In re K.H.

167 N.H. 766
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 19, 2015
Docket2014-0642
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 167 N.H. 766 (In re K.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re K.H., 167 N.H. 766 (N.H. 2015).

Opinion

Dalianis, C.J.

The respondent, D.H., appeals an order of the Circuit Court (Cyr, J.) granting the petition of the petitioner, the New Hampshire Division for Children, Youth and Families (DCYF), to terminate his parental rights over his son, K.H., on the ground that he failed to correct, within 12 months, the conditions leading to a finding of neglect. See RSA 170-C:5, III (2014). On appeal, the respondent argues that: (1) the trial court admitted hearsay evidence in violation of RSA 170-C:10 (2014); and *768 (2) there was insufficient evidence to support the court’s finding that he failed to correct the conditions leading to the original neglect finding and its determination that terminating his parental rights was in the child’s best interests. We affirm.

I. Background

The trial court found, or the record contains, the following facts. The child was born in February 2008. On September 17, 2009, a petition for abuse/neglect was brought against the respondent and the child’s mother. At that time, the respondent was incarcerated in a county jail in connection with an incident in which he had punched the child’s mother in the stomach in the child’s presence. The petition was based upon domestic violence between the parents, the failure of the parents to maintain a safe, clean, and sanitary home for their child, and their failure to address their respective mental health issues. The affidavit in support of the petition alleged, among other things, that DCYF was “concerned with the decisions that the parents are making regarding their son” because it was “apparent that there are anger issues, domestic violence, and parenting issues,” including issues related to “the home environment, supervision of [the child] and [the respondent] being incarcerated for assault.”

Thereafter, the parents consented to a finding of neglect. The trial court approved their consent decree on September 23, 2009. Pursuant to the decree, the child was placed with his mother, the respondent was granted supervised visitation with him, and DCYF was awarded legal custody of him.

The child remained in his mother’s physical custody until March 2010, when the court awarded DCYF protective supervision of the child because the mother had failed to supervise him properly and had placed him at risk of harm. The trial court placed the child with his current foster family, where he remained until June 22, 2011, when he was placed with the respondent.

Between June 22,2011, and September 13,2012, the original neglect case remained open, and DCYF continued to provide services. However, in approximately early September 2012, assessment workers and the guardian ad litem visited the respondent’s home to investigate a report that he had physically abused and emotionally neglected the child (a report that was never confirmed). They found the child’s behavior to be out of control, observing him choking and hitting the respondent. The respondent had to be prompted to tell the child to stop. The respondent told an assessment worker that he did not discipline the child when the child acted out. The child told the worker that he hits the respondent because the respondent does not listen to him.

*769 During the week after this initial visit, the child again acted out aggressively. At one point, he struck the respondent in the groin with a bar, causing bleeding. On another occasion, the respondent called the police twice in one evening because the child was hitting and throwing things. On still another occasion, the police were called because the child was in a car, throwing things. The police were able to get the child out of the car, and they took him to the emergency room. Later, the respondent told police officers that he could no longer have the child in his home.

The next weekend, DCYF approved placing the child with his current foster family for respite care. The respondent and his girlfriend, who is not the child’s mother, reported that, after the child returned from his foster family’s home, he was like a different child. However, within days of the child’s return to the respondent’s home, a parenting support worker, who was at the respondent’s home at the time providing services, called DCYF because the respondent again said that he could not “do this anymore,” meaning that he could no longer take care of his son. The child was again taken to his foster family for respite care.

On September 13, 2012, DCYF filed an ex parte motion to change the child’s placement from his father’s care to that of a licensed foster parent. In its motion, DCYF stated that it sought a change in placement for the child because “[t]here is reasonable cause to believe that [the child] is in a potentially unsafe environment with his father who is unable to maintain [the child’s] behaviors in the home.” The trial court granted the motion, and the child was placed, again, with his current foster family. Upon his return to the foster family, the child’s aggressive behaviors lessened.

DCYF prepared, and the respondent signed, an initial case plan, which stated that among the tasks for him to accomplish were -“Maintaining structure and a predictable schedule,” and “[supervision and discipline” of the child, who was now a preschooler. The plan stated that the respondent was “often challenged to regulate his emotions” and that he did “not understand the effects that a lack of consistency can have on his son.”

To address these concerns, the plan provided that the respondent would continue in counseling with his then counselor and that he would participate in family therapy with his girlfriend and the child. Moreover, under the plan, DCYF provided a parent aide to supervise visits between the respondent and the child and provide the respondent with information about child development and parenting skills. Pursuant to the plan, the child was evaluated by medical professionals, who concluded that his aggressive behavior was not related to any organic cause, but appeared to be the result of his living environment.

*770 At a review hearing in November 2012, DCYF reported to the court that the child had “adjusted well to his return to foster care.” DCYF described the child as “generally happy and . . . presently well[-]behaved.”

The joint counseling sessions went well for a period of time; however, from mid-April through August 2013, it appears that the respondent either cancelled or did not appear for the sessions. In August 2013, the mental health agency that had been providing the counseling closed the respondent’s case for non-attendance. Similarly, DCYF reported in its July 2013 review that the respondent had “missed sessions of individual therapy.”

The use of a parent aide for supervised visits and to help the respondent acquire better parenting skills followed a similar path. The parent aide testified that the respondent often did not stay focused upon parenting the child during the visits and had to be prompted to discipline the child when necessary. The respondent appeared more focused upon matters such as his employment instead of upon learning about child development and gaining parenting skills.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 N.H. 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kh-nh-2015.