E.W., O.W. v. J.W.

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 17, 2014
Docket82A04-1401-AD-40
StatusPublished

This text of E.W., O.W. v. J.W. (E.W., O.W. v. J.W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana 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.W., O.W. v. J.W., (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Nov 17 2014, 10:32 am

FOR PUBLICATION

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: JULIANNE L. FOX GLENN A GRAMPP Fox & Lutz, LLC Evansville, Indiana Evansville, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

E. W., ) ) Appellant/Plaintiff-Petitioner, ) ) O. W., ) ) Co-Appellant/Plaintiff-Petitioner, ) ) vs. ) No. 82A04-1401-AD-40 ) J. W., ) ) Appellee-Respondent, )

APPEAL FROM THE VANDERBURGH SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Brett Niemeier, Judge Cause No. 82D01-0803-JP-91 Cause No. 82D07-1211-AD-166 Cause No. 82D03-1210-PO-5227

November 17, 2014

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

ROBB, Judge Case Summary and Issues

The appellants in this matter, E.W. (“Father”) and O.W. (“Grandmother”)

(collectively, “Appellants”), appeal from the trial court’s orders in favor of J.W.

(“Mother”) in three consolidated causes, two of which concern Father and Mother’s

child, R.W. The trial court issued separate orders denying Grandmother’s petition to

adopt R.W., denying Father’s petition to terminate Mother’s parenting time, and denying

Father’s petition for a permanent protection order against Mother. Appellants raise three

issues for our review: (1) whether the trial court’s denial of Grandmother’s petition for

adoption is clearly erroneous; (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying

Father’s request to terminate Mother’s parenting time; and (3) whether the trial court

erred by denying Father’s petition for a protection order against Mother. We conclude

the trial court’s decisions regarding the petition for adoption and request to terminate

parenting time were not erroneous, and we affirm those decisions in all respects.

However, we conclude the trial court’s order relating to Father’s petition for a protection

order did not comply with Indiana Trial Rule 52(A), and we remand for further

proceedings on that issue. Accordingly, we affirm in part and remand.

Facts and Procedural History

Mother and Father share one child together: R.W. On May 12, 2010, due to

Mother’s issues with drug abuse and her relationship with an abusive spouse, Father was

granted primary physical custody of R.W. Mother’s visitation was restricted to a single

three-hour visit per week at the Parenting Time Center at Mother’s expense. The trial

2 court ordered that Mother’s child support obligation was limited to one-half of any

medical, pharmaceutical, and dental expenses.

On November 4, 2011, Mother filed a motion to modify custody and a request for

additional parenting time. A hearing was held on that motion at which Mother testified

that she was no longer abusing illegal drugs, and the trial court ordered Mother to submit

to a drug test. Mother did not appear for the drug test, and the trial court presumed

Mother’s nonattendance meant that she would have tested positive. On April 24, 2012,

the trial court issued an order denying Mother’s request for additional parenting time.

Rather than terminate Mother’s parenting time, the trial court ordered that Mother would

continue to have three-hour visitations on a weekly basis to be supervised by the maternal

grandmother. Additionally, the trial court ordered that “[n]either Mother nor [maternal]

grandmother may bring [R.W.] gifts unless it is the child’s birthday, Christmas, or other

holiday.” Appellant’s Appendix at 83-84. Finally, the trial court’s order noted that “[i]f

Father has a reasonable suspicion that Mother is under the influence of drugs, Father may

request Mother submit to a hair follicle test and/or urinalysis test at her expense up to

three times per year.” Id. at 84.

Mother continued with her visitation, as ordered, until September 2012, when

Father requested that Mother submit to a hair follicle test. Mother did not comply with

Father’s request, and Father unilaterally discontinued Mother’s visitation and refused to

allow any communication between Mother and R.W. Thereafter, a number of motions

and petitions from Mother, Father, and Grandmother were filed in relatively short

succession.

3 On October 11, 2012, Father filed a motion to terminate Mother’s parenting time.

On October 22, 2012, Father filed for and received an ex parte protection order against

Mother. On November 5, 2012, Grandmother filed her petition to adopt R.W., to which

Father gave consent conditioned on the retention of his parental rights. Also on

November 5, 2012, Mother filed a request to hold Father in contempt for violation of the

trial court’s order regarding Mother’s visitation. All of the above were consolidated into

the present cause. A hearing on these matters was held over the course of three days in

September 2013.

After Father obtained primary custody of R.W. in May 2010, Mother continued to

struggle with drug abuse and with involvement in abusive relationships. Mother had

some issues with methamphetamine use and was a habitual marijuana smoker. Most

recently, Mother was arrested in March 2013 for driving while intoxicated. However, in

the six months preceding the September 2013 hearings, Mother was no longer in an

abusive relationship and was drug free.

At the time of the September 2013 hearing, Father had not allowed Mother to see

or communicate with R.W. for an entire year. Prior to Father’s decision to disallow

visitation, Mother had visited six straight weeks prior to September 12, 2012, and Mother

made use of a majority of her weekly visitation opportunities going back one year from

that date. Mother’s visitation with R.W. was largely without incident, and it is clear that

R.W. loves Mother. Mother had a number of gifts saved that she had been unable to give

to R.W. in the last year.

4 Sarah Dotson, a caseworker with the Indiana Department of Child Services

(“DCS”), testified at the hearing. She explained that she was acquainted with Mother

because DCS filed a case alleging that R.W.’s half-sibling, who was in Mother’s care,

was a child in need of services (“CHINS”). The CHINS proceeding was instituted in

March 2013, and Dotson stated that Mother had cooperated with DCS and provided clean

drug screens since that time. The child at issue in the CHINS proceeding had been

returned to Mother, and the CHINS matter was set to close in November 2013.

On October 15, 2013, the trial court issued three separate orders. The first order

denied Grandmother’s petition for adoption, concluding Mother’s consent was required

for adoption. The second order denied Father’s motion to terminate Mother’s parenting

time and denied Mother’s request to hold Father in contempt. The third order denied

Father’s request for a permanent protection order. Father and Grandmother filed motions

to correct error as to the issues of adoption, parenting time, and the protection order. The

trial court denied those motions to correct error on December 19, 2013. This appeal

followed. Additional facts will be supplied as necessary.

Discussion and Decision

I. Adoption

Grandmother filed a petition to adopt R.W., which Mother contested. The trial

court denied Grandmother’s petition, concluding that Mother’s consent was necessary.

Appellants argue that Mother’s consent is unnecessary for three reasons: (1) Mother is

unfit to be a parent and the best interests of the child would be served if her consent was

not required; (2) Mother has unjustifiably failed to communicate significantly with R.W.

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