In re Cali

111 N.E.3d 1111
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 2, 2018
Docket17-P-1557
StatusPublished

This text of 111 N.E.3d 1111 (In re Cali) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Cali, 111 N.E.3d 1111 (Mass. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

The mother appeals from a decree issued by a judge of the Juvenile Court finding her unfit to parent her daughter, Cali, and terminating her parental rights.3 See G. L. c. 210, § 3. She argues that the trial judge's factual findings are insufficient to establish her parental unfitness by clear and convincing evidence, that the Department of Children and Families (department) did not make reasonable efforts to reunify her with Cali, and that the case should be remanded for the judge to reconsider posttermination visitation. We affirm.

Background. The judge's subsidiary findings and the essential facts are uncontested. The mother has three children by two fathers. Her older two children, Cali's half-siblings, were the subjects of numerous G. L. c. 119, § 51A, reports alleging medical neglect and alcohol abuse by the mother. In 2013 the department filed a care and protection petition as to the two older children and created a service plan for the mother. The mother did not complete the recommended services, which included taking a parenting class, undergoing substance abuse treatment, and obtaining a psychological evaluation. As a result of the care and protection petition, the two older children were removed from the mother's care and placed in foster care. Ultimately, they were placed in the custody of their father.

While that case was pending, the department learned that the mother was pregnant with Cali. The department received reports during the mother's pregnancy that she had positive drug screens and had missed three prenatal appointments. When confronted about one of the positive screens, the mother told the social worker that she used marijuana to help with anxiety and lack of appetite.

In October of 2014, with the department's assistance, the mother moved to Jessie's House, a shelter for parents and children where parents can receive assistance in procuring services. Cali was born one month later. At the time of the birth, the mother tested positive for marijuana, prompting the department to file a care and protection petition and seek emergency custody of Cali. See G. L. c. 119, § 24. After a temporary custody hearing, a judge granted custody to the mother contingent on her remaining in good standing at Jessie's House and remaining drug and alcohol free, among other conditions.

In February of 2015, Jessie's House staff expressed concern that the mother had been drinking alcohol while caring for Cali. The department again sought emergency custody. After another hearing the judge granted custody to the mother subject to the same conditions in the first temporary custody order. Several days later, the mother tested positive for cocaine. The mother contested the results and was given the opportunity to retest the next day. When the second sample also came back positive for cocaine, the department was granted emergency, and later temporary, custody of Cali.

Because the mother no longer had custody, she was forced to leave Jessie's House. Earlier, Jessie's House staff had assisted the mother in obtaining a Section 8 housing voucher. When the mother claimed that an unpaid gas bill was impeding her efforts to find an apartment, the department informed her that it would pay a portion of the bill and help set up a payment plan for the rest. The mother never provided the department with a copy of the bill, however, and at trial she admitted that she did not call the gas company to ask for a copy. Due to the mother's inaction, the Section 8 voucher expired.

Throughout the time leading up to trial, which began in November of 2016, the mother remained homeless, living with relatives and various friends and moving frequently from home to home. The only address the mother provided to the department was her brother's address in the Dorchester section of Boston, where she was living at the time of trial. The department was unable to conduct a home visit at the brother's address.4

The mother did not comply with the majority of her service plan tasks. She did not complete a substance abuse program after she left Jessie's House, develop a relapse prevention plan, attend Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous meetings, take a parenting class, or maintain contact with the department. In addition, the mother was not consistent in attending visits with Cali. Of twenty-six scheduled visits between March of 2015 and September of 2016, the mother cancelled or failed to attend five and was late to eleven. She was frequently more than fifteen minutes late. On multiple occasions she would not call to cancel until after the time scheduled for the start of the visit, by which time Cali had already been transported from her foster home to the department's area office.5 The mother also was not properly prepared for the visits she did attend, failing to bring appropriate food, drink, and activities for Cali.

Discussion. 1. Unfitness. "To terminate parental rights to a child and to dispense with parental consent to adoption, a judge must find by clear and convincing evidence, based on subsidiary findings proved by at least a fair preponderance of evidence, that the parent is unfit to care for the child and that termination is in the child's best interests." Adoption of Jacques, 82 Mass. App. Ct. 601, 606 (2012). While the mother raises no challenge to the judge's subsidiary findings, she contends that his ultimate conclusion of unfitness is not supported by clear and convincing evidence. Specifically, she contends that the judge erred in finding her unfit based solely on her issues with substance use.

It is true that "a [drug] habit, without more, [does not] translate[ ] automatically into legal unfitness to act as a parent." Adoption of Katharine, 42 Mass. App. Ct. 25, 34 (1997). But unlike in Katharine, the evidence in this case established a nexus between the mother's substance use and her parental deficiencies: not long before Cali was born, the department filed a care and protection petition as to the mother's two older children due in part to her alcohol abuse, resulting in those children being placed in foster care. This past conduct has prognostic value, and the judge was allowed to consider it in assessing the mother's current parental fitness. See Adoption of Larry, 434 Mass. 456, 469 (2001).

The mother's past conduct is especially relevant because "the evidence support[s] the continuing vitality of such conduct." Id. Around the time she lost custody of her two older children, the mother smoked marijuana while she was pregnant with Cali. She then tested positive for cocaine, despite the requirement of the temporary custody order that she remain drug and alcohol free. During the time this case was pending, the mother did not complete a substance abuse program or develop a relapse prevention plan. Contrary to the mother's contention, the evidence of her substance use is not stale, and the judge did not err by considering it as part of the calculus. See Adoption of Nancy

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.E.3d 1111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cali-massappct-2018.