In Re Rene B.

544 A.2d 137, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 98, 1988 WL 65669
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 29, 1988
Docket87-427-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 544 A.2d 137 (In Re Rene B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rene B., 544 A.2d 137, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 98, 1988 WL 65669 (R.I. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

KELLEHER, Justice.

In October 1986 the Department for Children and Their Families (DCF) filed a petition in Family Court to terminate the parental rights of a Woonsocket couple to their son who was five years old at that time. This petition came on for a hearing before a Family Court justice in the spring of 1987. A few days after the hearings had ended, the trial justice gave a bench decision in which he granted the termination petition. Hereafter we shall refer to the mother as Mary and to the father as Ray. 1

*138 The DCF sought the termination of Mary’s rights on two statutory grounds. One ground is set forth in G.L. 1956 (1981 Reenactment) § 15-7-7(b)(l), as amended by P.L. 1984, ch. 204, § 3, which authorizes termination if the parent suffers from an emotional or mental illness or mental deficiency for such duration as to render it improbable that the parent could care for a child for an extended period. The DCF also sought termination of both parents’ rights pursuant to § 15-7-7(c). Section 15-7-7(c) calls for termination when the child has been in state care for at least six months and the trial justice finds that integration of the child into the parents’ home is improbable in the foreseeable future owing to parental conduct or conditions that are unlikely to change.

During the four-day trial, the trial justice heard testimony from several individuals who were employed by, or whose services were procured by, DCF or the Northern Rhode Island Community Health Center (mental health center). The witnesses included social workers, a psychologist, a case manager, a psychiatrist, and a “registered, independent social worker” who was qualified by the trial justice to testify as an expert in the areas of child, family, or adult sexual abuse.

A case manager for the mental health center testified that she had been Mary’s case manager since August 1984 and Ray’s case manager since August 1985. This witness reported that on September 3, 1985, Mary was admitted to Woonsocket Hospital because “she was in a manic state.” Rene, who was with his mother at the hospital emergency room, was then taken into custody by DCF and placed in a shelter. In mid-October 1985 Mary was discharged from the hospital to go into a group home where she stayed until late November 1985, when she returned home.

According to the case manager, after Mary’s discharge the mental health center monitored Mary’s medications and provided other services such as home visits, almost daily counseling, and referrals to appropriate low-income agencies. The case manager, along with the DCF social worker, formulated a case plan for the reunification of the family. The target date for the reunification was the end of the summer of 1986. The case manager testified that from January 1986 until May or June 1986 Mary and Ray complied “almost to the letter” with the reunification plan and their mental-health treatment plan. Sometime in May 1986 Mary and Ray decreased their almost daily contacts with the mental health center to the point where they were in attendance about every other week.

In late August Mary's counselor told her that Rene had been involved as the aggressor in a sexual episode with another child in the foster home. The expert in child sexual abuse evaluated Rene, and he expressed the opinion that in the light of “respective major psychiatric dysfunction of each parent, coupled with [Rene’s] disturbed behavior, the viability of reunification must be seen as extremely guarded.”

In late summer DCF decided to abandon the plan for reunification. Other factors that precipitated the abandonment were the “increased tension” and “bickering” between the parents and their difficulty in adjusting to a financial budget.

A week following Labor Day 1986, the case manager learned that Mary was again “in a manic state” and shortly thereafter was hospitalized. Mary’s hospitalization began on September 3 and ended October 31, 1986.

A staff psychiatrist at the mental health center testified that Mary was suffering from a psychiatric disorder involving major swings of mood that were characterized by periods of extreme energy and elation with alternative periods of extreme depression. Although medication therapy had stabilized Mary’s condition, the psychiatrist reported that she is unstable when she is “being noncompliant with her medication.” This witness predicted that to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, Mary would continue to discontinue her medication periodically.

Mary told the trial justice that she stopped taking her medication in September 1986 when she heard that her parental rights to her son would be terminated. Ac *139 cording to Mary, she ignored the advice of her counselor and doctor because she felt she had “nothing to live for.” She also stated that her attendance at the mental health center dropped off during the summer of 1986 because of a desire of both her and her husband to pursue recreational activities such as “browsing around stores” and going to Rocky Point Amusement Park.

There is evidence in the record that Ray was unable to fulfill the role as Rene’s father. A representative of the mental health center testified that during one of Mary’s hospitalizations, Ray went almost daily to the mental health center for guidance about the ordinary tasks of daily living. He also exhibited a competitive relationship with Rene for Mary’s attention and Rene’s toys.

In his bench decision, the trial justice made the following findings of fact: DCF and the mental health center had made “reasonable efforts” to work with the parents to reunify them with their child; there had been no change of circumstances since the child had been taken into state custody in September 1985; the parents “had not made a good faith effort to adjust their circumstances and conditions” to facilitate the return of the child; no lasting adjustment by the parents could be effectuated; and the integration of the child into the parents’ home was “improbable.” Although the trial justice found that the love of the parents for Rene was genuine, he emphasized that Rene needed permanency. The trial justice went on to observe that Rene’s continuance in foster care would not be in his best interest.

The parents’ appeal has two facets, as follows:

1. Did the trial justice err in terminating the parental rights of Mary and Ray?
2. Did the trial justice err in admitting into evidence certain health-care information relating to Mary?

Mary contends that when the state relies upon § 15-7-7(c), DCF must show that the parents are at fault. She emphasizes that the statute requires the trial justice to consider a parent’s good-faith effort to adjust his or her conduct in the attempt to facilitate the return of the child. Alternatively, she argues, even if DCF is not required to establish fault, the termination of parental rights violates a parent’s right to due process. In addition she argues that the trial justice erred in finding that DCF made reasonable efforts to reunify her family. She further stated that DCF “simply waited for [her] to ‘slip-up’ once” and failed to pursue reasonable alternatives short of termination of her parental rights.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
544 A.2d 137, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 98, 1988 WL 65669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rene-b-ri-1988.