In Re Bf
This text of 560 S.E.2d 738 (In Re Bf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the Interest of B.F., a child.
Court of Appeals of Georgia.
*739 O'Brien & Koontz, David J. Koontz, Marietta, for appellant.
Thurbert E. Baker, Atty. Gen., Dennis R. Dunn, Deputy Atty. Gen., William C. Joy, Senior Asst. Atty. Gen., Shalen S. Nelson, Asst. Atty. Gen., Sanders B. Deen, Marietta, for appellee.
POPE, Presiding Judge.
The father of B.F. appeals following the termination of his parental rights. He asserts that there was insufficient evidence to support the juvenile court's order. We agree and reverse.
In determining whether a termination of parental rights is supported by sufficient evidence, we construe [the] evidence and all reasonable inferences from it in a light most favorable to the trial court's ruling and ask whether a rational trier of fact could have found by clear and convincing evidence that the natural parent's rights had been lost.
(Citation omitted.) In the Interest of J.E. L., 223 Ga.App. 269(1), 477 S.E.2d 412 (1996).
Viewed in that light, the evidence at the termination hearing showed that in February 1999, the father was arrested on a charge of driving with a suspended license. At the time, B.F. was living with the father and the mother's whereabouts were unknown, so the child was placed in the custody of the Department of Family & Children Services. A review hearing was scheduled with regard to B.F. on June 1, 1999, but when the father failed to appear, the juvenile court issued an arrest warrant. After the father explained that he was incarcerated at the time of the June hearing, he was released from jail on the warrant.
At a later hearing on October 5, 1999, the juvenile court found that the father had failed to comply with the court's March 8, 1999 order in that he had failed to seek and maintain full-time employment; he had failed to maintain a stable home for a period of six months; he had failed to have a complete drug and alcohol assessment and to follow the recommendations of that assessment; and that he had failed to complete parenting classes. On January 18, 2000, the father failed to appear for another review hearing. The juvenile court found him to be in wilful contempt and issued a second arrest warrant. The father testified that he never received notification of this hearing. He was released from that warrant after accepting service of the petition for termination of his parental rights.
The hearing on the petition for termination was held over a period of two days in October and November 2000. A DFACS caseworker testified that after coming into the department's custody, B.F. was placed in a foster home until August 2000 when he went to live with his paternal grandparents. While in foster care, B.F. received counseling and was placed on Ritalin to help with his school grades. A DFACS caseworker testified that since being placed with his grandparents, B.F. had been doing well. He was taken off Ritalin, but planned to continue with counseling. He was receiving tutoring to help with two of his classes, and the caseworker said he seemed "focused and excited about school." She stated that the counseling was to assist B.F. in showing his emotions and feelings as he tended to suppress them. The focus of this counseling is at least partially attributable to an incident where B.F. burst into tears during a visit with his father. The caseworker admitted, however, that B.F.'s reaction to seeing his father by bursting into tears may have been an indication that he loved and missed his father.
Between the time B.F. was taken into DFACS custody and the termination hearing, the father had visited him five times, three of which occurred within one and one-half months before the termination hearing in October 2000. The father had attempted to visit the child on one other occasion, his birthday on March 31, 2000, but the child already had plans for the day. The caseworker attempted to reschedule, but informed the father that there was an outstanding arrest warrant for him. She told the father that DFACS would have to contact the authorities if that remained outstanding.
*740 The father said that he would try to clear that up and contact her a few days later. She did not hear from him.
The caseworker stated that the father had never presented any verification that he had completed a parenting class or substance abuse assessment as ordered by the court. But she admitted that B.F. was taken into custody due to his father's arrest and not based upon any evidence of abuse or drug use. The caseworker also testified that the father had never provided DFACS with an address where he was living, nor had he attempted to make any financial contributions to B.F.'s support. But she conceded that the father had been in jail for a significant amount of time since January 1999, which may have affected his ability to contribute financially or to comply with the court's order.
The father filed a petition to legitimate B.F. in connection with the termination proceedings, and the juvenile court granted that petition. He had never previously made any attempt to legitimate B.F. and had never attempted to legitimate A.F., his other child, who resided primarily with her mother. The father testified that he had been residing in a three-bedroom trailer for a period of six months prior to the hearing, although by the time of the November hearing date, he had moved into a two-bedroom trailer with a friend. He stated that he could obtain access to a three-bedroom trailer at anytime if B.F. came to live with him.
Prior to living in the trailers, the father had been in jail off and on. The father spent from six to nine months in jail in 1999 on the suspended license charge and the resulting probation violation, and other jail time was attributable to the arrest warrants issued by the juvenile court. He was released from jail in January 2000.
At the time of the hearing the father was employed with a tree service company, but received no health benefits. The father admitted that he made no attempt to support B.F. financially since the child was placed in DFACS custody because no one ever mentioned anything to him about making payments. He later stated that he had tried to give B.F.'s stepgrandmother some money towards the child's support, but that she had refused to take it.
The father stated that he never attended any parenting class because he did not need to. He described himself as a good parent and said that he "didn't need to go sit in an office and have people tell me what I was and what I wasn't." But at the second hearing date, he stated that he had tried to attend parenting classes while in jail, but that they had been suspended. He stated, however, that if he got custody of B.F. back he would do anything he was asked to do, including attending classes.
The child's paternal stepgrandmother testified that B.F. was living with her husband and her at the time of the hearing. She stated that the child had lived with them previously in 1995 "when neither parent was available." At that time, they were called in the middle of the night to pick up B.F. and A.F. by the Cobb County police. They kept them for several months, before the father came for a visit. The stepgrandmother testified that B.F.'s current stay with them was going well and that she believed that he would benefit by staying longer.
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560 S.E.2d 738, 253 Ga. App. 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bf-gactapp-2002.