In Re McDaid Minors

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 21, 2023
Docket364341
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re McDaid Minors (In Re McDaid Minors) 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 McDaid Minors, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

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

UNPUBLISHED In re McDAID, Minors. September 21, 2023

No. 364341 St. Joseph Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 2022-000950-NA

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and O’BRIEN and FEENEY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent-mother appeals as of right the trial court’s order removing the minor children, HM and ZM, from respondent’s care and custody. We reverse the portion of the trial court’s order that removed the children and remand for further proceedings.

On December 15, 2022, the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) petitioned the trial court to take jurisdiction over HM and ZM under MCL 712A.2(b)(1) due to medical neglect.1 The petition also requested that the court issue an order removing the children from respondent’s home.

In support of its petition, the DHHS described how concerns about respondent’s ability to meet ZM’s medical needs began immediately after ZM was born. The petition alleged that ZM remained hospitalized at Three Rivers Hospital for two weeks after his birth because of feeding issues. According to staff at Three Rivers, respondent did not consistently visit ZM during that time, despite the staff’s insistence that she remain to bond with her child and learn to care for his medical needs. Three Rivers’ staff also reported that when respondent visited ZM, she did not feed ZM unless asked, slept through his crying, would send ZM to the hospital’s nursery to be fed, and failed to set alarms during the night to wake ZM up to feed, leaving hospital staff to meet

1 In its petition, the DHHS marked a box indicating that the DHHS was asking the trial court to take jurisdiction under MCL 712A.2(b)(2), but this appears to be a clerical error. In documents attached to the standard petition form, the DHHS stated that it was asking the trial court to take jurisdiction under MCL 712A.2(b)(1), and the allegations in the petition are more appropriate under that subsection.

-1- ZM’s needs during the night. The staff further reported that, even when respondent did feed ZM, she would do so improperly, then place ZM back in his crib and go to sleep without alerting staff.

The petition alleged that ZM was eventually discharged with respondent on or around November 20, 2022, but had to be airlifted to a Bronson Children’s Hospital on November 24, 2022, due to a urinary tract infection that turned septic. According to the petition, ZM has had to remain at Bronson since then because he was diagnosed with hyperinsulinism. The petition alleged that, like staff at Three Rivers, staff at Bronson reported that respondent infrequently visited ZM (including not visiting ZM for an entire week), despite staff’s insistence that respondent be at the hospital to learn how to care for ZM. The staff further reported that when respondent did visit ZM, she seemed uninterested in ZM, slept through most of the visits, and again had to be prompted to feed ZM. The staff also reported that respondent still failed to set alarms to feed ZM in the night, again leaving hospital staff to care for him.

With respect to HM, the petition only alleged that she had to be dismissed from family care services in June 2022 “due to no call no shows,” and that a referral for HM to Early On was closed “due to not being able to make contact with” respondent.

At the preliminary hearing, the DHHS worker reiterated the allegations from the petition. The worker elaborated that, after ZM was originally discharged, he was seen by his regular pediatrician, who noted concerns about his weight and his lack of bond with respondent. The worker also went into more detail about ZM’s current medical condition, explaining that, due to his hyperinsulinism, “he has a feeding tube in his mouth and he needs medication to keep him [sic] blood sugar stabilized.” The worker added that staff at Bronson told her “that if [ZM] were to be [dis]charged to [respondent] at that time she would not have the skills to be able to take care of him.”

The worker also explained the DHHS’s concerns for HM. The worker said HM’s pediatrician told her that HM had “a slight motor delay” that they were attempting to address through services, but HM had to be dismissed for “too many no-call/no-shows” and “because they couldn’t get a hold [sic] of” respondent.

The worker also expressed some concerns about respondent’s living situation. The worker said that respondent lived in a manufactured home with her two children, boyfriend, mother, and stepfather. Other than the number of people in the home, however, the worker believed that the living conditions were appropriate. Apart from the living conditions, the worker said that the DHHS had concerns because respondent’s mother and stepfather both had CPS histories.

On cross-examination, the DHHS worker reported that respondent spoke with social services at the hospital, but the worker did not know if social services offered respondent services. The DHHS worker further reported that she did not identify any services that could aid respondent with the 24-hour care that ZM required, which was one of the DHHS’s main concerns. The worker also said that the DHHS did not offer respondent transportation assistance, despite knowing that respondent had to rely on her boyfriend and stepfather for transportation to the hospital.

The trial court determined that there was probable cause to authorize the petition against respondent and to order removal of ZM and HM, explaining:

-2- This is a very tough case, very tough case mom. Very unique and very special circumstances with your—at least your youngest son. It is as both attorneys have said, it is a lower standard, a probable cause standard. As to whether it meets the preponderance of evidence when we go to trial that’s yet to be seen, that’s when all the evidence would really come out. It’s very difficult for a very young child and a young parent, especially one that’s got some pretty serious medical needs, and strenuous feeding times and tubes and stuff like that. So, as to probable cause it does meet I think at this time and I do find that probable cause would be sufficient at this time and to reasonable efforts to going above and beyond, going to all the hospitals, going to her prior doctors for [HM] and getting those reports and getting that stuff. This is definitely enough reasonable efforts were made. I do find that contrary to the welfare for [sic] to be returned to mother at this time, but I think it’s not something that we can work with, we can get things going and hopefully with the services things can go very rapidly and fixed and get the things that you need prepared, because I think you need to get prepared and I know you’re young and I know you can do it and I think this Court and everyone here wants the best for this child, wants reunification, wants the family together. Okay?

So, I will find that removal at this time would be appropriate at least by a probable cause[.]

The trial court subsequently entered an order in which it checked a box indicating that there was probable cause to believe that one or more of the allegations in the petition were true. The court also checked a different box indicating that it was necessary to order the removal of ZM and HM from respondent’s custody.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In Re McDaid Minors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mcdaid-minors-michctapp-2023.