Frost and Burton v. DSCYF/DFS

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 24, 2025
Docket121 and 124, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of Frost and Burton v. DSCYF/DFS (Frost and Burton v. DSCYF/DFS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost and Burton v. DSCYF/DFS, (Del. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

GEORGE FROST § and JANE BURTON,1 § § No. 121 and 124, 2024 Respondents Below, § Consolidated Appellants, § § Court Below: Family Court v. § of the State of Delaware § DEPARTMENT OF SERVICES § File Nos. 23-02-1TK, 23-02-2TK FOR CHILDREN, YOUTH, AND § Petition Nos. 23-01898, 23-02179 THEIR FAMILIES (DSCYF/DFS), § § Petitioner Below, § Appellee. §

Submitted: December 4, 2024 Decided: February 24, 2025

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, and LEGROW, Justices.

ORDER

This 24th day of February, 2025, upon consideration of the parties’ briefs and

the record below, it appears to the Court that:

(1) The appellants (“Mother” and “Father”) share two sons: L.F., born

February 12, 2019, and T.F, born August 13, 2020. Father also has two sons from a

previous relationship: J.F., born October 12, 2013, and N.F., born October 22, 2015.

Mother and Father have jointly appealed a Family Court order (“TPR Order”) that

1 The Court previously assigned pseudonyms to the appellants under Supreme Court Rule 7(d). 1 terminated their respective parental rights to those four children (“the Children”).

Both Mother and Father have additional children with other partners, but those

children are not relevant in these proceedings.

(2) The Family Court held that Mother and Father failed to plan for the

Children’s physical needs and for their mental and emotional heath and development

as described by 13 Del. C. § 1103. The court further concluded that the Division of

Family Services (“the Division” or “DFS”) used reasonable efforts to prevent the

children’s removal and reunify the family, and that it was in the Children’s best

interest to terminate Mother and Father’s parental rights. Mother and Father appeal

each of the court’s findings and argue that the court abused its discretion in finding

clear and convincing evidence to terminate their parental rights. None of the

appellants’ arguments support reversal and we therefore AFFIRM the Family

Court’s order.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

(3) The Division’s contact with Mother and Father began several years

before the Children were removed from their care in 2022. Father and J.F. and N.F.’s

biological mother made numerous allegations of abuse and neglect against one

another, and Father was subject to several Protection from Abuse orders during their

marriage. The Division also received concerning reports about J.F. and N.F.’s

hygiene and the condition of the home. Mother and her two daughters (not subject

2 to this case) moved into Father’s home in 2018, shortly after his marriage to J.F. and

N.F.’s biological mother ended. Hotline reports and investigation by DFS during

this time once again revealed concerns about the Children’s hygiene and the

condition of the home.

(4) All four of the Children have extensive support needs. J.F. has a

diagnosis of Autism and developmental delays and was considered nonverbal while

in Mother and Father’s care due to his very limited speech. When he was removed

from Mother and Father’s care at age eight, J.F. was not yet toilet trained and wore

adult diapers. J.F. also requires extensive supports and specialized instruction for

his education. Father failed to address concerns raised by J.F.’s teacher during and

after the COVID-19 pandemic regarding J.F.’s skill regression associated with his

poor attendance and Father’s failure to accept school resources.2 J.F.’s teacher

observed that J.F. was often clothed only in a diaper and appeared unkempt during

online schooling sessions.

(5) N.F. was six years old when he was removed from Mother and Father’s

care, and he too was not toilet trained. N.F. has diagnoses of ADHD and disruptive

2 In April 2020, during the COVID-19 outbreak, J.F.’s school offered Chromebooks to each family to access virtual instruction. Father declined a Chromebook and instead chose to use his cell phone. J.F.’s teacher testified that the cell phone significantly limited the effectiveness of J.F.’s instruction because it did not permit the full use of interactive programs or allow her to determine whether J.F. was responding correctly. J.F. missed twenty-two days of instruction from March to June 2021, and twenty-four of thirty-six occupational therapy sessions between December 2020 and June 2021. 3 mood dysregulation disorder, exhibits aggression toward others, and engages in self-

harm. He also suffers from a chronic eye condition caused by the herpes virus. N.F.

alleged that Father mistreated him and required crisis services and hospitalization at

the Rockford Center several times during the Family Court proceedings.3

(6) L.F. and T.F. also have developmental delays and behavioral issues.

L.F. is diagnosed with Autism. The family received Early Head Start services from

August 2020 until August 31, 2023, to provide Mother and Father with tools and

skills to engage with L.F. and T.F. and develop their fine motor, cognitive, language,

and social skills.

(7) The Division received repeated reports regarding the condition of the

family’s home, which code enforcement ultimately condemned on October 6, 2021.

The code enforcement officer testified that:

. . . the odor was so bad in the home that [she] had to immediately return outside and get a mask just to continue the inspection. There was food, food waste, and trash on the floor and furniture, and [her] shoes stuck to the floor as she walked across it. There were signs of bedbugs, and cockroaches ran throughout the home. Fecal smears were on the walls and dirty diapers were on the floor.

The family resided at the Hope Center while their home was cleaned, and they

returned on December 23, 2021, when the condemnation order was lifted.

3 “[N.F.] has told his foster parent, Tiffany Adams, that he ‘is safe in foster care, because Ms. Gina [Baker] told my daddy you can’t hit me anymore, so now daddy is nice to me.’ Father denies mistreating [N.F.]” App. to OCA’s Answering Br. at C2. 4 (8) On January 21, 2022, Mother gave birth to another child, S.F, who died

at about three weeks of age. The Dover Police Department began investigating the

circumstances of S.F.’s death, and DFS received emergency ex parte custody of L.F.

and T.F on March 1, 2022, after unsuccessfully attempting to implement a safety

plan for Mother and Father.4 DFS also sought custody of J.F. and N.F. at that time,

but ultimately dismissed that petition and placed the two children with their

biological mother.

(9) On April 4, 2022, the Family Court held an Adjudicatory Hearing on

the Division’s petition for custody of L.F. and T.F. Mother and Father presented

evidence that some of the conditions that led to the home’s condemnation were the

landlord’s responsibility. The court found that Mother and Father were “not

currently able to meet the children’s basic needs on a fulltime basis.”5 The Family

Court also found that DFS had used reasonable efforts to maintain the family and

prevent Children’s unnecessary removal from the home.6

4 DFS entered into a series of safety agreements to keep the children in the home. The final safety agreement was developed on or about February 17, 2022, and required that Gwen Barber stay with the family and supervise the care of the children. Barber testified that Father locked her out of the home on March 1, 2022, and the parents were unresponsive to attempts to contact them.

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