In Re Giorgianna H.

205 S.W.3d 508, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 192, 2006 WL 721303
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 21, 2006
DocketM2005-01697-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished
Cited by181 cases

This text of 205 S.W.3d 508 (In Re Giorgianna H.) 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 Giorgianna H., 205 S.W.3d 508, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 192, 2006 WL 721303 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

OPINION

WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., P.J., M.S.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., joined. WILLIAM B. CAIN, J., filed a separate concurring opinion.

This appeal involves the parental rights of the biological parents of seven minor children. After the children had been removed from their biological parents’ custody for approximately one year, the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Perry County seeking to terminate the parental rights of the biological parents. The trial court conducted a bench trial and then entered an order terminating the biological parents’ parental rights because the conditions that caused the children to be removed from the parents’ custody continued to persist and because the parents had committed severe child abuse. Both parents appealed. We have determined that the record contains substantial and material evidence supporting the trial court’s conclusions that the biological parents’ conduct provides substantive grounds for terminating their parental rights and that the termination of the biological parents’ parental rights is in the children’s best interests.

I.

In April 1998, David H. and Mary Ellen H. were living in Greenwood, South Carolina with their six children whose ages ranged from eleven years old to two months old. The South Carolina Department of Social Services took all the children into emergency protective custody because Victoria H., then two months old, had been hospitalized for failing to thrive and because the home was dirty and unsafe for minor children. The six children remained in foster care until November 1998, when the family court returned them to their parents.1

The parties’ seventh child, Benjamin H., was born in September 1999. Soon thereafter, the South Carolina Department of Social Services received a report that Benjamin H. was being neglected, but by the time the South Carolina authorities followed up on the report, David H., Mary Ellen H., and their seven children left the state and moved to Murfreesboro, Tennessee. The South Carolina authorities alerted the Tennessee Department of Chil[513]*513dren’s Services (Department) to these events, and in February 2000, the Department filed a petition in the Rutherford County Juvenile Court seeking temporary custody of the seven children. The juvenile court filed an order on February 11, 2000, determining that all seven children were dependent and neglected2 and placing the children in the Department’s custody.

The Department placed the seven children in foster homes. In November 2000, Mary Ellen H. gave birth to Sarahanna H., the parties’ eighth child. Ten days later, the Rutherford County Juvenile Court, despite its continuing concerns about the parents’ home, returned physical custody of all the children except the oldest, Virgil-lia H., to the parents.3 However, the court also determined that the Department should retain legal custody of the children pending further hearings. In December 2000, the trial court returned legal custody of the second oldest child, Giorgianna H., to the parents. The court also directed that all the school-age children should be enrolled in public school and that the Department should determine the adequacy of the house in Perry County where the parents planned to move. On January 17, 2001, following an emergency hearing, the Rutherford County Juvenile Court again removed the children from their parents’ home. Three months later, on April 19, 2001, the court returned legal and physical custody of the children to their parents.

In November 2002, the Department filed a petition in the Perry County Juvenile Court alleging that seven of the parties’ children were dependent and neglected.4 After the arrangements for temporary placement fell through, the children were placed with two different foster families. Giorgianna H. and Stuart H. were placed with one family, and Sabrina H., Savannah H., Victoria H., Benjamin H., and Sarahan-na H. were placed with another family.5 The Perry County Juvenile Court found the children to be dependent and neglected in July 2003, and the parents perfected a de novo appeal to the Circuit Court for Perry County.

On January 5, 2004, before the Circuit Court for Perry County could conduct the de novo trial on its dependent and neglect petition, the Department filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Perry County to terminate David H.’s and Mary Ellen H.’s parental rights regarding their seven younger children.6 The Department sought termination on the grounds of abandonment, persistence of conditions, and severe child abuse. Approximately one month later, the Circuit Court for Perry County conducted a trial on the dependent and neglect petition and, on September 20, 2004, filed an order concluding that the parents’ seven younger [514]*514children were dependent and neglected.7 The parents appealed the September 20, 2004 dependency and neglect order in a separate appeal.8

On October 5, 2004, within weeks after entering its order in the dependent and neglect proceeding, the Circuit Court for Perry County conducted a trial on the Department’s termination petition. The Department’s case relied heavily on the testimony and exhibits introduced during the dependent and neglect trial in February 2004.9 Over the parents’ objections, the trial court permitted the Department to introduce the transcript of the dependent and neglect trial and certified copies of the exhibits that had been introduced at that trial. In addition to this evidence, the Department presented eight witnesses to support its termination petition. In addition to three of the children,10 the Department called a family education specialist who had worked with the parents, the therapist who had worked with Sabrina H. and Savannah H., two of the Department’s case managers, and one of the foster parents who had been caring for five of the children since February 2003.

The trial court filed a memorandum opinion on February 14, 2005 finding that the Department had presented clear and convincing evidence supporting its claims that the parents’ parental rights should be terminated under Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-1-113(g)(3)(A) (persistence of conditions) and TenmCode Ann. § 36-l-113(g)(4) (severe child abuse).11 The trial court also concluded that terminating the parental rights of David H. and Mary Ellen H. would be in their children’s best interests.12

The trial court entered a final order on May 19, 2005, which differed from the [515]*515court’s memorandum opinion in two ways. First, it reflected that the termination proceeding involved seven, rather than nine, children. Second, it found that David H.’s and Mary Ellen H.’s parental rights should be terminated for abandonment under Tenn.Code Ann. §§ 36-l-102(l)(A)(ii), - 113(g)(1) even though it had not addressed this ground in its memorandum opinion. Like the memorandum opinion, the final order also concluded that David H.’s and Mary Ellen H.’s parental rights should be terminated under Tenn.Code Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W.3d 508, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 192, 2006 WL 721303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-giorgianna-h-tennctapp-2006.