In re D.B., C.B., N.B. and T.B., Juveniles

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedSeptember 27, 2012
Docket2012-005
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re D.B., C.B., N.B. and T.B., Juveniles (In re D.B., C.B., N.B. and T.B., Juveniles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re D.B., C.B., N.B. and T.B., Juveniles, (Vt. 2012).

Opinion

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2012-005

SEPTEMBER TERM, 2012

In re D.B., C.B., N.B. and T.B., Juveniles } APPEALED FROM: } } Superior Court, Franklin Unit, } Family Division } } DOCKET NO. 50/51/52/53-5-09 Frjv

Trial Judge: Linda Levitt

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Father appeals an order of the Franklin Superior Court, Family Division, terminating his parental rights with respect to his four children, D.B., C.B., N.B., and T.B. The State opposes the appeal, and the children join in the State’s brief. We affirm.

The unchallenged family court findings reveal that the four children, born between June 2004 and August 2008, were placed in the custody of the Department for Families and Children (DCF) in May 2009. Between 2006 and 2008, DCF received eight reports of suspected child abuse and neglect concerning the family. Among the reports were instances of the children found unattended in public places in the early hours of the morning and an incident in which the oldest child suffered a gash on his head as the result of his father throwing a toy at him to teach him a lesson. Father also abused mother and threatened to kill her. In 2008, father was placed on probation based on a conviction for unlawful mischief. He had previously been convicted of cruelty to animals and simple assault. In January 2009, father was incarcerated after violating his probation by threatening to kill a certain DCF social worker and also mother and himself if the children were taken from him. Mother was unable to handle the children on her own and she entered into a voluntary care agreement that was extended through May 2009. That same month, the State filed a children in need of care or supervision (CHINS) petition. The children were placed in DCF custody, and father was restricted to supervised contact. Upon his release from jail, father was discovered at the family home in violation of his probation and was returned to jail.

In July 2009, both parents stipulated to a finding of CHINS as to all four children. At the September 1 disposition hearing, the court returned custody of the younger three children to mother with conditions, while continuing DCF custody over the oldest child. Father objected to certain facts in the disposition report, but did not object to the ultimate goal of reunification with mother.

Shortly before father was released from jail at the end of December 2009, mother sought and obtained a relief-from-abuse (RFA) order that prohibited father from abusing, or having contact with, her or the children. Three weeks after father was released from jail, he violated the RFA order by staying at the family home and having contact with mother and the children. Found hiding in the house by police, he was charged with another violation of the order in February 2010 and incarcerated. He was charged with a third violation for continuing to contact mother from jail. In April 2010, he pled guilty to the three violations and received a six to twenty-four month sentence with a minimum release date of August 5, 2010 and a maximum release date of January 27, 2012.

In November 2010, the three younger children were returned to DCF custody because mother was unable to parent them. In May 2011, the mother voluntarily relinquished her parental rights to all four children, and the following month DCF filed a petition to terminate father’s parental rights. Father was released from jail in September 2011.

The termination hearing was held October 25-26, 2011. Following the hearing, in a December 1 decision, the family court ordered termination of father’s parental rights. The court concluded that father’s ability to parent his children had stagnated, if not regressed, and that the best interests of the children supported termination of his parental rights. The court found that father had played an entirely negative role in his children’s lives, that he had no insight into how his parenting had adversely affected his children, that he still blamed DCF and others for his predicament, and that he had failed to address domestic violence and anger management issues that led to the children being taken into DCF custody.

On appeal, father first argues that the termination order must be reversed because the evidence supporting the family court’s finding of stagnation involved factors beyond his control. Father states that the court impermissibly relied upon physical and economic factors, such as his being unemployed and not having his own home, which were a direct result of his being incarcerated for over two years and released only about one month before the termination hearing was held. Father cites out-of-state cases for the proposition that a parent’s incarceration cannot be a determinative basis for a finding of parental unfitness. See, e.g., In re Cody T., 2009 ME 95, ¶ 28, 979 A.2d 81 (stating that “a parent’s incarceration, standing alone, does not provide grounds for the termination of parental rights,” and that, in considering parental fitness of incarcerated parents, courts must focus on whether parent can provide nurturing parental relationship using means available rather than on whether parent can show ability to provide physical and economic support for child). According to father, “[b]ecause a parent cannot be judged on acts that are impossible for him to perform, the consideration of a person’s fitness to parent must be in the context of assessing conduct based on what is physically and legally possible for the particular incarcerated parent involved.” Father asserts that in this case, the State directly impeded his ability to develop any kind of positive connection with his children by cutting off his communication with them. In father’s view, if the court had considered the degree to which his satisfaction of case plan goals and his rehabilitation in prison had positively impacted his ability to parent, the court could not have found stagnation in that ability.

The family court may consider modification of a court-approved goal “only upon a showing of a substantial and material change of circumstances.” In re A.G., 2004 VT 125, ¶ 17, 178 Vt. 7. The party seeking modification has the burden of showing not only the requisite changed circumstances but also how the proposed change serves the children’s best interests under the relevant statutory criteria. Id. The decision of whether there has been a substantial and material change in circumstances is within the sound discretion of the family court. Id. ¶ 19. Most often, a change in circumstances is found when a parent’s ability to care for the children has either deteriorated or stagnated. Id. Because stagnation is generally shown by the lack of sufficient improvement over time in the ability to parent, the key question is whether any 2 improvement substantially conformed to the expectations at the time of the CHINS proceeding and DCF’s case plan. Id.

Here, in finding stagnation, the court noted that father had spent twenty-seven of the previous thirty-two months in jail and that he had recently been released from jail with no job, no transportation, and no home other than staying with his mother, who had abused him as a child and from whom he had been taken at the age of twelve. The court also noted that the RFA order prohibited father from contacting the children until the end of December 2011. Notably, father’s extended incarceration resulting from his contact with the children and their mother on multiple occasions in violation of an RFA order was conduct also prohibited in the disposition case plan. Thus, father’s conduct in violation of the case plan led to his incarceration, which, in turn, undermined his ability to reach a point in which he could care for his children.

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Related

Santosky v. Kramer
455 U.S. 745 (Supreme Court, 1982)
In Re Cody T.
2009 ME 95 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2009)
In re C.L. & H.L.
563 A.2d 241 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1989)
In re J.H.
587 A.2d 1009 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1991)
In re E.B.
603 A.2d 373 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1992)
In re C.A.
630 A.2d 1292 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1993)
In re A.W.
670 A.2d 1265 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1995)
In re K.F.
2004 VT 40 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2004)
In re A.G.
2004 VT 125 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
In re D.B., C.B., N.B. and T.B., Juveniles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-db-cb-nb-and-tb-juveniles-vt-2012.