In re Esme

111 N.E.3d 1114
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 29, 2018
Docket18-P-60
StatusPublished

This text of 111 N.E.3d 1114 (In re Esme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Esme, 111 N.E.3d 1114 (Mass. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

The mother appeals from decrees of the Juvenile Court finding her unfit and terminating her parental rights to her children, Esme and John. The father appeals from a Juvenile Court decree terminating his parental rights to John.3 After careful consideration, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence to establish the parents' unfitness, and that termination of parental rights was proper. Also, there was no error in leaving the decision for posttermination and postadoption visitation to the discretion of the children's legal custodians. We affirm.

Background. The judge found the following facts. Esme was born in May, 2011; no father was listed on her birth certificate.4 The Department of Children and Families (department) became involved due to concerns by hospital staff that the mother was unable to care for Esme. The mother worked with the department in learning parenting skills, and the case was closed, according to the mother, after approximately one month. Esme has attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and wears braces on her legs because she walks on the tips of her toes. She has an individualized education plan to address her speech and cognitive delays.

John was born in August, 2014; he was six months old at the time of removal. He suffers from asthma and eczema, both of which are controlled by care and medication. At the time of removal, John's eczema was bleeding and cracked despite the pediatrician's treatment instructions to the mother. After placement in foster care, John was enrolled in early intervention services due to cognitive, social, and speech delays. The children do not reside in the same foster home.

The mother has cognitive delays, and has been diagnosed with ADHD and posttraumatic stress disorder. The mother completed high school but did not graduate due to her inability to pass the required standardized testing; at the time of trial she was taking classes to obtain her general education diploma. The mother has never been employed; her sole source of income is supplemental security income from the Social Security Administration.5 The mother has complied with a majority of her department service plan tasks. Although she participated in the required psychological evaluation, she did not provide the department with the results.

The father is a level three sex offender, which designates him as a high risk of reoffense and requires that he must be supervised while in the presence of any child under the age of eighteen. This classification resulted from his 2002 convictions of the forcible rape, on multiple occasions, of his then six year old daughter, indecent assault and battery of his then eight year old niece, and the attempted kidnapping of, and assault and battery on, a fourteen year old girl who was a stranger to the father.6 The father, like the mother, did not provide the results of the required psychological evaluation to the department. He did not participate in the required parenting assessment.

The parents met in 2010 when the mother was pregnant with Esme. She knew at that time that the father was on probation, but he did not explain why. The father later told the mother about the charge of raping his daughter, but that his daughter had lied about the allegations. He acknowledges that he lied to the mother. On October 24, 2011, the father's probation officer, during an unannounced visit, found the mother with Esme hiding in the father's apartment after the father had just reported he was alone. The probation officer informed the mother of the father's sex offender classification, but the mother believed the father's assertion that the children had lied about the allegations. Due to concerns of the father's classification, the department reopened the mother's case and continued working with the family.

In January, 2015, the father bought a multifamily home. The department approved of the following living arrangement: the mother and children lived on the first floor, the maternal grandmother and mother's brother lived on the second floor, and the father on the third floor.7 The father was never to be alone with the children. Chain and bolt locks were on the doors of the mother's apartment to prevent the father from entering when he should not be there. The maternal grandmother agreed to supervise any visits between the father and the children anytime the mother was not present, even when the mother used the bathroom. The mother testified at trial that she would like to resume this arrangement if the children are returned to her custody. Both parents express the hope of marrying.

The incident prompting the department to remove the children occurred on February 23, 2015. On that day, the parents, the maternal grandmother, and the children drove to the pediatrician's office to treat John's "out of control" eczema. The mother brought John inside while everyone else waited in the car. The father telephoned the mother when Esme needed to use the restroom. While the maternal grandmother waited at the car, the father walked Esme approximately twenty to thirty feet along the sidewalk from the parked car to the doctor's office. The mother met the father and Esme in the building lobby, took Esme to the restroom, and returned her to the father, who walked Esme to the car.

The mother testified that the father was alone with Esme "only for three seconds," but the maternal grandmother "was watching," and the mother could see the sidewalk and parked car from the office. The father testified that he did not consider himself to be alone with Esme when he was walking her to the office. Evidence admitted at trial showed that the entrance to the doctor's office was located behind a bush. The department's filing of the underlying action was based on the father being alone with Esme while walking to and from the doctor's office, and the parents' failure to properly treat John's eczema.

In March, 2015, the department informed the mother that Esme was "acting up" and exhibiting sexualized behavior in her foster home, which the department believed to be a sign of sexual abuse. In May, 2015, Esme was moved from her foster home to an intensive foster placement due to the sexualized behavior. Two Sexual Abuse Intervention Network (SAIN) interviews were conducted as a result of comments Esme made to her social worker, Trisha Morris; Esme made no verbal disclosures in either interview.8 When the father was mentioned during a SAIN interview, Esme started sucking her thumb and crying.

The mother does not believe the father sexually abused Esme. Instead, she believed that Esme's behavior indicated that she wanted to be with the mother and maternal grandmother. The mother informed the court investigator that she both trusted the father and was concerned that he could do the same thing to her children and that such concern kept her carefully supervising the father's access to the children. The father insisted he had never been left alone with Esme. The mother learned at trial for the first time that the charges against the father involved three girls and the details of those convictions.

The judge, in his findings after trial, expressed concerns with the mother's ongoing relationship with the father. The mother had maintained the relationship throughout the pendency of this action despite learning of the father's sex offender status, the allegations that he had sexually abused Esme (which the mother disbelieved), and knowing that her relationship with the father hindered the return of her children.

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.E.3d 1114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-esme-massappct-2018.