In Re: Ethin E.S.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 31, 2012
DocketE2011-02478-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Ethin E.S. (In Re: Ethin E.S.) 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: Ethin E.S., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 19, 2012 Session

IN RE ETHIN E.S., ET AL

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Knox County No. 121394 Tim Irwin, Judge

No. E2011-02478-COA-R3-PT-FILED-MAY 31, 2012

Donna J.S. (“Mother”) appeals an order terminating her parental rights to her minor children, Ethin E.S. and Mary J.C. (collectively “the Children”). The younger child, Ethin, was born drug-exposed and required intensive care for treatment of his withdrawal symptoms. As a result, the Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) became involved. In the weeks after Ethin’s birth, a protective order was entered and DCS took temporary custody of the Children. Following a two-day bench trial, the court found that there are multiple grounds for terminating Mother’s rights and that termination is in the best interest of the Children, both findings by the court said to be based upon clear and convincing evidence. Mother challenges both of these determinations and, in addition, contends that DCS failed to provide reasonable efforts to assist her toward reunification with the Children. Finding no error, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

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

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Andrew J. Crawford, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Donna J.S.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Joshua Davis Barker, Assistant Attorney General, Office of the Attorney General, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services. Robert W. Rogers, Knoxville, Tennessee, Guardian ad Litem.1

OPINION

I.

The trial on DCS’s petition began on October 17, 2011. At that time, Mary, two and a half years old, and Ethin, ten months, had been in foster care for nearly nine months. There was scant evidence at trial regarding the status of the Children’s father. Mother reported to DCS that, although she was married to Kenneth W. at the time of the Children’s births, they were the biological children of Ralph C.2 We summarize the underlying proof.

Mary and Ethin were born to Mother on May 9, 2009, and December 18, 2010, respectively. Mother reported to her care providers that she was using drugs during her pregnancy with Ethin. Testing showed the presence of opiates in Ethin’s system at delivery. Ethin began suffering withdrawal symptoms the day after his birth. He was immediately transferred to the neonatal intensive care unit where he spent the next six weeks under treatment. Three months after the Children entered DCS custody, the trial court adjudicated them to be dependent and neglected in Mother’s care; Mother stipulated to the underlying facts. Following Ethin’s release from the hospital, he joined his sister in the same pre- adoptive foster care home where they both remained at the time of trial.

In January 2011, the family’s case manager, Stephanie Grissom, together with other DCS team members and Mother, created a permanency plan that outlined the steps Mother needed to take to achieve reunification with the Children. Ms. Grissom reviewed with Mother the plan’s requirements and the criteria for termination of her parental rights. Mother signed the plan indicating that she understood her responsibilities. According to Ms. Grisson, addressing Mother’s drug use was of primary importance because it was the basis upon which the Children had been removed from her custody. Generally stated, the plan required Mother to (1) become drug-free by completing an intensive outpatient drug

1 Mr. Rogers, on behalf of the Children, has filed a separate brief in support of the trial court’s judgment. 2 According to DCS’s pleadings in the dependent and neglect proceeding, Mother last saw Mr. C in 2010 and believed that he was presently “on the run from the police.” Mother remained married to Mr. W., but had not seen him in over 10 years; she had reason to believe he was recently released from prison and living in a halfway house. The record indicates that Mr. C executed a voluntary surrender of his parental rights, and that an August 2010 order terminated Mr. W.’s rights. Neither the alleged biological father nor the putative father appeared at trial and they are not parties on this appeal.

-2- treatment program; (2) pass random drug screens; (3) resolve past criminal matters; (4) incur no new charges; (5) learn and demonstrate effective parenting skills; (6) provide a safe, stable environment for the Children; (7) obtain stable income and housing; (8) cooperate and maintain regular contact with DCS; and (9) pay child support as ordered. The plan had the dual goals of “return to parent” and “exit custody with relative.”

Mother, 34, had a ninth-grade education. In addition to the Children, she had a son, age 16. Mother had work experience involving cleaning and in retail jobs, but was essentially unemployed during the pendency of the case except for a brief stint as a motel housekeeper. Mother subsisted mainly on food stamps and help from her father.

Much of the proof focused on Mother’s drug use and related matters. Mother acknowledged her history of using narcotic pain medication. She stated that she had been taking oxycodone for back pain for over ten years, ever since she was in a “real bad” car accident while pregnant with her older son. She also had scoliosis. In 2010, while pregnant with Ethin, Mother lived in Florida. She said she received prenatal care there on three occasions from different doctors, but was unable to furnish their names. Mother said she took, e.g., oxycodone, sleeping pills, and anti-depressants – “lots of different medications” – prescribed to her during her pregnancy. Questioned further, Mother was unable to name any of the doctors she saw for prenatal care and could not give specific locations or contact information for them or the pharmacies she had used. She explained that she was “running late” for court and did not bring evidence of her prescriptions, medical records, or referrals. Mother said “every doctor [she had] ever asked” had advised her that the use of painkillers during pregnancy had not been proven to cause any damage to pregnant women or their babies.

Mother returned to Knoxville, where Ethin was delivered. She said since the Children’s removal, she had seen four different local physicians, all of whom had prescribed oxycodone for pain. At the start of the trial, Mother admitted that she continued to take pain medications as prescribed and agreed that she had never informed any of her doctors of a drug addiction. Mother took a drug screen on the first day of trial which was positive for hydrocodone. She said it was prescribed for her during a recent visit to the emergency room for her complaint of back pain and she had taken the last pill a week earlier. When trial resumed following a three-week break, Mother said she was not taking any medications, but had been referred to a pain clinic where she intended to go once her TennCare coverage was reinstated. Mother denied she had a drug problem, but conceded that she had indicated otherwise in earlier court proceedings and had signed a permanency plan wherein she agreed to resolve her drug problem as a condition for reunification with the Children.

-3- The proof showed that Mother had made three attempts at addressing her drug use but failed to complete any of the programs. In January 2011, just after the Children’s removal, she began an intensive outpatient program at New Life Recovery, where she attended eight of twenty scheduled sessions. Mother explained that she was discharged because of absences, which were the result of transportation problems.

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In Re: Ethin E.S., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ethin-es-tennctapp-2012.