In re Adoption of E.S.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 9, 2021
Docket123301
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Adoption of E.S. (In re Adoption of E.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Adoption of E.S., (kanctapp 2021).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 123,301

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Matter of the Adoption of E.S., A Minor Child.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Riley District Court; KEITH L. COLLETT, magistrate judge. Opinion filed July 9, 2021. Affirmed.

Michael P. Whalen, of Law Office of Michael P. Whalen, of Wichita, for appellant.

Miranda B. Johnson, of Caffey, Johnson & Ingels, P.A., of Manhattan, for appellee.

Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., GARDNER and ISHERWOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM: E.S.'s stepmother, petitioned the court to allow her to adopt E.S. In support, she alleged that E.S.'s natural mother had failed to assume her parental duties for the two-year period preceding the filing of the petition. As a result, she argued, natural mother's consent to the adoption was unnecessary. In contesting the adoption, natural mother argued that she did the best she could given the circumstances, but that E.S.'s natural father hindered her abilities to assume her parental duties. The district court granted the adoption, and the natural mother appeals.

Because substantial evidence supports the district court's decision that clear and convincing evidence showed Mother refused or failed to assume the duties of a parent for two consecutive years preceding the filing of the petition, we affirm the district court's decision.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In July 2018, V.S. (Stepmother) petitioned the court to allow her to adopt her stepchild, E.S. (Child), age 5. In her petition, Stepmother alleged that the consent of the natural mother, A.R. (Mother), was not required because she had failed or refused to assume her parental duties for two consecutive years. Stepmother's husband, R.S. (Father), signed and submitted his consent to the adoption. Included with the petition was a motion to terminate Mother's parental rights.

Mother responded to the petition, denying that she had failed or refused to assume the duties of a parent.

The district court heard the matter in March 2019. Mother testified that at the time of the hearing she had recently gotten out of a rehabilitation program and was living with her parents. She planned to move to one of her family's rental properties soon. Before her time in rehabilitation, Mother spent nine months in the Topeka Correctional Facility after violating her parole. Mother explained that her original sentence was nine months and that she did not receive good-time credit while incarcerated because of several disciplinary write-ups.

As for the history of the case, Mother explained that in 2015 she was living with Father, her three daughters from a prior relationship, and Child. In September 2015, the State filed a Child in Need of Care (CINC) case, and the court temporarily placed all her children with Mother's parents. The CINC case involved an allegation that Mother was using illegal drugs. Ultimately, the court placed Child in Father's custody while the daughters stayed with Mother's parents.

In a custody case revolving around Child, an ex parte temporary order issued in May 2016 stated that Mother could have supervised visits with Child through Sunflower

2 Bridge. The district court issued an order in July 2016, which stated that Mother could have supervised parenting time and that Father could choose the supervising party—the order did not mention Sunflower Bridge. According to Mother, after the district court entered the final order, she called Sunflower Bridge to set up visits. Mother testified that because the order did not specifically say that Sunflower Bridge was the supervising party, she was told that they could not answer many of her questions.

In May 2017, Mother moved to modify the custody arrangement and sought unsupervised parenting time. The court scheduled a hearing in June 2017, but Mother did not attend. The court entered no other orders in the case. According to Mother, the motion never reached a hearing because she was incarcerated and because of a conflict with the judge handling the case. In a response to Mother's motion, Father acknowledged that Mother had tried to contact him at various times. In one attempted contact, which Mother described as an incidental meeting outside Father's home while Mother was visiting a friend who lived near Father, Father pointed a taser at her and told her to get off the property and never come back. Father contested Mother's version of this contact, saying that he did not point a taser at her. Mother also testified that she was unable to speak to Father about the visitations because he changed his phone number.

Mother last saw Child in December 2017 when she visited the child at her parent's house. During that visit, Father said he did not want to discuss the next time Mother could visit Child. At a later point, Mother said that the December visit happened in 2016. Mother then testified that she was in custody from December 2017 to February 2018. At some point between then and the hearing, the court issued a no contact order between Father and Mother. Mother explained that the last time she tried to call and talk to Child, Father reported her for violating the no contact order. There was also a period where Mother did not have contact information for Father.

3 As to her court ordered child support payments, Mother testified that she had tried to make payments but that the Kansas Payment Center did not have her case on file, so she was unable to do so. Nor had she sought to send Father money directly because she was unsure where he lived. Nor did she send it to Father's mother because she was worried about violating court orders by contacting her as an intermediary to Father.

Mother testified that she did purchase cards and gifts for the Child and would give them to her parents so that they could deliver them to Child. She testified that she would not sign them because she did not want to violate any no contact orders. She also wrote Child cards while she was incarcerated, but she sent them to her parents and told them to hold onto them because she was uncertain how to handle it with the pending case.

Mother also discussed her criminal history. She was found guilty of misdemeanor theft in 2016 after stealing from a Walmart. The State charged her with domestic battery in 2016 but that was ultimately dismissed. Also in 2016, the court convicted her of forgery because she was writing checks using Father's checking account. Around the same time, the State charged Mother with theft of Father's vehicle but that was also dismissed. She also had a theft conviction in a separate 2016 case. There was also a charge for violating a protective order, with Father as the victim, which was dismissed. The State charged her with burglary of a motor vehicle and theft in 2017—the case which ultimately landed her in prison. In 2018, the State charged Mother with felony theft of a vehicle.

Mother explained that during this period she was using methamphetamine. According to Mother she started using methamphetamine when she was 18 but stopped when she first became pregnant and started using again around the time of the initial CINC case. As of the hearing, Mother stated that she was 10 months sober, 9 of which she spent in custody. Mother also explained that she had a pending case for alleged burglary or multiple burglaries. Mother testified that she had changed by taking active

4 steps in recovery, staying clean, looking for work, seeking counseling and therapy, taking parenting and domestic classes, and continuing with outpatient therapy.

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Related

In Re Adoption of F.A.R.
747 P.2d 145 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1987)
In Re the Adoption of M.D.K.
58 P.3d 745 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2002)
In Re Adoption of Baby Girl P.
242 P.3d 1168 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2010)
In Re the Adoption of G.L.V.
190 P.3d 245 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2008)
In re Adoption of C.L.
427 P.3d 951 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2018)
In re Adoption of C.S.
452 P.3d 858 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2019)

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