in Re Harbert Minors

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 27, 2016
Docket333092
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Harbert Minors (in Re Harbert 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 Harbert Minors, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

UNPUBLISHED In re HARBERT, Minors. December 27, 2016

No. 332712; 333092 Jackson Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 15-003166-NA

Before: M. J. KELLY, P.J., and O’CONNELL and BECKERING, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In these consolidated appeals,1 respondent-father in Docket No. 332712 and respondent- mother in Docket No. 333092 each appeal by right the trial court’s order terminating their parental rights to their sons, CH and JH, under MCL 712A.19b(3)(b), (g), (j), and (k). At the time of the trial, CH was 12 years old and JH was 10 years old. On appeal, both parents argue that the trial court erred in terminating their parental rights on a variety of grounds. For the reasons more fully explained below, we conclude that there were no errors warranting relief. Accordingly, we affirm in both dockets.

I. BASIC FACTS

In September 2015, respondent-mother dropped CH off at the home of her parents. CH asked them to assist him with removing his pajamas because the pajamas were stuck to his skin. After helping him, the grandparents observed that his buttocks were “red, raw, and tender.” CH’s grandmother called her daughter that same day; she described the injury to her and asked her to verify JH’s well-being and call the police department. After mother did nothing over a period of weeks, the grandparents reported the abuse on November 16, 2015.

The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) removed JH from his parents’ care and had both children examined at a hospital. The treating doctor reported that CH’s buttocks had old bruising, scar tissue, and appeared “balloon like.” He similarly reported that JH’s buttocks had a significant injury and “appeared to be black, raw, and swollen, with

1 See In re Harbert Minors, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered June 29, 2016 (Docket Nos. 3327123; 333092).

-1- extensive tissue damage”; his injuries were so severe that he had to be hospitalized. The DHHS immediately petitioned the trial court to terminate both parents’ parental rights.

The trial court held a trial over three days. At trial, CH testified that his parents were dog handlers. The family had about 20 dogs that were housed in the basement. CH said that he and his brother were primarily responsible for the care of the dogs. They had to take them outside to the kennels, clean their crates with a bucket of soap and water, fill their water bowls, and “basically make sure they’re fed and healthy and stuff like that.” The dogs were the family’s main source of income. CH said father supervised them during the day because mother worked at night and would sleep most of the day. Mother would take the dogs to shows every weekend.

Both children testified about father’s use of extreme corporal punishment. CH testified that father punished him nearly every day since he was 5 years old. Father often punished him for “stuff” that he did to the dogs—such as forgetting to give them water or clean their crates. But other times he punished them for “tiny stuff” or just because he was angry. JH said father would punish him “pretty much every day”; he would beat him for not doing “stuff correctly.”

CH said father started punishing him by hitting him with a “piece of pipe, and then, it escalated to a leash, and then, it escalated to the two-by-four.” Father would force him to bend over a chair in the kitchen to receive his punishment. CH said father used a special two-by-four and would sometimes act like the two-by-four was a giant baseball bat and he was the ball. He said that he would be in a lot of pain on the lower half of his body after a beating. Sometimes it would be hard to move afterward: “the blood and stuff would stick” to “my underwear and my pants” and “it would be really hard to move.” It was difficult to go to the bathroom too “[b]ecause all the blood and stuff would get—would start to dry and get stuck to each other, and it would get stuck to my butt, and it would just rip off skin and stuff whenever—whenever I tried to go to the bathroom.”

JH testified that father had been hitting him with a two-by-four “most of my life pretty much.” His buttocks would “become swollen”; there would be “skin gone, like flesh was literally gone from it too, and it was . . . all red around, and—bleeding.” JH too described how his injuries would stick to his clothing: “My underwear was always getting stained. It would— the underwear would either stick to it and become stained also, but—and the result of it sticking to it, it would come off very painfully.”

An officer testified that he spoke to respondents individually one or two days after JH was removed from their care. Father admitted that he hit both boys with a piece of wood and hit CH with a dog leash. He stated that he spanked them daily. Mother told the officer that they used “a board to spank the kids,” and she admitted that she spanked JH with the board five times earlier on the day of his removal. When he asked if she would ever hit her dogs with a piece of wood, she replied, “ ‘[a]bsolutely not’ ”; she explained: the dogs “ ‘never lied to us.’ ”

The emergency room physician who treated the boys after JH’s removal testified that JH had “large wounds on the back of both sides of the buttocks. Both buttocks were very swollen.” The tissue that was open was “weeping” because it had not been treated in any capacity; “it was just an open, fresh wound that was, you know, continuously irritated and weeping.” The wounds were “well through the skin and deep into the fatty tissue of the buttocks.” The physician said

-2- CH showed that he had a significant amount of swelling to his buttocks—his buttocks were twice the normal size and had become “bulbous” and protruded backwards. He also had bruising and discoloration of his skin. He stated that, from the nature of the injury, one could say “with certainty that he [CH] suffered repeated injury to his buttocks.”

After the close of proofs, the trial court found that jurisdiction was appropriate and that the DHHS had proved by clear and convincing evidence grounds to terminate both parents’ parental rights under MCL 712A.19b(3)(b), (g), (j), and (k). It also found that termination was in the children’s best interests. The trial court signed orders taking jurisdiction and terminating respondents’ parental rights in April 2016. Mother moved for reconsideration later that same month, but the trial court denied the motion.

Both respondents then appealed in this Court.

II. RESPONDENT-FATHER’S ISSUES ON APPEAL

A. CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO PARENT

Father first argues that he has a constitutional right to parent his children and suggests that the trial court must have presumed that he was an unfit parent in violation of this right. Because he did not raise this claim of error before the trial court, we shall review it for plain error affecting his substantial rights. See In re Utrera, 281 Mich App 1, 8-9; 761 NW2d 253 (2008).

Father cites numerous authorities discussing the constitutional right to parent, but he does not specifically state how the trial court violated his constitutional right to parent his children. He does not even discuss his assertion that the trial court must have entertained an impermissible presumption or it would not have proceeded to terminate his parental rights. “It is not enough,” our Supreme Court aptly noted more than 50 years ago, “for an appellant in his brief simply to announce a position or assert an error and then leave it up to this Court to discover and rationalize the basis for his claims, or unravel and elaborate for him his arguments, and then search for authority either to sustain or reject his position.” Mitcham v Detroit, 355 Mich 182, 203; 94 NW2d 388 (1959).

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