In Re L.M. and L.S.

774 S.E.2d 517, 235 W. Va. 436, 2015 W. Va. LEXIS 611
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 2015
Docket14-0050
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 774 S.E.2d 517 (In Re L.M. and L.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re L.M. and L.S., 774 S.E.2d 517, 235 W. Va. 436, 2015 W. Va. LEXIS 611 (W. Va. 2015).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice.

In this case, the Court must determine whether grandparent placement is appropriate for two minor children: L.M. 1 and L.S. The maternal grandparents, B.S. and D.S., the petitioners herein and intervenors below (hereinafter “grandparents”), appeal the circuit court’s December 19, 2013, order. By that order, the' lower court denied the grandparents’ request to intervene and their motion for placement of the minor children in their home. Both the respondent, the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (hereinafter “DHHR”), as well as the Guardian ad Mem (hereinafter “Guardian”) for the minor children, assert that the grandparents’ home is not a proper placement for the children. Based on the parties’ briefs, the appendix record designated for our consideration, and the pertinent authorities, we find that the circuit court’s ruling was proper; thus, it is affirmed.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case involves -the proper placement for two children: L.M., a three-year-old boy, *440 and his younger sister, L.S., who is two. The DHHR filed an abuse and neglect petition on January 11, 2013, prior to L.S.’s birth, alleging that L.M. was neglected by his parents as a result of chronic substance abuse. The petition maintained that L.M. had been exposed to drug paraphernalia and that police had seized a clandestine methamphetamine (hereinafter “meth”) lab from the mother’s home, a trailer that had been purchased for her by her parents, the grandparents herein. The DHHR sought and received custody of L.M., and placed him in foster care. Thereafter, on January 17, 2013, the grandparents filed a motion to intervene and, further, moved for placement of L.M. in their home. The DHHR opposed this motion; however, the circuit court granted physical custody of L.M. to the grandparents.

L.M.’s younger sister, L.S., was born soon thereafter in March 2013. At birth, L.S. tested positive for substantial amounts of alcohol and trace amounts of controlled substances, cotinine and hydrocodone, in her bloodstream. The DHHR amended its petition to include L.S., and was granted custody of L.S. When L.S. was released from the hospital, she also was placed in her grandparents’ care. The following day, the DHHR’s child protective service (hereinafter “CPS”) worker conducted an unannounced home visit to the grandparents’ home. While there, the CPS worker took photographs of the children’s living environment.

Subsequent to the home inspection, the CPS worker was examining pictures taken of the grandparents’ home and compared them with photographs that had been taken of the mother’s home on the day the meth lab had been discovered. CPS determined that several baby items in the grandparents’ home were the same items that had been in the mother’s meth-contaminated home. Specifically, CPS identified a bassinet and a baby swing.

Based upon its concern that the children currently were exposed to items in the grandparents’ home that had been contaminated in an unremediated meth environment, the DHHR filed a motion for emergency custody and for the children to be removed from the grandparents’ home. The circuit court granted the DHHR’s motion to change placement, and the matter was set for a full hearing.

The hearing on the emergency motion for change of placement occurred on April 15, 2013. The DHHR presented evidence that a baby bassinet and indoor baby swing were found in the grandparents’ home where the children were placed. It was asserted by the DHHR, through its witnesses’ testimony, that these items were the same items that had been contaminated in the mother’s trailer where she was managing a clandestine meth lab while L.M. was in the home. The testimony presented by the DHHR focused on a comparison of the colors of the items in question, the ribbons attached thereto, the accessory bag on the side, the bars on the base, and the product warning labels. Further, the DHHR presented testimony that the contamination of the mother’s trailer caused by the meth lab resulted in the property being closed, with entry on the premises precluded and removal of items disallowed. It was stated, through a witness at the hearing, that exposure to the trailer or any items that had been inside of the trailer, such as the baby bassinet and swing, created a risk to the public health and safety. It was explained to the circuit court that meth residue on household items can cause adverse health effects, including respiratory issues.

Both grandparents also testified at the hearing on the emergency motion for removal of the children. They testified that they had purchased the trailer for their daughter, the children’s mother, and that the trailer was. located on the grandparents’ property. Further, the trial statements from the grandparents indicated that the baby equipment in them home was not the same as had been in the mother’s home but, rather, had been received from friends or elsewhere.

The circuit court, based on the evidence submitted at the emergency hearing regarding placement of the children, found that certain items in the photographs taken at the contaminated trailer were the same currently being used by the grandparents in their home. The lower court found that “it appears the items have been transferred from the unremediated trailer which once contained a *441 methamphetamine lab, to the grandparent’s [sic] home for use by them with the infant child.” The motion for an emergency change of placement for the children was granted, and the children were .removed from the grandparents’ care. Subsequent thereto, the rights of the biological parents were terminated by the circuit court. 2

On December 2, 2013, the circuit court held a hearing on the grandparents’ previously-filed motion to intervene and for placement of the children in their home. The circuit court took judicial notice of the evidence from the April 15, 2013, emergency hearing. CPS testified that placement of the children with the grandparents was concerning based on the fact that the grandparents’ own children had trouble in school, and three of them became involved in drugs. Despite the drug issues, the grandparents continued to support and engage with their adult children, including posting bond for the adult children’s drug charges. Therefore, CPS voiced concerns that the grandparents would not prevent interaction between the children and the mother, or preclude exposure to others with criminal proclivities, including illicit drug use.

At the hearing, the grandmother testified, reiterating her previous statements that the bassinet and the swing in her home were not from her daughter’s trailer. Additionally, the grandparents’ counsel proffered to the circuit court that the grandfather’s testimony would be the same as he previously had testified. Further, counsel for the grandparents also submitted that another witness had observed the bassinet and swing through the trailer’s window on the same day that he had observed similar items'in’the grandparents’ home.

The resultant court order, entered December 19, 2013, denied the .grandparents’ motion to intervene and motion for placement of the children in their home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
774 S.E.2d 517, 235 W. Va. 436, 2015 W. Va. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lm-and-ls-wva-2015.