In Re An

2005 MT 19, 106 P.3d 556, 325 Mont. 379
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 2005
Docket04-364
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2005 MT 19 (In Re An) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re An, 2005 MT 19, 106 P.3d 556, 325 Mont. 379 (Mo. 2005).

Opinion

106 P.3d 556 (2005)
2005 MT 19
325 Mont. 379

In the Matter of A.N. and M.N., Youths In Need Of Care.

No. 04-364.

Supreme Court of Montana.

Submitted on Briefs January 4, 2005.
Decided February 1, 2005.

*558 For Appellant: Nancy G. Schwartz, LaRance, Syth & Schwartz, P.C., Billings, Montana.

For Respondent: Honorable Mike McGrath, Attorney General; Mark W. Mattioli, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana, Dennis Paxinos, County Attorney; Richard Helm, Deputy County Attorney, Billings, Montana. Damon L. Gannett, Attorney at Law, Billings, Montana (Guardian Ad Litem).

Justice W. WILLIAM Leaphart delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 T.N. (Father) appeals from the District Court's Order terminating his parental rights. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 A.N. (Son) is fourteen years old, and M.N. (Daughter) is twelve years old. They are registered members of the Sioux Tribe from the Fort Peck Reservation. Father lives in Billings, and C.N. (Mother) currently lives in South Dakota. This case concerns the fourth time the Department of Public Health and Human Services (the Department) or the Bureau of Indian Affairs Social Services has had to remove these children from Father's custody because he has abused and neglected them. Soon after Father and the children were reunited for the second time, they moved in with C.D. (Father's Mother) and I.D. (Stepfather) who are Father's mother and stepfather, respectively. Because Stepfather is a convicted and untreated child sex-offender, the Department had concerns about leaving the children with Father. Father promised that he would not allow the children to be around Stepfather and would closely supervise them.

¶ 3 In the most recent case, the Department had returned Son and Daughter to Father in the fall, after Father had completed inpatient chemical dependency treatment in Butte in July 2001. In February 2002, the three again moved into Father's Mother's and Stepfather's home. The next month, Father, Daughter, Father's Mother, and four others traveled to Boulder and went to a basketball game in Butte. While they were on the trip, the Billings Police Department responded to a 911 call at the residence to find Son and M.B., Son's cousin (Male Cousin), sleeping on mattresses on the living room floor. Stepfather and D.W. (Stepfather's Friend) were babysitting them.

¶ 4 Upon arriving, the police officers discovered that Stepfather's Friend was extremely intoxicated, Stepfather was a registered child sex-offender, and living conditions in the house were deplorable. Old food, dishes, and garbage were scattered about and the quantity of clothes on the floor prevented the officers' from moving easily in the house. The lights in the bathroom, bedroom, and kitchen were out, so the officers had to use flashlights. The Department removed the children for the fourth time.

¶ 5 Male Cousin made allegations of sexual abuse against Father soon afterward. Father had been convicted of two DUIs and, at one time, had left his children at a gas station while he went to a residence three blocks away. The combination of these circumstances presented a danger to the children. To prevent further danger, the Department suspended all contact between Father and the children. The Department was willing to reinitiate contact, but it wanted to review Father's sex-offender evaluation first.

¶ 6 In December 2002, the Department finally received Father's sex-offender evaluation completed in August. The Department *559 had paid for the evaluation. Since the evaluation showed Father was a low-risk sex-offender, he expected the Department to allow him to see his children. Later that month, Father visited Pam Weischedel, the social worker assigned to the case, to request telephone contact with his children. Although Weischedel was willing to arrange the conversation, Father refused to give her any contact information that she could use to make those arrangements. For the nine months following — from December 2002 until September 2003 — Father did not contact Weischedel or provide any contact information besides a post office box.

¶ 7 Between the adjudication of the children as Youths in Need of Care and the termination hearing, the District Court developed two treatment plans for Father. Father's first treatment plan required him to obtain a sex-offender evaluation, not to involve himself in any criminal activity, to agree that the Department may place the children in a temporary facility for their protection, to obtain a chemical dependency evaluation and follow the resulting recommendations, to attend Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous meetings, to submit to random drug screens, to maintain an adequate home, to keep alcohol out of the home, to attend family or individual counseling sessions, to attend a parenting class, to maintain weekly contacts with the social worker, to maintain income through employment or other legal means, to sign various releases, and not to have any contact with his children until deemed appropriate by the Department.

¶ 8 Of those thirteen tasks, Father completed only the first three. He obtained a sex-offender evaluation, did not involve himself in criminal activity, and assented to the Department placing the children with their grandparents. He simply failed to complete the next nine tasks, and he failed the last task by showing up intoxicated outside the foster home to see his children. His second treatment plan tasks and his failure to complete those tasks were similar to the first treatment plan tasks and his failures therein.

¶ 9 The District Court found Father totally unbelievable when he said he tried to work with Weischedel but that she put up barriers to his completion of the treatment plans. The Department paid for Father's sex-offender evaluation. Weischedel held two family group decision-making meetings to help identify and discuss the issues of concern so the reunification of the children with at least one parent could occur. Father and Mother attended both meetings.

¶ 10 Because of car trouble, Father missed the good-bye visit in August 2002, when the Department moved the children to live with relatives in North Dakota. Weischedel tried to stay in touch with him, but neither he nor his mother was willing to give Weischedel an address or telephone number. Over those eighteen months, Father lived at three friends' houses in Montana, at a friend's house in Wyoming, at various motels, and at his mother's house.

¶ 11 The District Court certified Sheila Standing as an Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) expert. She is a tribal member and was raised according to tribal traditions and practices. Applying Indian cultural norms, Standing specifically concluded that the children would likely be exposed to serious physical or emotional damage if the District Court returned them to Father.

¶ 12 Standing's conclusion was based on several factors. First, Father had no permanent home and no steady job. Second, based on her impressions from the file, the children seem to have been afraid of him. Third, she believed he was incapable of being a good father until he received some alcohol treatment and counseling. Fourth, she believed the children were spending too much time around Stepfather, a registered sex-offender. Standing never met with Father, Mother, Son, or Daughter, but based on her review entirely on the Department's files.

¶ 13 After considering the heightened evidentiary requirements in ICWA, 25 U.S.C. § 1912

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2005 MT 19, 106 P.3d 556, 325 Mont. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-an-mont-2005.