In Re: Edward C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 31, 2023
DocketE2023-00210-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Edward C. (In Re: Edward C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Edward C., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

10/31/2023 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE September 19, 2023 Session

IN RE EDWARD C.

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Sevier County No. 21-000811 Jeffrey D. Rader, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2023-00210-COA-R3-PT ___________________________________

This is an appeal of the termination of a father’s and mother’s parental rights. The Tennessee Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) filed a petition in the Juvenile Court for Sevier County (“the Juvenile Court”) seeking the termination of the parental rights of Justin S. (“Father”) and Alyse C. (“Mother”) to their minor son Edward C. (“the Child”). The Juvenile Court found that DCS had established by clear and convincing evidence the following statutory grounds for each parent: (1) abandonment by failure to provide a suitable home, (2) persistence of conditions, and (3) failure to manifest an ability and willingness to assume legal and physical custody of or financial responsibility for the Child. The Juvenile Court further found that termination of Father’s and Mother’s parental rights was in the Child’s best interest. Although we vacate the statutory ground of abandonment by failure to provide a suitable home due to insufficient findings of fact as it relates to Mother, we affirm the Juvenile Court’s judgment in all other respects, including termination of Mother’s and Father’s parental rights.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Affirmed in Part, Vacated in Part; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., and JOHN W. MCCLARTY, J., joined.

James R. Hickman, Jr., and Vicki Tucci Krusel, Sevierville, Tennessee, for appellant, Alyse C.

Gregory E. Bennett, Seymour, Tennessee, for appellant, Justin S.

Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General and Reporter, and Amber L. Barker, Assistant Attorney General for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services. OPINION

Background

On July 24, 2020, DCS filed in the Juvenile Court a petition seeking temporary legal custody of the Child born in October 2019. DCS averred that it had received allegations of environmental neglect and exposure to drugs by Mother and her paramour. DCS became involved after Mother, her paramour, and the Child were brought to the Sevier County Police Department after police had conducted a welfare check on the family. The couple and the Child had been staying in the lobby of a Days Inn; they had no place to stay and no money for a room. DCS drug screened Mother and her paramour. Mother tested positive for cocaine. She admitted to marijuana use but denied that she had used cocaine. Mother reported to DCS that she was married to Father but claimed that he was not the biological father of the Child.

According to the petition, Father agreed to take the Child but his then-paramour, Cynthia S. (“Cynthia”),1 was a “substantiated perpetrator in the DCS system for Drug Exposed Child,” and Father was unwilling to make her move out of his home. Father married Cynthia in June 2022. DCS averred that Father had seen the Child only once since the Child was born. DCS was unable to locate any appropriate relatives to assume custody of the Child. The Juvenile Court entered a protective custody order, finding probable cause that the Child was dependent and neglected “due to the substance abuse issues of the mother, lack of housing, and because the legal father’s fiancé has been substantiated in the past for Drug Exposed Child.”

In October 2020, DCS filed an amended petition for temporary legal custody adding the following allegations related to Father:

Since the child entered DCS custody, DCS learned that the child’s father was either [Father] or another gentleman who has since been ruled out by DNA. Despite [Father] being the child’s legal father and knowing he might actually be the biological father, [Father] met the child when he was approximately one month old and did not seek further visitation and never saw the child again until he was in foster care. Despite demanding custody of the child after the child was in foster care, [Father] was very resistant to actually visiting the child and getting to know the child and would not allow FSW Vineyard to schedule visitation for several weeks.

1 This Court has a policy of protecting the identity of children in parental termination cases by initializing the last names of the parties. Considering that Cynthia S. has two children in DCS’s custody, we will refer to her by her first name throughout this Opinion. We mean no disrespect by doing so. -2- Once visitations began, DCS has grown concerned about [Father’s] mental health issues. [Father] is a veteran and has been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Depression. Upon information and belief, he is participating in treatment and taking medication for his diagnosis. However, his behavior towards DCS employees, the mother, and around the child raises concerns about his mental health:

a. [Father] has been texting the mother and telling her that he will get full custody and she has made it easy for him.

b. When DCS would not simply release the child to him, [Father] sent threatening text messages to the FSW Vineyard telling her he would see her ass in court.

c. When the child’s pediatrician changed the child’s formula to a lactose-free formula due to stomach issues, [Father] continued to feed the child regular formula even after DCS advised him of the pediatrician’s recommendations. [Father] was angry at DCS for trying to correct him in any shape or form.

d. During a visit on October 12, 2020, [Father] finally brought appropriate food for the child and when giving the child the food was overheard to state, “I brought this so she wouldn’t bitch.” When FSW Vineyard entered the visitation room and asked him to stop using foul language around the child and then went back behind the two-way glass, [Father] walked up to the glass, pointed at FSW and yelled “Mind your damn business!” When FSW Vineyard ended the visit[ ], he stated “I will deal with your ass in court!” [Father] also texted “regardless of what u say or think or even put in your little reports, I will stop at nothing even death to make sure it happens.”

e. During another visit when he was with the child, [Father] could be heard stating “Fuck her.”

[Father] reported that his girlfriend [Cynthia] moved out of the home. However, his girlfriend, who has been found to severely abuse at least one of her own children and has another severe abuse hearing scheduled in November 2020, recently asked Knox County DCS to visit her home (the same home as [Father]) in efforts to gain supervised visitation with her children. DCS worker Amber Hawk visited the home on September 29, 2020 and met with both [Father] and his girlfriend, [Cynthia]. Both [Father] and -3- [Cynthia] represented that they live at the home together and made no indications to Ms. Hawk that [Cynthia] would be moving out.

(Paragraph numbering omitted.)

On November 4, 2020, the Juvenile Court entered an order finding the Child to be dependent and neglected. The Juvenile Court found:

Father stipulates to a clear and convincing finding of dependency and neglect because at the time of removal, his paramour was restricted from her own children[.]

Default finding of dependency & neglect against the mother based on the allegations in the petition.

On July 20, 2021, DCS filed a petition to terminate the parental rights of Father and Mother to the Child. DCS averred that it had given Father the option to take custody of the Child if Cynthia moved out of his home. DCS claimed that he declined this offer.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re: Edward C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-edward-c-tennctapp-2023.