In Re JESSICA M. and Shawnta M.

744 S.E.2d 652, 231 W. Va. 254, 2013 WL 2460534, 2013 W. Va. LEXIS 613
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 2013
Docket12-0808
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 744 S.E.2d 652 (In Re JESSICA M. and Shawnta M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re JESSICA M. and Shawnta M., 744 S.E.2d 652, 231 W. Va. 254, 2013 WL 2460534, 2013 W. Va. LEXIS 613 (W. Va. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Petitioner, Lucinda M. (hereinafter “Lucinda” or “mother”), appeals the June 13, 2012, order of the Circuit Court of Gilmer *256 County terminating her parental rights to her children Jessica M. and Shawnta M. 1 The mother maintains that the lower court erred because the evidence shows both that she successfully complied with and utilized the services she was provided during the court-authorized improvement period, and made the changes necessary to assure the safety of her children in her eai’e. Respondent, West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (hereinafter “DHHR”), is joined by the guardian ad litem 2 in arguing that the facts of this case support the termination of the mother’s rights to satisfy the children’s need for permanency and stability.

Following a complete examination of the record accompanying the appeal, we reverse the order of the circuit court and return the matter for development of a reunification plan consistent with this opinion.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Lucinda is the biological mother of two girls, Jessica and Shawnta. An abuse and neglect petition was filed on March 19, 2009, by the DHHR against Lucinda and her husband, Jesse M., the biological father of the children. The petition contained the allegation that Jessica and Shawnta, then aged three and two respectively, were abused and/or neglected children due to their exposure to domestic violence and drug use by the father in the home.

An adjudicatory hearing was held on May 29, 2009, at which the mother admitted to being the victim of domestic battery and to not removing the children from a home where the father used illegal substances in their presence. The father on the other hand denied all allegations. The circuit court determined the evidence established that the children were abused and neglected by the parents.

Soon after the adjudicatory hearing, the father voluntarily relinquished his parental rights. The court accepted the relinquishment and terminated the father’s parental rights at a June 29, 2009, dispositional hearing. At a separate dispositional hearing, Lucinda was granted a six-month post-adjudicatory improvement period, which was extended by three months. Before the three-month extension expired, DHHR filed a motion to terminate the mother’s parental rights, to which the guardian ad litem concurred. Following a hearing in March 2010, the circuit court denied the motion and granted Lucinda a one-year rehabilitation period. The court found that Lucinda was meaningfully engaging in services and should receive the treatment recommended in her psychological evaluation. The mother apparently complied with and benefitted from the services provided as it is uncontested that the mother sought and received unsupervised, overnight supervision with the children in December 2010, and that the visitation was increased at a March 2011 hearing. When the court granted the mother additional visitation, it also ordered DHHR to develop a case plan for unification of the mother with the children. Although the guardian ad litem had concurred with reunification at an April 2011 status hearing, he moved to temporarily suspend visitation on May 6, 2011. According to the June 13, 2012, order terminating the mother’s rights, the guardian’s motion was “based on the fact the West Virginia DHHR reported sexual-ized behaviors being exhibited by the Infant Respondents in this matter.” It appears from the briefs that the court suspended visitation and directed DHHR to conduct an investigation. DHHR filed an amended motion to terminate the mother’s parental rights on May 24, 2011, and the matter was set for dispositional hearing.

The dispositional hearing was held on July 8, 2011. DHHR called three people to testify: a volunteer who worked at the school where the children attended pre-kindergar- *257 ten classes, a man who had lived in a trailer near where the mother had moved, and the Child Protective Services (hereinafter “CPS”) worker assigned to the case. The mother also called three witnesses: two workers who provided services to the mother involving parenting, supervised visitation, and transportation, and the therapist who had been counseling the mother for a year and a half on a regular basis.

The school volunteer testified that she had discovered Jessica sitting on a commode in the school’s bathroom closely examining her vagina with the lips of the vagina spread apart. The volunteer said that she did not ask the child what she was doing or why she was doing it either when she observed the child or after the child followed her out of the bathroom The only additional information the volunteer provided was that later the same day Jessica unexpectedly said during nap time that her mother had warned her “to watch these two boys that rides bicycles up to our house ... that they might touch us.”

The neighbor called by DHHR to testify was unable to place the mother at a bonfire gathering where attendees were drinking on May 9, 2011. He further denied telling the CPS worker that he saw her at this event. He said that he really did not know the mother, but his stepfather who lived in the same neighborhood did. The stepfather did not appear as a witness.

Before the CPS worker testified, DHHR moved to have the prior testimony regarding the observations and interview of a Maureen Runyon at some unspecified hearing incorporated into the record. The mother’s counsel pointed out that she had objected to the admission of the Runyon report at a previous hearing at which Ms. Runyon was not in attendance. The court stated, “The Court will take judicial notice of the prior testimony, but I — I—if you want Ms. Runyon’s testimony in, you’ll have to call Ms. Runyon as a witness.” It became apparent from the CPS worker’s testimony that Ms. Runyon was the DHHR employee who interviewed Jessica about the sexualized behaviors the child was exhibiting, behaviors the CPS worker called masturbation. The CPS worker had no firsthand information regarding what Jessica had said about her conduct, and the worker further said that Jessica “did not tell me she learned sexual behaviors from her mother.”

The CPS worker also expressed concern with the mother’s choice of people with whom she associated. The mother’s husband 3 had been abusive and her chosen boyfriend also was inclined to violence. The CPS worker admitted that the mother had told him she stopped seeing the boyfriend. The CPS worker also was concerned that even though the mother followed the multidisciplinary team’s advice to move to a different residence, he faulted the mother for choosing a new home without taking advantage of the assistance available from DHHR. He admitted the assistance from DHHR was not a court ordered requirement for relocation, and went on to testify that when he visited the home once the mother relocated, he completed a report saying it was a safe, proper and adequate home. He explained that he now had reservations with the new home because it was near the residence of at least one relative of the mother’s former boyfriend.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
744 S.E.2d 652, 231 W. Va. 254, 2013 WL 2460534, 2013 W. Va. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jessica-m-and-shawnta-m-wva-2013.