In Re: Joshua P

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 15, 2013
DocketE2012-02165-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Joshua P (In Re: Joshua P) 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: Joshua P, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 17, 2013 Session

IN RE JOSHUA P. ET AL.

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Hawkins County No. HJ-10-0944 Floyd W. Rhea, Judge

No. E2012-02165-COA-R3-PT-FILED-JULY 15, 2013

This termination of parental rights case concerns Joshua P. and Quinn W. (“the Children”), the children of G.W. (“Mother”). The Children were placed in the protective custody of the Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) after both parents were arrested. Later, DCS petitioned the court to terminate Mother’s parental rights.1 Following a bench trial, the court found that multiple grounds for termination exist and that termination is in the Children’s best interest, both findings said to be made by clear and convincing evidence. Mother appeals. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court 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.

Douglas T. Jenkins, Rogersville, Tennessee, for the appellant, G.W.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter, and Marcie E. Greene, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services.

1 The parental rights of the Children’s biological father, M.P., (“Father”), were terminated in a separate proceeding. Father did not file an appeal. We refer to him only as is necessary to recite the underlying facts relevant to Mother’s appeal. OPINION

I.

At the time of the trial, Joshua was nearly ten and Quinn was four. They had been in foster care for nearly three years. We summarize the relevant facts. Mother and Father were never married to each other. In 2007, they moved to Tennessee from the Chicago area where both children had been born. They lived with Mother’s father, T.W., (“Grandfather”) in an old house on a farm in Edson. Joshua testified to filthy living conditions there – with dog feces and urine “everywhere.” He also mentioned soiled mattresses. Joshua said he often took care of Quinn, then an infant, by mixing his formula and feeding him. Father was physically violent toward Mother, and Mother “got hit a lot.” He saw plants growing in a closet with lights hanging above them. Joshua felt Mother was a good parent, but wanted to remain with his foster parents. He believed he and his brother would be adopted because their foster parents had been good to them. Joshua testified to an incident when he found Mother awake and laying naked across his mattress. He climbed on top of her and pretended to have intercourse with her. He told his foster parents about the incident a few months after he came into their care. Joshua testified that he had come to realize the incident was Mother’s fault.

As the parents’ relationship deteriorated, Mother moved out of the home and began living with R.M., a “friend” who lived in a trailer next door. Joshua remained with Father, while Mother took Quinn with her. Joshua acknowledged that Mother told him that she loved him and was not abandoning him. She said that she had to leave because Father was “mean” to her. Mother and the Children went back and forth between the two homes and one or both children were often left in Father’s care. Ultimately, Mother and R.M. became engaged and were married. In January 2009, DCS became involved with the family when case workers accompanied sheriff’s deputies to speak with Mother regarding suspected child abuse involving R.M.’s 14-year-old son, C.M., who lived with R.M.and Mother. During questioning, Mother gave a signed statement in which she admitted to one incident of performing fellatio on C.M. Consequently, Mother was arrested for aggravated statutory rape. At the same time, officers investigated Grandfather’s home, which led them to arrest Father for manufacturing marijuana. Based on both parents’ arrest and the “environmental issues” and safety hazards in Grandfather’s home, the Children were placed in protective custody.

-2- In February 2009, the first permanency plan was established with a goal of “return to parent.”2 A revised plan would later change the goal to adoption, but Mother’s obligations remained the same. They included, among other responsibilities, exercising regular visitation with the Children, resolving all legal matters, attending parenting classes, paying child support, completing alcohol and drug assessments and following all recommendations, providing documentation of continuing mental health treatment and progress reports to DCS, and providing a safe, stable, clean, and suitable home environment. The DCS case manager agreed that Mother visited regularly. Other than this, Mother provided no proof that she had completed any of her required actions. Mother disputed the case manager’s testimony and insisted she had completed the requirements of the first permanency plan.

In March 2009, the juvenile court adjudicated the Children to be dependent and neglected in Mother’s and Father’s care. In June 2009, pursuant to her guilty plea, Mother was convicted of aggravated statutory rape. She was sentenced to two years in prison and ordered to register as a sex offender. She began serving her sentence on June 26, 2009. After serving eighteen months, she was released. Mother had completed the terms of her probation at the time of trial.

R.M. testified in support of Mother. He had interacted with Joshua before the child was removed. He said that he knew him to stretch the truth at times. R.M. did not believe anything inappropriate occurred between Joshua and Mother. As to Mother, R.M. had observed her with the Children and felt she was able to parent them properly. He admitted that he and Mother continued to drink alcohol, but said their consumption was not to excess. R.M. observed Mother’s visits with the Children and said they were “excited and happy” to see her. He said the visits went well. He testified Mother attempted to resume the visits soon after her release from incarceration but that her efforts were thwarted. Regarding Mother’s conviction, R.M. said that he did not believe Mother “ever did the act.”

Mother, 43, testified she is bipolar, was in counseling in Chicago, and “signed up for help at a bunch of mental hospitals” as soon as she came to Tennessee. She advised DCS that she was in counseling at Frontier Health. She admitted she continued to struggle with alcohol; she had been sober five years up until the Children were removed. She said she turned to alcohol again in her depression. Mother had worked as a chef and cook in Chicago, but was not employed in Tennessee. She testified she could not hold down a full-time job because of “a host of medical problems . . . and the depression has really incapacitated me.” She applied for social security disability benefits based on bipolar disorder, arthritis, bursitis, and a spinal injury, but her application was not processed because of her incarceration.

2 Separate, but essentially identical plans were initially created. We refer to them in the singular for ease of reference.

-3- Mother said she never received a letter advising her that she was required to pay child support. Regarding her mental health records, Mother could not recall whether she ever signed a waiver to release them to DCS. Mother conceded she told DCS that she would not agree to turn over everything, because her later records detailed “really deep down painful childhood things” she discussed in counseling. Mother absolutely denied Joshua’s claim of any type of sexual contact between them. Mother believed Joshua made up the story because he figured it was a way to make sure he stayed in a better home. Despite her conviction, Mother also denied any sexual interaction with C.M., now her stepson.

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In Re: Joshua P, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-joshua-p-tennctapp-2013.