In Re JK

661 N.W.2d 216, 468 Mich. 202
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 2003
DocketDocket 121410
StatusPublished
Cited by288 cases

This text of 661 N.W.2d 216 (In Re JK) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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 JK, 661 N.W.2d 216, 468 Mich. 202 (Mich. 2003).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

A judge in the Family Division of the Kent Circuit Court terminated the respondent mother’s parental rights to her three-year-old son after concluding that there were attachment and bonding problems between the respondent and the child. Following an unsuccessful appeal to the Court of Appeals, respondent filed a timely application for leave to appeal in this Court. While that application was pending, unknown to this Court, the family division of the circuit court engaged in the apparently unprecedented and extraordinary action of allowing *204 the foster parents to adopt the child. 1 Again, unaware of this adoption, we remanded for additional findings.

Because we find the evidence supporting termination to be insufficient, we vacate the order terminating the respondent’s parental rights. 2 We also take this opportunity to make clear what we believe to be obvious, that the circuit court is not permitted to proceed with an adoption following a termination of parental rights where the parent’s appeal of that decision remains pending.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In April 1999, the Kent Circuit Court, Family Division, assumed temporary jurisdiction over the minor child on the basis of the respondent’s admitted marijuana use. The child, who was then sixteen months old, was placed in a foster home by Catholic Social Services 3 while the respondent entered an in-patient substance-abuse treatment program. For the first ten months of the child’s wardship, Catholic Social Services planned to return the child to the respondent. Visits between the respondent and the child went well, and the respondent actively interacted with the child. Initially, the visits were weekly, but later were increased to twice weekly. The child was sufficiently *205 bonded to the respondent that he cried when forced to leave her. 4

Catholic Social Services subsequently placed the respondent in the same foster home. The foster parents reported that the respondent did a good job with the child and attended to most of his needs.

In June 2000, Catholic Social Services filed a petition 5 to terminate the respondent’s parental rights on the basis of allegations that the conditions that led to the adjudication continued to exist and there was no reasonable expectation that the respondent would rectify the conditions within a reasonable time given the child’s age. 6 As a factual basis for the allegation against the respondent, Catholic Social Services alleged that the respondent failed to submit to a required psychological evaluation, failed to adequately participate in counseling at the Dakotah Family Treatment Center and Aftercare Process Program, 7 and was continuing to use alcohol and marijuana. The petition also alleged that the respondent was inatten *206 tive and acted inappropriately during agency visits with the child.

Catholic Social Services had referred the respondent to therapist Elaine Hoogeboom for weekly substance-abuse therapy. 8 In November 2000, Catholic Social Services, for the first time, expressed specific concern with the respondent’s bonding and attachment to the child. The social worker asked the respondent’s therapist to address the newly raised concern in weekly therapy with the respondent. Hoogeboom began meeting weekly with the respondent, her boyfriend, and the child to address the bonding and attachment issue. Several of the sessions involved only the respondent and her boyfriend because the foster mother failed to bring the child. Less than one month after the bonding and attachment therapy began, Ywania Richardson, a therapist who practiced in Genesee County, conducted a bonding and attachment assessment of the respondent and her child. She observed their interaction for less than one hour.

The permanent-custody trial took two days in early 2001. At the beginning of the trial, the parties stipulated that only legally admissible evidence could be used to establish the bonding and attachment issue. That constituted an acknowledgment by all parties that the bonding and attachment issue was not a basis supporting temporary jurisdiction. MCR 5.974(E)(1). At the trial, the social worker admitted that the respondent completed the substance-abuse program and an independent-living program. She was *207 employed, 9 had secured housing, 10 and was able to care for herself. Her previous substance abuse was no longer a problem and she had remained free of controlled substances for over one year. 11 Although the respondent did not initially follow through with a psychological evaluation when first referred IV2 years earlier, she did follow through with the second referral in August 1999. 12 The psychologist who conducted the evaluation found nothing in her intellectual and psychological profiles that prevented her from appropriately parenting the child.

The social worker’s new concern about the respondent’s ability to parent related to her alleged lack of attachment and bonding with the child. She testified that the respondent did not interact appropriately with the child during visits. According to the worker, the respondent sometimes had difficulty engaging the child in activities, sometimes seemed lethargic during portions of the visits, and sometimes inappropriately brought candy to visits scheduled in the morning.

Hoogeboom, the respondent’s therapist, opined that the respondent and the child were bonded. She recommended that the child be placed with the respondent. According to Hoogeboom, the respondent appropriately disciplined the child and interacted with him by playing and singing with him.

*208 Ywania Richardson, a therapist contacted by the foster mother and paid by Catholic Social Services for the respondent’s assessment, also testified at trial about the bonding and attachment issue. 13 Richardson met with the respondent and the child on one occasion for approximately one hour to evaluate their bonding. On the basis of this single meeting, which took place less than one month after Hoogeboom began addressing the bonding and attachment issue with the respondent, Richardson opined that they did not have a well-attached, bonding relationship, but explained that this may have resulted from the fact that the child had been in a number of foster homes. 14

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
661 N.W.2d 216, 468 Mich. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jk-mich-2003.