In Re Kaelyn R.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 31, 2021
DocketE2020-01254-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Kaelyn R. (In Re Kaelyn R.) 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 Kaelyn R., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

08/31/2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs March 1, 2021

IN RE KAELYN R.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hamblen County No. 19CV112, 19CV70 Alex E. Pearson, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2020-01254-COA-R3-PT ___________________________________

A mother appeals the termination of her parental rights to her daughter. The trial court concluded that there was clear and convincing evidence that the mother had abandoned her child by wanton disregard and by committing severe child abuse against her. The court also concluded that the evidence was clear and convincing that termination of parental rights was in the child’s best interest. We agree and affirm.

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

W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which KENNY W. ARMSRONG and KRISTI M. DAVIS, JJ., joined.

Gerald T. Eidson, Rogersville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Brittany R.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter, and Lexie A. Ward, Assistant Attorney General, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services.

OPINION

I.

A.

In January 2019, the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) received a report of a possible drug-exposed child. When a Child Protective Services Investigator looked into the claim, she found the child, Kaelyn, and her mother, Brittany R. (“Mother”), living in a one-bedroom home with two other adults. When the investigator began discussing the allegations with Mother, Mother fled via the back door with the four- month-old child. The investigator enlisted law enforcement to look for Mother and the child without success.

The following day, the investigator received a phone call from the mother of one of Mother’s male acquaintances. The child had been left with the caller, and Mother was in jail on check forgery charges.

When she met with Mother at the jail, the investigator found it difficult to keep Mother’s attention because she kept nodding off. Mother admitted to the investigator that she had smoked marijuana the preceding day and had smoked or used methamphetamine about two days prior to her arrest. Mother consented to a drug screen, which was positive for marijuana and methamphetamine but also amphetamines and morphine.

DCS petitioned the Hamblen County Juvenile Court to find the child dependent and neglected and to award it temporary legal custody. The juvenile court granted DCS temporary custody on an emergency basis and ordered that Mother have no contact pending further hearing.

Although Mother remained incarcerated, DCS developed a family permanency plan with her input. Among other things, the plan called for a hair follicle test to be performed on Kaelyn. The hair follicle test, conducted on March 28, 2019, revealed that Kaelyn had been exposed to methamphetamine sometime in the previous three months. Methamphetamine was present at levels twenty-six times that ordinarily required for a positive result.

The permanency plan also placed several responsibilities on Mother, such as participating in therapeutic visitation, scheduling and completing an alcohol and drug assessment, submitting to random drug screens, and resolving all legal issues and refraining from incurring additional charges. But DCS’s efforts to assist Mother in carrying out her responsibilities were hampered in two ways. First, DCS had difficulty communicating with Mother. The initial case manager, who was involved with the case from Kaelyn’s removal until October 2019, reported only being able to discuss plan responsibilities with Mother about ten times. She was able to meet with Mother three times while Mother was incarcerated, but once she was out, Mother often did not return telephone calls or respond to text messages. The next case manager reported that Mother would not return her telephone calls or text messages. She eventually was able to contact Mother in December 2019 through Facebook Messenger.

Second, Mother could not avoid time in jail. She was in jail for approximately a week after her arrest for forgery charges. She was incarcerated again from March 15 to May 27, 2019, in Hamblen County. And she spent May 28, 2019, in another jail for violation of probation arising from a previous conviction.

2 Also in May, the juvenile court adjudicated Kaelyn dependent and neglected. The juvenile court found by clear and convincing evidence that Mother had committed severe abuse by exposing Kaelyn to methamphetamine. The court ordered that Mother, upon her release from jail, could have supervised visitation on two conditions. Mother had to provide proof to the court that she had been clean of methamphetamine for thirty days, and she had to provide proof of enrollment in a rehabilitation program.

B.

Mother appealed the dependency and neglect decision, but on September 18, 2019, before the appeal could be heard,1 DCS petitioned the Hamblen County Circuit Court to terminate Mother’s parental rights. The petition alleged three grounds for terminating Mother’s parental rights: abandonment by an incarcerated parent, severe child abuse, and failure to manifest an ability and willingness to assume custody or financial responsibility of her child.

At trial,2 Mother explained her struggles with drug use and the circumstances leading up to Kaelyn’s removal. Mother had an older child who was removed by DCS following an automobile accident in 2016. The child spent approximately two years in foster care. According to Mother, “that’s when [she] started doing drugs really.” She used heroin and morphine almost every day.

After surrendering her parental rights to her older child, Mother decided “to get clean because [she] did not want [the child] to think that [she] was a junkie.” She went through a treatment program. And she claimed sobriety for a time, including while she was pregnant with Kaelyn. But then Mother relapsed. She attributed the relapse to an abusive boyfriend. She used methamphetamine with the boyfriend and then again after she moved out. Although she could not be sure, Mother conceded the second instance of her use was shortly before Kaelyn’s removal.

After Mother’s release from jail on May 29, 2019, she moved from place to place. Her longest stay at any one place was “probably a month or two,” although she could not recall the address of any place where she stayed. Mother also resumed taking drugs, both methamphetamine and marijuana, which she attributed to losing custody of Kaelyn. She estimated that, by the fall of 2019, she was using methamphetamine daily. The DCS case

1 DCS also petitioned to terminate the parental rights of the man Mother claimed to be the father of Kaelyn. His parental rights, if any, are not at issue. 2 The circuit court consolidated the hearing on the appeal of the dependency and neglect proceeding with the trial on the petition to terminate. We have previously highlighted the problems that can arise with such an approach. See In re Envy J., No. W2015-01197-COA-R3-PT, 2016 WL 5266668, *5-6 (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 22, 2016). Although the parties and the court seemed to have avoided such problems in this instance, the better course is to keep the proceedings distinct. Id. at *6. 3 manager at the time said Mother described herself as “pretty bad strung out” during that period.

But a turning point occurred on November 26, 2019. Mother remembered that date because it was the day she found out she was pregnant again. According to Mother, she “went to rehab probably two days later.”

In December 2019, Mother attended a rehabilitation program in Nashville. She maintained that she completed the thirty-day program in nineteen days. Mother then returned to Morristown where she started another rehabilitation program.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Kaelyn R., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kaelyn-r-tennctapp-2021.