In Re: S.J.W.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 28, 2014
DocketE2013-00351-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: S.J.W. (In Re: S.J.W.) 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: S.J.W., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs October 15, 2013

IN RE S.J.W. ET AL.

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Sullivan County No. J 37860 Mark H. Toohey, Judge

No. E2013-00351-COA-R3-PT-FILED-JANUARY 28, 2014

T.R.D. (“Mother”) and S.M.W. (“Father”) appeal the termination of their rights to four minor children, S.J.W., B.H.D., J.E.W., and J.C.D. (“the Children”). The Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) had been involved with the family since 2006. DCS received multiple referrals regarding environmental neglect and lack of proper care of the Children. DCS made efforts to assist the parents in providing the Children with suitable housing and basic physical and medical care. In August 2010, DCS received another referral alleging environmental, medical, and nutritional neglect. New services were provided without substantial improvement. In October 2010, the Children were removed from the parents’ home and taken into temporary, protective custody. The following month, they were adjudicated dependent and neglected and placed in foster care. A year later, DCS filed a petition to terminate the parents’ rights. Following a bench trial, the court found, by clear and convincing evidence, that multiple grounds for termination exist as to both parents and that termination is in the Children’s best interest. Both Mother and Father appeal. We affirm.

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

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R.,P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Randall D. Fleming, Kingsport, Tennessee, for the appellant, T.R.D.

Nicholas A. Schaefer, Kingsport, Tennessee, for the appellant, S.M.W.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter and Mary Byrd Ferrara, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services. Daniel J. Cantwell, Kingsport, Tennessee, Guardian ad litem.

OPINION

I.

Mother and Father were not yet married when the Children were born over a four-year span from December 2005 to August 2009. The young parents, neither of whom completed high school, struggled from the outset. They paid rent with the social security disability checks their oldest son received after he was diagnosed with leukemia. DCS’s involvement with the family began when he was six months old. In March 2006, DCS received a referral regarding concerns of environmental neglect and lack of proper supervision and care of the minor children. Over the next three years, there were nine referrals, all focused on the Children’s living conditions and their care and supervision. Early on, DCS referred the family for numerous services and provided resources and other assistance, as did community organizations, in an effort to assist Mother and Father toward the goal of providing appropriate housing and care for the Children. In addition to DCS’s direct involvement, it referred services including a HUGS1 nurse to the home since 2007; Tennessee Early Intervention Services which provided physical, speech, and developmental therapy, occupational services, and advanced home care in the home since 2007; and Palmer Center which transported the two oldest children to its school where their efforts focused on development of fine motor skills, speech, and communication. In addition, DCS linked the family with multiple community resources and organizations in an effort to obtain housing after the family was evicted from public housing in 2009. After the first two children were born, Mother initially worked at a fast-food restaurant but had difficulty maintaining a job as she was largely left to care for the Children on her own. Mother believed it was a mother’s role to stay home and care for her children, but did not feel Father made much effort to find a job and support the family. For his part, Father was often absent from the home and in and out of jail. When he was present, case workers described him as being “okay” at times, while, at other times, hostile and in denial that there were any issues in the home. In 2009, the family was evicted from public housing because of their failure to pay rent. In 2010, a local church sponsored them and provided various items they needed as well as an apartment. When the family secured suitable housing – a primary area of concern – DCS closed their file.

1 H.U.G.S. stands for “Help Us Grow Successfully.” It is a state program provided to families through county health departments pursuant to which nurses visit families and provide assistance in their homes to keep children on track in their development.

-2- In August 2010, DCS returned to the family’s home on another referral alleging environmental, medical and nutritional neglect. Case workers observed a filthy, odorous home in “disarray” – the Children, in heavily soiled diapers, played and ate food off of the feces-stained carpet, dogs and cats were running about, and a litter pan sat on the dining table. The Children, then ranging in age from one to five, were not potty-trained. All were developmentally delayed, and the youngest, an infant, was diagnosed with failure to thrive. The oldest had leukemia that was in remission, but required monitoring. The Children could not speak discernable English and appeared to have developed their own way of communicating with each other. In addition to the multiple services already working with the family, the case manager referred Solutions Sources and two workers to provide in-home assistance with homemaking skills in a “last-ditch” effort to keep the Children at home with Mother and Father. No notable progress was made.

In October 2010, the Children were placed in the protective custody of DCS. In November 2010, they were adjudicated dependent and neglected and entered foster care. Following the Children’s removal, Mother and Father stopped receiving government assistance and benefits for the Children. As a result, they were unable to pay rent, lost their apartment, and essentially became homeless.

DCS created a family permanency plan with both parents’ input. The primary tasks assigned to Mother and Father were to obtain safe, stable housing and stable employment or other legal sources of income to support the Children. As time passed, maintaining contact and communication with DCS also became an issue. After the Children were removed, Mother and Father remained unemployed and continued their lifestyle of moving from one motel or boarding house to another. Because they owed substantial past-due rent, they were not eligible for public housing in the Kingsport area. In January 2011, they lived at the West Side Inn. In June 2011, they moved to the Model City Motel. Two months later, they lived in a “tourist” boarding home. In August 2011, they moved to Morristown where, with the help of a local church, they moved into an apartment and Father obtained work with a roofing company. He quit after some two months to return to Kingsport to face pending criminal charges. Since then, neither parent was employed, but both hoped to secure disability benefits. Father continued to incur new criminal charges and spend short stints in jail.

Over a year later, in December 2011, DCS filed a petition to terminate the parents’ rights. In January 2012, Mother and Father got married. Mother indicated the primary reason she married Father was to secure help from churches and other religious organizations that did not provide housing assistance to unmarried couples.

The termination hearing took place over three days during September, October, and November 2012. By then, Father had been incarcerated for nearly eight months. A few days

-3- before trial, Mother moved into a friend’s apartment. She remained unemployed.

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