In re Interest of John J.

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 2019
DocketA-18-911
StatusPublished

This text of In re Interest of John J. (In re Interest of John J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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 Interest of John J., (Neb. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

IN RE INTEREST OF JOHN J. ET AL.

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

IN RE INTEREST OF JOHN J. ET AL., CHILDREN UNDER 18 YEARS OF AGE.

STATE OF NEBRASKA, APPELLEE AND CROSS-APPELLEE, V.

TARA C., APPELLANT, AND BYRON J., APPELLEE AND CROSS-APPELLANT.

Filed June 25, 2019. No. A-18-911.

Appeal from the Separate Juvenile Court of Douglas County: ELIZABETH G. CRNKOVICH, Judge. Appeal dismissed. Kenneth Jacobs for appellant. Thomas C. Riley, Douglas County Public Defender, and Claudia L. McKnight for appellee Byron J.

RIEDMANN, ARTERBURN, and WELCH, Judges. RIEDMANN, Judge. INTRODUCTION Tara C. appeals, and Byron J. cross-appeals, the order of the separate juvenile court of Douglas County denying their motions for supervised visitation with their children. Byron also appeals the court’s verbal suspension of his visitation rights. For the reasons stated below, we dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. BACKGROUND Tara and Byron are the biological parents of six children, five of whom are at issue in this case. In November 2016, the State filed a petition seeking to adjudicate the children under Neb.

-1- Rev. Stat. § 43-247(3)(a) (Reissue 2016). The State alleged the children resided in a family home which was in a “filthy, unwholesome condition, which placed the children at risk for harm,” and the parents failed to provide safe and stable housing. The children were adjudicated in January 2017. At a subsequent review hearing held for Byron in April 2018, the juvenile court ordered a concurrent plan of reunification and adoption. The court also ordered Byron to complete individual therapy, participate in a batterer’s intervention program, maintain a legal source of income and suitable housing, and refrain from drugs and alcohol. The order further provided that Byron should have reasonable rights of visitation with the children, with the visits to exclude Tara. Later in April 2018, a review hearing was held for Tara. Although Byron attended his review hearing just a week earlier, he appeared at Tara’s hearing without his attorney. Tara’s attorney explained that Tara had some medical issues that required surgery and therefore, there had been some delay in progress. He reported, however, that the parties had obtained suitable housing where visits could be held instead of in the community so the visits should be less chaotic. Following the receipt of several exhibits and the recommendation from the caseworker that Tara visit with the children in the home without Byron present, the court stated, These visits should be stopped. And the chaos had nothing to do with the fact that they were in the community and everything to do with an inability to parent, a refusal on the part of both parents to take any direction. .... . . . I understand your surgery. But this condition that brought you to court existed long before that. And you, sir. Until all drug tests are made, all appointments are kept, all therapy is kept, there is no way I can continue these visits under these chaotic and horrific circumstances that we have been allowing to happen. . . . There will be no visitation at this time, . . . until such time as [Tara] and [Byron] comply with court orders, which will be key to assisting them in parenting. There is not only no parenting going on in visits. There’s -- there’s just chaos.

The court set the next review hearing for June 20, 2018. The court did not file its written order on the April review hearing until May 10. In that order, the court indicated that Tara was to have reasonable rights of visitation, and the visits were to exclude Byron. On June 8, the court issued a nunc pro tunc order consistent with its oral pronouncement that Tara shall have no visitation with the children until further order of the court. Neither written order addressed Byron’s right of visitation. In the interim, the State filed a motion for termination of parental rights, a copy of which is not in our record. In August 2018, Tara filed a motion for supervised visitation. Although she phrased it in terms of a joint motion of both parents, the court would not acknowledge it as a joint motion at the hearing, Byron’s attorney made an oral motion for Byron to also have supervised visitation. The parents’ caseworker testified that since the court’s April order suspending visitation, Tara had been attending family therapy with the children. The caseworker also indicated that Tara had been compliant with her required drug testing because she tested positive only for a prescribed

-2- medication, benzodiazepine. Additionally, the parents lived together and the caseworker found their home was suitable for visitation. However, the caseworker also testified that she had not received any confirmation that Tara had completed individual counseling. Further, she indicated that she had concerns about the court granting Tara visitation because nothing had been done to address the chaos that led to the court’s suspension of visits. She expanded on the problems which led to the suspension, stating that Tara would not allow the children to leave with visitation workers, would have a friend follow the visitation workers home, would scream at the children in stores, and would not follow redirection of the visitation workers. The caseworker testified that Byron had also been attending family therapy every other week and had completed a batterer’s intervention program. She stated that, prior to his visitation rights being suspended, Byron’s visits occurred at the home, and she had concerns with him being overwhelmed managing all the children during the visits. On cross-examination, the caseworker admitted that family therapy sessions had recently begun so Byron had completed only two sessions, and Tara had completed only four. The caseworker explained that the family therapy sessions were separate for Tara and Byron because there were past domestic violence concerns in their home. Further, neither parent had addressed parenting strategies in their family therapy sessions, nor had the children addressed the trauma they experienced as a result of the disruptions in the family home that caused their removal. Neither parent was involved with individual therapy. The caseworker also stated that there were concerns with Byron accepting redirection from the visitation supervisors during his visits with the children, which is reflected in the court report received into evidence at Byron’s April review hearing which indicated that Byron did not believe the visitation workers had the right or knowledge on how to teach him to parent. The attorney for the Department of Health and Human Services requested that the court take judicial notice of “the file” and “specifically the motion for termination of parental rights and the second motion for termination of parental rights, which were filed on or about May 15th of 2018.” The court agreed to do so, but neither motion is contained in our record. The juvenile court denied the parents’ motions for supervised visits. In denying the motions, the court noted that neither Tara nor Byron were in individual therapy and that the reason for the suspension of visits had to do with Tara’s threatening and aggressive behavior, which was not going to be corrected in family therapy. The court also expressed concern with Tara’s use of benzodiazepine despite her having a prescription for it. The court stated that the parents’ progress in the case plan was coming very late in the process, and it was therefore “best to proceed and adjudicate the motions that are before the Court.

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In re Interest of John J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-interest-of-john-j-nebctapp-2019.