when they were unattended. 6 The telephone calls also had a negative effect on the children, the foster mothers reporting that the children became very upset when they were allowed to speak to their parents on the telephone. In addition, the foster mothers advised that visits with their parents had a very negative effect on the children: the eldest would behave uncontrollably for days after a visit, the middle child would wet the bed, and the youngest would inflict deep scratches on his arms. The foster mothers also confirmed testimony regarding the sporadic nature of the parents’ visits with the children, noting that they frequently brought the children to the Department for parental visits only to discover that the parents had failed to appear.

Ms. Wisdom, the supervisory social worker in the Child and Family Service Division of the Department, who had been the caseworker for the children from October 1987 to April 1989, reviewed the history of Department plans and efforts to reunite the family, the natural parents’ failures to fol *1248 low through on these efforts, and their sporadic efforts to visit their children. 7 The visits that occurred with the children had to be closely supervised due to E.C.’s unpredictable behavior. 8 Ms. Wisdom noted that the placement of the children in five foster homes was “very unusual,” but necessary as a result of the natural parents’ aggressive and hostile behavior towards the foster parents.

With regard to the children’s relationship to their natural parents, Ms. Wisdom testified that the children looked to the foster parents for day to day care as their parents. The two youngest children had not stated any wishes with regard to their parents, and the oldest child cried when his parents failed to show up for visits. Based on their ages and capabilities and the absence of any significant health problem, Ms. Wisdom thought that they were adoptable, recounting that one family had been interested in adopting the children and that subsequently two other interested families had been cleared by the Department. 9

Finally, over objection, a daughter of D.C. and stepdaughter of E.C. testified that when she was thirteen years old, E.C.

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Bluebook (online)
589 A.2d 1245, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 99, 1991 WL 64296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ec-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1991.