In Re Hs
This text of 648 S.E.2d 143 (In Re Hs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the Interest of H.S., a child.
Court of Appeals of Georgia.
*144 Kelley & Snow, Julia E. Snow, for appellant.
Thurbert E. Baker, Attorney General, Shalen S. Nelson, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Clark & Bellamy, Andrew W. Clark, Thomasville, Kenneth D. Steele, Bonnie R. Spears, for appellee.
MIKELL, Judge.
The biological father of a nine-year-old girl, H.S., appeals the Juvenile Court of Thomas County's order finding H.S. deprived and awarding temporary custody to the Thomas County Department of Family and Children Services ("DFCS") and physical custody to H.S.'s maternal great aunt and great uncle. Appellant argues that the order is erroneous because there was no evidence that he was unfit. Because there was no clear and convincing evidence that appellant was unfit, we reverse.
"On appeal from a juvenile court's order finding deprivation, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the juvenile court's judgment to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found by clear and convincing evidence that the [child was] deprived."[1] In doing so, we neither weigh the evidence nor determine the credibility of witnesses; instead, we defer to the trial court's factfinding and affirm unless the appellate standard is not met.[2] So viewed, the evidence adduced at the deprivation hearing showed that DFCS sought emergency custody of H.S. because H.S.'s mother, who was entering a drug treatment program, was concerned that appellant, who resided in Mississippi, would come to pick up H.S. while she was in treatment. The mother was present at the deprivation hearing but did not testify.
Diane Adams, the DFCS investigator who made the request for the emergency removal of H.S., testified that according to the mother, H.S. had observed domestic violence between the mother and appellant in their home in Mississippi; that the domestic violence had begun the night of their honeymoon; and that the mother left Mississippi with H.S. because appellant had grabbed H.S.'s arms, preventing her from going for help during an incident when he was pulling the mother around the yard by her hair. Adams further testified that the mother did not show up for the treatment program but had returned to Mississippi and was spending some time with appellant.
Adams also testified that she interviewed H.S., who confirmed the incident discussed by the mother and said that appellant hurt her arms when he prevented her from going for help. Adams recounted H.S.'s statements that her father would periodically slap her on the top of her head for no reason and that she had observed domestic violence. Adams explained that H.S. had been placed with her aunt and uncle, with whom she and her mother lived when they moved from Mississippi, and where H.S. had lived the first year and a half of her life because her mother tested positive for drugs at H.S.'s birth, and that the home had been approved by DFCS.
On cross-examination, Adams admitted that she had not requested psychological reports on H.S., evaluated the father for placement, or checked the records in Mississippi for reports of abuse. According to Adams, appellant confirmed that there was a domestic violence incident five years earlier and one before the mother moved. Adams did not investigate whether there were any pending charges against appellant.
H.S. testified that she was living with the aunt and uncle because her parents got into a fight during which appellant grabbed her mother around the neck twice. H.S. also testified that her father grabbed her arms, leaving a red mark, when she tried to run to get help for her mom, and that he had previously slapped her on the head a few times. On cross-examination, H.S. testified that *145 when her father slapped her on the head, she had been running in the house; that when her father grabbed her arm during the incident with her mother, he let her go soon thereafter; and that she had seen her parents smoking "pot," and that she knew what it was because she described it to Tamela Wooten, a counselor at her school.
According to Wooten, H.S. told her that she misses her mother and wants her to get better and that her father hurts her mother and does drugs, which she described to Wooten as "brown crumply stuff." Wooten recalled that H.S.'s aunt was in the room when H.S. talked about her parents doing drugs, and the aunt suggested that the substance was "pot."
Appellant testified that he was in the process of remodeling a trailer home that he inherited from his grandfather, which was parked on 40 acres of land owned by his family in Mississippi, on which his mother and father also lived; that his wife left after an incident in which she came home drunk, which led to a shoving match and her threat to leave; that he told her that she was not leaving because she was drunk and squirted her with a water hose to sober her up and to try to keep her from driving away with his daughter; that the mother left with H.S. two months later; that he did not touch H.S. or her mother during the incident; that several years earlier, he was charged with domestic violence because he and H.S.'s mother had a physical altercation and when the police arrived, they had to take one of them to jail, and he volunteered to go; and that he had never struck H.S. but that he had playfully wrestled with her because she loved to wrestle. Appellant also testified that he had been employed by the same cable company for eight years; that he wished his wife would conquer her drug addiction; that he smoked marijuana and drank alcohol in the past; that he paid child support while H.S. was in Georgia; and that, initially, he and H.S. talked every time he called her at her aunt's house but by the time of the hearing, she was refusing his calls.
Pursuant to OCGA § 15-11-2(8)(A), a deprived child is one who "is without proper parental care or control, subsistence, education as required by law, or other care or control necessary for the child's physical, mental, or emotional health or morals."[3] "But a finding that a child is deprived does not necessarily result in a loss of custody by the parent."[4] It has been held that
[t]o authorize even a loss of temporary custody by a child's parent on the basis of deprivation, the deprivation must be shown to have resulted from unfitness on the part of the parent, that is, either intentional or unintentional misconduct resulting in the abuse or neglect of the child or by what is tantamount to physical or mental incapability to care for the child.[5]
Furthermore, "[p]roof of unfitness must be shown by clear and convincing evidence [as] this standard recognizes the importance of the familial bond and helps eliminate the risk that a factfinder might base his determination on a few isolated instances of unusual conduct or idiosyncratic behavior."[6] It follows that "[o]nly under compelling circumstances found to exist by clear and convincing proof may a court sever the parent-child custodial relationship."[7] Reviewed in the light most favorable to the juvenile court's judgment, we find that the evidence was insufficient to establish clearly and convincingly that H.S. was a deprived child within the meaning of Georgia law.
The juvenile court's grant of the deprivation petition was based on two factors related to appellant.
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648 S.E.2d 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hs-gactapp-2007.