In Re: Mary E. P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 4, 2013
DocketM2013-00436-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Mary E. P. (In Re: Mary E. P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Mary E. P., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs August 23, 2013

IN RE MARY E. P. ET AL.

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Maury County No. 85888, 85889 George L. Lovell, Judge

No. M2013-00436-COA-R3-PT - Filed October 4, 2013

The juvenile court terminated the parental rights of the mother and father on the grounds of substantial noncompliance with the permanency plans, persistence of conditions, and willful abandonment by failure to visit, and upon the determination that termination of their parental rights was in the best interests of the children. Both parents appeal. Finding the evidence clear and convincing, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Affirmed

F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A NDY D. B ENNETT and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, J.J., joined.

Jacob J. Hubbell, Columbia, Tennessee, for the appellant, Christy P.1

Cara E. Lynn, Columbia, Tennessee, for the appellant, Mark P.

Robert E. Cooper, Attorney General and Reporter, Derek C. Jumper, Assistant Attorney General, James Stephens, and Mary Byrd Ferrara, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services.

Charles M. Molder, Columbia, Tennessee, for the minor children, Mary E.P. and Melodie E.P.

1 This court has a policy of protecting the identity of children in parental termination cases by initializing the last names of the parties. OPINION

Christie P. (“Mother”) and Mark P. (“Father”) are the parents of Mary (born September 2004) and Melodie (born June 2006). The Department of Children’s Services (“the Department”) and the community offered many services to the family beginning in September 2004 after Mother alleged she could not take care of Mary, due to “people bothering her.”

The Department filed a Petition to Adjudicate Dependency and Neglect and for Court- Ordered Services on August 28, 2007, after an increasing number of referrals indicated that, inter alia, Mother was often found at Wal-Mart begging for food and diapers; on one occasion she asked strangers to take her children; law enforcement was dispatched to the home; reports indicated the home was filthy and the children were dirty and without food or diapers; the children’s clothes and diapers were soiled, and Melodie often was not clothed. Mother, who suffers from paranoid schizophrenia, refused any treatment, and Father, who appears to be developmentally delayed, was rarely present at home and was seldom involved with the Department.

A preliminary hearing was held on August 31, 2007, and the Juvenile Court of Maury County ordered that legal and physical custody of the children shall remain with the parents, subject to the requirements of an agreed upon safety plan. The safety plan required the parents to take the children to Daisy Daniels Daycare, yet the parents failed to do this due in part to Mother’s expressed paranoia of the daycare’s religious beliefs. Mother stated she wanted to switch the children to Kids Country 3 located in Columbia, and the Department agreed; however, when the Department subsequently contacted Kids Country 3, it was informed that the family only brought Mary to daycare, they did not mention Melodie.

The parents were required to cooperate with the Department, but they failed to do so. On one occasion Mother scrunched down behind the couch and refused to answer the door. When the Department worker entered the home, Mother threw a bag of potato chips at the worker, began shouting profanities and referred to Child Protective Services as “the devil.”

The safety plan also required Mother and Father not to take the children out in extreme hot or cold weather; however, on November 10, 2007, when the temperature was in the thirties, Mother walked from her home to the Columbia Wal-Mart with the children in a stroller wearing summer clothing. Mother contacted 911 and when the police officer arrived, Mother was trying to give the children’s clothes to the Wal-Mart greeter, talked irrationally and disclosed she had not been taking her medication. The children were shivering in wet summer clothes; Mother stated they had an “accident,” but would not elaborate. When a concerned citizen provided sweater jackets to the children, Mother became

-2- perturbed and tried to give them back. Mother and children were transported to Maury Regional Medical Center where Dr. Daniels examined them. Dr. Daniels found Mother’s erratic behavior was not a result of the Phenobarbital levels and was not related to her psychosis. Moreover, the nurse stated the children appeared to be in diapers from the night before. In response, Mother stated she only had two diapers left and that “Mary is grown up and doesn’t need her anymore,” although Mary was only three years old. The children appeared filthy and Mary’s hair showed signs of head lice. Mother stated the only reason the Department keeps bothering her is because they accept referrals from “drugs addicts, prostitutes, and gay people.” Father was contacted at work; he stated he could not come to the hospital until the afternoon.

The Department filed a Petition to Adjudicate Dependency and Neglect for Temporary Custody on November 14, 2007. The petition was supported by an Affidavit of Reasonable Efforts from Carrie Opalewski, Case Manager and CPS Investigator for the Maury County Office of the Department. The juvenile court found there was probable cause to believe the children were dependent and neglected, and a Protective Custody Order was approved and entered on the same date.

A preliminary hearing was held November 15, 2007, and the juvenile court again found there was probable cause to find the children were dependent and neglected, and ordered the children remain in the custody of the Department. Further, the court ordered the parents to pay child support in accordance with statutory guidelines; Mother and Father be provided with separate attorneys; and for the Department to setup visitation between the parents and children. An adjudicatory hearing was set for December 10, 2007, and on March 5, 2008, an Order Waiving Adjudicatory Hearing was entered.

The children were placed in foster care with a family in Spring Hill, Tennessee, and currently remain with them. The foster parents received the girls when Mary was three years and Melodie was 18 months old. Mr. M., the foster father, testified they immediately had big concerns with the girls. The children would hit their heads on the wall or floor, pull out their hair and self-stimulate. Testing showed the children were significantly delayed academically; Mary was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), predominately inattentive and anxiety disorder and not otherwise specified, and Melodie was diagnosed with mood deficit disorder not otherwise specified and ADHD, combined type.

The Department developed the first of many permanency plans on December 4, 2007, outlining several responsibilities and goals for the parents to regain custody of the children. The plans included, inter alia, the parents participate in psychological evaluations to ensure their mental health needs were met; participate in medication and psychiatric evaluations, and become compliant with medications if needed; participate in individual counseling and

-3- individual counseling for parenting in order to become able to meet their children’s needs; and to improve their parenting skills by participating in therapeutic visitation and family counseling.

In the interim, subsequent permanency plans were adopted in May 2008 through September 2010, and each one reiterated the requirements set forth in the initial plan, along with updated dates for completion of uncompleted tasks.

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