In Re Griffin

690 A.2d 1192, 456 Pa. Super. 440, 1997 Pa. Super. LEXIS 383
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 19, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 690 A.2d 1192 (In Re Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Griffin, 690 A.2d 1192, 456 Pa. Super. 440, 1997 Pa. Super. LEXIS 383 (Pa. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

TAMILIA, Judge.

Michael and Karen Derzack appeal from the January 17, 1996 Order entered by Juvenile Court sitting en banc. 1 The Order, which followed the latter of two contempt hearings, removed Byrae and Byron Griffin from the physical custody of appellants and granted Allegheny County Children and Youth Services (hereinafter “CYS”) permission to place the children in alternative adoptive foster care. The court en banc ordered removal after finding that appellants had violated no less than eight Orders of court concerning the care and custody of the Griffin children. The facts relevant to this appeal are set forth by Juvenile Court as follows, with the Orders deemed violated by appellants indicated in bold.

Byrae was born drug-addicted, on July 30, 1991, to La-Shawn Jeffrey (hereinafter, “Mother”) and Todd Griffin. Approximately one year later, on July 15, 1992, Byron was born drug-addicted to the same parents. On November 30, 1992, four months after Byron’s birth, Todd Griffin died in an automobile accident. Byron and Byrae have three older siblings (brothers) who are the natural children of Mother, but have different fathers. Byron is the youngest of Mother’s five children.
Byrae first came to the attention of this Court in November 1991. Byrae, then three months of age, drug-addicted *446 and weighing only seven pounds, six ounces, was removed from Mother’s care and taken by paramedics to Children’s Hospital where she was diagnosed as suffering from severe malnutrition, dehydration and a severe skin infection. Children’s Hospital reported Byrae to be “near death” when admitted.
Following a hospitalization of one week, the matter of Byrae and her three older siblings was brought before this Court pursuant to a Petition for Dependency filed by CYS. On November 21, 1991, Byrae and her three older brothers were adjudicated dependent. Her older siblings were present in Court and were removed that day by CYS from Mother’s custody with Mother’s consent, pursuant to Mother’s acknowledgement that she was unable to care for her children because of a chronic drug dependency. Upon her discharge from Children’s Hospital, Byrae was placed by CYS into the care and custody of her paternal grandmother, Flora Griffin Shapiro. Byrae remained in the home of Flora Griffin Shapiro for the next eighteen months.
Between the period of November 1991 to July 15, 1992, this Court held several hearings regarding the welfare of Mother’s children wherein evidence of the severe nature and extent of the neglect suffered by Byrae and her older siblings was placed on the record. Based upon the serious nature of the information contained in the record, Byron’s special health needs at birth as a result of his drug-addiction and Mother’s abandonment of Byron when she failed to return to the hospital to take him home following his birth, CYS immediately filed a Petition for Dependency, with respect to Byron, within days of his birth. This Court entered an Order on July 27, 1992 adjudicating Byron a dependent child. For purposes of placement, Byron was designated a “child in need of special care”.
Initially, CYS sought placement of Byron with relatives. When efforts to place him with relatives failed, CYS selected and approved the Derzacks, a foster care family with Family Services of Western Pennsylvania (hereinafter, “Family Services”), as a special needs foster care family, for *447 the singular purpose of accepting placement of Byron for a temporary period of time after his discharge from the hospital. The original understanding between CYS and the Derzacks was that Byron was being placed with the Der-zacks for a few days, pending the outcome of CYS’ Petition for Dependency which had been filed on Byron’s behalf. Byron was placed with the Derzacks on July 21, 1992. On the date of his first placement, Byron was six days old[.]
Following the dependency adjudication, CYS returned Byron to the Derzacks’ home while an adoption plan was being developed. Byron’s original adoption plan was being developed under a new CYS policy which had been adopted on May 15, 1992 by CYS and captioned, “Child and Youth Services Transracial Placement Policy” (hereinafter “trans-racial placement policy”). The transracial placement policy was an internal policy which grew out of a national concern for African-American children being displaced in white adoptive homes and the impact of such placement on their lives.... Although Byron and the Derzacks’ case fell under CYS’ transracial adoption policy, Byron’s status in the Derzacks’ home remained uninterrupted for five months while CYS completed his adoption plan and identified an African-American pre-adoptive home.
