In re Keast

278 Mich. App. 415
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 2008
DocketDocket Nos. 279820, 279834, 279844, and 279845
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 278 Mich. App. 415 (In re Keast) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Keast, 278 Mich. App. 415 (Mich. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The Newaygo Circuit Court, Family Division (hereafter referred to as the family court), terminated the parental rights of the minors’ father on February 22, 2006, and of their mother, Erica Keast, on May 10, 2006. The court committed the children to the custody of the Department of Human Services (DHS) for permanency planning, supervision, care, and placement pursuant to MCR 400.203. The children became state wards committed to the Michigan Children’s Institute (MCI) of the DHS.

Nicole Coppess has provided foster care for Alyssa Ann Keast1 and Amber Nicole Keast2 since the latter part of June 2005. She is also seeking to adopt the children. Timothy and Barbara Atwood are the children’s maternal grandparents. In Docket No. 279834,3 the DHS appeals as of right the July 25, 2007, order granting the Atwoods’ petition under MCL 710.45(2), ruling that the MCI’s decision to withhold consent for adoption by the Atwoods was arbitrary and capricious, terminating the rights of the MCI pursuant to MCL 710.45(8), and making the children permanent wards of the court. In Docket No. 279820, Coppess appeals by leave granted an August 6, 2007, order allowing the maternal grandparents of the children, Timothy and Barbara Atwood, visitation with the children.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

During the course of the termination proceedings, the children were initially placed with the Atwoods [418]*418from March 14, 2005,4 to June 25, 2005. The children were removed from this placement because of the Atwoods’ failure to comply with a no-contact order barring contact with Erica’s former boyfriend, and because of Mr. Atwood’s use of drugs.4 5 Following a meeting held on June 22 and 25, 2005, the children were placed with their maternal uncle and his wife. Within a week of this placement, the uncle and his wife concluded that they could not handle the children, and the children were placed in foster care with Coppess. At that point, the Atwoods appealed the removal of the children from their home. The removal was supported [419]*419by the Foster Care Review Board (FCRB) and affirmed by the family court. A brief reunion with Erica in December 2005 ended after one week when she attempted suicide in the presence of the children. The Atwoods had no contact with the children from July 1, 2005, until March 2007.

A permanency planning hearing was held in the termination case on March 15, 2006. At that hearing, Erica testified that she started “doing drugs” when she was 12 years old and that her “parents’ house was a drug house, they got me into it.” Following Erica’s release of parental rights on May 10, 2006, the children were committed to the MCI for permanency planning, supervision, care, and adoptive placement under MCL 400.203.

Testimony was presented at a posttermination review hearing held on August 9, 2006, that the children remained in foster care with Coppess.6 Suzanne Adams of Bethany Christian Services (BCS), the adoption agency under contract with the DHS, testified that the At-woods were interested in adopting the children. Adams expressed concern because the children were previously removed from the Atwood home, but stated that the agency would conduct a home assessment and evaluation.7

BCS prepared an October 26, 2006, adoptive family assessment and a child adoption assessment that recommended that the adoption request be denied. The family assessment indicated that Tim Atwood admitted a long history of drug use, starting at age 16 and ending [420]*420in March 2005, and that he admitted to smoking marijuana with Erica in 2004. The assessment concluded that this behavior showed poor self-control, lack of judgment, and failure to put the welfare of the children first. In addition, while the children were in the Atwoods’ care, the Atwoods failed to adhere to the parent-agency agreement when they knowingly allowed the children to have unsupervised visitation with Erica and her boyfriend.

The Atwoods objected to the assessment and requested a case conference, which was held on November 17, 2006. The agency subsequently issued a case conference report indicating that the agency stood by its denial of the adoption based on an assessment of possible risks to the children. In a January 17, 2007, letter, William Johnson, the MCI superintendent, sent a letter to the Atwoods informing them that the MCI determined that adoptive placement in their home would not be in the best interests of the children.

On December 12, 2006, before the issuance of Superintendent Johnson’s decision, the Atwoods filed a motion for review under subsection 45(2) of the adoption code, MCL 710.45(2). That subsection provides that an adoption petitioner who has been unable to obtain the consent for an adoption required by MCL 710.43(l)(b) may move the court to allow the adoption by showing that the decision to withhold consent was arbitrary and capricious. A hearing under § 45 began on January 3, 2007, attended only by the Atwoods and their counsel. The court stated on the record that it would grant the petition and consent to the adoption by the Atwoods. However, the notice of the § 45 hearing was apparently defective. Another notice of hearing was issued, and a second hearing was held on February 7, 2007.

[421]*421On that date, the court conducted a posttermination review hearing in the termination of parental rights case immediately before conducting the § 45 hearing. An adoption progress report prepared by BCS on February 6, 2007, stated that the agency was advised on January 17, 2007, that the MCI determined that adoptive placement of the children with the Atwoods was not in the children’s best interests and that the agency was to proceed with adoption planning. The report stated that Coppess expressed her desire to adopt the children and that the home study process had begun.

On March 5, 2007, the court issued an order after posttermination review. The court made several findings by way of the order, including a finding that reasonable efforts had not been made toward adoption and that Coppess was reconsidering her decision not to adopt the children. The court terminated the commitment to the DHS, took jurisdiction over the children, and ordered that the children be placed with the Atwoods “by virtue of their petitions to adopt.” In the meantime, Superintendent Johnson consented to adoption of the children by Coppess on March 19, 2007.

The DHS filed an emergency application for leave to appeal from the March 5, 2007, order on April 12, 2007. This Court peremptorily reversed the family court’s decision by unpublished order entered on April 17, 2007 (Docket No. 277354). The text of this order provides, in part:

Pursuant to MCR 7.205(D)(2), in lieu of granting the application for leave to appeal, the Court orders that the March 5, 2007 order of the trial court is REVERSED. Where there was evidence that the adoption was proceeding at the time of the review hearing, the court erred in finding that reasonable efforts were not made to place the children for adoption in a timely manner. The court also [422]*422erred in placing the children with their maternal grandparents without conducting a review of the best interests of the children. MCL 710.22(g).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 Mich. App. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-keast-michctapp-2008.