In Re Qh
This text of 662 S.E.2d 358 (In Re Qh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the Interest of Q.H., a child.
Court of Appeals of Georgia.
Hollowell, Foster & Gepp, Jolanda Evon Herring, Shawn Darryl McAllister, for Appellant.
Thurbert E. Baker, Atty. General, Shalen S. Nelson, Senior Asst. Atty. General, Kathryn Ann Fox, Asst. Atty. General, for Appellee.
MIKELL, Judge.
The mother of 14-year-old Q.H. appeals the juvenile court's order extending temporary legal custody of the child with the Georgia Department of Human Resources, acting by and through the Fulton County Department of Family and Children Services ("DFCS"). The mother claims that the juvenile court erred in granting the motion to extend. She also contends that the juvenile court committed reversible error in considering hearsay evidence. For the reasons set forth below, we disagree and affirm.
Viewed in a light most favorable to the juvenile court's findings, the evidence shows the following. DFCS filed a deprivation complaint against the mother on June 14, 2006, alleging that the mother was physically abusing then 12-year-old Q.H. On June 16, 2006, the juvenile court entered an order finding that there was probable cause to determine that Q.H. was a deprived child. The mother consented to the placement of temporary legal custody of Q.H. with DFCS. DFCS filed another deprivation petition on June 21, 2006, alleging among other things that Q.H. was a victim of physical and sexual abuse. The juvenile court entered a scheduling order on June 29, 2006, setting a hearing for submission of a case plan, six months citizen's panel review, and an annual permanency *359 hearing.[1] The mother filed a motion on February 1, 2007, to "modify petition," asking that the child be placed with the mother.
Q.H. underwent a psychological evaluation on May 2, 2007. Two psychologists reported that the child had "a long history of lying, sexual preoccupation, and disruptive, sexualized, and at times, violent behavior," and that she reported a history of sexual abuse. The psychologists recommended that Q.H. be placed in a residential treatment facility. They further recommended that the child not be placed with the father, and that such a placement not be considered until, among other things, the father completed parenting classes and passed a home evaluation, and Q.H. showed significant improvement in her treatment.
The juvenile court held a hearing to consider the mother's modification motion on March 21, 2007. Included in documents entered into evidence was a letter written by Q.H.[2] The child wrote, among other things, that when she told her mother she had lost her virginity that the mother called her a "nasty hoe," and suggested, "you should've charged him." In ruling on the modification motion, the juvenile court found that the child threatened to kill herself if she was returned to the mother's home. The court also found that after being placed in DFCS custody the child had been moved six times, run away twice, and acquired a communicable disease. The court concluded that, due to the child's mental health issues, returning the child to the home would not be in her best interest, and ordered that custody remain with DFCS.
On May 22, 2007, DFCS filed a motion to extend its legal custody of the child. At the June 26, 2007, evidentiary hearing on the motion, the child's caseworker testified that the child could not be safely returned to the mother. According to the caseworker, the mother had completed most of her reunification case plan goals but had not completed family therapy. The mother's therapist had concluded that the mother and Q.H. were not ready for therapy because a couple of visits between the two had been "very bad." The caseworker had observed the child and mother interact, and testified that the mother was manipulative, giving as examples that the mother told the child that she would never live with her father, if any harm came to the mother that the child would be the primary suspect, and that the child was "acting like a whore." The mother and Q.H. stopped visiting in April 2007, because the child adamantly maintained that she did not want to see her mother.
According to the caseworker, Q.H. had run away from her foster placement twice in the period following the previous hearing. Q.H. told the caseworker she ran away because she was fearful of going back to her mother's care. Q.H. was placed with her father on June 7, 2007. Since physical placement with her father, Q.H. was, as described by the caseworker, "almost a different child. . . . She's really, really happy and she hasn't acted out."
The mother testified that although Q.H. came into DFCS custody with a black eye, she "did not blacken the child's eye." According to the mother, she found the child on the telephone propositioning a man to perform fellatio. The mother admitted to then slapping the child, but maintained that Q.H. reacted by intentionally exaggerating a fall, resulting in her face hitting the side of the bed.
The mother also testified that while the child was in DFCS custody she had communicated with Q.H. over the internet. The mother posed as a 20-year-old man named "Ricky Shapiro" so that the child would not realize she was exchanging messages with her mother. Posing as Shapiro, the mother *360 pretended to have witnessed a sexually graphic event involving another "chick" with the same name, "Cherri," that Q.H. was using. The statements, which the mother admitted were inappropriate, were made "to gauge" how Q.H. would respond. The mother's testimony also showed that, acting as Shapiro, she was able to persuade Q.H. to remove suggestive photographs the child had posted on-line.
The juvenile court subsequently entered an order finding that the mother had substantially completed her case plan, but that Q.H. continued to be a deprived child, and that an extension of temporary legal custody with DFCS was necessary to accomplish the purposes of the original order.
1. The mother claims that the juvenile court erred in granting DFCS's motion to extend custody. A court's order removing the child from the child's home may be extended, "for an additional 12 months if, after satisfying certain procedural requirements, the court finds that the extension is necessary to accomplish the purposes of the original order."[3] The mother challenges the juvenile court's finding that Q.H. remains deprived, and she argues that because she completed her case plan that no evidence presented by DFCS justified its retention of the child for an additional 12 months. We disagree.
Any rational trier of fact could have found by clear and convincing evidence that Q.H. was deprived and in need of the continued protection of the court.[4] "Under Georgia law, a child is deprived if the child is without proper parental care or control, subsistence, education as required by law, or other care or control necessary for the child's physical, mental, or emotional health or morals."[5] In its findings of fact, the juvenile court cited in particular that the mother's on-line contact with her daughter in the guise of Ricky Shapiro showed that the mother had failed to refrain from abusing the child. The mother claims that this could not have been parental abuse because the child was not aware that she was speaking with her mother, and that the mother was using effective parenting techniques in convincing Q.H., through the mother's on-line persona, to remove the photographs that the child had posted on the internet. We are unpersuaded.
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662 S.E.2d 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-qh-gactapp-2008.