In Re B.H. and S.S

754 S.E.2d 743, 233 W. Va. 57, 2014 WL 537757, 2014 W. Va. LEXIS 110
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 2014
Docket13-0342
StatusPublished
Cited by164 cases

This text of 754 S.E.2d 743 (In Re B.H. and S.S) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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 B.H. and S.S, 754 S.E.2d 743, 233 W. Va. 57, 2014 WL 537757, 2014 W. Va. LEXIS 110 (W. Va. 2014).

Opinion

LOUGHRY, Justice:

The petitioner, Krista H. (“the mother”), appeals from the January 9, 2014, Corrected Disposition Order through which the Circuit Court of Wood County granted primary custodial responsibility of her daughters, B.H. *60 and S.S., 1 to their biological father, the respondent Randy H., Jr. (“the father”); 2 granted her unsupervised visitation with the children; and dismissed the proceeding from the circuit court’s docket. 3 Seeking a reversal of the circuit court’s order and the entry of a new order making her the primary custodial parent, the mother asserts that the circuit court erred by granting the father primary custody of the children because she had substantially complied with the terms and conditions of her improvement period and by denying her an adequate opportunity to regain primary physical custody of the children through unsupervised visitation. Based upon the record, the parties’ briefs, and the arguments presented, we find no error. Accordingly, we affirm the circuit court’s award of primary custody of the children to the father and unsupervised visitation to the mother.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

On December 5, 2011, the respondent, the West Virginia. Department of Health and Human Resources (“the Department”), filed a verified Petition to Institute Child Abuse and Neglect Proceedings (“Petition”) against the mother in relation to her minor children, B.H. and S.S. 4 The father was also a named respondent in the proceeding, although there were no allegations of either abuse or neglect against him in the Petition. 5 The Department alleged that the mother was in a personal relationship with a registered sex offender, John Bailey; that the mother exposed her children to Mr. Bailey, as well as his friend, Andrew Oldaker, a registered sex offender with whom the mother, her daughters, B.H. and S.S., and Mr. Bailey lived for a period of time; and that S.S. and B.H. were sexually abused on multiple occasions by Mr. Bailey and other sex offenders with whom the mother associated. 6 The Department took emergency custody of the children and, on December 6, 2011, the circuit court ordered that the legal and physical custody of B.H. and S.S. remain with the Department. The mother waived her preliminary hearing and the matter proceeded to adjudication.

*61 During the January 10, 2012, adjudicatory healing, the circuit court accepted the mother’s stipulation wherein she stated, in part, as follows:

8. The father of [B.H. and S.S.] is Randy [H., Jr.] whose whereabouts are unknown.
7. The respondent-mother admits to the neglect of the above-named children as follows:
1. No permanent residence at the time of filing the petition.
2. She and her children were residing with John Bailey, a registered sex offender.
8. She was aware that John Bailey and Andrew Oldaker were registered sex offenders, and failed to protect her children by allowing them to be around John Bailey and Andrew Oldaker.
4. That as a result of being around John Bailey and other individuals who are registered sex offenders, her children were subjected to sexual abuse.
8. Based upon these stipulations, the children are neglected children within the meaning of the West Virginia Code 49-6-1 et al.

On January 17, 2012, the circuit court entered an order adjudicating the children abused and neglected and awarding the mother a six-month post-adjudicatory improvement period. The primary goals of the improvement period were to aid the mother in improving her self-esteem; to help her gain insight into how her children had been harmed through their exposure to registered sex offenders; and to teach her how to identify and recognize sex offenders, how to prevent the sexual abuse of her children, and how to provide them with a safe and secure home, free from exposure to sex offenders. The improvement period also allowed the mother to have supervised visitation with her daughters.

Thereafter, periodic review hearings were held before the circuit court to ascertain how the mother was doing in her improvement period. While the mother complied with certain aspects of her improvement period, in other areas she experienced difficulties. 7 In Child Protective Services (“CPS”) worker Amanda Damron’s April 3, 2012, hearing update, she reported that the mother had knowingly started dating and living with another sex offender, Patrick Trembly. CPS worker Damron further reported that the mother indicated that Mr. Trembly was fighting his “wrongful conviction” and 'that she believed he is innocent. 8

In CPS worker Damron’s update for the July 9, 2012, review hearing, she reported that the mother “seemed to understand what the appropriate boundaries should be with [B.H. and S.S.], but in the next visit, she did nothing that she and the worker [the parenting provider] talked about.” Ms. Damron further reported that the parenting provider was “very uneasy at the thought of unsupervised visitation.”

In late August 2012, the mother filed a motion for a ninety-day extension of her improvement period, which the circuit court granted. Approximately one month into the ninety-day extension, CPS worker Damron *62 reported that the mother had started weekend visitations with her children under the supervision of her maternal aunt. Ms. Damron concluded her October 2012 report by expressing continuing concern that the mother will not be protective of the children based on the parenting provider’s impression that the mother still does not believe that John Bailey is a sex offender 9 but says that she does so as to appear protective. 10 In late November 2012, CPS worker Damron filed another hearing update in which she reported that while the mother had complied with the terms and conditions of all services, 11 she “eontinue[d] to be concerned that [the mother] will not be protective of the children in the future” and that “the provider’s account of [the mother’s] diminished decision making skills ... will cause safety concerns for the children if they were to be in [the mother’s] complete care.” 12 In recognition of these continuing concerns, when the circuit court awarded the mother unsupervised visitation by order entered December 10, 2012, the court directed that only the mother and the children’s maternal grandmother 13

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Bluebook (online)
754 S.E.2d 743, 233 W. Va. 57, 2014 WL 537757, 2014 W. Va. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bh-and-ss-wva-2014.