In Re Shazayla P, (May 16, 1996)

1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4074
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 16, 1996
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4074 (In Re Shazayla P, (May 16, 1996)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Shazayla P, (May 16, 1996), 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4074 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an action for removal of guardian, which was filed with the Probate Court for the District of Bristol on November 7, 1995, and transferred to the Superior Court for Juvenile Matters pursuant to CGS § 45a-623 on November 27, 1995. The applicant s, Dorothy B., the maternal great-aunt of the minor child Shazayla P., who was born on May 8, 1994. The application, which was filed pursuant to CGS § 45a-610, seeks the removal of Shazayla's mother, Latisha P., as the child's guardian. The application alleges that the minor child has been abandoned by Latisha P., in the sense that the parent failed to maintain a reasonable degree of interest, concern or responsibility for the minor child's welfare. It also alleges that Shazayla has been denied the care, guidance or control necessary for her physical, educational, moral or emotional well-being, as a result of acts of parental commission or omission.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Trial in this matter commenced on January 18, 1996 at the Superior Court for Juvenile Matters in Plainville. It continued on diverse dates at that court and at this venue until May 13, 1996 when the trial concluded. The applicant, Dorothy B., the respondent Latisha P., and the minor child were each represented by separate counsel throughout the proceeding. By agreement of the parties, the hearing on the order of temporary custody was consolidated with the contested hearing on the application for removal of guardian. On February 8, 1996, counsel for the respondent mother made an oral motion to the court that Shazayla's custody be returned to the mother, claiming that the applicant had failed to prove by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the parent's actions had placed the child in CT Page 4074-A immediate physical danger. The court denied the motion on that date and, pursuant to CGS § 45a-607, confirmed the ex parte order of the Bristol Probate Court awarding Shazayla's temporary custody to Dorothy B.

During trial, the applicant Dorothy B. testified, as did her daughter, Shonda B. Counsel for the minor child introduced the testimony of Elizabeth Gutierrez, then a social worker for the Department of Children and Families (DCF), and Gail Lawson, a DCF supervisor. The respondent, Latisha P., testified on her own behalf.

FACTUAL FINDINGS

The court, having carefully considered the testimony of the witnesses and the evidence introduced at trial, makes the following factual findings:

On or about October 6, 1995, Shonda B., the 24-year-old daughter of the applicant Dorothy B., received a telephone call concerning her infant cousin, Shazayla. The caller indicated that Shazayla had been beaten with a belt, was crying, and was in distress. Shonda went to the address where Shazayla was located. She learned that Latisha P. had gone away, leaving her daughter with Queen P., the child's maternal grandmother. The grandmother in turn left the child with a babysitter named Eloise R. The caller who telephoned Shonda was not Eloise R. Shonda took custody of Shazayla, who was then approximately 17 months old, from the caller. When she recovered the child, Shazayla was dirty, wearing a soiled diaper, and appeared sick. It was apparent to Shonda that Shazayla's diaper had not been changed in some time. There was no evidence that Shazayla had been assaulted or otherwise physically injured, but the child was ill and subsequently required medical treatment. The whereabouts of Latisha P. were unknown at this time.

After Shonda assumed de facto custody of Shazayla, she took the child to the home of Dorothy B., where Shazayla has remained to this date. DCF was notified. It was approximately two weeks later that Latisha P. finally contacted Shonda to inquire about Shazayla. Shortly thereafter, at the suggestion of DCF, Dorothy B. filed this guardianship action.

The October 1995 incident was not the first occasion when the mother departed without making appropriate arrangements for CT Page 4074-B Shazayla's care. The DCF study which was prepared for this case was admitted into evidence at trial. (See Child's Exhibit 1). It states in pertinent part:

"On 7/30/95, the Department of Children and Families received a call from the Bristol Police stating that [mother] had left her 20-month-old infant in the maternal grandmother's home without permission. Grandparents woke up on 7/30/95 and found the child alone and the mother missing. The Bristol police officer, in his statement said the grandparents' apartment, where the infant was left, was in total disarray, and the place where the infant was sleeping was unkempt."

Evidence introduced at trial about the July 30th incident indicates that Latisha P. had gone to the beach then because she was "hot," and had not informed the grandmother beforehand that the child would be left in her care.

During her testimony, Latisha P. stated that she had gone to Hartford in October 1995 and had left her child with the maternal grandmother. She believed that the grandmother, or Eloise R., would care for Shazayla. Latisha P. testified that she went to Hartford to visit with friends because she "needed to get away" due to "a lot of personal things." She admitted that she was gone for two weeks. She claimed she left diapers for her daughter, and money to pay Eloise R. to babysit. Latisha also admitted that it was only after she returned from Hartford and went to her mother's home that she learned about what had transpired with Shazayla while she was absent.

ADJUDICATION

The respondent argues that her conduct does not constitute abandonment, or acts or omissions which evidence a lack of care. She contends that she was, in effect, merely taking a respite from her parenting responsibilities, and that she had made appropriate arrangements for the care of her daughter while she was gone. The court, however, does not agree.

When Shonda B. took emergency responsibility for Shazayla, the child was not with the maternal grandmother, nor with Eloise R. Shazayla was with a third party, who was so concerned about the child's condition and welfare that she called other relatives and requested intervention on the child's behalf. When Shonda found Shazayla, the baby was ill, dirty and wearing a soiled CT Page 4074-C diaper which had not been changed for an extended period of time. Latisha P.'s testimony that she only learned about this incident when she returned from Hartford two weeks later indicates that the parent never called to inquire about Shazayla, or check on her welfare, during the entire period she was away. Latisha P.'s disinterest in the care of her daughter resulted in Shazayla being shuttled from the grandmother, to Eloise R., to a third party. The child's condition when Shonda B. claimed her indicates that the designated caretakers had been neglectful in their treatment of the child, and that the child was in immediate physical danger until Dorothy B. and Shonda B. rendered assistance. Latisha P. selected inappropriate and inattentive caretakers, failed to make any inquiry about the whereabouts or care of her daughter, and was, in fact, oblivious to Shazayla and her needs during this 14-day period. As noted above, this was not the first time in recent history that the child's best interests took a back seat to the mother's recreational interests.

Based on all of the forgoing, and pursuant to CGS § 45a-610, the court finds proven by clear and convincing evidence that Latisha P.

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Related

§ 45a-607
Connecticut § 45a-607
§ 45a-610
Connecticut § 45a-610
§ 45a-612
Connecticut § 45a-612
§ 45a-616
Connecticut § 45a-616
§ 45a-617
Connecticut § 45a-617
§ 45a-623
Connecticut § 45a-623

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Bluebook (online)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shazayla-p-may-16-1996-connsuperct-1996.