In Re the Adoption of Missy M.

133 P.3d 645, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 45, 2006 WL 964752
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 2006
DocketS-11898
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 133 P.3d 645 (In Re the Adoption of Missy M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Adoption of Missy M., 133 P.3d 645, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 45, 2006 WL 964752 (Ala. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The State of Alaska, Department of Health ánd Social Services, Office of Children’s Services (OCS) appeals the grant of petitions by R.D. and D.D. (the Donnes) to adopt minor children M.M. (Missy) and C.H. (Cameron). 1 The Donnes had previously been licensed by OCS as foster parents. But OCS had received substantiated reports of abuse occurring in the Donnes’ home and the Donnes relinquished their foster care license in 2004. OCS withheld its consent to the adoption based on these reports and the lapse of the license. The superior court found that OCS’s withholding of consent was unreasonable as against the children’s best interests. Because the incorrect test was used to determine the reasonableness of OCS’s withholding of consent, we vacate the order of adoption and remand the case for further findings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Donnes, R.D. and D.D., were first licensed as foster parents in 1997. Their license was modified over the years to allow up to seven foster children into their home. In total they cared for about thirty children as foster parents.

In 2000 OCS received a report alleging inappropriate methods of discipline used by the Donnes, including placing Tabasco sauce on the children’s tongues, grabbing the children, and pulling the children’s hair. OCS investigated these allegations by interviewing each of five children separately. As a result of this report, R.D. was required to and did complete a plan of correction. The Donnes retained their foster home license and OCS continued to place children with them.

In May 2001 OCS received a second report alleging that the Donnes were still using Tabasco sauce as punishment and pulling the children’s hair. Different children were allegedly involved. The report was unconfirmed because the child telling the story was too young to confirm the sequence of events.

In December 2001 OCS assumed emergency custody of Missy and Cameron in a child in need of aid (CIÑA) case. Missy and Cameron were placed with the Donnes on December 18, 2001. At that time, Cameron was approximately six months old and Missy was approximately eight years old. Cameron remained with the Donnes until his removal in May 2004. Missy was at one point returned to her mother in an attempt to reunify the family; when that attempt failed, she was returned to the Donnes.

In April 2004 OCS received a third report alleging that inappropriate discipline was being practiced in the Donnes’ home. The allegations were first brought to OCS’s attention by another foster parent who occasionally took care of, foster children who were living with the Donnes on weekends. The *647 report included a list of disciplinary methods used by the Donnes, including grabbing a child under the chin so hard as to leave a bruise; pulling hair; calling the children belittling names; requiring children to run back and forth between the house and a pole at the edge of the yard; and forcing them to stand and touch their toes until their legs ached. There was also an allegation that one of the children, who was frightened of showers, was thrown into a shower in the middle of the night if he wet the bed. At this time, the Donnes had seven foster children in their care including Missy and Cameron, and D.D.’s teenage daughter was also living with them.

OCS investigated by interviewing five of the children and four adults. Because each child’s story was consistent, OCS considered the allegations to have been substantiated. R.D. was also interviewed as part of the investigation; initially, she denied any wrongdoing, but she subsequently admitted to some of the conduct, maintaining that she thought her methods permissible as long as they did not result in bruises.

As a result of this investigation, OCS removed all foster children from the home. R.D. was told that she would retain her foster care license if she completed another plan of correction. The plan was to include a mental health evaluation of R.D. as well as in-home services offered through a parenting program. In response, R.D. sent a letter refusing to participate in a mental health evaluation and stating that she did not want to be a foster parent any longer. The state then “closed” the Donnes’ foster care license in a letter dated June 15, 2004. In the letter, OCS explained to R.D. that if the Donnes wished to become foster parents again, they would have to complete the plan of correction before the license was reissued.

The Donnes filed their petition to adopt Cameron on June 15, 2004. They filed their petition to adopt Missy on August 20, 2004. 2 When questioned why the petitions were filed separately, R.D. explained that they had been told that Cameron was being sent to Canada and that they had to act on a petition to adopt him right away.

A two-day evidentiary hearing was héld on November 22 and 24, 2004, the purpose of which was to determine whether the Donnes were “unfit to be parents.” The superior court judge commented during the hearing that he did not consider the reports of discipline used by the Donnes to be unusual or substantially different from what he had experienced as a child. At the end of the hearing, the trial court found that the Donnes were not “unfit to be parents.” But because the parents of Missy and Cameron had not yet consented to the adoption, the superior court did not consider the hearing an adoption hearing and the issue of OCS’s consent was not decided.

Subsequent to the evidentiary hearing, the mother gave her consent to the adoption petitions for both children on November 29, 2004. The mother relinquished her rights to both children on December 6, 2004 and the children’s fathers’ rights were terminated on the same date. A home study, deemed acceptable by the superior court, was undertaken by an expert hired by the Donnes’ attorney prior to the adoption hearing. The adoption hearing was held on February 22, 2005.

At the adoption hearing, testimony was taken from the person who performed the home study, the grandmother of the children, R.D., and a mental health therapist as witnesses on behalf of the Donnes. OCS called an OCS worker and Michelle Simpson, with whom Missy was living at the time. Missy was also called to testify. The two main issues before the court were OCS’s consent and Missy’s consent.

As to Missy’s consent, because she was over ten years of age at the time of the hearing, her consent is required under AS 25.23.040(5) “unless the court in the best interest of the minor dispenses with the mi *648 nor’s consent.” Missy had been inconsistent about whether she wanted to be adopted by the Donnes. The superior court considered it to be in her best interest to dispense with her consent to the adoption.

As to OCS’s consent, the superior court recognized that OCS was concerned about the children being adopted by a family which had lost its foster care license. The superior court determined that although the Donnes did not meet the standards OCS applied to foster parents, “those standards are a different set of standards” from those to be applied to adoptive parents.

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Bluebook (online)
133 P.3d 645, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 45, 2006 WL 964752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-adoption-of-missy-m-alaska-2006.