In Re CC

618 S.E.2d 813
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 20, 2005
DocketCOA04-1448
StatusPublished

This text of 618 S.E.2d 813 (In Re CC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re CC, 618 S.E.2d 813 (N.C. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

618 S.E.2d 813 (2005)

In the Matter of C.C. J.C., minor children.

No. COA04-1448.

Court of Appeals of North Carolina.

September 20, 2005.

Mecklenburg County Attorney's Office, by J. Edward Yeager, Jr., Charlotte, for petitioner-appellee Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services.

Klein & Freeman, PLLC, by Katherine Freeman, Charlotte, for petitioner Guardian Ad Litem.

Mercedes O. Chut, Greensboro, for respondent-appellant.

*815 TYSON, Judge.

T.C.W. ("respondent") appeals from order terminating her parental rights to her two minor children, C.C. and J.C. (collectively, the "children"). We reverse.

I. Background

J.C. was born on 26 February 1993 and C.C. was born on 27 April 1995. In May 2000, the two children were referred to the Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services ("DSS"). Respondent agreed to a case plan designed to improve the children's living conditions. This case plan addressed three areas of concern: (1) lack of supervision for the children; (2) the mental health of respondent; and (3) living conditions in the home. Respondent agreed to provide better supervision of the children, attend parenting classes, continue mental health counseling, and provide sanitary living conditions for the children. She also agreed to monthly meetings with a social worker monitoring their case.

Giovanna Wilson ("Ms. Wilson") was the social worker assigned to the children from December 2000 to May 2001. Ms. Wilson "visited the home regularly" during that time and testified it "[t]ypically . . . was straightened up." In May 2001, Ms. Wilson found the house in a "very dirty" condition with dirty dishes all over the kitchen, "[t]he trash can was full and trash was coming out of the trash can," a full trash bag sitting on the kitchen floor, clothes strewn about on the steps, no sheets on the bed, and roaches in empty soda cans in respondent's room.

During that time period, respondent did not attend all of her mental health appointments. Ms. Wilson "received a lot of calls from the school that the children were not attending." These calls made Ms. Wilson suspect respondent was not properly supervising the children. On occasion, Ms. Wilson found the children outside playing while respondent was in bed upstairs. Ms. Wilson also received reports the children were having behavioral problems at school. She encouraged respondent to address these issues, but was unaware of any attempt by respondent to do so.

In May 2001, Ms. Wilson picked up the children from school one day after she could not reach respondent. When Ms. Wilson arrived at respondent's home, respondent was upstairs and offered no explanation where she had been. Upon returning home, six-year-old C.C. "put a pan on the stove and he was attempting to open up a can to cook."

On 3 May 2001, Ms. Wilson filed a juvenile petition. The petition alleged the children lacked proper parental supervision, did not attend school regularly, and lived in an "unkempt and unsanitary" home. Respondent did not contest the facts alleged in the petition. On 2 July 2001, the trial court accepted the facts as alleged in the petition with minor modifications and adjudicated the children to be neglected.

After assuming custody of the children, DSS continued to work with respondent to reunite the family. Starting in August 2001, social worker Kate Koebel ("Ms. Koebel") was assigned to the family. She augmented respondent's previous case plan after the children were found to be neglected. Under the amended case plan, respondent was also encouraged to: (1) obtain "a job or some other means of legal income;" (2) stay in contact with the children's therapist; (3) regularly attend therapy; (4) "participate in Family Preservation Services and in-home education services;" (5) "pay all of her bills in a timely manner;" and (6) to "maintain housing."

Respondent was unemployed when the children were initially taken into DSS custody. She obtained stable employment with the Charlotte Observer almost two years later, in April 2003, earning $6.50 per hour selling newspaper subscriptions by telephone and worked approximately seventeen hours per week. She voluntarily resigned from this job in early 2004. Prior to the Charlotte Observer job, she worked as a cashier for Jack-In-The-Box in Pineville, North Carolina where she worked for only two weeks earning approximately $100.00. Previous to the Jack-In-The-Box job, she worked "on and off" for her pastor "[f]iling, answering the phone, and cleaning" and earned approximately $150.00 per month.

*816 Respondent began to receive Supplemental Security Income in January 2004. She received disability income due to her "[s]leep apnea, severe back pain and depression." Initially, she received $389.50 per month. However, by 30 April 2004, she was receiving $564.00 per month. Respondent testified she was still looking for work as of April 2004. When asked what work she was seeking, respondent replied she had "an internet marketing business going on." Between August 2001 and May 2003, respondent was in danger of eviction on "a couple of occasions." Her monthly rent ranged between $25.00 and $40.00 per month.

Ms. Koebel characterized respondent's contact with the children's therapists as "not always consistent." After March 2003, the children's therapist requested respondent not be present at the children's counseling sessions. Respondent's attendance at her own counseling sessions was likewise sporadic until June 2003. Respondent participated in the Family Intervention Program and complied with the in-home education services.

Initially, the children had very limited visitation with respondent. They were allowed to visit for one hour each week at Walton Plaza. Soon after Ms. Koebel was assigned to the case, the family enjoyed visitation in respondent's home. The visits became progressively longer. Two hours each week unsupervised visitation became overnight visits, and finally evolved to weekend visitation. On at least one occasion, respondent elected not to have weekend visitation with the children because they had been especially rowdy the previous weekend. Respondent seemed to have an especially conflicted relationship with J.C. The visitation periods culminated in a month-long visitation with C.C. in January 2003. However, C.C. was removed from the home again because he was "not consistently getting his medication," missed some school, exhibited behavior problems at school, and was not consistently finishing his homework.

After June 2003, respondent attended all of her counseling sessions with her therapist Ms. Linda Lee Woodburn and showed progress. Ms. Koebel testified that in the year and one-half leading up to the hearing, respondent stabilized her housing situation and appropriately maintained it for the children. Respondent completed family education sessions with Ms. Angela Howard in September 2002 and completed another set of parenting classes on her own in February 2004.

In the court summary dated 20 May 2003, DSS recommended "the goal be changed to termination of parental rights and adoption regarding both children." On 28 October 2003, DSS filed petitions to terminate respondent's parental rights to J.C. and C.C. The petitions alleged the following grounds for termination of respondent's parental rights: (1) neglect; and (2) willfully leaving the children in foster care for more than twelve months without showing reasonable progress under the circumstances in correcting the conditions which led to the removal of the children.

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Bluebook (online)
618 S.E.2d 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cc-ncctapp-2005.