In Re Is

520 S.E.2d 470, 238 Ga. App. 304
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 27, 1999
DocketA99A0489
StatusPublished

This text of 520 S.E.2d 470 (In Re Is) 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.

Bluebook
In Re Is, 520 S.E.2d 470, 238 Ga. App. 304 (Ga. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

520 S.E.2d 470 (1999)
238 Ga. App. 304

In the Interest of I.S. et al., children.

No. A99A0489.

Court of Appeals of Georgia.

May 27, 1999.

*471 Darden & Moyers, Richard M. Darden, John D. Gatch, Savannah, for appellant.

Thurbert E. Baker, Attorney General, Dennis R. Dunn, Deputy Attorney General, William C. Joy, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Shalen A. Sgrosso, Assistant Attorney General, Edith J. Gilbert, for appellee.

SMITH, Judge.

The mother of I.S. and G.S. appeals from the order of the Juvenile Court of Chatham County terminating her parental rights, alleging that the evidence was insufficient to support the termination. We find no error, and we affirm.

The record shows that I.S. and G.S., then aged four years old and ten months old, respectively, were placed in the custody of the Chatham County Department of Family & Children Services in September 1993, after DFACS received a report concerning injuries to G.S. G.S. was admitted to a local hospital because of severe burns to his feet, described as "stocking" or immersion burns. Following an investigation, the juvenile court entered an order finding G.S. and I.S. to be deprived. According to the order, the mother stated that she had left the two children in the bathtub for no more than two minutes, that she heard G.S. cry and returned to the bathroom to find G.S. "standing in the empty bath tub with skin hanging off his feet." The juvenile court found more credible the testimony of medical personnel stating that G.S.'s burns were caused by immersion in hot water and that the burns "were consistent with the child having been held and his feet dipped deliberately into scalding hot water." According to one caseworker, G.S. was required to undergo hydrotherapy, and he also was hospitalized because of a virus "attributed to eating bad food at the residence." G.S. was temporarily placed with his maternal aunt and I.S. with his maternal grandmother, but the children were later placed into foster care and, at the time of the termination hearing in July 1998, had lived in several different foster homes. The mother pled guilty to the felony charge of cruelty to children arising out of the incident with G.S. and received a ten-year suspended sentence.

After DFACS took custody of the children, a reunification plan was developed for the mother requiring her to attend parenting classes, undergo a psychological evaluation, visit with the children regularly, and cooperate *472 with DFACS. A supplemental order also required her to engage in counseling for the purpose of reducing "the risk of a recurrence of physical abuse." The caseworker who developed the mother's initial plan and worked with her for the first 30 days testified that she was hostile, defiant, and verbally abusive on several occasions and that she offered "no cooperation whatsoever." He described her as "one of the most oppositional people that I've ever had to work with." According to the caseworker who worked with the mother for the remainder of the proceedings, the mother was often hostile and uncooperative.

Evidence was presented that the mother completed parenting classes as required by the plan. The mother's caseworker also testified that the mother visited with the children on a "fairly regular" basis and that family interaction went well, although the mother often was late despite her caseworker's efforts to find a convenient time for the mother to visit. Even on her last visit with the children, the mother arrived late and left early. The caseworker also testified that the mother often seemed to give other activities, such as college, higher priority than the children.

Despite the caseworker's testimony that the mother's interactions with the children were usually positive, I.S.'s foster mother testified that his response to visits with the mother was "[t]errible. When he comes back home, it takes us a few days to stabilize him again. He's disruptive [and] oppositional." The foster mother also testified that I.S. refused to discuss visits with his mother and that he was belligerent both before and after the visits. A family service worker who took I.S. to see the mother testified that he often did not want to visit.

With respect to the requirement that the mother obtain counseling, evidence was presented that from 1995 through 1997 she saw four different therapists. She first met with Dr. Bernard McGahee, beginning in February 1995, for a total of six out of ten scheduled sessions. He testified that she made no progress, that she denied "any responsibility" for the injuries to G.S., and that she "just quit showing up" for her sessions. He believed that she needed continued counseling. The mother then began seeing Dr. Mahesh Gupta, a therapist of her choice whom she paid a nominal fee, "off and on." She saw Dr. Gupta for approximately ten sessions during 1996. The mother saw a third therapist, Ken Denny, from February 1997 through April 1997 for ten visits. Denny testified that the mother made some progress in the area of anger management and appropriate behavior when "dealing with authority figures," but when scheduled therapy concluded after ten sessions, he believed further therapy was required. The mother did see Denny for five more sessions and then another therapist, who did not testify at trial. After 20 visits, however, Denny believed that additional counseling was needed for the mother "to be able to adequately parent the children."

Although this shows that at least one of the mother's counselors observed some progress toward the goal of anger and hostility management, evidence to the contrary was also presented. In September 1997, Officer Victor Jones of the Liberty County Sheriff's Department was working in an off-duty capacity at a restaurant around 3:00 a.m., when he was summoned inside concerning "an unruly customer."[1] The waitress reported that the customer, the mother in this case, had been "verbally abusive" and "physically menacing" and that she had asked her to leave the restaurant because of her inappropriate dress. Officer Jones recognized the mother when he entered the restaurant because he had seen her earlier in the evening "involved in a verbal altercation" with a man. He asked the mother to leave until she was appropriately dressed, and she responded by cursing at him.

After Jones escorted the mother outside, she "continued to be belligerent and uncooperative." Because of this conduct, Jones told her she was under arrest for disorderly conduct, and she walked away, refusing to comply with Jones's commands to stop. He caught and began to handcuff the mother, and she struck him in the face. Jones stated that it took himself and three or four other *473 officers to place her in a police vehicle "because she was belligerent and uncooperative and fighting." The officers finally succeeded in placing her in the vehicle after spraying her with pepper spray, "which didn't have a visible effect," and she kicked out the window of the car. Jones stated he "could smell a strong odor of alcohol about her." The mother pled guilty to charges of obstruction of an officer, damage to government property, and disorderly conduct arising out of this incident. She was apparently sentenced only to probation but served some time in jail because her probation was revoked on her sentence for the previous cruelty to children conviction.

Evidence was also introduced concerning other incidents of violence involving the mother. In August 1996, after G.S. and I.S.

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In the Interest of I. S.
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Bluebook (online)
520 S.E.2d 470, 238 Ga. App. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-is-gactapp-1999.