In re B.P.

2015 ME 139, 126 A.3d 713, 2015 Me. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 29, 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2015 ME 139 (In re B.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re B.P., 2015 ME 139, 126 A.3d 713, 2015 Me. LEXIS 150 (Me. 2015).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2015 ME 139 Docket: Pen-15-75 Submitted On Briefs: July 23, 2015 Decided: October 29, 2015

Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, and HUMPHREY, JJ.

IN RE B.P.

SAUFLEY, C.J.

[¶1] The parents of B.P. appeal from a judgment entered by the District

Court (Newport, Fowle, J.) terminating their parental rights to B.P., their son,

pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(A)(1)(a) and (B)(2) (2014). The parents

primarily challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the District Court’s

finding that they are not fit to parent B.P. We affirm the judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶2] This case began when the state police responded to a physical

altercation between the mother and the father that occurred in B.P.’s presence on

July 3, 2012, when B.P. was just over a year old. During the assault, the mother hit

the father, knocking one of his teeth out. Subsequently, B.P. was removed from

the family home with custody granted to the Department of Health and Human

Services through a preliminary protection order. On November 5, 2012, the

District Court entered a jeopardy order, finding that both the mother and father had

abused substances and exposed the child to domestic violence. The Department 2

placed B.P. in foster care with his maternal great aunt and uncle pending

reunification with the parents.

[¶3] In July 2013, the Department of Health and Human Services filed a

petition to terminate the parents’ parental rights. After several continuances, the

termination hearing began in April 2014. Because the father was demonstrating an

improved capacity to safely parent B.P., the court recessed the hearing and entered

a judicial review order establishing a new reunification plan as to the father. The

plan contained a timeline toward trial placement of B.P. in the father’s home with

an ultimate goal of reunification with the father. By agreement of the parties, the

judicial review order that created the reunification plan contained several

conditions, including (1) a strict prohibition of contact, direct or indirect, between

the father and the mother, and (2) an order that the father continue counseling. The

agreed-to order containing the reunification plan for the father also included a

cease reunification order with respect to the mother.

[¶4] In a judicial review order dated October 8, 2014, the court noted that

B.P.’s trial placement with his father had begun two days earlier. The order also

included the court’s finding that the father “has continued to participate in

services,” and that supervised visits would continue for the mother. Less than

seven weeks later, on November 24, 2014, the Department removed B.P. from the

trial placement with his father and returned him to the care of the foster parents. 3

The termination of parental rights hearing was resumed. In late December 2014

and January 2015, the trial on the petition for termination of parental rights was

completed. The court entered a judgment terminating each parent’s parental rights

on February 5, 2015. The court found the following facts by clear and convincing

evidence, and its findings are supported by competent evidence in the record. See

In re K.M., 2015 ME 79, ¶ 9, 118 A.3d 812.

[¶5] The mother has been convicted of drug trafficking, domestic violence

assault, and theft. She has not been in drug treatment since April 2013 and failed

to complete anger management counseling. Her challenges limit her ability to take

care of herself, let alone her child.

[¶6] The father, unbeknownst to the Department at the time, had unilaterally

withdrawn from counseling in August 2014, four months after the termination

hearing had been recessed to allow for additional reunification efforts, and had

been having contact with the mother. It was only because the court, the

Department, and the GAL were operating on the assumption that the father was

complying with the conditions of the reunification plan1 that the trial placement

with B.P. had commenced in October 2014.

1 It is not clear from the record why the Department, which was paying the father’s service providers, was unaware that the father had stopped attending his counseling sessions in August 2014. 4

[¶7] Nine days before the end of the trial placement—and the planned full

reunification of B.P. with the father—a sheriff’s deputy responded to an altercation

between the father and the mother’s stepbrother at a gas station. The confrontation

began when the stepbrother saw the mother with the father and B.P., and took a

picture to document it. When the stepbrother left the station in his truck, the father

pulled his vehicle in front of him, stopped, got out of the vehicle, confronted the

stepbrother, and angrily accused the stepbrother of following him. The father later

reported to the police that the stepbrother had deliberately rear-ended his vehicle

and threatened him with a gun. No damage to the father’s vehicle was observed,

no gun was discovered, and the police were unable to substantiate any of the

father’s claims.

[¶8] When the termination hearing recommenced in late December 2014,

the father’s counselor testified that although the father had been making progress,

the father stopped attending the sessions in August 2014 because he felt that he did

not need the counseling and that he was too busy. The counselor also testified that

the father continues to have difficulty controlling his verbalizations and that he is

often overwhelmed by emotions. The counselor opined that although the father is

an adequate parent most of the time, he is not able to foresee dangerous situations

and has inconsistent coping skills that create an unsafe environment for B.P. 5

[¶9] At the hearing, the father was evasive about his relationship with the

mother. He said that he did not know what type of relationship he would have with

her. Although he insisted that he had not had much contact with the mother, he did

not think that she was using drugs and he was convinced that he would be able to

tell if she was. The father also testified that he did not have any concerns with the

mother having unsupervised contact with B.P. In addition, the father

acknowledged that domestic violence in a previous relationship had led to the

removal of his other children from the home for a period of sixteen months.

[¶10] The court found, and the record confirms, that the mother and father

had been violating the no-contact order on a regular basis. B.P. told his great aunt

and uncle that he saw his parents together more than once after the April 2014

agreement, and the mother once told B.P. that his father would bring B.P. to see

her soon. Although B.P. reported seeing them together, the parents claimed that

B.P. was fantasizing. Caseworkers also reported seeing the parents together on

more than one occasion immediately before and after attending supervised visits.

The evidence strongly supports the court’s findings that the father is not credible or

honest, and cannot be relied upon to honor his agreements with the Department or

to abide by court orders.

[¶11] The father’s unwillingness to protect B.P. from the mother’s violence

was an important factor in the trial court’s decision, but so, too, was the father’s 6

inability to control his own behavior.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 ME 139, 126 A.3d 713, 2015 Me. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bp-me-2015.