IDHW v. Jane Doe (2017-33)

CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 2018
StatusUnpublished

This text of IDHW v. Jane Doe (2017-33) (IDHW v. Jane Doe (2017-33)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IDHW v. Jane Doe (2017-33), (Idaho Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 45456

In the Interest of: DOE CHILDREN, ) Children Under Eighteen (18) Years of ) Age. ) IDAHO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH ) 2018 Unpublished Opinion No. 371 AND WELFARE, ) ) Filed: February 26, 2018 Petitioner-Respondent, ) ) Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk v. ) ) THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED JANE DOE (2017-33), ) OPINION AND SHALL NOT ) BE CITED AS AUTHORITY Respondent-Appellant. ) )

Appeal from the Magistrate Division of the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, State of Idaho, Ada County. Hon. Michael Lojek, Magistrate.

Judgment terminating parental rights, affirmed.

Anthony R. Geddes, Ada County Public Defender; John R. Shackelford, Deputy Public Defender, Boise, for appellant.

Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Brent King, Deputy Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. ________________________________________________

GUTIERREZ, Judge Jane Doe (“Mother”) appeals the judgment terminating her parental rights to her children John Doe I, John Doe II, Jane Doe I, and Jane Doe II. Mother argues that the magistrate’s findings that Mother subjected the children to chronic neglect and that it was in the children’s best interests to terminate Mother’s parental rights are not supported by clear and convincing evidence. For the following reasons, we affirm.

1 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On June 8, 2016, Mother was arrested, and her four children were placed in foster care. On January 18, 2017, the magistrate conducted a hearing on the State’s motion for early permanency. Following the hearing, the court approved a permanent plan of termination and adoption and ordered the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare (“IDHW”) to continue to make reasonable efforts to reunify the children with the parents pursuant to the Adoption and Safe Families Act. The State filed its termination petition on February 8, 2017. Mother gave birth to a fifth child while this case was pending. IDHW has not initiated proceedings to remove this fifth child from Mother’s custody. The termination trial began on July 18, 2017, and continued on August 16, August 17, and August 18, 2017. The State, Mother, Father, and guardian ad litem were all represented by counsel at trial. 1 The State’s first witness was a detective from the Boise Police Department’s Special Victims Unit. This detective had been tasked with retrieving Mother’s children after Mother was arrested on June 8, 2016. The detective went to Mother’s residence but the children were not present, and the detective could not gain access. However, the detective was able to see into the residence, noticing that it was very cluttered with numerous items stacked up against windows and exit doors. The detective also observed two individuals enter the residence and then smelled the odor of marijuana. The children were eventually handed off to the detective by a woman who had been asked to bring them to the detective by a different woman who was looking after them. When the children were delivered to the detective, they were dirty and all they had eaten was hot dogs. One child was sweaty, pale and vomiting, which the paramedics diagnosed as heat exhaustion, and another child was sunburned. The detective’s description of the children’s condition on that day is consistent with the testimony of one of the foster parents. This foster parent testified that when the two girls were delivered to them, one was missing shoes and underwear and was suffering from dehydration, which was causing diarrhea and vomiting, while the other was wearing shoes that were too small for her. A child welfare social worker from IDHW then provided some background, explaining that the children had been removed from Mother’s custody in 2014 and placed in foster care, but

1 The Father represented at trial is only the father of the oldest boy. The other children have different fathers. 2 that Mother was able to regain custody. The social worker then testified as to what he was told by Mother after the 2016 arrest, with the important admission being that Mother was using meth and allowing others to use meth at her house. A police officer employed by the Boise Police Department then testified as to the events that occurred on May 20, 2016, when the officer responded to a call regarding two unattended children. Upon arriving, the officer noticed that the children were dirty and disheveled. The officer observed that the house was very cluttered and dirty, with broken furniture and garbage in the bedrooms, rendering them uninhabitable. Mother informed the officer that the children slept in the living room on a couple of couches, which were surrounded by piles of dirty clothes. A licensed certified professional counselor, a trauma therapist who taught Protective Parenting Classes that Mother participated in, and a psychologist who evaluated Mother in January of 2015 also testified. The counselor explained that the psychological condition of each child worsened once the children had been around their mother. The counselor also recalled a specific incident where Mother revealed in front of one of her daughters that the daughter had genital warts from being sexually abused by another foster caregiver and that now people were not going to want to touch the daughter. The trauma therapist testified that Mother had expressed the need to take accountability for her actions, including using drugs, exposing her children to unsafe people, and being absent. The psychologist’s report, which was admitted into evidence, included a summarized account of an exchange between Mother and the psychologist. In this exchange, Mother claimed that the children were not left unsupervised outside, despite her not being around to monitor them, because a neighbor and others in the neighborhood would supervise the children. In the same exchange, Mother also admitted that she let her oldest son, who was not yet nine years old, hang out with another child who convinced the son to try cigarettes. Numerous other lay and professional witnesses also provided testimony at trial. After the trial concluded, the magistrate entered a judgment terminating Mother’s parental rights to the children on October 17, 2017. Mother timely appealed. II. ANALYSIS A parent has a fundamental liberty interest in maintaining a relationship with his or her child. Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 65 (2000); Doe v. State, 137 Idaho 758, 760, 53 P.3d

3 341, 343 (2002). This interest is protected by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. State v. Doe, 144 Idaho 839, 842, 172 P.3d 1114, 1117 (2007). Implicit in the Termination of Parent and Child Relationship Act is the philosophy that, wherever possible, family life should be strengthened and preserved. I.C. § 16-2001(2). Therefore, the requisites of due process must be met when terminating the parent-child relationship. State v. Doe, 143 Idaho 383, 386, 146 P.3d 649, 652 (2006). Due process requires that the grounds for terminating a parent-child relationship be proved by clear and convincing evidence. Id. Because a fundamental liberty interest is at stake, the United States Supreme Court has determined that a court may terminate a parent-child relationship only if that decision is supported by clear and convincing evidence. Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 769 (1982); see also I.C. § 16-2009; In re Doe, 146 Idaho 759, 761-62, 203 P.3d 689, 691-92 (2009); Doe, 143 Idaho at 386, 146 P.3d at 652.

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IDHW v. Jane Doe (2017-33), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/idhw-v-jane-doe-2017-33-idahoctapp-2018.