In re N.F.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJune 15, 2018
Docket118395
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re N.F. (In re N.F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re N.F., (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 118,395

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

IN THE INTEREST OF N.F., A Minor Child.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Crawford District Court; LORI A. BOLTON FLEMING, judge. Opinion filed June 15, 2018. Affirmed.

Maradeth Frederick, of Frederick Law Office LLC., of Frontenac, and Jason P. Wiske, of Law Office of Jason P. Wiske LLC., of Pittsburg, for appellants.

Michael Gayoso Jr., county attorney, for appellee.

Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., HILL and BUSER, JJ.

PER CURIAM: Making a 5-point attack on the district court's ruling, a mother and father ask us to reverse a court's order severing their parental rights to their son, N.F. Our review of the appellate record convinces us that both parents have failed to overcome the legal presumption of their unfitness to parent because they have made little improvement during the two years the child has been out of their home. Even without this presumption, the termination of their parental rights is supported by clear and convincing evidence and is not erroneous. Because the State's motion revealed with clarity its claims of Mother's and Father's deficiencies and the scope of its attack on their ability to parent N.F., we reject their claim of a procedural due process violation. Finding no errors, we affirm.

1 Problems with school attendance started the State's involvement.

First, in March 2014, the State filed a child in need of care petition, alleging that N.F., born in 2004, was not attending school because of a lack of parental supervision and it was in his best interests to remove him from the home. In May, the district court ordered informal supervision to ensure that N.F. was attending school.

Later, based on the evidence of a walkthrough inspection of the home in July 2014, the State amended its petition to allege that the child was without adequate care. The State alleged that the sanitation and conditions of the home were unsuitable for children. The State also alleged Mother has a mental illness which prevents her from providing care for N.F. Mother and Father did not contest these allegations. As a result, in November, the district court found that the parents' home was not suitable for children and ordered out-of-home placement. Finally, in April 2015, the district court adjudicated N.F. as a child in need of care.

Review hearings were held in April and October 2016. At both hearings, the district court found that N.F. should remain in the custody of the Department of Children and Families and maintained that reintegration of the family was the goal. In April 2016, the district court ordered family therapy, recommended increased visits between N.F. and his parents, and found that the contractor, Kaw Valley Center, could return N.F. to the home at its discretion.

This all changed in October 2016, when the district court found that Kaw Valley Center had not made reasonable efforts to reintegrate the family. The failure occurred from August 2016 until the hearing in October. During this time, N.F. was staying at an unapproved placement, and the caseworker lied to her supervisor about N.F.'s placement. The caseworker was fired. Following this hearing, the district court continued N.F. in out-of-home placement but maintained that reintegration of the family was still the case

2 goal. About a year and a half after the child was found to be in need of care, in January 2017, the district court found that the parents needed to make more progress, but also stated that overnight visits with N.F. should begin. The visits were at the discretion of Kaw Valley Center.

With the passage of time and little or no progress being made, the State, in April 2017, moved to terminate Mother's and Father's parental rights. This was two years after the child in need of care adjudication and more than two years after the court removed N.F. from the home in November 2014. The State alleged several statutory reasons for a finding of unfitness. These included:  Mother's mental illness;  drug and alcohol use by both parents;  lack of effort to change the parents' circumstances to meet the needs of the child;  a failure to carry out a reasonable plan directed toward reintegration; and  other statutory factors.

The State also alleged a statutory presumption should apply here since N.F. had been placed by court order out of the home for more than two years.

For the allegation in its motion about the failure to carry out a reasonable plan directed towards reintegration, the State used the latest case plan from February 2017 as an exemplar. The State listed each permanency objective from the plan and presented factual allegations about each task. Pertinent to this appeal are the results of scheduled and unscheduled inspections of the home. These inspections occurred from January 2017 through March 2017.

3 We summarize the evidence from the first day of the hearing.

The court split the hearings on the motion to terminate between two days. The State presented its evidence on the first day. The State's evidence focused on three main areas: the completion or failure to complete the case plan tasks assigned to the parents; Mother's mental illness; and Father's lack of gainful employment.

The five witnesses for the State testified and offered their views and impressions of the parents and their home. Sara Jarrett was the assigned Department social worker to the family and began working with them in 2014. Charleen Workman, a family response advocate with the Pittsburg Police Department, started with the family in 2013 based on a referral from a school counselor. Madison Beard is a Kaw Valley Center case manager who began working with the parents in 2016. Jessica Jordan, a family support worker for Kaw Valley Center, dealt with Mother and Father beginning in September 2016. Finally, Stella Lynch was a permanency supervisor with Kaw Valley Center.

The caseworkers testified that the parents had completed some case plan tasks: (1) Mother had to take all of her medication; (2) the family was required to participate in family therapy; (3) Mother had to participate in mental health services; and (4) the parents were required to submit to random urinalysis screenings.

Yet, the parents did not complete these case plan tasks: (1) provide a stable house and utility receipts; (2) Father must obtain employment; and (3) make necessary repairs to the house.

One case plan task was completed with one exception. The parents were not to have anyone living at the house that could not pass a KBI background check. The parents allowed their older son to stay at the house after he was released from custody in Washington. He lived with them from November 2016 until late January 2017.

4 The State presented details about the failure to complete some case plan tasks. The State presented evidence from walkthroughs of the home conducted between 2014 and 2017. Mother objected to the evidence of any walkthroughs before January 20, 2017, because they were not included in the factual allegations within the motion to terminate parental rights. The district court overruled the objection.

The first walkthrough inspection occurred after the State amended its initial child in need of care petition. During this walkthrough, Jarrett observed clothes and clutter scattered about the home. Jarrett performed a second walkthrough and stated that the conditions had worsened. It is not clear from the record when this walkthrough occurred. The other walkthrough inspections, which occurred from September 2016, until March 2017, were performed by three caseworkers—Beard, Jordan, and Lynch.

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