In Re: Adoption/guardianship of Rashawn H.

937 A.2d 177, 402 Md. 477, 2007 Md. LEXIS 732
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 11, 2007
Docket7, Sept. Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 937 A.2d 177 (In Re: Adoption/guardianship of Rashawn H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of 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 Rashawn H., 937 A.2d 177, 402 Md. 477, 2007 Md. LEXIS 732 (Md. 2007).

Opinions

ALAN M. WILNER, Judge,

Retired, Specially Assigned.

Before us is a judgment of the Circuit Court for Frederick County that terminated the legal relationship between petitioner, Melissa F., and two of her four children, Rashawn and Tyrese, who were then six and five years of age, respectively. Upon evidence that the children had previously been found by the juvenile court to be children in need of assistance (CINA) and after considering the various factors then set forth in Maryland Code, § 5-313 of the Family Law Article, the court concluded that termination was in the best interest of the children, essentially because Ms. F. had been, was then, and likely would continue to be unable to care properly for them. The Court of Special Appeals, in an unreported opinion, affirmed that judgment. We shall reverse and remand for a new proceeding.

BACKGROUND

Ms. F. suffers from the effects of several partially interrelated problems—an overall IQ of 66, an oppressive childhood, eviction from and apparent disqualification for Government assisted housing because of her drug-dealing mother, life-long poverty, inability to maintain steady employment, and lack of a reliable support system. The combination of those impediments have made her life and the early lives of Rashawn and [482]*482Tyrese terribly unstable. Ms. F. was raised in a household rife with domestic violence, with a father who physically and psychologically abused both her and her mother and a mother who became a drug addict and a drug dealer. She said that she was essentially raised, at least in her early years, by her maternal grandmother, who unfortunately died when Ms. F. was ten.

After her mother’s second arrest, Ms. F. dropped out of school, in the eleventh grade, and moved first to Harrisburg to live with a step-brother and then, after a year, back to Frederick to live with a cousin. She had her first child, Mark, in February, 1997, when she was seventeen. The child’s father was an alcoholic and abusive, so she ended that relationship and began one with another man, Richard, with whom she had three more children in fairly quick succession— Richard, Jr., born in June, 1998, Rashawn, born in November, 1999, and Tyrese, born in November, 2000. Richard, Jr. has lived with his paternal grandparents in Delaware since infancy. In 1999, the remainder of the family moved to an apartment apparently shared with Ms. F.’s mother. In December, 2001, they were evicted because the mother was selling drugs from the apartment.

In the three years following that eviction, which occurred when Rashawn and Tyrese were two and one, respectively, Ms. F., Mark, Rashawn, and Tyrese moved approximately eleven times. She and Richard were sometimes together and sometimes apart. The family spent a week in a hotel paid for by the Frederick County Department of Social Services (DSS), then in a shelter until May, 2002, and then briefly at a Community Action Center. They then moved to an apartment in Harrisburg, which they shared with ten other people and where they survived on peanut butter sandwiches and water, then to different shelters in Harrisburg. They finally returned to Frederick to live with Ms. F.’s mother, but the day after they arrived, the mother was incarcerated, so they moved to New York, where they stayed in various shelters and finally ended up in a roach and rat-infested apartment, [483]*483where she and Richard had to take turns staying awake at night to guard the children from the noxious animals.

In August, 2003, Ms. F. returned to Frederick to try to find work, leaving the children with her sister in New York. At some point in 2004, her sister brought the children back to Frederick, where the family found a temporary place to stay with a friend of Richard. In May, however, Richard was incarcerated, and Ms. F. and the children were forced to move. They had no place to go. On either May 19 or 20, 2004, Ms. F. took the children to the local DSS office.1 Dome Hill, a social worker, was called to the lobby of the building upon a report that a woman was there with three children, cursing at them and grabbing their arms. When she went to investigate, Ms. Hill found Ms. F., along with Mark, Rashawn, and Tyrese, sitting on a bench. The children were unruly but unharmed, and Ms. F. was upset. She explained that she was waiting for a family member, Mark’s aunt, to come get her and her children. The aunt was contacted, but she was willing to take only Mark. Mark’s father was located, and he eventually came and picked up his son but not Ms. F. or the other children.

When it appeared that there was no place for Rashawn and Tyrese to go, Ms. F. and Ms. Hill agreed that the only alternative was for DSS to place the two children in emergency shelter care. Richard, who by then had married another woman, later agreed to that disposition as well. After a hearing two days later, the shelter care was continued. The court found that it was not possible to return the children to their home because of the father’s incarceration and Ms. F.’s lack of a residence. There was no home to which they could return. On June 16, 2004, based, in part, on “the lack of a permanent residence for the children, and on the agreement of the parties,” the children were found by the juvenile court to be CINA. Among other things, the court ordered psychiatric, psychological, substance abuse, and parenting potential evalu[484]*484ations, that Ms. F. enter into and comply with a service agreement, that she maintain steady and reliable employment and adequate and appropriate housing, and that she participate in the “DORS” program.2 No appeal was taken from that disposition, so the validity of it is not before us.

DSS, for its purposes, found insufficient evidence to show an “indicated” child neglect on Ms. F.’s part, in that, although she had been unable to secure resources for her children, she had attempted to do so and was willing to “g[i]ve up her children because she could not provide instead of allowing her children to be homeless and hungry.” On the other hand, DSS declared that it could not “rule out” neglect, in that Ms. F. “had been homeless and transient for several years.” It therefore declared child neglect to be “unsubstantiated,” the only other category possible under the circumstances.

Upon assuming custody of the children and in preparation for the CINA hearing, DSS sought an evaluation from Dr. Dennis Hilker, a psychologist, who reported, in relevant part, that, although Ms. F. had an emotional attachment to her children and wanted to be a productive mother, she showed “little parenting ability,” had “no job skills,” and would “require a great deal of assistance and supervision to meet the needs of her children.” He found that both parents were “cognitively challenged,” that they had not developed any “consistent, reliable employment base,” and would need “a long time to build their educational and vocational capacity for self-support, before proposing any possible home for the children to return to their custody.”

At the time of the evaluation—some three weeks after she took the children to DSS—Ms. F. was still homeless, was on a waiting list for an apartment, had no income, and “wanders [485]*485the streets when she cannot stay with anyone.” Dr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re: Z.F. & B.F.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2025
In re: I.Q.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2025
Caldwell v. Sutton
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2022
In re: W.W.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2021
In re: K.H., J.H., D.H.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2021
In re: M.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2021
In re: K.L.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2021
In re: D.M., J.M.
250 Md. App. 541 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2021)
In re A.T.J. & L.D.J.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2021
In re: K.Y.B.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2019
In Re Adoption/Guardianship of J.T.
213 A.3d 710 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2019)
In Re Adoption/Guardianship C.E.
210 A.3d 850 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2019)
In Re: H.R., E.R. & J.R.
192 A.3d 822 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2018)
In re: Adoption/G'ship of C.E.
Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2018
In re: Adoption/G'ship of H.W.
189 A.3d 284 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2018)
In re: Adoption/G'ship of H.W.
170 A.3d 882 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2017)
In re: Adoption/G'ship of C.A. & D.A.
168 A.3d 1088 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2017)
Burak v. Burak
168 A.3d 883 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2017)
IN RE TA.L. IN RE A.L. IN PETITION OF R.W. & A.W. IN RE PETITION OF E.A.A.H. AND T.L.
149 A.3d 1060 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2016)
Burak v. Burak
150 A.3d 360 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
937 A.2d 177, 402 Md. 477, 2007 Md. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoptionguardianship-of-rashawn-h-md-2007.