In Re: Savanna C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 31, 2017
DocketE2016-01703-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Savanna C. (In Re: Savanna C.) 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: Savanna C., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

08/31/2017 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 18, 2017 Session

IN RE SAVANNA C.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hamilton County No. 15A222 W. Neil Thomas, III, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2016-01703-COA-R3-PT ___________________________________

This is a termination of parental rights case involving the parental rights of the father, Jason C. (“Father”), to his minor child, Savanna C. (“the Child”), who was two years of age at the time of trial. The Child was born in 2014 to Father and Katie N. (“Mother”). On November 10, 2014, the Hamilton County Juvenile Court (“juvenile court”) granted temporary legal custody of the Child to the maternal grandmother, Kathryn N. (“Maternal Grandmother”). The maternal grandfather, Tommy N. (“Maternal Grandfather”), was later added as a joint petitioner. The juvenile court adjudicated the Child dependent and neglected on August 20, 2015, and ordered that the Child remain in the custody of the Maternal Grandmother and Maternal Grandfather (collectively, “Maternal Grandparents”). On September 21, 2015, Maternal Grandparents filed a petition to terminate Father’s parental rights to the Child in the Hamilton County Circuit Court (“trial court”). Following a bench trial, the trial court terminated Father’s parental rights to the Child upon determining by clear and convincing evidence that Father had abandoned the Child by willfully failing to visit during the four months preceding the filing of the termination petition. The court also found clear and convincing evidence that termination of Father’s parental rights was in the best interest of the Child. Father has appealed.1 Discerning no reversible error, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., and J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., joined.

1 The trial court also terminated Mother’s parental rights to the Child. Mother and Father each respectively appealed the trial court’s judgment, but Mother voluntarily dismissed her appeal in this matter. We will therefore confine our analysis to those facts relevant to Father. David Paul Coates, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jason C.

Kathy Rowell, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellees, Tommy N. and Kathryn N.

Charles W. Wheland, III, Chattanooga, Tennessee, Guardian Ad Litem.

OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Upon petition filed by Maternal Grandmother, the juvenile court, in an order entered November 10, 2014, removed the Child from the custody of her parents due to the parents’ lack of stable housing and drug addiction, placing temporary custody of the Child with Maternal Grandmother. Maternal Grandfather was not included in the initial custody order, but the juvenile court later added him as a joint petitioner. During a hearing in December 2014, Father submitted to a drug screen administered by the juvenile court and tested positive for oxycodone. Father reported having a prescription for the medication at that time.

Following removal of the Child from the parents’ custody, Father filed a petition for custody in the juvenile court in March 2015, alleging that Mother had an extensive history of drug abuse and was not fit to care for the Child. Father also alleged that Maternal Grandparents had allowed Mother more visits per week than ordered by the juvenile court and had cancelled Father’s visits abruptly. Father subsequently withdrew his custody petition, explaining during trial that he had filed the petition when he and Mother “had a break” in their relationship for approximately a week. Father later submitted to a hair follicle drug screen on or about April 10, 2015, with the results indicating that he tested positive for methamphetamine.

During the pendency of the juvenile case, as the juvenile court record reflects, Father was arrested for public intoxication in March 2015 and for “Driving Under the Influence of an Intoxicant” on May 16, 2015. Following the adjudicatory hearing on July 16, 2015, the juvenile court found by clear and convincing evidence that the Child was dependent and neglected as to Father and Mother due to the parents’ lack of stability and progress. The court ordered that custody of the Child remain with Maternal Grandparents.

On September 21, 2015, Maternal Grandparents filed a petition in the trial court, seeking to terminate the parents’ parental rights and adopt the Child. In their petition, Maternal Grandparents alleged as statutory grounds that the parents had abandoned the Child by failing to visit and support her in the four months preceding the petition’s filing and that the conditions leading to the removal of the Child from the parents’ home persisted. Maternal Grandparents also alleged that termination of the parents’ parental -2- rights was in the best interest of the Child. The trial court conducted a bench trial on April 6, 2016.

During trial, Maternal Grandmother testified at the time she obtained emergency custody of the Child on November 10, 2014, the parents had left the Child with the paternal grandmother (“Paternal Grandmother”) and Father’s sister, and the Child had missed her nine-month medical check-up. Maternal Grandmother reported that the Child had contracted two ear infections requiring antibiotics within a span of a few weeks. According to Maternal Grandmother, the parents were not present when she picked up the Child from Paternal Grandmother’s home. Maternal Grandmother obtained emergency custody from the juvenile court on the day she picked up the Child.

The juvenile court ordered supervised visits for the parents in early December, which were scheduled to occur twice per week. According to Maternal Grandmother, she allowed the parents to have regular visits prior to that court order. The visits between the parents and the Child took place at public places rather than Maternal Grandparents’ home because, as Maternal Grandmother related, Father entered their home while Maternal Grandparents were away and stole blank checks, which he attempted to use. Subsequently, Maternal Grandparents did not allow Father in their home.

Concerning visitation, Maternal Grandmother kept a chart of the visits that occurred from November 2014 to April 2015. Maternal Grandmother’s chart, introduced as a trial exhibit, reflects that there were thirteen visits offered to Father in November and December 2014. Of those thirteen visits, Father failed to appear for six and was late to five others. Maternal Grandmother’s chart also reflects that twenty-five visits were offered to Father from January to April 2015. Of those twenty-five visits, Father failed to appear for nine and was late to thirteen others. According to Maternal Grandmother, when Father was late, he was approximately fifteen to thirty minutes late if not later. Maternal Grandmother reported that each visit lasted from one and one-half hours to two hours.

Although Maternal Grandparents were initially responsible for supervising the visits, in April 2015, the trial court ordered that all supervised visits between the parents and the Child would occur at Path Finders, a private agency providing supervision for visits. This change was by reason of tension between the parents and Maternal Grandparents. Maternal Grandmother reported that the parents’ visits were moved to Path Finders because Father was harassing Maternal Grandparents. According to Maternal Grandmother, the parents were more concerned with the relationship between Mother and Father than the welfare of the Child. Maternal Grandmother explained that once the visits were changed to Path Finders, Father did not visit the Child again until January 2016.

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In Re: Savanna C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-savanna-c-tennctapp-2017.