In re A.M., E.M., L.M., Juveniles

2017 VT 5, 165 A.3d 1111, 2017 WL 554928, 2017 Vt. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 10, 2017
Docket2016-249
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2017 VT 5 (In re A.M., E.M., L.M., Juveniles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re A.M., E.M., L.M., Juveniles, 2017 VT 5, 165 A.3d 1111, 2017 WL 554928, 2017 Vt. LEXIS 11 (Vt. 2017).

Opinion

ROBINSON, J.

¶ 1. Father appeals from a family court judgment modifying the disposition plan and terminating his parental rights to the minors A.M., E.M., and L.M. We conclude on the basis of the record in this case that a single transgression by father, in the face of otherwise positive evidence and findings as to his compliance with the case plans and his observed parenting abilities, did not support a finding of changed circumstances to warrant modification of the case plan goal. Accordingly, we reverse.

¶ 2. The procedural history and trial court findings are as follows. The three children who are the subject of this proceeding were eight, six, and two and a half years old at the time of final hearing in this matter. The parents, who are not married, were in their late teens when they started having children. The Department for Children and Families (DCF) first filed a CHINS (children in need of care and supervision) petition in September 2011 after reports of inadequate supervision of L.M. and E.M. The case resulted in a conditional care order subject to DCF supervision. After apparent progress by both parents toward the case plan goals, the case was dismissed about a year later.

¶ 3. The parents' relationship has been marked by periodic separations and turmoil. Father contested paternity as to each of the children, and mother obtained several relief from abuse (RFA) orders against father over a period of years. Between the summer of 2012 and the summer of 2014, the parents were mostly together with the children. Father worked third shift and did not participate much with the children; mother did all the diapering, laundry, shopping and cooking. In July 2014, father left after a serious argument. He moved to New York, about an hour and a half away from mother's home. The children remained with mother full time.

¶ 4. The trial court heard the most recent petition for an RFA order in September 2014. 1 At that hearing, father acknowledged that he and mother "argued almost *1113 every day." The court found that over the years father had struggled to control his temper. In the past, he had grabbed mother by the throat and thrown her into a wall on one occasion, and on another he grabbed her and threw her on the bed. The court found that in September 2014 father angrily confronted mother and grabbed and smashed her phone, yelling at her all the while. On the basis of this conduct, the court issued an RFA order through September 15, 2015. The children were not present for the events of September 2014 that gave rise to the last RFA order, but were present in the past when father grabbed and pushed mother.

¶ 5. During the months leading up to the CHINS petition, under the terms of the September 2014 RFA order, father had visits with all the children on alternate Saturdays, which he attended regularly. He visited the children at his father's house in Vermont. During this time, father filed a motion to modify parental rights and responsibilities in the family court. The State filed a CHINS petition before the hearing on father's motion to modify, so father's motion was not heard.

¶ 6. The State filed the CHINS petition leading to the current proceeding in December 2014. The children were in mother's custody at the time, and mother and the children were living with the children's maternal grandmother. The petition alleged a lack of supervision, unsafe adults in the home, ongoing domestic violence (with mother's new partner), and a home inspection that found mother's home and the children to be in an impoverished and unhealthy state of affairs. The trial court found that the triggering event leading to the CHINS petition was further deterioration in mother's mental health. The State filed the petition on the day mother was admitted to the hospital with an apparent overdose. Several months earlier, she had been hospitalized for three days due to mental health issues. In the meantime, DCF had engaged with mother concerning significant health and hygiene issues in the home.

¶ 7. On December 1, 2014, pursuant to an emergency care order, the children were removed from the home where they lived with their mother and placed in foster care.

¶ 8. The court held a temporary care hearing in December 2014. Father sought custody, but DCF opposed it based on the history of domestic violence against mother and DCF's inability to supervise a New York placement. The hearing on temporary custody was ultimately rescheduled to March 2015, and essentially combined with the merits hearing. In the meantime, the court allowed father to continue his weekly Saturday visits with the children as outlined in the RFA order.

¶ 9. At the merits hearing on March 18, 2015 mother stipulated to an adjudication of CHINS based on her inability to provide adequate care or a safe living environment. Father did not oppose the CHINS finding, but because he was not the custodial parent at the time of the CHINS filing and his stipulation was not necessary to support the CHINS adjudication, he did not join the stipulation. The court made a CHINS finding and ordered DCF to prepare a disposition plan.

¶ 10. Father again sought custody pending disposition. DCF, mother, and the children all opposed father's request-at least until they saw the outcome of a home study in New York that DCF had initiated. The court began a hearing on father's request. After father's testimony, it became clear that the court did not have enough time to hear from father's other witnesses, mother's witnesses, or the State's witnesses. The court indicated that it would set a continued hearing to complete *1114 the evidence. The next hearing, in May, was the disposition hearing itself, effectively mooting the question of the children's placement pending disposition.

¶ 11. Throughout the period between the emergency care order and disposition, mother saw the children only in a supervised setting in the Family Time Program at the Northeastern Family Institute (NFI). She saw the children together for about an hour each week. Although he lived a considerable distance away, father was invited to have similar NFI-supervised contact with the children, including evenings, in order to try to accommodate his work and living schedule in New York. He was unable to arrange visits in the Family Time Program but maintained his daylong visits on Saturdays at his father's home in Vermont. The trial court found "no evidence of anything negative about those visits," and they later supported DCF's "increasing focus on [father] as the potential custodial parent."

¶ 12. DCF's proposed disposition plan, filed with the court in late April 2015, recommended concurrent goals of reunification, initially with mother and if that did not work out then with father, or adoption. With respect to mother, the plan acknowledged some efforts at counseling, cleaning up her home, and keeping her own medical appointments, but emphasized that mother needed to demonstrate accountability for her behaviors such as minimizing the past threats to her children posed by lack of supervision and not consistently engaging in mental health treatment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 VT 5, 165 A.3d 1111, 2017 WL 554928, 2017 Vt. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-am-em-lm-juveniles-vt-2017.