In Re Greyson D.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 7, 2021
DocketE2020-00988-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Greyson D. (In Re Greyson D.) 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 Greyson D., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

04/07/2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs March 1, 2021

IN RE GREYSON D. ET AL.

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Roane County No. 2019-JC-194 Terry Stevens, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2020-00988-COA-R3-PT ___________________________________

A mother appeals the termination of her parental rights on the grounds of severe abuse and failure to manifest a willingness and ability to assume custody and on the determination that termination is in the best interests of her children. Upon our review, we discern no error and affirm the termination.

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

J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, JJ., joined.

Allison M. Rehn, Harriman, Tennessee, for the appellant, L.O.

Herbert H. Slatery, III, Attorney General and Reporter; Jordan K. Crews, Assistant Attorney General, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services.

OPINION

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

L. O. (“Mother”) and Thomas D. (“Father”) are the parents of Greyson D., born in October 2018, and Mason D., born in September 2019.1 Each child tested positive for drugs at the time of his birth, prompting the involvement of the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”). Greyson was placed in foster care shortly after his birth due to Mother’s admitted use of cocaine and methamphetamine during her pregnancy, but the

1 This Court has a policy of protecting the identity of children by initializing the last names of the parties. parents were able to regain custody. Mason’s positive drug test at his birth and parents’ admitted drug usage prompted DCS to remove both children from the parents’ care and to file a petition alleging that the children were dependent and neglected. The juvenile court entered an emergency protective order placing the children in DCS custody on September 27, 2019; they have remained in foster care since then. When Greyson entered foster care this second time, he again tested positive for drugs, specifically methamphetamine.

On November 7, 2019, DCS filed a petition to terminate the rights of Mother and Father.2 As to Mother, the petition alleged that termination was warranted on the grounds of severe abuse due to her drug usage during her pregnancies with both children and her failure to manifest an ability and willingness to assume custody of the children. The petition also alleged that termination was in the children’s best interest.

On November 26, 2019 DCS filed a motion to suspend parents’ visitation, citing their refusal to submit to random drug screening on October 24 and November 14, 2019, and also because of Father’s “extremely unusual behavior including profuse swearing, crying, and screaming[, and] . . . talking constantly but not making sense” during an October 24 home visit conducted by the DCS caseworker and her team leader. The motion also stated that neither parent had completed an alcohol and drug assessment or engaged in any form of substance abuse treatment, causing DCS to be “concerned that the[] parents are continuing to use methamphetamine and therefore are potentially continuing to expose the children to methamphetamine during supervised visitation.” DCS asked the court to suspend the parents’ supervised visitation until the parents “submitted to an alcohol and drug assessment and begin compliance with treatment recommendations” and to require the parents to “submit to all random drug screens and to submit to a drug screen two hours prior to each supervised visitation session.” No order on the motion appears in the record.3

On or about December 23, 2019, the juvenile court found that the parents had committed severe child abuse against each child due to their knowing exposure of the children to methamphetamine.4 At that time, the court also relieved DCS of providing

2 This appeal only concerns the parental rights of Mother. Like Mother, the trial court terminated Father’s parental rights following a trial, and Father appealed to this Court. Due to Father’s failure to file a brief on appeal, despite extensions from this Court allowing him the opportunity to do so, however, his appeal was dismissed. As a result, we discuss Father only to provide context for our consideration of Mother’s appeal. 3 An order on the motion prohibiting visitation was apparently entered in December 2019, as it was discussed at trial by the DCS case worker, and the permanency plan references it. An order entered on April 27, 2020, states that “visitation shall continue as previously ordered.” 4 Due to the incredibly short amount of time between the second removal and the filing of the termination petition in this case, at the time the December 23, 2019 severe abuse order was entered, a termination petition had already been filed. It has generally been held that “[t]he exclusive jurisdiction of juvenile court is super[s]eded when a petition for termination of parental rights is filed in another court with concurrent jurisdiction to make that determination.” State v. R.S., No. M2002-00919-COA-R3-CV, 2003 WL 22098035, at *19 (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 11, 2003); see also, e.g., In re DMD, No. W2003-00987-COA- -2- reasonable efforts to reunite the children with their parents and ordered the parents to have no contact with the children. The children were moved to a pre-adoptive foster care placement in late January 2020.

A permanency plan was created on April 13, 2020 and ratified by the court on April 27. The plan required Mother to submit to random drug tests, undergo an alcohol and drug assessment and a mental health assessment, and attend a parenting class. Mother was also to obtain and provide proof to DCS of a legal source of income and of safe and stable housing. An order entered on April 27, 2020 following a permanency hearing indicates that DCS had been relieved of making reasonable efforts; that DCS was “in substantial compliance” with the permanency plan; that the court was reserving ruling on Mother’s compliance “due to the current COVID-19 pandemic and the Court’s limitation on conducting in-person hearings at this time”; but that “progress toward resolving the reasons the children are in foster care has not been made in that there has been a lack of progress under the permanency plan.”

The juvenile court held a hearing on the petition to terminate on June 17, 2020, at which four witnesses testified: on behalf of DCS, the DCS case manager and the person who supervised visitation testified, while Mother and Father each testified on their own behalf.

Kaitlyn Stutz, a foster care case manager with DCS, testified that Greyson had previously been in foster care for three or four months following his October 2018 birth due to a positive drug test and Mother’s admitted use of cocaine and methamphetamine during her pregnancy. When Mason was born in September 2019, he tested positive for amphetamines, which, according to Ms. Stutz’s testimony, prompted DCS’s involvement with the family and the children’s removal. When the older child, Greyson, entered foster care this second time, Ms. Stutz testified that he “was inconsolable” and “seemed to be in a lot of pain.” Based on these behaviors, a hair follicle drug test was performed, and he tested positive for methamphetamines. The parents were also drug tested, and both tested positive for methamphetamine, amphetamine, and THC. Ms. Stutz testified that during home visits, she had concerns about the home itself, reporting that “there was flies and there was cat feces and other things in the bathroom,” which “smelled of urine.”

Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Greyson D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-greyson-d-tennctapp-2021.