In Re Gutzman Minors

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 2025
Docket374203
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Gutzman Minors (In Re Gutzman 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 Gutzman Minors, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

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UNPUBLISHED December 08, 2025 8:49 AM In re GUTZMAN, Minors.

No. 374203; 374204 Alpena Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 21-007604-NA

Before: YATES, P.J., and BOONSTRA and YOUNG, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondents Austin Gutzman and Monica Carnes are the biological parents of the three minor children: PG born in 2020, CG born in 2021, and GG born in 2023. Respondents appeal as of right the termination of their parental rights to their children following the four-year pendency of this case in which they were temporarily but impermanently able to bring their house up to habitability. Throughout the case, respondents would inconsistently avail themselves of the services that petitioner, the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), offered or provided. The trial court recognized that while respondents loved their children and made modest progress by the end of the case, respondents had not shown that they had rectified, or could rectify, their underlying problems. We affirm the circuit court’s order terminating respondents’ parental rights.

I. BACKGROUND

Respondents and PG lived together at their home in Alpena, Michigan. Children’s Protective Services (CPS) first received a complaint in August 2020 when PG was three months old, alleging respondents’ home was dirty, smelled of rotting food and mold, was littered with garbage and cigarette butts, and that respondents were using marijuana in PG’s presence. Respondents were unmarried and both 20 years old at the time. Several interventions including Families Together Building Solutions (FTBS), Early Head Start, and WIC assisted the family in purchasing a washing machine, electric stove, Walmart gift cards, 10-yard dumpsters, smoke and

-1- carbon monoxide detectors, paint and cleaning supplies, and baby supplies. FTBS made efforts to teach respondents to how clean their home and provide a safe environment for PG.

A. FIRST REMOVAL

In October 2020, the home was still in a “deplorable condition” and PG was removed from the home. CPS continued monitoring and providing respondents with a to-do list for cleaning and organizing the home. Respondents brought their home up to habitability in February 2021, and PG returned to their care. Respondents welcomed CG in May 2021, and the home returned to an unacceptable condition again by the end of the summer; the kitchen “sink and cupboards were full of dirty dishes . . . , garbage throughout the kitchen, and flies everywhere.” CG was underweight and experiencing seizures.1 On September 8, 2021, respondent-mother took CG to a hospital in Saginaw, where it was reported his car seat and toys were soiled, he had dirt caked into his skin folds and extremities, and respondent-mother was “disengaged and on her phone.”

B. SECOND REMOVAL

On September 10, 2021, after efforts were made to prevent PG and CG’s removal from respondents’ home, DHHS filed a petition to remove the children and place them in DHHS’s care and custody, providing the following reasons why residing in respondents’ home was contrary to the children’s welfare:

the parents’ unwillingness to cooperate with Families First to reduce and eliminate significant safety concerns in the home; the home environment due to dangerous objects and substances (marijuana and “Dabs,” glass bongs, razors and knives, butane and propane torches – dangerous due to risk of explosion), and refusal to move other dangerous items like a large fish tank on top of a dresser that [PG] has been climbing on; parents’ unstable mental health and inability to manage emotions appropriately for the health and safety of the children; parents’ inability to prioritize the needs of the children over their own (having multiple people moving in and out of the home, frequent partying, leaving children in their cribs while they are awake so parents/adults do not have to supervise); . . . inability to manage finances effectively; and current health concerns for [CG] (underweight, seizures).

The petition also cited multiple animals lived in the home and contributed to the unsanitary environment, including: ducks, a large bird, turtles, lizards, a tarantula, a snake, mice, rats, two pit bull dogs that fought with one another, and several cats. Families First was no longer willing to work with respondents because they were “extremely argumentative, belligerent, and disrespectful.” The trial court held a hearing at which respondent-mother testified CPS caseworkers were not responsive, and that she made many improvements to the home such that many of the conditions listed for removing the children were no longer present. Respondent- mother also alleged a CPS caseworker “lunged at” respondent-father. Respondent-father testified he was working with CPS, and this presented a challenge because it required him to lose hours and money at work. He also admitted: “I am known to be pretty hot-headed.” The trial court

1 The record later established there was a family history of seizures.

-2- authorized the petition on September 10, 2021, removed PG and CG from respondents’ care, placed the children in foster care with Tina and Timothy Ratz, and ordered supervised parenting time and video visits for respondents.

At subsequent status conferences, respondents complained they were not getting enough video visits with or pictures of the children. Respondent-mother complained it took 24 hours for caseworkers to respond to her messages asking about the children, and that caseworkers were not responsive on the weekends. A foster care supervisor explained this was due to limited staff. The trial court reminded respondents to be patient, but ordered DHHS to accommodate at least one video visit on the weekends, and asked that foster care workers respond to respondents’ text messages sooner. The children’s lawyer guardian ad-litem (LGAL) testified in October 2021 that she “couldn’t believe how happy these children are” in foster care.

At a December 9, 2021 hearing, DHHS caseworker Tiffany Eddinger testified that respondents were still uncooperative and aggressive with caseworkers, and this was a barrier to DHHS being able offer services to achieve reunification. Regarding whether the conditions of the home which led to the children’s removal had been rectified, Eddinger testified that while “the home has been picked up,” a used marijuana joint remained on the living room floor and posed a safety risk to the children. The trial court agreed that respondents were aggressive and difficult with caseworkers, but the court opined that if the home was no longer unsafe, the children should be placed back with respondents. By December 22, 2021, DHHS recognized respondents had “made a lot of progress” with cleaning the home and gave them “a lot of credit for the work that they have done.” DHHS agreed the children could return to respondents’ home for the Christmas and New Year holidays, and allowed unsupervised weekends overnight at respondents’ home, with visitation during the week, subject to random drop-in home visits by DHHS to ensure respondents were maintaining a clean and safe home.

In January 2022, DHHS asked that the children be removed again because, although much of the house was clean and appropriate, there were marijuana pipes and a propane tank on the enclosed front porch that posed a fire hazard. CPS caseworker Alisha Allen testified that she advised respondent-father to not smoke marijuana in the same room as the children.

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In Re Gutzman Minors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gutzman-minors-michctapp-2025.