IN RE A.W.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 8, 2021
DocketM2020-00892-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of IN RE A.W. (IN RE A.W.) 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 A.W., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

09/08/2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 7, 2021 Session

IN RE A.W.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 18CV-1243 Darrell Scarlett, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2020-00892-COA-R3-PT ___________________________________

A mother and an unknown father were the subjects of a petition to terminate parental rights and to adopt a child. Only mother appeals. She argues that she lacked notice of the proceedings and that the petitioners failed to comply with the parental termination statutes. She also contests the statutory grounds relied on for terminating her parental rights and the trial court’s determination that termination was in her child’s best interest. We affirm the termination of the mother’s parental rights. But because the record does not reflect that the unknown father was served under the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure or the statutes governing substituted service, we vacate the judgment terminating his parental rights.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part and Vacated in Part

W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., and FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., joined.

Catherine T. Mekis, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellant, Angela W.

Rebecca L. Lashbrook, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellees, T.G. and A.G.

OPINION

I.

A.

T.G and A.G. (together, “Petitioners”) met Angela W. (“Mother”) and her five-year- old daughter, A.W., when Mother and A.W. began attending Petitioners’ church. Soon after, Mother stood up in church and asked for assistance caring for her child at night. A.G., who ran a daycare out of the home she shared with T.G., offered to help. And that is how A.W. began living with Petitioners. As A.G. later explained, after picking up A.W. on January 8, 2016, “[s]he stayed with us that weekend, and pretty much has stayed since.” Although A.G. acknowledged that the child would sometimes stay overnight with Mother after that time, the last time being in January 2017.

Mother’s absences led Petitioners to file a dependency and neglect petition against Mother. In January 2018, a juvenile court found by clear and convincing evidence that A.W. was dependent and neglected in Mother’s care and awarded custody to Petitioners.

In July of that same year, Petitioners petitioned to terminate the parental rights of Mother and an “unknown father” and to adopt A.W. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-1-113(b)(1) (Supp. 2018) (granting the “prospective adoptive . . . parents . . . standing to file a petition . . . to terminate parental . . . rights”). By that point, Petitioners last contact with Mother was nearly nine months ago. As grounds for terminating Mother’s parental rights, the petition alleged abandonment by failure to support, abandonment by failure to visit, persistence of conditions, and failure to manifest an ability and willingness to assume custody or financial responsibility of the child. As to abandonment, the petition claimed that Mother willfully failed to support or visit A.W. “for a period in excess of four (4) months.”

At the time the petition was filed, Mother was incarcerated. She wrote a letter from the detention center, which the trial court treated as her responsive pleading. According to the letter, Mother was unwilling to “completely” give up A.W and wanted to remain part of her child’s life. Mother’s release date was within a few months, and she was “waiting to be approved for treatment.” She was “trying to better [her]self.”

The court held a trial on the petition. Appointed counsel appeared on behalf of Mother, but Mother did not. The only witnesses were Petitioners and a friend of Petitioners who attended the same church. The testimony established how A.W. came under Petitioners’ care, the frequency or infrequency of Mother’s contact with her child and Petitioners, and how A.W. was fairing. Petitioners also introduced evidence of Mother’s “extensive criminal history.” She had been in and out of prison since A.W. was placed in Petitioners’ care. And she had pending charges at the time of the trial.

After the trial, the court terminated Mother’s and the unknown father’s parental rights. With respect to Mother, the court concluded that she abandoned A.W. both by failure to visit and by failure to support. In concluding that A.W. was abandoned, the court determined that the relevant time period for evaluating Mother’s visitation and support was the four-month period preceding the filing of the petition to terminate. See id. § 36-1- 102(1)(A)(i) (Supp. 2018) (defining “abandonment” as the willful failure to visit or the willful failure to support “[f]or a period of four (4) consecutive months immediately 2 preceding the filing of a proceeding [or] pleading . . . to terminate the parental rights of the parent or parents”). The court made no determination regarding the other grounds alleged for terminating Mother’s parental rights.

The court also concluded that termination of Mother’s parental rights was in A.W.’s best interest. In its best interest analysis, the court did not articulate its reasoning. The court only noted that it had considered the relevant statutory factors.

Mother moved to alter or amend the court’s judgment or, alternatively, for a new trial. She claimed that she was incarcerated when the petition to terminate was filed and did not receive the notice due to incarcerated parents under the parental termination statutes. See id. § 36-1-113(f). She also claimed that she did not receive notice of the trial date “due to relocation and lack of mail forwarding.” And she argued that, due to her incarceration, the court analyzed the abandonment ground incorrectly by looking at the wrong four-month period.

Petitioners also moved to alter or amend the court’s judgment. Seemingly agreeing with one of the points made by Mother, Petitioners asked that the judgment terminating parental rights “be altered and/or amended with regard to the statutory time frame utilized by [the court]” as it related to the ground of abandonment.

The court granted Petitioners’ motion but denied Mother’s. The court amended its judgment to reflect that the relevant four-month period in determining abandonment was the four-month period preceding Mother’s incarceration. As for Mother’s notice arguments, the court found that Mother “had notice of the[] proceedings and failed to appear at trial.” And Mother willfully failed “to appropriately communicate her whereabouts to her . . . counsel.”

B.

Mother appealed. See In re A.W., No. M2019-00358-COA-R3-PT, 2020 WL 95690 (Tenn. Ct. App. Jan. 8, 2020). This Court determined that the judgment terminating the parental rights of Mother and the unknown father was not final because the judgment failed to address two of the four grounds Petitioners alleged for terminating parental rights. Id. at *3. So we dismissed the appeal, and we remanded the case for consideration of the two grounds left unaddressed in the judgment. Id. We also remanded for specific findings of fact and conclusions of law on the court’s best interest analysis. Id.

On remand, the court again terminated Mother’s and the unknown father’s parental rights. With respect to Mother, the court once more concluded that Mother had abandoned her child both by failure to visit and by failure to support during the four-month period preceding her incarceration. The court also concluded that the two grounds left unaddressed previously—persistence of conditions and failure to manifest an ability and 3 willingness to assume custody or financial responsibility of the child—applied to Mother.

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Bluebook (online)
IN RE A.W., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-aw-tennctapp-2021.