in Re Barrett Minors

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 2020
Docket351343
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
in Re Barrett Minors, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

UNPUBLISHED In re BARRETT, Minors. June 4, 2020

Nos. 349859; 349897; 351314; 351343 Livingston Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 18-015854-NA

Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and SERVITTO and REDFORD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In Docket Nos. 349859 and 349897, respondents appeal by right the trial court’s order of disposition, assuming jurisdiction over the children after adjudication by jury trial, as to their son, BB.1 In Docket No. 351343, respondent-father appeals by right, and respondent-mother argues against,2 the trial court’s order removing BB from their home. In Docket No. 351314, attorney Timothy P. Crawford appeals by right the trial court’s order denying his petition to appear as the child’s attorney and imposing sanctions for having filed a frivolous pleading. In Docket No. 351314, we remand for the limited purpose of affording Crawford a conditional opportunity to move for reconsideration regarding the reasonableness of sanctions. In all other respects, we affirm. This appeal is being decided without oral argument pursuant to MCR 7.214(E)(1).

1 The proceedings below initially focused primarily on respondent-father’s other son, SB. SB is now a few months shy of 18 years old, and respondent-father does not appeal any of the trial court’s orders regarding SB. Likewise, SB’s mother, who was a respondent below, has not participated in this appeal. Thus, SB is not actually at issue in this appeal, and all references to respondent-mother in this opinion refer only to BB’s mother, and unless otherwise specified, “the child” refers to BB. 2 Respondent-mother appeared as an appellee in Docket No. 351343, but pursuant to MCR 7.216(A)(2), we choose to treat her as having properly appeared as an appellant in that appeal.

-1- I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Respondent-mother works outside the home and respondent-father is a stay-at-home parent who homeschooled the children and coached them athletically. Respondent-mother is not the mother of respondent-father’s older child, SB, and has no legal relationship with him, though she considers him her stepson. The testimony at the 16-day jury trial established that respondent- father subjected SB to increasingly severe mental abuse, and also physical abuse, from 2012 to 2019. Respondent-father took the younger child, BB, who is at issue on appeal, to meetings at which he disparaged SB; and respondent-father also directed BB to videotape his domestic violence against SB.

In 2016, a caseworker identified a risk of harm to both children posed by the home environment. The caseworker testified that respondent-father told the caseworker that she would not be allowed to speak with respondent-mother, and there is no indication in the record that the caseworker actually spoke with respondent-mother. Respondent-father agreed to discontinue physically disciplining SB and to stop picking him up and carrying him, but respondent-father continued to physically restrain and spank SB, despite SB being a teenager by then. Respondents and the children engaged in voluntary counseling, which resulted in a safety plan under which respondent-father would stop carrying SB. However, a youth services administrator testified that respondent-father refused to engage in the safety plan and conflict continued in the home.

Multiple therapists, educators, and service providers testified that respondent-father brought BB with him to meetings at which he disparaged SB. At one meeting, respondent-father talked over SB, and when SB began crying, respondent-father demeaned and degraded him. BB was present, even though the counselor had told respondent-father that BB should not be present. Respondent-father also used BB to validate his behaviors, and therapists testified that this behavior was not appropriate and that it was harmful for BB to be put in the middle of his father and brother.

A juvenile court incorrigibility referee informed respondent-father that he should not continue to attempt to restrain the child, but respondent-father nevertheless continued doing so. The referee also told respondent-father that if there was conflict in the home, respondent-father should have BB leave the room and not be involved in any way, including by videotaping the incidents. Despite this, respondent-father asked BB to videotape his altercations with SB, and informed one caseworker that the child “just knows that’s required now.” Even at trial, respondent-father testified that he did not think that asking BB to videotape SB was “a major deal.”

Respondent-mother testified that the conflict between respondent-father and SB began increasing in the summer of 2018. Neighbors testified about instances during which SB appeared at their homes, upset and in some instances injured. The police were called to respondents’ home multiple times, often by respondent-father after conflict had escalated with SB. Respondent- mother had concerns about how the conflict affected BB at times, and spoke with him about the conflict in the home. Respondent-mother sometimes removed BB from physical conflicts between SB and respondent-father where she believed BB might be in physical danger. Respondent-mother testified that she did not think that videotaping the incidents placed BB at a risk of harm.

Throughout the proceedings, respondent-father adamantly refused even to consider any possibility that his own rigid, controlling, aggressive, and violent conduct might be contributing

-2- to the family’s strife. Ultimately, after respondent-father continued to refuse to utilize safety plans and services, and as conflict continued in the home, the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) petitioned to remove the children from respondents’ care. BB was first returned to respondent-mother’s care and then also respondent-father’s care during the pendency of the trial. Ultimately, a jury found that one or more statutory grounds alleged in the petition had been proven against respondents regarding both children. The trial court ordered SB placed out of the home, but it placed BB with respondents and ordered them to engage in services.3

Although she was not particularly cooperative with DHHS, respondent-mother engaged in a domestic abuse intervention program and parenting classes. Respondent-mother admitted that she had stated that she would prefer that DHHS not visit the home, but she understood that it was required. Other than testimony concerning how respondent-mother had requested the DHHS policy concerning home visits, and testimony that respondent-mother told BB that he did not have to speak with DHHS if he did not want to, very little testimony concerned respondent-mother’s behavior during the worker’s attempts to visit BB. Respondent-mother testified that she had previously cared for BB without respondent-father in the home and that she was willing to engage in any option that returned BB to her home. There was little evidence that respondent-mother personally engaged in the commission of any physical or psychological abuse against SB. However, there was equally little evidence that respondent-mother went to any trouble to try to prevent respondent-father from engaging in the abuse.

In contrast, respondent-father was removed from both domestic violence and parenting programs because he was verbally aggressive and uncooperative with staff. Additionally, respondent-father was actively disruptive during sessions he attended, and he insisted that “he already knew all he needed to know about parenting,” despite the significant evidence to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
in Re Barrett Minors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-barrett-minors-michctapp-2020.