In re: K.A.H.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 21, 2000
DocketM1999-02079-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In re: K.A.H. (In re: K.A.H.) 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: K.A.H., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 2000 Session

IN RE: K. A. H.

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Montgomery County No. 73-155 Wayne C. Shelton, Judge

No. M1999-02079-COA-R3-CV - Filed July 21, 2000

This case involves the termination of parental rights regarding a child who was removed from the mother=s home by the Department of Children=s Services in 1996 and placed in foster care. DCS devised a Plan of Care for the mother, which, among other things, required her to address her drug and alcohol addictions. During the two years between the removal from the home and the filing by DCS of the petition to terminate parental rights, the mother made some efforts to improve her situation, but her substance abuse continued. The trial court terminated the mother=s parental rights on grounds (1) that the conditions that led to the child=s removal continued to persist with little likelihood of remedy and (2) that the mother failed to comply with the Statement of Responsibilities as provided in the Plan of Care. Because DCS has established grounds for termination and has established that termination is in the best interest of the child, we affirm.

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

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL, P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM B. CAIN, J., joined.

Gregory D. Smith, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Gail Ann Heller.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter, Douglas Earl Dimond, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Department of Children=s Services.

OPINION

The child who is the subject of this proceeding was taken into custody in April 1996, after several referrals to the Department of Children=s Services (ADCS@) because of the mother=s1 apparent 1 The mother declined to name the child=s father. The child=s birth certificate is Asilent as to the name of the father@ and no person filed a notice of intent to claim paternity or acknowledgment of paternity with the Putative Father Registry. neglect. DCS devised a Plan of Care, which, among other things, required the mother to address her drug and alcohol addictions. During the two years between the removal of the child from the home and the filing by DCS of the petition to terminate parental rights, the mother made some efforts to improve her situation, obtaining employment and a residence. She continued to maintain a relationship with the child. The mother=s substance abuse continued, however. In the interest of making permanent placement of the child possible, DCS initiated this termination proceeding.

I. Background

The child, K.A.H., a girl, was born in September 1994. She came to the attention of DCS because several people made referrals to DCS alleging that the mother was neglecting her. The first referral was made in February 1996, when someone reported a baby crying inside her home. Police investigated, believing the child to be abandoned, and found the mother present, but Apassed out.@ DCS began working with the mother, developing a APlan of Action@ to prevent the necessity of taking the child into state custody. The Plan of Action included a provision that the mother remain drug and alcohol free. The mother=s difficulties with drugs and alcohol continued, and additional referrals of her neglect were made to DCS.2 The Department filed a petition to take the child into state custody in April 1996, when the mother, having left the child with a babysitter, was jailed for several days after being arrested while Awalking in the rain while intoxicated and/or high on drugs.@

After the mother=s release from jail, DCS began working with her, attempting to improve her parenting skills so that the child could be returned to her. DCS developed a APlan of Care,@ outlining the steps the mother needed to take before she could regain custody of her daughter. The steps included visiting the child regularly, having a drug and alcohol assessment, undergoing random drug and alcohol tests, and attending substance abuse treatment programs, counseling sessions, and parenting classes.

2 Other referrals were made because the mother picked the child up from daycare while intoxicated, failed to give the child her medicine when she was sick, and left the child alone in a car while she went to a bar and became intoxicated.

-2- The mother maintained a job in food service throughout most of the time the child was in foster care, except when she was in jail or hiding from authorities.3 Her visits with the child were consistent, with the same two exceptions. No one disputed that the mother loved her daughter and that the two had Abonded.@ Early in the process, the mother was allowed unsupervised visitation, but her continued drug use made such visits impossible, so all later visits were supervised. The mother consistently took toys and clothes to the child at the visits, even though the foster care worker suggested that she could better spend the money improving her situation so the child could return to her. The mother=s interaction with the child was described as Aappropriate.@

DCS personnel worked with the mother consistently throughout the two and one half years the child was in custody. The foster care workers encouraged the mother to attend counseling sessions, parenting classes, and alcohol and narcotics users= support groups, even providing transportation and financial assistance when needed and appropriate. They described the mother=s tearful promises to do better in her efforts to stop abusing drugs, but the mother never followed through on her promises. She never had a drug and alcohol assessment, and did not inquire about obtaining one until immediately prior to the hearing. She went to a few Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous meetings, but refused to attend any more. She consistently failed the drug tests, testing positive for cocaine and marijuana, until shortly before the hearing. Even three weeks prior to the hearing, the mother tested positive for Valium.4 She admitted to having taken the drug, but claimed that she did not realize that Valium would show up on the drug test.

The mother attended four sessions of a parenting class, but did not complete the program. She began counseling sessions with a psychologist, but stopped going to her sessions. The psychologist had referred her to a psychiatrist for her depression. The psychiatrist prescribed antidepressant drugs for the mother, but DCS refused to pay for additional prescriptions after the mother took all of the pills remaining in the bottle at one time.

DCS filed the petition to terminate the mother=s parental rights in March 1998 based on the persistence of the conditions which led to the removal of the child from the home, and the mother=s failure to comply with the Plan of Care.5 After learning of the petition, the mother claimed she was Aserious this time@ about following the plan. She resumed the Alcoholics Anonymous meetings in

3 The mother was incarcerated for more than one instance of driving on a suspended license. She provided the police a false name, the name of a friend, once when she was stopped. She hid from authorities after the friend reported her. 4 The mother did not have a prescription for Valium. She obtained the drug from a friend. 5 In its Prayer for Relief, DCS also asked the court to find that the mother had abandoned the child. The mother had not visited the child between December 1997 and April 1998 because she was hiding from authorities and then incarcerated. DCS did not argue at trial that the mother had abandoned the child.

-3- May 1998. She managed a few negative drug tests, but also tested positive for cocaine and Valium in the months after the petition was filed.

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In Re Drinnon
776 S.W.2d 96 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1988)
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In re: K.A.H., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kah-tennctapp-2000.