In Re J.F.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 28, 2014
DocketE2013-01712-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re J.F. (In Re J.F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re J.F., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs June 30, 2014

IN RE J.F. ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Jefferson County No. 23281 O. Duane Slone, Judge

No. E2013-01712-COA-R3-PT-FILED-AUGUST 28, 2014

C.R.H. (“Mother”) appeals the trial court’s order terminating her rights to two minor children. The Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) removed the children from Mother’s care following allegations that she locked one child in a bedroom for three days without access to water, food, or a bathroom. The children entered protective custody and were adjudicated dependent and neglected. DCS filed a petition to terminate Mother’s parental rights.1 After a bench trial, the court found (1) that multiple grounds exist to terminate Mother’s rights and (2) that termination is in the children’s best interest, both findings said by the trial court to be made by clear and convincing evidence. Mother appeals. She challenges the trial court’s findings with respect to grounds, but does not contest the best-interest determination. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Matt E. Miller, Jefferson City, Tennessee, for the appellant, C.R.H.

1 The petition also named each child’s father. B.M. is the putative biological father of J.F.; his parental rights were terminated in 2007 in an unrelated proceeding. R.F. is the adoptive father of J.F.; after the trial in the instant case, the court dismissed the petition as to him. J.D. is the biological father of B.H.; he did not appear at trial and his parental rights were terminated. None of the fathers are parties to this appeal. They are referenced only as necessary to present the facts relevant to Mother’s appeal. Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter, and Kathryn A. Baker, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services.

OPINION

I.

This case concerns two of Mother’s children – a daughter, J.F., and a son, B.H. (collectively “the Children”).2 The Children are half-siblings, born in 2003 and 2010, respectively.

Mother and R.F. had a long-term relationship, but never married. R.F. legally adopted J.F., and supported Mother and all three of her children. In 2009, Mother and R.F. ended their relationship. Mother left and she and J.F. went to a homeless shelter, where she met J.D. Within a month, she moved in with J.D. In December 2009, they were married. The following year, B.H. was born to their union. By all accounts, J.D. was violent and abusive. Around January 2011, Mother left J.D. and took the Children with her to another homeless shelter. The Children were removed from Mother and adjudicated dependent and neglected in a Cocke County proceeding. Around June or July of 2011, R.F. returned to help Mother and temporary custody of the Children was returned to her. Although R.F. and Mother did not resume their relationship, R.F., an over-the-road truck driver, allowed Mother and the Children to move into his apartment and he supported them. R.F. was away most of the time, but came home every weekend to visit J.F. and help Mother with the Children.

On February 24, 2012, DCS received a call from Christopher Gulley, a neighbor, who was concerned about eight-year-old J.F. Mr. Gulley reported that he had observed J.F. through a window in his residence for three days. On the second day, February 23rd, he asked J.F. if she was alright, and she told him, “no,” that she was grounded and had had nothing to eat or drink and could not use the bathroom. Mr. Gulley brought over some potato chips and water and passed them to J.F. through the window. The following day, February 24th, he again saw J.F. in her room, and she again told him that she was not okay. He knocked on the door and asked Mother if J.F. could come out of her room; Mother told him that J.F. was grounded. Mr. Gulley went home and spoke to someone at the police department, and then contacted DCS. He was afraid if he did not call, “she might have died up there.”

2 In addition, the Children have another half-sibling, Mother’s older son, D.F., who has been in the custody of Mother’s parents since his birth.

-2- After 8:00 pm that evening, DCS case manager Linda Vaughn and Officer Robert Peoples arrived at Mother’s home to investigate. From the front door area, Ms. Vaughn could see into a window of a bedroom at the front of the apartment. She saw J.F. lying face- down and motionless on a mattress. Mother allowed Ms. Vaughn and Officer Peoples into the home. Ms. Vaughn saw a fabric “rope” tied to the handle of the door to J.F.’s room that was stretched across a hallway and tied to the hinge of an opposite door. She untied the rope from the hinge and entered the bedroom. There was a powerful urine odor. J.F. awoke and appeared “dazed” and was “lethargic” in talking with Ms. Vaughn. J.F. said that Mother grounded her to her room days earlier and she was not allowed her to eat or drink anything. She said a friend, Mr. Gulley, had passed her something to drink and eat, but Mother intervened and nailed the bedroom window shut. According to Ms. Vaughn, J.F. acted embarrassed because she had urinated in her clothing. She indicated she had also used a nearby bucket as a toilet. Ms. Vaughn observed the bucket to be nearly full of urine and also some feces. Officer Peoples testified in a similar manner with respect to the conditions he observed. He said that the rope tied between J.F.’s door and another door had to be untied in order to gain access to the room.

An ambulance was summoned and J.F. was instructed to pack a bag. J.F. went into the kitchen and packed some snack food. On leaving the apartment, Ms. Vaughn told J.F. to say goodbye to Mother. J.F. hugged Mother. According to Ms. Vaughn, Mother was stern, but calm and told J.F., “I told you one day your words would come back and bite you. I hope that you come back, but if you don’t, you know why.”

At the emergency room, J.F. complained of thirst. The treating physician, Dr. William Smith, initially “asked the nursing staff to, as far as fluids and food go, go ahead and give her more, whatever she’d like. . . .” Thirty minutes later, Dr. Smith examined her. He found J.F. to be “well-developed, well-nourished” and in “remarkably good spirits” considering the history he received. Based on urinalysis, Dr. Smith diagnosed J.F. with dehydration in the “mild to moderate” range. Dr. Smith found no symptoms of severe hydration but did not think this unusual; he explained that “dehydration is a continuum and those findings are present relatively late in that continuum.” He further stated that with dehydration, children are “better able to compensate for significant stress until fairly late stages – at which point they, ‘fall off the cliff,’ and deteriorate . . . very rapidly.” He was of the opinion that Adderall, a medication J.F. took for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, would not lead to dehydration in and of itself. It can cause increased thirst, but should not cause dehydration if the patient has free access to water. Dr. Smith estimated that if J.F. had continued with no access to food or water, it “absolutely” had the potential to lead to her death in approximately a week.

-3- Detective Roland Holt arrived at the apartment after J.F. had left. He noticed that the doorknob at J.F.’s bedroom door was turned around so that the lock was on the outside. Inside, he also saw a bucket filled with urine and some feces. The room was in “pretty nasty condition” and the window was nailed shut. On speaking with Mother, she admitted that she locked J.F.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re J.F., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jf-tennctapp-2014.