In Re RMS

223 S.W.3d 240
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 28, 2006
StatusPublished

This text of 223 S.W.3d 240 (In Re RMS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re RMS, 223 S.W.3d 240 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

223 S.W.3d 240 (2006)

In re R.M.S., A.D.S., and D.C.S.
State of Tennessee, Department of Children's Services
v.
Marcy G. Orange.

Court of Appeals of Tennessee, Western Section, at Nashville.

July 12, 2006 Session.
December 28, 2006.
Permission to Appeal Denied March 5, 2007.

*242 Irene R. Haude, Nashville, TN, for the appellant, Marcy G. Orange.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter, and Amy T. Master, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, TN, for the State of Tennessee, Department of Children's Services.

Permission to Appeal Denied by Supreme Court March 5, 2007.

OPINION

HOLLY M. KIRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S., and ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., joined.

This is a termination of parental rights case. The three children involved in this action lived with their mother and the mother's boyfriend. The oldest child reported to authorities that the mother's boyfriend had sexually abused her. The State was notified of the allegations, and the mother was ordered to keep the children away from the boyfriend. The mother, however, did not believe her daughter's allegations of abuse, and the boyfriend continued to live with her and the children. Consequently, the children were removed from the mother's home and placed in protective custody. While in State custody, all three children underwent extensive counseling. Eventually, all three reported to their counselors a variety of serious acts of abuse by the mother's boyfriend and by the mother as well. The mother made only minimal attempts to fulfill the requirements of the children's permanency plans and continued to live with the boyfriend. The State filed the instant petition to terminate the mother's parental rights on the grounds of abandonment, failure to comply with the permanency plans, and persistent conditions which led to the children's removal. After a five-day trial, the trial court granted the State's petition on all grounds. The mother now appeals. We affirm, finding that clear and convincing evidence establishes grounds for termination, and that terminating the mother's rights is in the children's best interest.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This is a chilling case of sexual abuse. Respondent/Appellant Marcy G. Orange ("Mother") is the biological mother of the three children involved in this action, R.M.S. ("Daughter R"), a daughter born November 4, 1992; A.D.S. ("Daughter A"), a daughter born January 27, 1996; and D.C.S. ("Son D"), a son born January 30, 1998. Mother and the children's biological father were married when each of the children were born. They divorced, however, in January 2000 because the biological father had physically abused Mother *243 and the children. Mother received custody of the children. After Mother separated from the children's biological father, she and the children moved in with Mother's new boyfriend, Mitchell Pozezinski ("Pozezinski"), in a duplex in Joelton in Davidson County, Tennessee. The parental rights of the children's biological father are not at issue in this appeal.

In July 2001, Mother enlisted in the armed services, and the children were placed in the custody of their maternal grandmother ("Grandmother"). Grandmother was unable to deal with the needs of the youngest child, Son D, so she wrote Mother's commanding officer. As a result, Mother was recalled from the military. Mother left the armed services in October 2001, and she was formally discharged in December 2001. When she returned from duty, Mother moved back in with Pozezinski in the duplex in Joelton.

In April 2002, Mother and Pozezinski moved to a three-bedroom, single-wide trailer on Isaac Clifton road in Chapmansboro, Tennessee, Cheatham County. Around that same time, Mother regained custody of the children, and they moved into the trailer with Mother and Pozezinski. The trailer was small, and most rooms had no door, only a sheet or a curtain in the doorway. The two girls shared a bedroom, and Mother and Pozezinski slept in the living room area. The girls' bedroom was separated from the rest of the living area by a curtain, and the bathroom doorway was covered by a sheet. At the time the family moved into the trailer, Daughter R was nine years old, Daughter A was six years old, and Son D was four years old.

In October 2002, Daughter R, by then who was almost ten years old, claimed to school authorities that she was raped at school after cheerleading practice. Petitioner/Appellee State of Tennessee, Department of Children's Services ("DCS"), was notified of her allegations. In response, DCS put into effect a Plan of Action, which was signed by Mother and DCS case manager Melanie Duncan. The plan required that Daughter R be assessed for sexual abuse, that she receive counseling from licensed psychologist Janie Berryman ("Dr. Berryman"), and that she obtain a medical examination to determine if there were any physical signs of abuse.

Police lieutenant Floyd Duncan ("Lieutenant Duncan") investigated the matter.[1] Both he and Dr. Berryman interviewed Daughter R. Based on these interviews with the child, both Dr. Berryman and Lieutenant Duncan determined that Daughter R's allegation of rape on the school premises was not credible. Consequently, Lieutenant Duncan re-interviewed Daughter R, apparently on October 23, 2002. She admitted that her story of a rape at school was not true, but disclosed that she had been victimized by someone in her home. Daughter R was reluctant to tell the abuser's identity, but finally told Lieutenant Duncan that she had been raped by Mother's boyfriend, Pozezinski. Daughter R described to Lieutenant Duncan some of Pozezinski's acts of abuse. She said that he penetrated her, sometimes anally, using water or cooking oil as a lubricant. She said that he sometimes used sex toys; one was a vibrator/dildo that she called "Mr. Purple," and the other a pacifier-shaped item with a male organ instead of a nipple, which Daughter R referred to as a "pink stopper," used for anal penetration. She said that Pozezinski also forced her to perform oral sex on him. Most of the abuse occurred while they *244 were living in the trailer on Isaac Clifton Road, although it apparently began when they were living in the duplex in Joelton. These acts allegedly occurred when Mother was not home. To help corroborate Daughter R's allegations, Lieutenant Duncan asked her to describe where the sex toys and cooking oil were kept in the trailer.

Lieutenant Duncan then went to the trailer and informed Mother that Daughter R had identified Pozezinski as the perpetrator of the abuse. Mother consented to permit him to search the trailer for the items Daughter R had mentioned. He found the cooking oil and the "pink stopper" where Daughter R had said they were kept. "Mr. Purple" was in a laundry basket instead of the place Daughter R had described. Mother told Lieutenant Duncan that she could not think of an instance in which Pozezinski had been left alone with the children. Mother agreed to a revised Plan of Action that required Daughter R to be medically examined at the Our Kids Clinic, and also required Mother to prevent Pozezinski from having any contact with her children, whether supervised or not.[2] In light of Mother's agreement to the terms of the revised Plan of Action, the children were left in Mother's custody at that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 S.W.3d 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rms-tennctapp-2006.