In re R.F.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJune 7, 2019
Docket120415
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re R.F. (In re R.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 R.F., (kanctapp 2019).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 120,415

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Interest of R.F., A Minor Child.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Johnson District Court; NEIL B. FOTH, judge. Opinion filed June 7, 2019. Reversed and remanded with directions.

Dennis J. Stanchik, of Olathe, for appellant natural father.

Jacob M. Gontesky, assistant district attorney, and Stephen M. Howe, district attorney, for appellee.

Before GARDNER, P.J., ATCHESON and SCHROEDER, JJ.

PER CURIAM: T.F. contends the State presented insufficient evidence to the Johnson County District Court to prove him an unfit father to R.F., his minor son, and the court, therefore, erred in terminating his parental rights. We agree. The social service agency overseeing efforts to restore the family improperly cut off T.F.'s visits and communication with R.F. The district court, as we explain, largely rested its termination decision on the lack of contact between T.F. and R.F. during the following 14 months—a circumstance more indicative of bureaucratic fumbling than parental unfitness. So we reverse the district court's order of termination. Because R.F. remains a child in need of care, we remand for further proceedings.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case has a long and seemingly intricate factual and procedural history. The record on appeal, including the evidence presented at the termination hearing, leaves many unilluminated nooks and crannies. We dispense with any discussion of those aspects of the case and otherwise endeavor to pare down the history to focus on the issue before us.

Before this case began, T.F. regularly left R.F. with a man and woman living in Johnson County. R.F.'s stays with the couple grew in frequency and duration, so T.F. saw his son sporadically for a few days at a time. From the record, it appears R.F.'s mother was never really involved in his care. Her rights were terminated in this case, and she has not appealed. She and T.F. were not married.

In October 2014, when R.F. was about three-and-a-half years old, the State filed a petition to have him declared in need of care, as provided in the Revised Kansas Code for Care of Children, K.S.A. 2014 Supp. 38-2201 et seq. The allegations in the petition principally came from the people who had been caring for R.F. and indicated the child may have been poorly supervised when he was with T.F. and acted out in inappropriate ways upon his return from visits with his father. As a result, the Department for Children and Families was given temporary custody of R.F., and he remained in the physical custody of the Overland Park couple. About five months later, the district court formally adjudicated R.F. to be a child in need of care and ordered paternity testing to conclusively establish his familial relationship with T.F. The testing confirmed T.F. to be R.F.'s father.

The district court directed KVC, as the assigned social service agency, to develop a plan to reintegrate T.F. and R.F. as a family. The district court extended the plan at least once and ordered that T.F. participate in "cognitive therapy" for reasons that are not readily apparent from the appellate record.

2 In June 2016, the State filed a motion to terminate T.F.'s parental rights. In early November, shortly before the scheduled termination hearing, T.F. filed a motion asking the district court to consider allowing his brother and his brother's wife to adopt R.F. In support of the motion, T.F. submitted a signed consent to an adoption by his brother and his brother's wife and agreed to "give up all custody and parental rights" to R.F. if they were approved as adoptive parents. The submission indicated T.F.'s relatives were agreeable, and they provided some general biographical information about themselves. The district court continued the termination hearing, so the proposed adoption could be explored.

The district court took the matter up again in September 2017. The guardian ad litem for R.F. opposed the adoption, precluding that option from going forward. See K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 38-2268(a). The record on appeal again sheds no light on the precise reason. The district court then scheduled the termination hearing for late November. The hearing was continued several times, and in February 2018, the district court appointed a new lawyer to represent T.F., further delaying the termination hearing.

The district court held the termination hearing in September 2018. The State called as its only witnesses three employees of KVC who were sequentially assigned to oversee the case and R.F.'s ultimate placement. The first of those caseworkers took over responsibility for the reintegration plan in August 2016, nearly two years after the petition had been filed, and continued through mid-July 2017.

The first caseworker initially supervised weekly visits between T.F. and R.F. She testified that T.F. displayed good parenting skills and interacted appropriately with R.F. She described T.F. as having a bond with R.F. and said the two related well. The caseworker testified that she and T.F. had an argument at the end of one of the visits because he had not been informed that R.F. had been in a motor vehicle collision. The

3 caseworker said she attempted to apologize for the lack of notice but T.F. was unmollified and eventually called the police. She testified that at the next visit T.F. accused KVC of being racist and said he wanted an African-American caseworker.

The caseworker testified that after the State filed the motion to terminate parental rights T.F.'s visits with R.F. were cut back from once a week to once a month. According to the caseworker, T.F. participated in those visits but did little else called for in the reintegration plan. She specifically noted T.F. stopped going to therapy and did not submit to drug testing.

At the termination hearing, T.F. testified that he attended several therapy sessions. He agreed that he stopped going without KVC's approval. The State offered no evidence that T.F. had a substance abuse problem immediately before or during this case or that he ever tested positive for illegal drugs.

The caseworker testified that KVC, with approval from the Department, determined that T.F.'s consent to have his relatives adopt R.F. should be treated as a general relinquishment of his parental rights. Based on that assessment, KVC terminated visitation between T.F. and R.F. in July 2017. But a relinquishment of parental rights to the Department is not the same as a consent to adoption. See K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 38- 2268(b)(1), (d). On appeal, the State has not argued that T.F.'s motion for adoption and the supporting documents amounted to a relinquishment of his parental rights to the Department.

The second KVC caseworker had responsibility for the case from July 2017 through January 2018. She supervised the last visit between T.F. and R.F. in July 2017. She testified that she had no communication from T.F. after that visit. She did not say whether she attempted to contact T.F. The last caseworker was assigned in January 2018 as an adoption case manager and continued through the termination hearing. She, too,

4 reported having no communication from T.F. She testified she made no effort to contact T.F.

Those caseworkers testified T.F. did not attend case plan meetings in September 2017 and June 2018. Although they said T.F.

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