In Re Adoption/Guardianship of Mark M.

807 A.2d 789, 147 Md. App. 99, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 13, 2002
Docket1832, Sept. Term, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 807 A.2d 789 (In Re Adoption/Guardianship of Mark M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Adoption/Guardianship of Mark M., 807 A.2d 789, 147 Md. App. 99, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 165 (Md. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

THIEME, Judge.

This case involves a mother’s second appeal from a juvenile court’s refusal to grant her request for a psychological examination of her child by an expert of her choice before terminating her parental rights. On this appeal, she presents the following two questions:

I. Did the juvenile court abuse its discretion by refusing to vacate the order terminating the mother’s parental rights, where the Court of Appeals had ordered further proceedings in a related case from which an appeal was pending at the time the order terminating parental rights was entered?
II. Did the juvenile court abuse its discretion by determining that the child would be harmed by the psychological examination proposed by the mother, and that the harm outweighed the mother’s need for the examination?

We answer the second question in the affirmative. We need not and shall not address the first question.

PROLOGUE

Ms. Helen M., the appellant, is the natural mother of Mark M., who was born on March 5, 1994, and who was adjudicated a child in need of assistance (“CINA”) on April 9, 1995, by the District Court of Maryland, Montgomery County, sitting as the juvenile court.

On June 17, 1999, the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services (“the Department”) filed a “Petition for Guardianship with Right to Consent to Adoption or Long Term Care Short of Adoption.” The Department recommended that Mark M. be adopted by his paternal grandmother, Peggy M., with whom he had been residing since June of 1998. On February 24, 2000, in connection with the Department’s petition, Helen M. filed a “Motion for Evaluation of *102 Child.” A hearing was held on the motion on March 29, 2000, and the motion was denied.

A six-day hearing on the “Petition for Guardianship with Right to Consent to Adoption” commenced on April 26, 2000 and the appellant appealed the final order that terminated the appellant’s parent rights and granted the Department’s Petition, and on June 13, 2000, the juvenile court granted the petition and terminated Helen M.’s parental rights.

ACT ONE

In her first appeal to this Court, Helen M. argued that it was a denial of due process to refuse her request for an examination of the child by her own expert. 1 This Court neither reversed nor affirmed on this issue, but instead remanded the case for further proceedings, “in order for the court fully to consider and determine whether such an evaluation would be harmful to Mark, and whether appellant is entitled to the requested evaluation.” In Re: Adoption/Guardianship No. 6Z99027, No. 884, September Term, 2000 (filed March 9, 2001) at 34.

At the time of the remand by this Court, an appeal was pending in the Court of Appeals from a related CINA proceeding involving visitation. In that proceeding, the juvenile court had refused a similar request by Helen M. for a psychological examination óf Mark and had denied Helen M. visitation with her son. In light of the pending appeal from the CINA proceeding, Helen M. filed a motion in this Court to stay further proceedings in the juvenile court in this termination of parental rights (“TPR”) action. This Court denied the motion.

*103 ACT TWO

On July 13, 2001, in accordance with the mandate from this Court, the juvenile court held a hearing to determine whether the forensic mental examination of Mark sought by Helen M. would be harmful to him, and whether Helen M. was entitled to such an examination before her parental rights could be terminated. Dr. John Mealy, the clinical psychologist that Helen M. proposed to conduct the examination, testified that the purpose of the examination would be to determine “to what extent [Mark’s fear of Helen M. is] a reality based perception.” Dr. Mealy had reviewed the records in this case and had also listened to testimony elicited during previous proceedings in this case from Dr. Robert Lazun, Mark’s therapist, and Dr. Joseph Poirier, a clinical psychologist who had evaluated Helen M. and her family for the Department in 1995. Dr. Mealy noted that reports of abuse conflicted with reports that Mark was well-treated by his mother, so that it was difficult to determine the quality of that relationship. Furthermore, because the attachment with his mother had been abruptly terminated with no visitation, the child had been subjected to a potentially traumatic experience.

Dr. Mealy testified that, because of these complicated issues, an in-depth examination would be necessary, which would include watching Mark interact with his grandmother, teachers, or any other caretakers. In Dr. Mealy’s opinion, it would also be important to conduct psychological testing so that he could “try and get a sense of what [Mark’s] experience is, what he thinks about, what his personality, characteristic strengths, weaknesses, what kind of thinking goes on, how his emotion is handled.” One of his goals would be to determine the extent to which Mark’s perception of his mother was based on reality, and he suggested that an evaluation of the mother could also be important in that process. He stated that in his experience children would sometimes describe their parents as horrible people, and yet when they were together in the same room with them, they would appear to have a good relationship. Dr. Mealy added that he could not envision any harm to the child from such an evaluation, and he had “no sense that *104 I’ve ever traumatized a child that way.” In his experience, children responded favorably to his treatment of them.

When questioned as to whether he had to talk to Mark about his mother, Dr. Mealy testified that if any discussion with Mark about his mother was too distressing for him, he would not pursue it. If Mark handled those discussions well, however, he might even entertain the possibility of a visit with his mother so that he could observe them together. According to Dr. Mealy, the important thing would be that the evaluation be “done in a sensitive way, to him.” Dr. Mealy testified:

Perhaps there should be some visitation with his mother, that I could observe, you know. I mean, that’s, in terms of a full evaluation, that’s out on the edge of it. It’s not something that I would say that I wouldn’t, that I’m going to do, but it’s something that could be sensible, as an evaluation progresses....

Dr. Mealy estimated that it would require approximately 20 hours to perform the type of thorough evaluation that was needed in this case.

Although he had never met Mark, Dr. Mealy believed that the examination could be conducted without causing him any additional trauma. When questioned on cross-examination as to whether he had any opinion on whether the process would be harmful to Mark, Dr. Mealy responded that the evaluation would be conducted in a way that was safe and comfortable for Mark, and that he would not pursue avenues of inquiry that were having an adverse effect on him. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
807 A.2d 789, 147 Md. App. 99, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoptionguardianship-of-mark-m-mdctspecapp-2002.