in Re L Fouty Minor

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 2017
Docket335546
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re L Fouty Minor (in Re L Fouty 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 L Fouty Minor, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

UNPUBLISHED In re L FOUTY, Minor. June 15, 2017

No. 335546 Muskegon Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 2013-042948-NA

Before: O’BRIEN, P.J., and HOEKSTRA and BOONSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent, the father of the minor child LF, appeals by right the trial court’s order terminating his parental rights to LF under MCL 712A.19b(3)(g).1 We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In August 2013, petitioner filed a petition seeking the removal of LF, six days old at the time, from his parents’ home. The petition alleged that Children’s Protective Services (CPS) had received a complaint that LF’s mother had mental health issues that limited her ability to parent LF and suffered from delusional thoughts that LF was suffocating, and that respondent was aware of these issues but continued to leave LF in her care. The petition also alleged that respondent had multiple mental illness diagnoses and that in 2010 he had sexually abused LF’s mother, then 16 years old.

LF was removed from the home. The trial court allowed petitioner to exercise its discretion to place LF with respondent if LF’s mother moved out of their home. Respondent and LF’s mother were married at the time.

LF’s mother was adjudicated by a plea of admission in August 2013. At that time, our Supreme Court had not yet abolished the “one parent doctrine” (as it later did in In re Sanders, 495 Mich 394; 852 NW2d 524 (2014)), therefore respondent was not separately adjudicated at that time. LF was placed with respondent after his mother was placed in an inpatient mental health institution following a self-harm episode. In October 2014, after several review hearings,

1 LF’s mother was also a respondent in the proceedings below. Her parental rights were terminated via plea and she is not a party to this appeal.

-1- LF’s mother was allowed to return home and the petition was dismissed. Respondent was employed at this time and attending marital counseling with LF’s mother.

On December 29, 2014, petitioner filed another petition for LF’s removal. The petition alleged that LF had been brought to petitioner’s office by Misty Slater, who stated that she did not know LF’s last name, had not seen or heard from his parents in two days, and had no ability to contact LF’s parents. The petition also alleged that Slater had had her parental rights to her first child terminated, and that a termination petition was currently pending with regard to another child of hers who had been removed from her care. LF was removed from the home again and respondent was given supervised parenting time. Respondent testified at a review hearing that he had known Slater for 10 years and that Slater’s allegations were not true. He testified that he and LF’s mother had left LF in the care of Slater on December 28 and were planning on picking him up the next day, but were informed by the police that LF was at petitioner’s office. Respondent testified that Slater had mental issues and was a chronic liar.

Throughout 2015, respondent and LF’s mother had a chaotic, on-and-off relationship where they vacillated between trying to work on their marriage and getting divorced. LF’s lawyer-guardian ad litem (LGAL) informed the court that LF had developmental delays and that respondent lacked the ability to care for LF and LF’s mother at the same time. In April 2015, petitioner filed a supplemental petition alleging that LF was improperly supervised and at risk of harm in respondent’s home, and that respondent continued to provide improper supervision by leaving him with inappropriate caretakers, including Slater. An amended petition filed in June 2015 alleged that, despite filing for divorce earlier in 2015, respondent and LF’s mother continued to engage in a relationship and had engaged in public sexual behavior at a mental health facility.

Following the release of Sanders, respondent was adjudicated by jury trial in September 2015. A CPS investigator testified that respondent had a history of leaving LF with inappropriate caretakers, including at least three people with a history of CPS involvement. The investigator testified that respondent was provided with services including a psychological evaluation, a parent mentor, infant mental health treatment, and individual and couples counseling. A parent mentor testified that respondent did not pay attention to LF, did not teach him appropriate eating skills, and was primarily focused on his relationship with LF’s mother. Another parent mentor testified that respondent did not use a required thickener in liquids that he provided to LF, which placed LF at risk of choking. Dr. Joseph J. Auffrey, a psychologist, testified regarding his psychological evaluations of both respondent and LF’s mother. Respondent’s counsel objected to Dr. Auffrey’s testimony and the introduction of LF’s mother’s psychological evaluation on relevance grounds, but the objection was overruled. The jury found sufficient evidence for the court to exercise its jurisdiction regarding respondent’s parental rights.

At a review hearing in December 2015, LF’s mother testified that respondent had used physical violence to force her to have sexual relations with him. Respondent had missed three counseling appointments and was not participating in all of the services provided. Respondent’s home was not appropriate for a child, as it was extremely filthy, infested with fleas, and also contained machetes and firearms that were not properly stored. Respondent did not appear to

-2- take LF’s swallowing problems seriously and gave LF hard candies even though they caused him to choke.

In 2016, LF’s mother was granted a personal protection order (PPO) against respondent. Respondent’s home continued to be unclean and infested with fleas. Respondent missed several of LF’s medical appointments and did not attend several parenting time sessions. Respondent continued to fail to appropriately thicken liquids for LF or prevent him from choking on food. LF was still very developmentally delayed and relied on sign language, which respondent did not learn and use during sessions.

A termination hearing was held beginning in April 2016 and ending in September 2016. The trial court took judicial notice of the psychological evaluations of Dr. Auffrey in the adjudication trial. The court heard testimony that LF had significant developmental delays in multiple areas, was nonverbal, and continued to have problems with choking on food and liquids. Respondent missed an appointment to work with LF’s teacher in learning how to model behaviors for LF. Respondent’s parent mentor, Kevin Schmitt, testified that respondent was primarily hampered by his obsession with his relationship with LF’s mother. Respondent’s counselor also opined that respondent was hampered in parenting LF by his relationship with LF’s mother, especially during periods where the relationship was not going well. Respondent’s caseworker testified that respondent continued to have contact, including sexual contact, with LF’s mother despite the divorce and PPO. The caseworker also testified that the cleanliness of respondent’s home had never been sufficient during her involvement with the case. There was animal fecal matter on the floor, repeated flea infestations, and the utilities were periodically shut off for nonpayment. There also had been issues with inappropriate people living in the home, including multiple persons with prior CPS involvement who had had children removed from their care. The caseworker opined that respondent could not provide LF with proper care and custody because he struggled with parenting, communication, and coping skills and LF has extensive needs and parenting requirements.

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