In Re Jazmine L.

2004 ME 125, 861 A.2d 1277, 2004 Me. LEXIS 144
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 1, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 2004 ME 125 (In Re Jazmine L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Jazmine L., 2004 ME 125, 861 A.2d 1277, 2004 Me. LEXIS 144 (Me. 2004).

Opinion

SAUFLEY, C.J.

[¶ 1] The father of Jazmine L., Jordan L., Michael L., and Nathaniel L. appeals from a judgment of the District Court (South Paris, Lawrence, J.) terminating his parental rights. He asserts that, as a matter of law, the findings supporting determination of his parental unfitness are insufficient to support the termination of his parental rights by the clear and convincing evidence required pursuant to 22 M.R.S.A. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(b) (2004). We agree and vacate the judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] The four children first entered preliminary protective custody in August 2001, when the youngest children, twin boys, were approximately nine months old. The mother, who suffered from a serious mental illness, had been the primary caretaker of the children. The father, who often worked odd hours to earn income, had been a provider rather than a caretaker. The preliminary protection order was uncontested. The parents and the Department of Human Services 1 stipulated to jeopardy and a jeopardy order issued in November 2001. Jeopardy was based on the mother’s severe mental health crisis, evictions and homelessness during the previous three years, Jordan’s lead poisoning, and an alleged sexual assault by a third person on Jazmine while in her parents’ custody.

[¶ 3] The Department’s efforts to reunify the children with their parents initially focused on the mother, with the father’s approval. When the efforts with the mother appeared doomed, the court required the father and the Department to begin focusing on the father’s own reunification efforts. By September 2002, the children had been in foster care for nearly a year, and the court, recognizing the need for expedition, ordered that the father and the Department develop a reunification plan by October 31, 2002.

[¶ 4] Although the delay in addressing the father’s ability to care for his children was unfortunate, the court took pains to assure that the father had a reasonable opportunity to demonstrate improvement. The court noted that the father’s failure to work previously toward a plan for reunification “was the result of a misunderstanding” and that:

The parties agree that the past focus of reunification has been predominantly with the mother. In addition, reunification efforts have been hampered by multiple changes in caseworkers for the family. 2 The parties further agree that the father should be given an equal opportunity, for a limited period of time, to demonstrate that he is able to meet the basic needs of the children, as well as their emotional and developmental needs and any special needs.

[¶ 5] In November 2002, the father and the Department agreed to a reunification plan pursuant to 22 M.R.S.A. § 4041(1-A) (2004). This plan contemplated that the children would return to living with the *1279 father at an apparently clean and sufficiently sized apartment the father had obtained. Unfortunately, a Department inspection of the apartment in January 2003 turned up lead paint, precluding visits in that setting and delaying further efforts at physical reunification. Shortly thereafter, the Department received the psychological evaluation of the father and the mother, and the Department petitioned for termination of both parents’ parental rights in May 2003.

[¶ 6] At the hearing on the termination petition, Department allegations regarding the father’s ability to parent focused primarily upon his inability to meet his children’s emotional needs and his failure, over several months, to locate an adequate, lead paint free apartment in which to reunify with his children.

[¶ 7] In October 2003, the District Court issued an order terminating the parental rights of both parents. The termination of parental rights order regarding the mother was not seriously contested and is not subject to appeal.

[¶ 8] With regard to the father, the court concluded that he was unwilling or unable to protect the children from jeopardy and that those circumstances were unlikely to change within a time reasonably calculated to meet the children’s needs. 22 M.R.S.A. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(b)(i). The court also found that termination of parental rights was in each child’s best interest. 22 M.R.S.A. § 4055(l)(B)(2)(a) (2004). The court’s findings were thoughtful and comprehensive, and we therefore recite several of the findings that are central to this appeal.

Mr. [L.’s] parenting style lacks an emotional connection with his children. Such emotionally vacant parenting is problematic for children whose fives have been disrupted as much as has been true for the [L.] children. As Mr. [L.’s] emotional remoteness is so firmly rooted in his personality traits, it is unlikely that he would be able to demonstrate change in his emotional functioning, even if he participates in general ongoing therapy. Mr. [L.] would need to engage in intensive work on his functioning in the emotional realm of parenting and he would need to learn and understand that his emotionally closed personality style does not promote his children’s sense of emotional safety and security. The psychological data, however, reflects a poor prognosis that Mr. [L.] can make such changes because successful psychotherapeutic intervention is not likely for someone with his personality style.
The unresolved psychological and mental health issues of Mrs. [L.] and Mr. [L.] continue to pose a risk of serious mental/emotional harm to the children. In view of Mrs. [L.’s] refusal to engage in the intensive therapy necessary for her to achieve sufficient emotional stability to adequately parent any of the children, Mrs. [L.’s] unexplained failure to attend the hearing on the Petition to Terminate Parental Rights, and the dim prospects for the provision of further services to Mr. [L.] to enable him to engage his children emotionally and adequately meet them emotional needs, the court finds that neither Mrs. [L.] nor Mr. [L.] has made significant progress in correcting the conditions that led to the original finding of jeopardy-

[¶ 9] Because the Department had planned to return the children to five with the father before his psychological evaluation was completed, and because the court recognized that at least some of the factors inherent in the housing delay were created simply by the difficulties in obtaining lead paint free housing, it is evident that the *1280 court found the real impediment to the father’s ability to care for his children as springing from his inability to “adequately meet their emotional needs.”

[¶ 10] The court’s conclusion is summarized in its statement that (1) the father’s “emotionally vacant parenting is problematic for children whose lives have been disrupted as much as has been true for the [L.] children,” and (2) the father’s “emotional remoteness is so firmly rooted in his personality traits, it is unlikely that he would be able to demonstrate change in his emotional functioning, even if he participates in general ongoing therapy.”

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2004 ME 125, 861 A.2d 1277, 2004 Me. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jazmine-l-me-2004.