In Re BTW

2010 OK 69, 241 P.3d 199, 2010 WL 3862715
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 14, 2010
Docket106,865
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 2010 OK 69 (In Re BTW) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re BTW, 2010 OK 69, 241 P.3d 199, 2010 WL 3862715 (Okla. 2010).

Opinion

OPALA, J.

{1 This appeal presses three issues: (1) whether this court's mandate-that affirmed a 2008 trial court order-was ignored by the trial judge's 2009 decision in a post-appeal permanency/review hearing order, (2) did the trial judge abuse his discretion when he ordered (A) the child to remain in the care of the foster parent (B) supervised visitation for the mother and (C) a change of permanency plan to long-term out-of home child placement and (8) were the mother's due process rights violated when the court ordered long-term foster care for the child. We answer all questions in the negative.

I.

ANATOMY OF THE LITIGATION

{2 The appeal deals with the post-deci-sional consequence of an earlier pronouncement by this court, In the Matter of BTW. 2 That case shall be referred to as BTW I. To provide continuity and assist the reader, a brief recitation of the relevant factual and procedural history leading to our earlier decision and today's cause will be provided here. For a more complete account of the facts leading to BTW I, the reader is referred to the opinion in that cause.

Facts and Procedure Leading to BTW I

3 The mother (appellant in today's cause) adopted BTW in 1999. 3 In June 2005 the mother recognized that her physical and mental abilities to function were deteriorating and that she would need hospitalization. She sought care for BTW from the individual who currently serves as the foster mother. 4 *202 Upon her return home from the hospital, mother alleged the foster mother permitted her only limited supervised visits with BTW. In response to reports of the mother's volatile behavior toward the foster mother, BTW, and a Department of Human Services (DHS) employee, DHS became involved. In May 2006 the child was adjudicated deprived and placed in DHS custody. The agency continued the child's placement with its foster mother. In August 2007, DHS unsuccessful ly sought to terminate the mother's parental rights. 5

1 4 Two permanency/review hearings were held. In October 2007, following the first hearing, the trial judge ordered that a different placement be found for the child, all parties to work toward a permanency plan for the child's reunification with her mother and increased visitation with a view to allowing weekend visitations in the mother's home within thirty days. 6

15 Although visitation increased, DHS did not find alternative foster placement for BTW. At the second review hearing the foster parent intervened. Following the hearing the trial judge issued an order on 15 February 2008 that again directed a change of foster-home placement, reunification for the permanency plan, and visitation between the mother and her child to continue. 7 The state, child, and foster mother (the appellants in BTW I1) immediately filed an emergency motion for the cessation of the mother's visitation rights and a stay of portions of the order. The trial judge denied this motion. 8

T6 On 25 February the appellants filed in this court an application to assume original jurisdiction, a petition for writ of prohibition, and an application for an emergency stay. The court stayed solely the requested change in foster placement. 9 It assumed original jurisdiction on 18 April and issued a writ prohibiting further proceedings in the case. 10 During this time, the appellants also filed in the district court motions for disqualification of the trial judge 11 and reasonable efforts to *203 return the child to the home no longer be required, in accordance with the terms of 10 O.S. § 70083-4.6(A). 12

T7 On 21 April the appellants sought a request to clarify whether the court's writ of prohibition prevents the enforcement of the trial court's order for visitation. 13 Three days later DHS suspended all visitation and appellants filed an emergency motion requesting the court to construe the writ of prohibition as preventing enforcement of the visitation order. This motion was bottomed on reports of the child becoming physically sick following the most recent visitation and allegations that the mother threatened to strangle the child on an earlier weekend visit. 14 The court responded by an order to permit the district court to place for hearing before a disinterested judge the appellants' motion to discontinue visitation. Following a two-day hearing, a newly-appointed judge ruled supervised visitation to take place not more than onee a week. 15 The trial judge's 19 June order noted the incidents leading to the hearing on visitation "were not as horrible as characterized by the child and her supporters nor were they as noncontroversial as was characterized by mother." 16 The court's decision in BTW I that affirmed the district court order was issued on 16 September 2008.

Facts and Proceedings Following BTW I

T8 Before mandate issued in BTW I, 17 DHS, the child, and foster parent (collectively to be known here as appellees or state) filed an emergency motion to discontinue visitation and request that disclosures of the *204 court's opinion to the child be limited. 18 This motion was bottomed on a 3 October 2008 report provided by the child's counselor who recommended that visitation with the mother be discontinued because of the child's increased anxiety and deterioration. 19 He also opined to the child's attorney that informing BTW of the court's decision would be harmful to the child. 20 The parties further disagreed on visitation and on which order controlled during this period. 21 Mother sought a contempt citation against DHS, alleging the latter failed to obey the order affirmed by this court. 22

T 9 The trial judge set 25 November for a regular review hearing and to entertain: (1) the state's emergency motion to discontinue visitation and (2) its earlier motion pursuant to 10 O.S. § 7008-4.6(A). The trial judge denied the movants' latter motion sans hearing. 23

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Bluebook (online)
2010 OK 69, 241 P.3d 199, 2010 WL 3862715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-btw-okla-2010.