In Re: Joseph G.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 31, 2013
DocketE2012-02501-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Joseph G. (In Re: Joseph G.) 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: Joseph G., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs May 31, 2013

IN RE JOSEPH G. ET AL.

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Hancock County No. J1170 Floyd W. Rhea, Judge

No. E2012-2501-COA-R3-PT-FILED-JULY 31, 2013

This is a termination of parental rights case focusing on Joseph G., Trinity G., and Stephen G. (“the Children”), the minor children of a married couple, J.G. (“Father”) and E.G. (“Mother”). The Children, then ages four, two and one respectively, were placed in the protective custody of the Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) following the incarceration of both parents. The Children were subsequently adjudicated dependent and neglected by stipulation of the parents. A year after the Children entered foster care, DCS filed suit to terminate the parents’ rights. Following a bench trial, the court granted DCS’s petition. The trial court found, by clear and convincing evidence, that multiple grounds for termination exist as to both parents and that termination is in the Children’s best interest. Father and Mother separately appeal. As to both parents, we reverse the trial court’s finding of willful failure to support. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Reversed in Part; Termination of Both Parents’ Parental Rights Affirmed; Case Remanded

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

Aaron J. Chapman, Morristown, Tennessee, for the appellant, J.G.

William E. Phillips, II, Rogersville, Tennessee, for the appellant, E.G.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter, and Mary Byrd Ferrara, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services. Deborah A. Yeomans, Johnson City, Tennessee, Guardian ad Litem.

OPINION

I.

DCS first became involved with the family in August 2010. Police responded to a report that no one was home to meet Joseph when he arrived from kindergarten. Upon investigation, the police also found that the two younger children, Trinity and Stephen, had been left unsupervised. When Mother arrived home, she was arrested for public intoxication. By Mother’s account, she was at home but had fallen asleep. She denied that she was “high,” but admitted to failing a sobriety test. Father was not present at the scene; at the time, he was subject to a restraining order that Mother had taken out stemming from a 2009 domestic assault. DCS took the Children into protective custody. They were returned to Mother the following month when DCS’s petition for temporary custody was dismissed because of DCS’s failure to timely pursue it. DCS established a non-custodial permanency plan for the Children. It began making efforts to assist Mother. Mother did not comply with the plan or follow any of DCS’s recommendations.

On December 19, 2010, Mother and Father were incarcerated. Mother had been arrested on a charge of theft over $1,000 and for failure to appear. Father, who had been free on bond, was arrested for a probation violation and failure to appear. Initially, the Children were placed in the emergency custody of their maternal grandmother, L.F. (“Grandmother”). After a few days, she returned them to DCS custody, stating she was unable to care for them at her current residence. DCS filed another petition for temporary custody on December 22, 2010. The petition alleged that the Children were dependent and neglected and in need of a proper guardian. The trial court granted the petition and the Children entered foster care. The Children were twice moved before settling into their third and current foster home placement in March 2011.

In January 2011, the non-custodial plan became the “family permanency plan.” The plan’s stated goal was the return of the Children to the parents. The plan generally charged the parents with providing an environment “without domestic violence, drug abuse and public intoxication concerns.” DCS went over the plan with Mother and Father and they signed it.1 Among their responsibilities, the parents were required to enroll in domestic violence classes and seek marital counseling; complete anger management classes; complete alcohol and drug assessments; follow all recommendations following the assessments;

1 Father was in jail at the time; the case manager personally delivered the plan to Father there and reviewed it with him “line by line,” after which he signed it.

-2- complete parenting classes; submit to hair follicle drug tests; pass all drug screens; and “present themselves in a sober fashion.” Further, they were directed to obtain and maintain suitable housing, complete therapeutic visitations with the Children, pay child support and provide gifts and clothing for the Children.

On February 1, 2011, by an agreed order, the Children were adjudicated as being dependent and neglected. Father was released on bond in March 2011, but he returned to jail in May to serve 270 days after he again violated his probation, for the fourth time. In interactions with the parents, the DCS case manager, Patricia Johnson, repeatedly observed that Mother was intoxicated – at the DCS office, on the street, and when Mother arrived for a parenting assessment. Mother seemed to doze off at DCS meetings and court hearings. When questioned, Mother told Ms. Johnson that she was taking Suboxone, a drug that, according to Mother, allowed her to consume alcohol without her consumption being detected on any “flipping test” she might be required to take. Mother denied ever being intoxicated around her case manager, but admitted to taking sleeping pills. At an agency meeting in August 2011, DCS staff determined that the parents had made no discernable progress toward regaining custody. As a consequence, DCS decided to proceed with a suit to terminate. At the same time, they gave Mother and Father more time to see if they would follow through with their stated intention to make some progress in completing the “action steps” outlined in the permanency plan.

By December 2011, DCS had filed a revised permanency plan that changed the goal of the plan to adoption. DCS noted that Mother and Father had failed to complete any of the plan’s goals looking toward a restoration of custody. DCS pointed out that the parents made no real effort on the permanency plan until after termination proceedings were initiated.

The trial court ordered no further contact between the parents and the Children based on allegations that the visits were too upsetting to the Children. On December 19, 2011, DCS filed a petition to terminate the parents’ parental rights. The petition asserted multiple grounds against each parent for termination, including abandonment, non-compliance with the permanency plan, and persistence of conditions. Trial was held in September 2012. Joseph was then seven, Trinity was five and Stephen was four.

The proof showed that the parents led troubled lives before and after losing custody. Both had criminal histories that dated back several years. After Mother and Father went to jail and the Children were removed, the parents had no stable housing or employment. During most of 2011, Father was incarcerated. At other times, Mother and Father moved around, lived with others, or stayed in a motel room. In March 2011, Mother was involved in a serious car accident. At the time, she was already taking prescription pain medication. The dosages were increased when the Children were removed. Mother said between May

-3- and July 2011, she stopped going to a pain clinic and tried to wean herself off the drugs in an effort to regain custody.

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In Re: Joseph G., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-joseph-g-tennctapp-2013.