In Re Allyson P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 17, 2020
DocketE2019-01606-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Allyson P. (In Re Allyson P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Allyson P., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

06/17/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs May 1, 2020

IN RE ALLYSON P.1

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Blount County No. JV-1085 Kenlyn Foster, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2019-01606-COA-R3-PT ___________________________________

A mother’s parental rights to her daughter were terminated on four grounds and on the trial court’s finding that termination was in the child’s best interest. Upon our review, we conclude that the record does not support the court’s determinations with respect to two of the grounds or the holding that termination of the mother’s rights was in the best interest of the child. While we affirm two of the grounds upon which the court terminated Mother’s rights, our reversal of the holding that termination of the mother’s rights was in the child’s best interest requires that the judgment be reversed and the petition dismissed.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part; Petition Dismissed

RICHARD H. DINKINS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which KENNY W. ARMSTRONG, J. joined. D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., filing a separate concurring and dissenting opinion.

Brennan M. Wingerter, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Amanda P.

Herbert H. Slatery, III, Attorney General and Reporter; and Jeffrey D. Ridner, Assistant Attorney General, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services.

OPINION

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Amanda P. (“Mother”) and Jonathan W. (“Father”) are the parents of Allyson P. (“the Child”), who was born in May of 2012. On January 12, 2018, while driving with 1 This Court has a policy of protecting the identity of children by initializing the last names of the parties. the Child and the Child’s younger half-sister in the car, Mother was stopped by the police; in the course of the stop, the officer found methamphetamine in Mother’s possession and in one of the children’s toys, resulting in Mother’s arrest and the children being placed in the protective custody of the Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”). On January 18, DCS filed a petition in the Blount County Juvenile Court to have the children adjudicated dependent and neglected due to their exposure to drugs at the hands of Mother, and seeking temporary legal custody; the court granted DCS custody that day.2 A permanency plan was created on February 9, with the dual goals of “return to parent” and “exit custody with relative”; the plan was duly ratified by the court. On April 13, Mother pled guilty to felony possession of methamphetamine and was sentenced to ten years imprisonment, with 123 days of her sentence to be served in the Tennessee Department of Corrections and the remainder to be served in Community Corrections.

A hearing was held on November 8, at which both children were adjudicated dependent and neglected. On the same day, a second permanency plan, which had been prepared in July, and which contained the same goals as the original plan, was ratified. Following a hearing on March 12, 2019, the court found that the children were severely abused within the meaning of Tennessee Code Annotated section 37-1-102(b)(27)(A)(i) based on the following findings:

[D]ue to mother’s testimony that meth was found on Mother’s person and in Ally’s belongings the night she was arrested in Jan 2018 while the child was not properly restrained; mother’s testimony that meth was dangerous to the children; mother knowingly moving the children into a residence of an active meth smoker and knowingly leaving the children in the care of a meth user; the court found mother’s testimony that she didn’t know the children were exposed to meth not credible.

DCS filed a petition to terminate both Mother’s and Father’s rights to the Child on April 1, 2019. With respect to Mother, the petition alleged the following grounds for termination: abandonment by failure to provide a suitable home (Tennessee Code Annotated §§ 36-1-113(g)(1) and 36-1-102(1)(A)(ii)); abandonment by engaging in conduct prior to incarceration that exhibits a wanton disregard for the Child’s welfare (§§ 36-4-113(g)(1) and 36-1-102(1)(A)(iv)); persistence of conditions (§ 36-1-113(g)(3)); and severe child abuse (§ 36-1-113(g)(4)). The petition alleged that termination was in the Child’s best interest. Father surrendered his rights to the Child on May 6, and his rights are not at issue in this appeal.

2 The petition was later amended to allege that, due to the Child’s half-sister’s drug screen testing positive for amphetamines and methamphetamines, Mother had committed severe child abuse. -2- II. THE TRIAL

Trial was held on July 26, at the beginning of which counsel for DCS announced that DCS would also be seeking to terminate Mother’s rights on the ground of failure to manifest an ability and willingness to assume custody of the Child. Four witnesses testified: Angela Mueller, the DCS case manager; Corey H., foster father; Mother; and Britt Baker, therapeutic visitation supervisor.

Angela Mueller, DCS foster care case manager, testified that she had been the Child’s case manager since she came into custody on January 12, 2018, as a result of a traffic stop in which Mother, driving with the children in the car, was found to have three grams of methamphetamine on her person and five grams of methamphetamine in one of the children’s toys; that the Child and her half-sister were initially placed in a DCS foster home but were moved to a kinship foster home from February through October 2018; that they were subsequently placed in kinship foster home with Corey H. and his wife; and that Corey H. is the biological father of Barbara P., the Child’s younger half-sister.

Ms. Mueller testified that she developed a permanency plan, which Mother signed; that Mother was incarcerated during the first four months the Child was in DCS custody but that she requested, and DCS paid for, a mental health assessment and an alcohol and drug assessment; that Mother completed those assessments and eight hours of individual therapy while incarcerated; that Mother was released from incarceration in April 2018 and was out “about fourteen or fifteen days” when she tested positive for methamphetamine, which resulted in her reincarceration on May 9 for violating her probation; that, during this period of incarceration, Ms. Mueller visited Mother in jail “maybe three times” over the next four months; that between September and December 2018, she maintained contact with Mother; and that Mother was released from incarceration on April 23, 2019, at which point Ms. Mueller set up a parenting assessment and therapeutic visitation with the Child; that Mother “has been on drugs the majority of [the Child’s] life” and that the children had previously been removed from Mother’s custody in 2016, but that Mother regained custody3; that, at the time of trial, Mother was residing at House of Awakenings, a recovery program in which she lives in a trailer with eight other women; and that Mother told Ms. Mueller that she planned to reside with her grandmother upon completion of the program.

Ms. Mueller testified that the Child told her she had witnessed violence that Mother suffered at the hands of Mother’s father and his wife, who reside in close proximity to Mother’s grandmother. With respect to the foster home in which the Child now resides, Ms. Mueller testified that it is “very family oriented” and “very loving, very nurturing” and that the Child is “at ease there”; that the children are on a schedule; that

3 The testimony of the circumstances of the children’s removal in 2016 was not clear and the incident has no bearing on our consideration of the issues in this appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Allyson P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-allyson-p-tennctapp-2020.