In re: D.B., J.M.

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 21, 2026
Docket24-51
StatusUnpublished
AuthorJudge Jeff Carpenter

This text of In re: D.B., J.M. (In re: D.B., J.M.) 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: D.B., J.M., (N.C. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA24-51

Filed 21 January 2026

Surry County, Nos. 22JA000148-850, 22JA000149-850

IN THE MATTER OF: D.B., J.M.

Appeal by Respondent-Mother from orders entered 30 August 2023 by Judge

Gretchen H. Kirkman in Surry County District Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals

5 November 2024.

The Law Office of Partin & Cheek, P.L.L.C., by R. Blake Cheek, for Petitioner- Appellee Surry County Department of Social Services.

Mercedes O. Chut, for Respondent-Appellant-Mother.

James N. Freeman, Jr., for the Guardian ad Litem.

CARPENTER, Judge.

Respondent-Mother appeals from the trial court’s 30 August 2023 permanency-

planning orders (the “Permanency-Planning Orders”) granting custody of D.B.

(“Donna”) and J.M. (“John”) (collectively, the “Juveniles”)1 to their respective

biological fathers and ceasing reunification efforts with Respondent-Mother. On

1 Pseudonyms are used to protect the identities of the Juveniles and for ease of reading. See N.C. R. App. P. 42(b). IN RE: D.B., J.M.

Opinion of the Court

appeal, Respondent-Mother argues the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction,

or in the alternative, the authority, to enter the 24 February 2023 nonsecure custody

orders (the “Nonsecure Custody Orders”) and consequently erred by basing future

orders, including the Permanency-Planning Orders, on the oral allegations that led

to the Nonsecure Custody Orders. Respondent-Mother further asserts that the trial

court lacked authority to modify the initial disposition orders absent a proper motion

and erred by ceasing reunification efforts. After careful review, we affirm the

Permanency-Planning Orders.

I. Factual & Procedural Background

This appeal concerns two of Respondent-Mother’s six children: Donna, born in

May 2014, and John, born in October 2011. Respondent-Mother’s other children, not

implicated in this appeal, are: Chris, born in 2007; Hannah, born in 2008; Andrea,

born in 2010; and Caleb, born in 2020. Respondent-Mother’s current husband, who

she married in 2020, is the Juveniles’ step-father (“Step-Father”). The Juveniles’

biological fathers are not parties to this appeal.

In late 2021, the Surry County Department of Social Services (“DSS”) received

reports of incidents of domestic violence between Respondent-Mother and Step-

Father. In February 2022, DSS determined the family needed services and

Respondent-Mother and Step-Father agreed to complete a case plan requiring them

to: complete a parenting program; complete a “DonLin” assessment and follow all

-2- IN RE: D.B., J.M.

recommendations from the assessment; and engage in mental health treatment and

follow all recommendations from the treatment.

Due to concerns regarding Respondent-Mother’s mental health, DSS requested

that Respondent-Mother participate in a psychological evaluation. On 9 March 2022,

Carol Pully, a licensed psychological associate, performed Respondent-Mother’s

psychological evaluation and determined Respondent-Mother met the “diagnostic

criteria” for: bipolar disorder, unspecified personality disorder; and unspecified

trauma and stressor-related disorder. In her report, Pully noted that Respondent-

Mother’s “level of self-esteem is of concern” and recommended that Respondent-

Mother participate in medication management and individual outpatient therapy.

To investigate the impact of Respondent-Mother’s mental health issues on the

family, DSS requested that the family participate in a Child Family Evaluation.

Chris Shaeffer, a licensed psychologist, conducted the Child Family Evaluation from

21 June to 23 June 2022. Respondent-Mother’s three eldest children, Chris, Hannah,

and Andrea, participated in the evaluation. In his report, Dr. Shaeffer described

Respondent-Mother’s mental health issues as “moderate to severe” and concluded

that Chris, Hannah, and Andrea, “appear to be highly impacted by, and negatively

affected by, [Respondent-Mother’s] behaviors stemming from her mental health

issues.” Further, Dr. Shaeffer determined Chris, Hannah, and Andrea each had their

own “significant mental health needs . . . [that] appear to be insufficiently addressed

at present.”

-3- IN RE: D.B., J.M.

On 20 December 2022, DSS filed juvenile petitions (the “Petitions”) alleging all

six children were neglected. In the Petitions, DSS alleged Respondent-Mother’s

mental health issues were of “great concern because of her erratic and domineering

behaviors” and that the children “express[ed] concern of their home environment

because of the arguments between them and [Respondent-Mother], [Respondent-

Mother’s] behaviors, and fear of what [Respondent-Mother] would do or say.” The

Petitions also alleged Respondent-Mother threatened suicide in the presence of the

children, scared the children by threatening foster care, and blamed the family’s

problems on DSS and the children’s other parents.

The Petitions further alleged Respondent-Mother “has continued to fail to

make any behavioral changes that would indicate an increase in her protective

capacity” and indicated the children “continue to be subjected to [Respondent-

Mother’s] impulsive, erratic, and inappropriate behavior.” Finally, DSS noted in the

Petitions that it had obtained a video recording of Respondent-Mother “screaming

and cussing at one of [Donna and John’s] siblings and wishing they would drown in

their bath water, calling them vulgar, nasty names and belittling them.” DSS did not

immediately obtain nonsecure custody of the Juveniles when it filed the Petitions.

On 15 February 2023, the trial court conducted adjudication and disposition

hearings. On 22 February 2023, the trial court entered an order adjudicating the

Juveniles as neglected. In the adjudication order, the trial court found that

Respondent-Mother “agreed to stand silent as to the allegations of the Juvenile

-4- IN RE: D.B., J.M.

Petitions and waived presentation of the evidence.” The trial court further found that

the “allegations of the Juvenile Petitions, being uncontroverted, are facts found by

this Court, and as such, [DSS] has met its burden by clear and convincing evidence .

. . .” At this time, custody of the Juveniles remained with Respondent-Mother and

Step-Father.

Soon after the adjudication and disposition hearing, the situation in the family

home deteriorated suddenly. On or about 23 February 2023, the family arrived home

in the evening to find the home in complete disarray. Chris’s dog had escaped from

its cage and there was “blood kind of strewn out everywhere.” Chris’s dog had broken

into a rat cage and killed Hannah’s pet rats. An argument between Respondent-

Mother and Chris ensued. When Chris said something “disrespectful,” Respondent-

Mother challenged Step-Father to fight Chris in front of the other children. Step-

Father threatened to kill Chris with a sharp gardening tool. Both parties landed

blows before law enforcement arrived to intervene.

As a result of the altercation, on 24 February 2023, the trial court entered the

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