Hickman v. Futty

489 S.E.2d 232, 25 Va. App. 420, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 548
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 19, 1997
Docket2191963
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 489 S.E.2d 232 (Hickman v. Futty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickman v. Futty, 489 S.E.2d 232, 25 Va. App. 420, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 548 (Va. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

ANNUNZIATA, Judge.

Jennifer Rebecca Hickman appeals the final order of the circuit court granting the adoption of her child without her consent to Jeffrey Scott Futty and Patricia Irene Kennedy Futty. She contends the evidence does not support the court’s finding that she withheld her consent to the adoption contrary to the child’s best interests. The disposition of this appeal turns on a construction and application of Code § 63.1-225.1, which has not been addressed by the Virginia appellate courts heretofore. We find that Code § 63.1-225.1 codifies the standard promulgated by the Virginia appellate courts in cases decided under prior law and that the evidence in the present case supports the circuit court’s finding under that standard.

I.

K.D.M. (child) was born on February 7, 1992. Appellant, Jennifer Rebecca Hickman (Hickman), is the child’s birth mother. James Clayton Miller, Sr. (Miller) is the child’s birth father. Hickman and Miller were never married. They lived together until Miller was incarcerated three weeks after the child’s birth, following which Hickman and the child lived at the Salvation Army. Appellees, Jeffrey Scott Futty and Patricia Irene Kennedy Futty (Futtys), thereafter took Hickman and the child into their home. Mrs. Futty is the child’s paternal grandmother. Hickman remained with the child in the Futtys’ home for seven weeks, until Mrs. Futty asked her to leave. Hickman was under investigation for welfare fraud, and the Futtys were granted custody of the child. In August 1992, Hickman and Miller were granted limited, supervised visitation.

*423 In February 1996, the Futtys filed a petition to adopt the child. The Campbell County Department of Social Services (DSS) prepared a home study report addressing the placement of the child for adoption with the Futtys. Ultimately, DSS recommended the Futtys as suitable adoptive parents for the child. DSS reported that the Futtys’ home was the only home the child had ever known, that the child identified only the Futtys as her parents, and that the Futtys, as well as the Futtys’ children, treated the child as part of their family. The evidence showed that the child was thriving in the Futtys’ home, which was described as stable and loving. There is no dispute concerning the suitability of the Futtys as custodians of the child.

Miller consented to the adoption. Hickman did not. At the circuit court hearing, Hickman agreed that the Futtys provided a suitable home for the child. She disagreed, however, that the Futtys should be allowed to adopt the child. Hickman reported to DSS that she had never been given a chance to parent the child and only wanted to prove that she could. At the hearing, Hickman testified that she wanted the child to stay with the Futtys until she could get on her feet and establish a mother/daughter relationship.

Hickman admitted, however, that she did not have “much of a relationship” with the child. Indeed, since she was granted visitation in August 1992, Hickman visited the child only nine times, for “very short” periods, and most recently in June 1995, eight months before the petition for adoption was filed. Over the four-year period, Hickman phoned the Futtys only once. Since the Futtys gained custody of the child in April 1992, Hickman had not petitioned for custody or additional visitation, and she had provided no financial support for the child.

Hickman attributed the infrequency of her visits and her failure to pursue custody to her “very abusive” relationship with Miller, which did not end until the Spring of 1995. She testified that she was afraid of Miller and that she had not sought custody of the child because she believed it to be in the *424 child’s best interests to remain with the Futtys while her relationship with Miller continued. Hickman also reported to DSS that she was reluctant to visit the child at the Futtys’ residence because Miller was present each time she went. She reported that she wanted to visit the child without Miller being present. Hickman further reported to DSS that Mrs. Futty did not like her because she was dating a black man and that the Futtys were racist. She also testified that her visitation problems were due in part to transportation difficulties.

The Futtys denied the allegation that they were racist and denied having hindered Hickman’s visitation rights. Miller testified that he had done nothing to prevent Hickman from visiting the child. The DSS social worker testified that she was unaware of any efforts by Miller to prevent visitation by Hickman, although she acknowledged that Miller had been incarcerated for thirteen months for “beating on” Hickman. The Futtys both reported to DSS and testified at the hearing that on all but one of Hickman’s visitations she had accompanied Miller to visit the child. In April 1994, Hickman gave birth to another child (the infant), which Miller had fathered.

At the circuit court hearing, the DSS social worker testified that she did not believe Hickman was able to care for the child. She pointed to Hickman’s difficulty in caring for the infant and noted the intervention of Child Protective Services to monitor Hickman’s ability to parent the infant and a health condition of the infant that required special attention. The social worker also pointed to Hickman’s recent job loss and inability to maintain a residence. DSS reported one founded complaint against Hickman for lack of supervision and two founded complaints against Hickman and Miller for medical and physical neglect of the child.

In preparing its report, DSS attempted but was unable to contact Hickman in June and July 1995 at the address they had listed for her. Subsequently, DSS scheduled a home visit with Hickman at another address. When DSS arrived, the homeowner reported that she had taken Hickman in because *425 Hickman was her son’s friend. One morning, the homeowner woke to find Hickman and the infant asleep on her back porch. Eventually, however, the homeowner “kicked [Hickman] out, [because she] could not put up with her laziness.” The homeowner reported that “[a]ll [Hickman] wanted to do was sleep all day and eat. She did not want to get a job and help pay for food.” The homeowner provided DSS a forwarding address at which DSS was able to locate Hickman. Hickman and the infant subsequently left that address and lived in an emergency shelter, following which they again lived with “some friends.” DSS reported that most recently, Hickman and the infant were living in a residence with nine other people. Hickman testified that since August 1992, she had been incarcerated three times, twice for two-week periods and once for a month. She further testified that since leaving the Futtys’ residence in April 1992 she had lived in eight separate locations.

DSS reported that Hickman had been fired from a job at Hardee’s. By the time of the hearing, Hickman had regained her employment at Hardee’s, having worked at McDonald’s and Subway in the interim. At the hearing, Hickman testified that she had acquired a car two days earlier and that she expected to have an apartment of her own in two months.

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Bluebook (online)
489 S.E.2d 232, 25 Va. App. 420, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickman-v-futty-vactapp-1997.