In re K.L.B.

431 P.3d 883
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedOctober 19, 2018
Docket118563
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 431 P.3d 883 (In re K.L.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re K.L.B., 431 P.3d 883 (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

Burgess, J.:

*886 M.K. (Mother) is the mother of K.L.B. (YOB: 2013) and A.S.B. (YOB: 2015). The family is originally from Kentucky. After being in Kansas for a week, the children were taken into State custody. Mother was eventually extradited to Kentucky on Kentucky charges. The Sedgwick County District Court ultimately terminated Mother's parental rights. Mother appeals, arguing (1) the district court did not properly exercise jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA); and (2) substantial competent evidence did not support the court's finding that she was unfit and would remain so for the foreseeable future. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On July 6, 2016, deputies responded to a suspicious character call in Wichita, Kansas. On arrival at the scene, they found Mother, who began making "suicidal statements." She told the deputies that her two children, K.L.B. and A.S.B., were staying with a couple she had met the day before at a QuikTrip. Father had also recently been arrested and extradited to Kentucky. Mother was hospitalized, and a deputy took K.L.B. and A.S.B. into police protective custody and transported them to the Wichita Children's Home (WCH). WCH reported that the children were "extremely dirty, having full diapers and wearing ill-fitting clothing" when they arrived.

At the hospital, Mother stated that she, Father, and the two children had moved to Wichita about a week earlier. They were originally from Kentucky but had left because Mother was having legal problems as a result of a theft charge. Mother was on probation for that charge. The family had passed through Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Oklahoma, before deciding to start a new life in Wichita. Mother stated they had no friends or family in Kansas.

Mother stated Father had been arrested on the day they arrived in Wichita. After that, she had stayed at a motel with the children for five days. During that time, their room was broken into twice. Mother then spent the night at the home of a couple she met at QuikTrip. Mother did not know the couple's last name. Mother lent her truck to the couple's son. When he did not return, Mother left her children with the couple and went to look for the truck. That is when police found her.

Mother also has a 20-year-old daughter and a 17-year-old son still in Kentucky. She left the son in the care of her older daughter, but Kentucky Child Protective Services (CPS) had taken him into custody. Mother stated she did not want to return to Kentucky because CPS was also trying to take custody of K.L.B. and A.S.B.

The State filed a child in need of care (CINC) petition in Sedgwick County. After a hearing on July 11, 2016, the district court entered temporary custody orders. The form used for the district court's journal entry included standard findings that jurisdiction and venue were proper, and that the court had original jurisdiction under K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 38-2203. The district court also ordered *887 the district attorney's office to contact the appropriate court in Kentucky.

Several weeks later, the district court held a disposition hearing. At the hearing, Mother answered no contest to the allegations in the CINC petition. The State told the district court that it had contacted officials and a child welfare agency in Kentucky, and they had conveyed that they did not intend to assume jurisdiction. Mother requested a hearing about the UCCJEA with officials from Kentucky to learn why they were declining jurisdiction. The district court asked Mother if she would be okay with a "judge-to-judge" call to verify that the Kentucky court was not retaining jurisdiction. Mother agreed as along as she and her counsel could be present. The district court continued disposition.

Two weeks later, on August 19, 2016, the district court held another disposition hearing. The court noted it had continued disposition to determine whether Kentucky wished to exercise jurisdiction since both parents were from Kentucky and the children had lived there for a substantial time. The district court explained that it had contacted the appropriate court in Kentucky. The Kentucky court did not want a hearing or anything on the record and declined to exercise jurisdiction. The State advised that the district court had emergency jurisdiction and its jurisdiction continued because Kentucky had declined to take over the case. In its orders, the district court found that the "Family Law Court in Hardin County, Kentucky, has been made aware of this CINC proceeding and has declined to exercise their jurisdiction over this matter."

The State eventually moved to terminate Mother's parental rights. The district court held a termination hearing on August 2, 2017. At the hearing, Mother testified that she was currently living at The Women's Healing Place in Louisville, Kentucky, and she had been there since March 2017. Mother explained The Women's Healing Place was a rehabilitation center for women. Mother was placed there as a condition of her parole from a felony theft conviction in Kentucky. Before living in the rehab center, Mother was in jail in Kansas from August 2016 to January 2017 because she did not want to sign the extradition papers and leave her children. Once Mother returned to Kentucky, she was in jail from January 2017 until March 2017.

Mother told the district court that she left Kentucky with Father and the girls around the beginning of June. Mother knew she should not have left Kentucky because she was on probation, but she was using drugs and alcohol at that time and made bad decisions. According to Mother, the family first went to Oklahoma and went camping with some friends there. The family arrived in Wichita at the end of June and was planning to continue on to Colorado for another week or so of camping. Before leaving for Colorado, Father was arrested on an outstanding Kentucky warrant in Kansas.

In early July, sheriff's deputies took Mother to the hospital because she was high and "psychotic." At the time, Mother was using methamphetamines and Xanax. Mother admitted to using methamphetamine while she was taking care of the minor children. Mother explained she began using methamphetamine and pain pills a few months before she was arrested. Mother testified that she had not used alcohol or drugs since being placed in custody and had never failed a urinalysis test at the rehab center. She stated she stopped using because the "pain of being separated from [her children] is the most heart-wrenching pain [she's] ever been through."

Mother testified that K.L.B. was autistic. Mother had gotten K.L.B. diagnosed while living in Kentucky. K.L.B. had developmental delays, would not make eye contact, and had been non-verbal. In Kentucky, a speech therapist and a developmental interventionist would come to the house and work with K.L.B. a few days each week. K.L.B. did not receive any of these services while the family was in Oklahoma.

Mother admitted that she and Father had had domestic violence issues in the past. In 2014, she had tried to get an emergency order of protection against Father. Father had pushed and spit on Mother and yelled at one of her older children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
431 P.3d 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-klb-kanctapp-2018.