In Re Dependency of RL

98 P.3d 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 20, 2004
Docket52147-1-I
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 98 P.3d 75 (In Re Dependency of RL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Dependency of RL, 98 P.3d 75 (Wash. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

98 P.3d 75 (2004)
123 Wash.App. 215

In re the DEPENDENCY of: R.L. and I.L., Minor Children,
State of Washington, Department of Social & Health Health, Respondent,
v.
Eric Johnson, Appellant.

No. 52147-1-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

September 20, 2004.

*76 Linda Lillevik, The Public Defender, Christine Jackson, The Public Defender, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.

Katherine Tassi, Jonathan Milstein, Atty. Generals Ofc. SHS, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.

BECKER, J.

The juvenile court made an emergency placement of appellant Eric Johnson's dependent daughters with their maternal grandmother, based on a caseworker's opinion that Johnson should not be considered as a placement option. Johnson asked the court to reconsider the suitability of the placement with the grandmother and raised a substantial question as to the caseworker's credibility. By refusing to hear the testimony of Johnson and his witnesses at the hearing on his motion for reconsideration, the court failed to accord him the due process provided by statute and local rule. We reverse and remand for a new hearing.

Eric Johnson is the father of two young daughters, born in 1997 and 1999, who were declared dependent at an early age because their mother was addicted to cocaine and Johnson was serving time. The Department of Social and Health Services placed them at first in the care of Johnson's father, Alfred, and then with Johnson in August 2001, when he was released from custody. Soon, Johnson allowed their mother, Jennifer Lynch, to resume the role of primary parent. The court formally placed the children with Lynch in August 2002, with weekend visitation allowed to Johnson. Jennifer Lynch lived with the girls and with her mother, Sue Lynch, in Tacoma.

Jennifer Lynch relapsed into drug use in February 2003. The court held an emergency placement hearing February 19, 2003. The Department's recommendation was to leave the girls in Tacoma in the care of their maternal grandmother, Sue Lynch. The Department's position was that Eric Johnson, the father, should not be considered as a placement option because he did not have a good track record of providing clean housing and adequate sleeping arrangements.

Johnson said he had just moved into his father's house and asked the court to place the children with him there. His father, Alfred Johnson, testified that the children had lived in his home earlier without any complaint that it was not a suitable environment for the girls.

Yvonne Brown, the Court Appointed Special Advocate for the children (CASA), supported Johnson's request. She recommended that Johnson be given an adequate opportunity to demonstrate his ability to parent the children because Jennifer Lynch's inability to stay sober made it doubtful that she could be the permanent placement. She expressed a view that the caseworker for the Department was unfairly favoring the mother's side of the family.

Johnson asserted that Sue Lynch was planning a move to Camano Island. The caseworker then testified and said Sue Lynch was not moving, she intended to remain in the Tacoma residence where the girls had been living for the past year. Based on this representation that the girls would not have to move, the court entered orders temporarily placing the girls with Sue Lynch. The court told Johnson that before the next review hearing on March 26, he should discuss with the Department what services would be needed to show that he could provide a stable placement.

One week later, on February 26, Johnson moved for reconsideration of the emergency placement decision. He alleged there was no evidence supporting the determination that Sue Lynch was an appropriate caretaker for the children or that he was not. He submitted a declaration signed by his attorney, stating that the attorney had talked to Sue Lynch and learned that she actually had moved to Camano Island, was planning to *77 enroll the oldest girl in school there, and was expecting the caseworker to make a home visit soon.

The court granted Johnson's request for a hearing at which he proposed to take testimony from Sue Lynch and to argue for reconsideration of the placement decision. The hearing took place on March 14, 2003. Johnson had not successfully subpoenaed Sue Lynch, and she did not appear.

The court allowed Johnson to call the caseworker to testify. The caseworker defended her recommendation to place the children with Sue Lynch, but had to acknowledge that she had been accepting Sue Lynch's representations rather uncritically. She did not think the house where Lynch was supposed to meet Johnson looked like a "drug house", as Johnson's attorney suggested, but she admitted the couple she found living there would not give her their names.

Upon further examination it came out that the caseworker had not conducted a criminal background check of Sue Lynch before placing the children with her. And although she was aware by the time of the February 19 hearing that Sue Lynch had an extensive criminal history including drug use, she did not disclose it to the court because "you didn't inquire."[1]

On examination by the Department, the caseworker said she continued to have concerns about placing the girls with their father. She was particularly concerned that Johnson had failed to return the children on time to Sue Lynch after the last weekend visit and had not started parenting classes that week as promised. After some equivocation, the caseworker recommended placement with Johnson's father, Alfred.

Johnson then asked the court to allow him to call Don Minor, the supervisor of the children's special advocate (CASA) Yvonne Brown, to impeach the testimony of the caseworker. Minor would have testified to the ease with which he had recently discovered the grandmother's extensive criminal history (which included more crimes than the caseworker knew about). Minor would have also testified that he had e-mailed and faxed the relevant documents to the caseworker, in contradiction to the caseworker's testimony that she had not received this information. The court said it was already apparent that the caseworker had not provided "criminal background on any of these people" at the previous hearing.[2] The court refused to allow Minor's impeachment testimony.

Johnson wished to explain that he did not return the girls to the custody of Sue Lynch because he suspected the house where she was waiting to pick up the girls was a known "drug house." The court refused Johnson's request to offer his own testimony:

[Counsel]: Your Honor, the father would also like to testify regarding the house.
[Commissioner]: I'm not going to allow him to testify.
[Counsel]: And just as an offer of proof, his testimony would be regarding the drug house, and would assert his right to testify under RCW 13.34.090, just for the record.
[Commissioner]: Thank you. Argument? [[3]]

Johnson argued that the court should place his daughters with him, or in the alternative with his father. Jennifer Lynch's attorney asked for continued placement with Sue Lynch. The children's special advocate (CASA) expressed dissatisfaction with the information provided by the caseworker, and questioned why the Department would be supportive of placement with Sue Lynch in view of her criminal history. She recommended placement with Johnson so long as he remained living in his father's home.

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Bluebook (online)
98 P.3d 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dependency-of-rl-washctapp-2004.