In Re Adoption of J.A. & R.A.

2021 Ark. App. 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 31, 2021
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 136 (In Re Adoption of J.A. & R.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas 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 J.A. & R.A., 2021 Ark. App. 136 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 136 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document DIVISION IV 2023.06.23 10:37:57 -05'00' 2023.001.20174 No. CV-20-446

Opinion Delivered: March 31, 2021 IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF J.A. AND R.A. APPEAL FROM THE BENTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 04PR-19-1044]

HONORABLE DOUG SCHRANTZ, JUDGE

REVERSED AND REMANDED

BART F. VIRDEN, Judge

Cassandra Carter appeals the Benton County Circuit Court’s denial of her petition

for single-parent adoption of J.A. (1/7/11) and R.A. (4/14/15). 1 We reverse and remand

with instructions to the circuit court to grant the petition for adoption.

I. Relevant Facts

On December 16, 2019, Carter filed a petition in the probate division of the circuit

court for single-parent adoption, stating that she is the biological mother of J.A. and R.A.

and that the father, Robert Bruce Alexander, consented to the adoption. 2 The probate

court transferred the case to the circuit court in which the divorce was granted, and the first

1 Carter changed her surname from Alexander to Carter between the filing of the petition and the first hearing on the matter. 2 During the relationship, Alexander adopted J.A., and R.A. was born after Carter and Alexander married. uncontested adoption hearing took place on January 15, 2020. At the hearing, Carter

testified that she, J.A., and R.A. live with her parents who provide financial and day-to-day

support. Carter testified that Alexander had not paid child support regularly since they

divorced in 2018 and had paid support only twice in 2019. Carter explained that when the

children had visitation with Alexander, they returned home with physical injuries. R.A. had

a busted lip and a black eye as well as a handprint on her back. J.A. told Carter that he

hated visiting his father and that “he would scream and cry” and hide under tables, refusing

to go to Alexander’s home. J.A. constructed tombstones in the backyard and wrote “Dad’s

dead” on one and made another for himself. Carter testified that J.A. had problems at school

and was “kind of closed off” but that after a year of not having visitation with his father,

J.A. was much happier, his grades improved, and he was making friends. The court stated

from the bench that it was “not persuaded” and scheduled a second hearing for Carter to

present further evidence.

The circuit court held the second hearing on February 27 at which Carter and her

father, Joseph Carter, offered more detailed testimony and introduced photographic

exhibits. Joseph testified that Carter, J.A., and R.A. live with him and his wife and that they

are very involved in raising the children. Joseph explained that in 2012, they successfully

petitioned for guardianship of J.A., and from 2012 to 2014, J.A. lived with them. After the

guardianship, the Carters allowed their daughter, the children, and Alexander to live with

them “a couple of times,” and they had given Alexander opportunities to “step up”;

however, when Alexander lived with them, Joseph observed that he was not parenting the

2 children or working. Joseph explained that “he’d sit on his butt and play video games.”

After Carter and Alexander divorced, Alexander exercised visitation sporadically, and Joseph

explained that J.A. and R.A. “weren’t the same kids” when they returned from visitation.

Joseph testified that they were “filthy” and “beat down.” The children came home from

visitation with chigger and flea bites as well as handprints or other marks on them, which

Alexander claimed happened when they “fell down.” Joseph testified that the children were

much happier since Alexander had ceased visitation. Since the divorce, Carter had obtained

a GED and had begun substitute teaching at the children’s school, and she had attended

counseling. Joseph stated that he is proud of Carter for getting herself out of the bad

situation.

Carter testified that she had obtained a GED and trained to become a substitute

teacher, and she planned to continue her education. Carter stated that she married Alexander

in 2012, her parents successfully petitioned for guardianship of J.A. the same year, and the

guardianship extended through the beginning of 2014. The couple divorced in 2018, and

she was given primary custody. Carter testified that for the first three months after the

divorce, Alexander occasionally exercised visitation but had not done so in over a year.

Carter testified that she had concerns about the children visiting Alexander before he ceased

visitation. She presented photographs of Alexander’s home, which were admitted into

evidence, showing trash and laundry piled throughout the home; dishes piled up on the

counters and in the sink; a very dirty bathroom; broken glass Christmas ornaments on the

floor; and a filthy refrigerator containing dirty, empty plates and no nutritious food. Carter

3 explained that there were dog feces in the children’s bathroom and Alexander’s bedroom

where R.A. slept. Carter testified that when R.A. returned from visitation, she told Carter

that Alexander had hit her on her back and showed Carter a handprint that “stayed for quite

a while.” Carter stated that Alexander admitted he hit R.A. but that he “missed” and hit

her back instead of spanking her on her bottom. When J.A. returned from Alexander’s

house, Carter saw marks on his neck. J.A. refused to explain what happened, saying, “I can’t

talk about it” and then he “shut down.” Carter stated that when she asked Alexander about

the bruises on J.A.’s neck, he laughed. Carter also testified that after one visit, J.A., who is

allergic to insect bites, had chigger and flea bites and ticks all over him, and they had to pick

ticks off of him “for hours” when he returned home. Carter submitted photos of the

children’s injuries and of the tick and flea bites. Carter testified that since she and Alexander

separated, she and her parents have taken care of the children, and she has seen an

improvement in the children since they stopped visitation. Carter stated that Alexander

consulted with an attorney when he consented to the adoption, and both she and her father

testified that Alexander’s family has no relationship with the children.

After the testimony concluded, the court denied the petition for single-parent

adoption. The court stated that it found both Joseph and Carter very credible and that Joseph

was “particularly compelling.” The court also stated that if the situation had been brought

to the court’s attention, Alexander could have been ordered to attend counseling or he

could have been denied visitation rights. The court explained that if it had been informed,

it would have put Alexander in jail for not paying child support “until he decides to comply

4 by paying.” The court found that there was no evidence presented that Alexander was “an

axe murderer” or “a great embarrassment to the children” and that if something happened

to Carter, “the State of Arkansas would assume responsibility for the kids and be

supporting.” The court decided that it could not find that it is in the best interest of the

children to “create a situation where they’re without a parent when that parent exists. I

can’t find it’s in the absolute best interest of the children to deny parentage to Mr. Alexander,

no matter how sorry an individual he is.” When asked for more specific findings, the court

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