In Interest of AB

444 So. 2d 981
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 30, 1983
DocketAQ-331
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 444 So. 2d 981 (In Interest of AB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Interest of AB, 444 So. 2d 981 (Fla. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

444 So.2d 981 (1983)

IN the INTEREST OF A.B., a Child.
Willie Mae BROWN, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.

No. AQ-331.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

December 30, 1983.

*983 Christina A. Zawisza and Mary Kay Williams, Jacksonville, for appellant.

Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., and Bruce Barkett, Asst. Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, for appellee.

ROBERT P. SMITH, Jr., Judge.

Mrs. Brown appeals from a circuit court order continuing her ten year-old daughter's temporary commitment to the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, in foster home care, and authorizing the foster parents to take the child with them from Jacksonville to their new home in Cleveland, Ohio. When Judge Safer entered this order in December 1982, the child A.B. had "temporarily" been placed in HRS foster home care for eight of her ten years. Periodic judicial review of the placement, see § 409.168, Fla. Stat. (1981), and In the Interest of V.M.C., 369 So.2d 660 (Fla. 1st DCA 1979), began in 1977. Judge Safer's order recognizes, with characteristic sensitivity, that the child A.B. was taken initially into the state's care to protect her from neglect by her father, and that by continuous foster care to this day, this child has virtually been weaned from her mother. Mrs. Brown recognizes this, too, and she complains of it.

The circuit court considers that "the best interest of the child," particularly as it is affected by her emotional instability and her mother's relative inability to recognize or cope with it, requires that the child continue in foster care and in this particular home, now moved to Cleveland. That home qualifies, because of the training and disposition of the foster parents, as a therapeutic foster home in which only one child may be placed. HRS reported to the court that no other suitable foster home is available *984 in Jacksonville for A.B. The issue, then, is whether these circumstances justify the continued, now virtually terminal separation of A.B. and her mother.

Though we have no transcript of the 1982 hearings before Judge Safer which produced the order appealed, the order is abundantly detailed in factual findings as well as in reasoning supporting the action taken. We therefore may and do accept the factual statements in the order, together with the history revealed in numerous HRS reports and other documents filed over the years, as the basis of our review. Mrs. Brown's motion to strike the supplementary record filed by the Attorney General is denied. The Attorney General's suggestion at oral argument that the order appealed be affirmed for want of transcripts is denied. Fla.R.App.P. 9.200(f). Despite opportunities to do so, no party has offered transcripts or a stipulated statement, R. 9.200(b)(3), as essential to our consideration of this appeal.

I.

The eldest child in this black family was declared dependent and placed in foster care in 1962, before his first birthday. Of him this record tells us nothing more than that he was still under the state's control in foster care 16 years later. In 1974 the remaining five children, ranging from A.B. not yet two years old to another girl ten, also came under the state's control. That happened when the state children's agency, responding to Mrs. Brown's call for help, filed and the circuit court granted a dependency petition. For grounds the petition alleged and the court found that the father kept the family virtual prisoners, isolated from school and other worldly contacts, on an island in the St. Johns River dubiously named Mt. Pleasant.

In the more than eight years that elapsed before this appellate record closed in December 1982, five circuit judges entered orders touching upon the children's care in foster homes, emergency shelters and hospitals. One child died in foster home care; the two elder children, aged 19 and 15 as we consider this case, "seem to have severed emotional ties with their mother and are not interested in living with her," according to HRS report; the youngest son began counseling for "defiant behavior" at age ten, in 1981, and he remains in "stable" foster home care. Then there is the very youngest, this daughter whom for confidentiality we identify as A.B.

A.B. was described in a 1980 agency report as "probably the most problematic of the Brown children. She has stolen money at both school and home and wets her clothes both day and night":

[She] was recently transferred from Southside Estates Elementary School where she is in emotionally handicapped self contained classroom. In her regular classroom she made a nuisance of herself, according to her teacher, by irritating the other children. Her teacher felt that she was basically insecure and would do anything for attention.

Later testimony characterized the child A.B. as "hyperactive, outbursts of temper, need for constant supervision." The child requires Mellaril medication regularly.

By 1981 A.B. had lived seven years with two brothers in a Jacksonville foster home. Then at midyear one of the boys, aged 12, suddenly died. On motion of the mother, assisted by a Legal Aid lawyer since 1978, the court ordered A.B. and her surviving brother placed in new foster homes. But first A.B. was hospitalized among disturbed children in Northeast Florida State Hospital, at Macclenny, which HRS then decided was "not an appropriate placement." But A.B. stayed there two or three months longer, evidently because of her unstable emotional condition, until a psychologist advised the court that "the longer she stays at the hospital the more possibility and probability she will act like other children there who are emotionally disturbed." And so, at year-end 1981, the court placed A.B. in the "therapeutic foster home" — offering special care to one child only — of the Jacksonville couple whose move to Cleveland within a year prompted *985 the October 1982 hearing and the December order now appealed by the mother.

Through it all Mrs. Brown has asked for return of her children. She departed the St. Johns River island when the children did, in 1974. In December 1974, living apart from her husband in Jacksonville, Mrs. Brown initiated the court's first review of the foster home placement orders. She divorced her husband and testified, seven years later, that an HRS counselor advised her "she had to divorce her husband in order to have the children returned to her." Without attempting to guess whether that advice was literally given as understood by Mrs. Brown, the circuit judge recorded the simple facts: "She divorced her husband and the children were not returned."

After what appears to be about three years, Mrs. Brown moved from Jacksonville to Jesup and then to Ludowici, Georgia, later saying she did so to get away from her former husband, who nevertheless continued to call her his wife and followed her to Georgia. As this truncated record closed in December 1982, Mrs. Brown was seeking public housing in Hinesville, Georgia. There or in Brunswick she had received medication of some sort, until she unilaterally discontinued it, and she has been counseled for mental health, in parenting skills and for alcohol abuse.

Mrs. Brown was thus encouraged by Florida and Georgia counselors to prepare herself to receive her children, or at least A.B., again within her home. As recommended by HRS she prevailed on her landlord to add plumbing and another bedroom to her Ludowici house. She has asked at every opportunity that A.B. and other children be returned to her.

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444 So. 2d 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-interest-of-ab-fladistctapp-1983.