In Re ED

2008 MT 216, 186 P.3d 1283
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 2008
Docket08-0044
StatusPublished

This text of 2008 MT 216 (In Re ED) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re ED, 2008 MT 216, 186 P.3d 1283 (Mo. 2008).

Opinion

186 P.3d 1283 (2008)
2008 MT 216

In the Matter of E.D., N.T., and M.S., Youths in Need of Care.

No. DA 08-0044.

Supreme Court of Montana.

Submitted on Briefs May 21, 2008.
Decided June 17, 2008.

*1284 James B. Wheelis, Chief Appellate Defender; Tammy Hinderman, Legal Intern, Helena, MT, for Appellant.

Hon. Mike McGrath, Attorney General; Sheri K. Sprigg, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, MT, Ed Corrigan, Flathead County Attorney; Katie Schultz, Deputy County Attorney, Kalispell, MT, for Appellee.

Justice BRIAN MORRIS delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 J.D. appeals from an order of the Eleventh Judicial District Court, Flathead County, terminating her parental rights. We affirm.

¶ 2 We review the following issue on appeal:

¶ 3 Did the District Court abuse its discretion when it terminated J.D.'s parental rights?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶ 4 Flathead County Child Protective Services initially received referrals of concern regarding J.D. in 1994. Eight separate referrals alleged physical abuse of J.D. by her stepfather and physical neglect of J.D.'s first child by J.D. The Department removed J.D.'s first child, E.D., from her care in 1996. J.D. was seventeen years old at the time, pregnant with her second child, and addicted to drugs. The Department removed her children again due to drug use when E.D. was eighteen months old and her second child, N.T., was nine months old. J.D. attended inpatient treatment at the Montana Chemical Dependency Center, completed parenting classes and counseling sessions, and engaged in random urinalysis in order to regain custody of her children. J.D. and her two children reunified and she remained sober for approximately two years.

¶ 5 J.D. resumed drug use again at age 22. J.D. had a third son, M.S., who was twelve months old at this time. The Department removed all three of J.D.'s children in January of 2005. All three children had seen their mother use drugs. They also had witnessed physical violence between their mother and her boyfriend. The two oldest children had witnessed sexual behavior occurring between their mother and her boyfriend. J.D.'s oldest child stated that J.D. sometimes would not feed the children at night and would make them stay in a separate room while she and her boyfriend used drugs. J.D. admitted at this time to using marijuana and methamphetamine. She also agreed that her children met the definition *1285 of youths in need of care. The District Court adjudicated all three children as youths in need of care in May of 2005, and the Department received temporary legal custody of the children.

¶ 6 The Department created a treatment plan to help J.D. reunify with her children. The treatment plan set forth six separate areas with goals and requirements. The plan required J.D. to remain free from alcohol and drugs and to submit to a drug testing program. The plan required J.D. to provide documentation verified by a doctor for any prescribed medications. J.D. also had to secure and maintain housing appropriate for herself and her children under the plan.

¶ 7 The District Court held a hearing regarding the treatment plan on April 21, 2006. J.D. attended the hearing. The court approved the plan in an order issued on May 22, 2006. The Department received three extensions of temporary legal custody over the children. The Department ultimately petitioned the District Court to terminate J.D.'s parental rights on November 13, 2006.

¶ 8 The District Court held a hearing on the Department's petition to terminate J.D.'s parental rights. The court heard testimony from seven social workers who testified on behalf of the Department. J.D. also testified at the hearing. She admitted that she had made mistakes in the past concerning her children and her choices as a parent. She attributed her initial failure to comply with the treatment plan to her various medical conditions. She asserted that these medical problems had left her in pain and "stuck in a fetal position," and had rendered her unable to comply with the plan's urinalysis testing requirements. J.D. insisted that she had made significant improvements and recently had complied with her treatment plan.

¶ 9 The termination hearing ran for two days and ended on July 24, 2007. The District Court issued its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order Terminating Parental Rights and Approving Permanency Plan, on December 26, 2007. The court issued one hundred and eighty-nine findings of fact in its order terminating J.D.'s parental rights. The court detailed J.D.'s family history and drug use history, J.D.'s attempted compliance with the treatment plan, her visitation with her children, the abuse and neglect of the children, and the subsequent impact upon the children. The court's findings of fact also addressed J.D.'s history of involvement with the Department, the services and efforts put forth by the Department in the present matter, J.D.'s potential for change, and the physical and emotional needs of the children.

¶ 10 The District Court found that J.D. had not complied with the treatment plan's requirement that she participate in a urinalysis testing program and remain drug free. The court found that J.D. had failed five times to report for urinalysis in June of 2006. J.D. failed to test and did not report during August of 2006. These failures triggered the Department's removal of J.D. from the urinalysis testing program. The court determined that J.D. had attempted to comply with a testing program only "when the Termination Hearing was looming."

¶ 11 The court found that J.D. consistently had tested positive for drugs. J.D. had valid prescriptions for some of the drugs present in her system during urinalysis testing. J.D. also had tested positive, however, for a number of drugs for which she did not have a prescription. Authorities had arrested J.D. for drug possession on July 28, 2006.

¶ 12 The District Court determined that J.D. had failed to comply with the treatment plan's requirement that she maintain appropriate housing during the majority of her time under the plan. J.D. had lost her housing in May of 2006 due to nonpayment of rent. J.D. failed to maintain appropriate housing for twelve of the fourteen months from the beginning of her treatment plan until the termination hearing.

¶ 13 Finally, the District Court determined that J.D. likely would not change her conduct. The court cited the pattern of J.D.'s drug use and poor choices that the witnesses had revealed at the termination hearing. The court noted that J.D. had revealed that she had acquired the appropriate housing and urinalysis testing "specifically in preparation for the Termination Hearing—not for the benefit of her children." The court noted *1286 that the removal of her children did not stop J.D. from resuming her drug use and poor associations during those periods when she had regained physical custody of the children. The court found that J.D. knowingly had resumed abusive relationships that had endangered both J.D. and her children. The court described the lives of J.D.'s children as consisting of "an emotional rollercoaster from the day they were born." The court determined that J.D.'s children had begun to "act out behaviorally" as a result of the abuse and neglect that they had suffered.

¶ 14 The District Court determined that J.D.

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Related

Matter of S.T. Youth
2008 MT 19 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
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In re E.D.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 MT 216, 186 P.3d 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ed-mont-2008.