By letter dated December 15, 1992, CYS advised the Derzacks that a pre-adoptive home had been found for Byron and that a representative of CYS would arrive at the Derzacks’ home on December 16, 1992 to take him away. The Derzacks responded to CYS’ letter by notifying the news media to come to their home to film their planned confrontation with CYS. When CYS arrived at the Der-zacks’ home, the Derzacks, in the presence of reporters representing the news media, refused to hand Byron over to CYS. To avoid a confrontation with the Derzacks and trauma to Byron, CYS left Byron in the Derzacks’ home and petitioned the Court that day for an immediate hearing to resolve the impasse. A hearing on CYS’ petition was held before this Court on the following day, December 17, 1992.
*448 At the hearing held December 17,1992, this Court specifically addressed CYS’ internal transracial placement policy and determined that CYS’ selection of an African-American pre-adoptive home for Byron, solely on the basis of color, was not in the best interest of the child. Consequently, this Court overruled CYS’ internal transracial placement policy and entered an Order continuing Byron’s placement with the Derzacks. This Court further ordered CYS to assist the Derzacks in adopting Byron, thus rendering moot, the issue of transracial adoption with respect to the Derzacks, this Court having found in favor of the Derzacks when Byron was returned to them, for the purpose of adoption, in December 1992.
With the exception of giving birth to Byron on July 15, 1992, Mother remained absent from and uninvolved in the rearing of Byron and Byrae from November 1991 until January 1993. On or about January 1993, Mother visited with Byrae, who was then living with her paternal grandmother, and attempted to reestablish a mother-child relationship with Byrae, for the first time since the child’s dependency adjudication in November 1991. No attempt was made by Mother to visit with Byron, at this time. The Court, therefore, returned Byron to the Derzacks, following a review hearing held on March 12, 1993. Dr. Patricia Piercy was appointed to conduct psychological evaluations of Byron and to monitor and evaluate his adjustment to living with the Derzack family.
In late March 1993, Mother contacted CYS and, for the first time since his birth, requested to visit with Byron.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In the Int. of: R.P., Appeal of: D.D.
2025 Pa. Super. 189 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2025)
In the Int. of: A.B., a Minor
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2024
In the Interest of: S.W. Appeal of: A.E.
2024 Pa. Super. 45 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2024)
In the Int. of: A.L., Appeal of: Y.T.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2023
In the Int. of: B.W., Appeal of: T.W.A., Mother
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2022
In the Int. of: T.H., Appeal of: T.H.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2021
In the Int. of: K.R., Appeal of: M.S.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2020
In the Int. of: J.M., Appeal of: L.M.-M.
2019 Pa. Super. 280 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019)
In the Interest of: J.A., Appeal of: M.R.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019
In the Interest of: J.A., Appeal of: C.A.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019
In the Interest of: Y.S., a Minor
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019
In the Interest of: T.H., a Minor
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018
Interest of: M.R.F., III, minor, Appeal of: K.L.C
182 A.3d 1050 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
In the Interest of: J.P., a Minor
178 A.3d 861 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
In the Interest of: H.L-R Appeal of: T.L.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015
In Re: J.A., Appeal of: D.A.
107 A.3d 799 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015)
In the Interest of S.H.J.
78 A.3d 1158 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)
In Re Adoption of B.R.S.
11 A.3d 541 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2011)
Hankin v. Graphic Technology Inc.
11 Pa. D. & C.5th 460 (Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, 2010)
Tucker v. R.M. Tours
977 A.2d 1170 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
690 A.2d 1192, 456 Pa. Super. 440, 1997 Pa. Super. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-griffin-pasuperct-1997.