In re C. R.

66 Pa. D. & C.2d 155, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 39
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Butler County
DecidedJuly 25, 1973
Docketno. 29 of 1973
StatusPublished

This text of 66 Pa. D. & C.2d 155 (In re C. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Butler County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re C. R., 66 Pa. D. & C.2d 155, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 39 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

HOUSE, P. J.

(Thirty-third Judicial District, Specially Presiding),

A petition for involuntary termination of parental rights was filed by Butler County Bureau of Childrens Services seeking to terminate the parental rights of M. R. as to her daughter, C. R. Counsel was appointed by the court to represent respondent and the matter proceeded to hearing. The petition alleges as grounds for termination the continued incapacity of respondent and the unlikelihood that this incapacity could or would be remedied.

ISSUES

Has it been shown that respondent has lacked in the past and now lacks the capacity to provide essential parental care, control or subsistence necessary for the physical or mental well-being of her daughter and, if so, has it been shown that the condition and causes of her incapacity cannot or will not be remedied by respondent?

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. C. R. is a minor female of the age of 15 years.

2. C. R. has been under the care and supervision of the Butler County Bureau of Childrens Services for a period of approximately eights years, during which time she has been cared for in a home for children and in foster homes.

3. Respondent, M. R., is an adult individual of the age of 51 years and is the mother of C. R.

4. Respondent is a high school graduate who had gainful employment for approximately 13 years after graduation from high school and until her marriage and/or until the onset of mental illness.

5. Respondent was first hospitalized and treated for [157]*157mental illness in 1950 or 1951, the inference being that she received electric shock treatment at that time.

6. Respondent has been hospitalized and treated for mental illness at Torrance State Hospital on four different admissions and for varying lengths of time, the first such admission being in 1954 and the last such admission being in 1968.

7. Respondent was placed in out-patient care by Torrance State Hospital at the time of her release from the hospital in 1969 and has been under such outpatient care at the hospital and at the Indiana Guidance Clinic continuously since her hospital release.

8. A final diagnosis at Torrance State Hospital found that respondent was suffering from schizophrenia, chronic undifferentiated type with possible paranoid trends.

9. Since leaving Torrance State Hospital in 1969, respondent has been under the care, first, of William T. Kitski, M.D., and, more recently since early 1972, of R. R. McLeod, M.D., a psychiatrist.

10. Dr. McLeod has diagnosed respondent’s present condition as of the date of his last examination on February 14,1973, as chronic paranoid schizophrenia.

11. Dr. McLeod is of the opinion that the prognosis in respondent’s case is “now poor”; that is, that she is not likely to become asymptomatic after “she has shown the symptoms for nineteen years”; the chance of abatement of her condition is one in 10.

12. Dr. McLeod is of the opinion that respondent is capable of maintaining herself in the community but that her condition is such as to adversely affect her parental relationship with her daughter and that the prognosis is poor as to an abatement of this incapacity.

13. Respondent has evidenced a continuous interest and concern for her daughter during the entire period that the child has been in foster care.

[158]*15814. Respondent presents herself before the court as an adult; apparently physically healthy and physically normal.

15. Respondent, in testifying, exhibited an apparently normal capacity to recall past events in proper sequence but lapsed repeatedly and unpredictably into unrealistic and unintelligible explanations and interpretations of those events, as for instance:

(a) Respondent states that in 1951 at St. Francis Hospital, she underwent “electrocution” where “they took the life out of my body” except “what went in the power lines was returned to the body” and that all of this is the basis for her “disability claim.” She describes her disability as “refraction annually” and says that this is interpreted to mean “life out — will return.” Respondent says the effect of all of this is that she has not matured since 1951 because “without your life you don’t mature like you should.”

(b) Respondent states that she is unable to properly explain her situation because “that is all sealed information with the government.”

(c) Respondent states that two other children were removed from her custody and placed in a children’s home some 15 years or more ago “by the United States Jury.” “They came to the Court in Indiana with the sealed Court Orders. That’s sealed information.”

16. Respondent suffers from a chronic mental illness of at least 20 years duration which renders her incapable of relating normally to the world around her or to any person in contact with her.

17. Respondent lacks the capacity to provide essential parental care, control and subsistence necessary for the physical or mental well-being of her child.

18. The conditions and causes of the parental incapacity suffered by respondent cannot or will not be remedied by her.

19. The best interests of the public and of the child [159]*159will be served by a termination of the parental rights of respondent.

DISCUSSION

The legislature has provided that the rights of a parent in regard to a child may be terminated after a petition filed and a hearing held on the ground that, inter alia: “(2) The repeated and continued incapacity ... of the parent has caused the child to be without essential parental care, control, orsubsistencenecessary for his physical or mental well-being and the conditions and causes of the incapacity . . . cannot or will not be remedied by the parent”: Act of July 21,1970, P. L. 620, art. Ill, sec. 311, IPS §311.

In the case at bar, such a petition has been filed, hearing held and evidence received on the question of respondent’s incapacity to function as a parent and upon the question of her ability to remedy her alleged parental incapacity.

There is a certain paucity of appellate decisions to guide us in determining whether the quality and quantity of petitioner’s evidence is sufficient to establish the fact of respondent’s incapacity and the fact of her inability to remedy that alleged incapacity. It is to be noted that respondent presented no evidence but did testify in the petitioner’s case as on cross-examination.

Our case deals with an alleged mental and emotional incapacity rather than an alleged physical incapacity. We are aware that the field of psychiatry is neither so exact nor so far advanced as the field of physical medicine. Therefore, we approach with considerable caution the diagnoses and prognoses profferred by those in the psychiatric field. The fact remains, however, that in a case where mental or emotional incapacity is alleged, the court necessarily must rely heavily upon the evidence of psychiatric experts.

In the case at bar, Dr. McLeod testified that respond[160]*160ent has been under his care since early 1972 and that he has available to him histories, records of treatment and other materials relating to respondent which cover the past 20 years or more.

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Related

Jones Appeal
297 A.2d 117 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
66 Pa. D. & C.2d 155, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-c-r-pactcomplbutler-1973.