In Re Kv Minor

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 8, 2025
Docket374236
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Kv Minor (In Re Kv Minor) 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 Kv Minor, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

FOR PUBLICATION September 08, 2025 2:18 PM In re KV, Minor.

No. 374236 Lenawee Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 24-000101-NA

Before: ACKERMAN, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and O’BRIEN, JJ.

ACKERMAN, P.J.

When a child is taken into state custody during child protective proceedings, the Department of Health and Human Services must ordinarily make reasonable efforts to reunify the child with his or her parents. In certain aggravated circumstances, however, the court may bypass reunification and consider termination of parental rights at the outset. We hold that the statutory scheme permits that option under MCL 722.638(1)(a) only when a parent has already abused the child or the child’s sibling; anticipated abuse does not qualify. Because the trial court relied on anticipatory abuse to find aggravated circumstances, it erred in proceeding directly to termination. While we affirm the trial court’s exercise of jurisdiction, we reverse its finding of aggravated circumstances, vacate the termination order, and remand for further proceedings.

I. FACTS

Respondent is married and has a biological daughter, KV. Through his wife—who is also a respondent in these proceedings but not a party to this appeal—he has a stepdaughter and three stepsons. Although married, respondent apparently lives apart from his wife: she lives in Michigan while he lives in Indiana. Respondent is a truck driver, and the record reflects that the children

-1- lived a transient lifestyle. KV spent time in both Michigan and Indiana and sometimes accompanied respondent on the road.1

These proceedings began when Indiana officials contacted Child Protective Services (CPS) with concerns that respondent had sexually abused KV and her stepsister, CG. In an interview, CG alleged that respondent had sexually abused her, up to and including digital penetration, and that she had witnessed respondent sexually abuse KV. CG further reported that her male brothers also touched the girls inappropriately and that her mother (respondent’s wife) was aware but failed to intervene. Respondent had previously been the subject of more than 20 CPS investigations, and the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) alleged that other relatives had reported being sexually abused by him. Based on those allegations, in July 2024 DHHS petitioned the circuit court for jurisdiction, removal, and termination of parental rights. At the time, the children were in Lenawee County for a planned vacation with a relative. The trial court entered an order placing the children in custody.

The other parents involved in the case either pleaded no contest or voluntarily relinquished their rights.2 Respondent, however, chose to proceed to a bench trial to determine jurisdiction over KV. CG testified that respondent had sexually abused her and that she had witnessed him sexually abuse KV. She also testified that her brothers behaved inappropriately toward her and KV, such as walking in on them while they were dressing in the bathroom and groping them, and that respondent and his wife ignored her complaints even while resorting to corporal punishment against her. By contrast, KV denied that respondent ever sexually abused her. She confirmed that her stepbrothers had abused her and that she felt unsafe around them, but she expressed a desire to remain in contact with respondent and ideally live with him and the rest of the family in a country setting.

At the close of trial, the court found CG’s allegations against respondent credible but issued an unclear ruling. It concluded that CG and KV were not siblings and found that respondent

is a person who is 18 years of age or older, who resided for any length of time in the child’s home and with [CG] and had abused her including, again, attempted sexual penetration or assault with intent to penetrate. Therefore, the court would hereby take jurisdiction as to [KV], as to [respondent] as well, and the Department now may proceed to immediate disposition and I don’t know if we are doing that today or the later date. They have the right to submit additional evidence if they choose. I debated about giving some insight here. I think I am going to go ahead and do it.

Not knowing what the Department is going to present, I don’t think in anyway this necessarily helps them, but obviously everyone knows that in order to terminate someone’s parental rights without any attempt of reunification at the

1 Indeed, the initial petition noted uncertainty about where the children resided, observing that several were “on the road” with respondent and his wife. 2 Respondent’s four stepchildren had multiple fathers, each of whom was also a respondent.

-2- initial dispositional hearing the burden is much higher. It has to be by clear and convincing evidence. I’m not ready to rule on that because I haven’t heard all the evidence, but you’ve heard my statements regarding the partial impeachment of [CG]’s testimony by [KV] and, 1) we will have to wait and see based upon all the other evidence that may or may not be presented whether or not relied upon evidence from the adjudication hearing can arise to clear and convincing evidence that [respondent]’s rights to [KV] should be terminated. Secondly, by [preponderance] of the evidence whether or not it is in [KV]’s best interest to have the rights terminated if that is what the court decides.

Although this established jurisdiction over KV, it did not clearly resolve whether aggravated circumstances existed to justify immediate termination. Indeed, the court arguably suggested that it was not deciding that issue, stating that DHHS could “submit additional evidence” and that the court was “not ready to rule on that because I haven’t heard all the evidence.”

DHHS promptly sought clarification. Its attorney noted that a finding of aggravated circumstances was necessary to proceed directly to termination. She argued that “aggravating circumstances do apply to [KV] by way of the doctrine of anticipatory abuse and neglect,” citing In re Mota, 334 Mich App 300; 964 NW2d 881 (2020). The trial court replied:

I don’t have a problem with [Mota] and I am willing to apply it here to my findings, but at least in my opinion I thought I referred to that by saying that since it is not her father that—I’m reading the very strict of that statute, that he qualifies because he is a person who is 18 years of age or older and who resided for any length of time in the child’s home, which I said he did, and I did not find that they are siblings. I don’t know if anyone takes issue with that, but in my opinion they are not siblings. They do not have the parent in common.

DHHS’s counsel agreed that CG and KV were not siblings but renewed her request to apply the doctrine of anticipatory abuse or neglect. The court then said that it “would adopt that because I understand that when the Michigan Court of Appeals states that it is assist the lower courts in understanding what they are looking for as opposed to what I gave a very [strict] instruction to that particular statute.” The court also clarified that it was exercising jurisdiction over KV based on respondent’s “failure to protect against the molestation by the male children in the home.”

Following the adjudication trial, the court entered an order on the standard State Court Administrative Office Form JC 49. It checked the box finding statutory grounds for jurisdiction but left blank the space identifying which ground was proven. It also left blank the section regarding aggravated circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Kv Minor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kv-minor-michctapp-2025.