In Re Fisher Minors

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 2022
Docket359040
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
In Re Fisher Minors, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

UNPUBLISHED In re FISHER, Minors July 28, 2022

No. 359040 Wayne Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 18-002358-NA

Before: M. J. KELLY, P.J., and MURRAY and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Appellant-mother appeals as of right the trial court’s order terminating her parental rights to her minor children ADF, AAF, and RF, under MCL 712A.19b(3)(c)(ii) (failure to rectify other conditions); MCL 712A.19b(3)(j) (reasonable likelihood that the child would be harmed if returned to the parent); and MCL 712A.19b(5) (best interest factors). Mother challenges both the trial court’s findings regarding the statutory grounds for termination, as well as the determination that termination was in the children’s best interests. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The primary barrier to reunification throughout the case was mother’s drug addiction and lack of engagement with her children. Mother consistently missed her weekly drug screenings and, more often than not, tested positive for various illicit substances, including cocaine, THC, benzoylecgonine, phentermine, and oxycodone. Moreover, mother only partially complied, at best, with the court ordered treatment plan designed to help her overcome her substance abuse and reunify with her children.

The children first came into care in 2018 when mother failed to address the severe mental health needs of her oldest child, NF. At the time the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) filed its petition in 2018, ADF was ten years old and had lived with her maternal grandmother her whole life. AAF, who at the time was three, had lived with mother but in the

-1- maternal great-grandmother’s home.1 The trial court authorized the petition, finding it clearly contrary to the welfare of the children to remain in mother’s care, and placed AAF and ADF in their maternal grandmother’s care. Mother subsequently admitted to the allegations in the petition, conceding that she could not provide the proper care for her children as she was homeless and suffered from depression. Mother was not employed at this time and only received social security disability payments following an accident in 2013, where mother’s ex-boyfriend shot her in the head, causing severe limitations, neurological and physical problems.

At the initial disposition hearing in January of 2019, the court ordered mother to complete a treatment plan consisting of parenting classes, counseling services, a psychological evaluation, a psychiatric evaluation, and an in-patient program to combat her substance abuse. In February of 2019, mother gave birth to her daughter RF, who tested positive for cocaine. Months later, DHHS discovered RF during a scheduled visit where mother lied about still being pregnant and hid the baby in an upstairs bedroom. DHHS filed an additional petition seeking termination of mother’s rights to RF, and the trial court placed RF in the maternal grandmother’s care. In March of 2020, AAF, ADF, and RF were removed from the maternal grandmother’s care because of multiple maltreatment and care complaints.2 The children were then placed with the maternal grandfather. However, shortly after, ADF was removed from her maternal grandfather’s care because of her poor behavior and was placed with her paternal grandmother.

The record shows that over almost three years mother only partially participated in the court ordered treatment plan. In that intervening time, mother had completed parenting classes and was deemed compliant with substance abuse therapy. Mother also completed a psychiatric evaluation and was diagnosed with bipolar and post-traumatic stress disorders. By the time of the termination hearing in August of 2021, mother had secured a month-to-month lease on a four- bedroom home she claimed to live in alone despite DHHS reporting a man living with her.

On the other hand, mother showed minimal progress toward combating her drug addiction. She had actively failed to attend many of her drug screens, and when she did attend, her results were mostly positive for illicit substances. Over almost three years, the court ordered mother to partake in roughly 128 drug screens. Of the 128 required screenings, mother presented for only

1 It is unclear whom mother and AAF were living with at the time the petition was filed in 2018. While mother testified that they were living with mother’s grandmother, she admitted it was not her “real” grandmother but rather fictive kin, someone she looked to as a grandmother. 2 The children were removed from the maternal grandmother’s care because multiple complaints regarding the maternal grandmother’s drunkenness were filed. The foster care specialist testified at trial that on one occasion, the maternal grandmother called the police while intoxicated, reporting that ADF and AAF were lost. Police officers responded to the call, and when they discovered ADF and AAF in the garage, the maternal grandmother assaulted the children, prompting the police to file a complaint and the children’s subsequent removal from the maternal grandmother’s home.

-2- 30 and rendered positive results on 21 of the 30 tests. Mother was also terminated from her parent partner because of a lack of engagement with services.

Mother did not take an active role in the children’s lives and failed to attend 81 of 135 scheduled visitations with her children. During the in-person visitations that she did attend, she spent most of the time watching TV or talking with the other adults while the kids played with each other. On one occasion, mother presented to visitation at the maternal grandfather’s home with a runny nose and white residue powder underneath her nose. Mother also brought an unauthorized visitor claiming to be RF’s father with her to visitations. The maternal grandfather ceased in-person visitations because of these issues, which mother did not contest, sharing that she preferred virtual visits instead of supervised in-person visits with the agency. Even with virtual visits, mother was still only partially compliant. On multiple occasions, she would call past the children’s bedtime, would not charge her phone and needed to cut visits short, or would not call at all. The conversations during these visits would be led primarily by the children without mother inquiring about their well-being, such as the progress of their therapy and treatments. Mother did not provide financial support or suitable resources to her children or their caregivers aside from broken toys or clothes that did not fit.

The foster care specialist who authored the petitions for termination testified at trial that mother treats the children like friends and opined that mother did not benefit from the parenting classes as she still did not try to bond with the children at visitations. The maternal grandfather similarly testified that mother had established more of a big sister or friend relationship with her children because mother hardly interacted with her children and contributed no lesson or instruction to their lives.

On August 17, 2021, the trial court terminated mother’s parental rights to the children, finding that mother did not rectify the conditions that brought the children into care in terms of her substance abuse. The trial court found that despite the extraordinary length of this case, almost three years, mother continued to abuse dangerous drugs, including while RF was in utero, and had shown ongoing neglect of her children.

The following month, the trial court found that termination of mother’s parental rights was in the children’s best interests.

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In Re Fisher Minors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fisher-minors-michctapp-2022.