In Re the Appeal in Maricopa County Juvenile Action No. JD-6123

956 P.2d 511, 191 Ariz. 384, 243 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 11, 1997 Ariz. App. LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMay 15, 1997
Docket1 CA-JV 96-0053
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 956 P.2d 511 (In Re the Appeal in Maricopa County Juvenile Action No. JD-6123) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Appeal in Maricopa County Juvenile Action No. JD-6123, 956 P.2d 511, 191 Ariz. 384, 243 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 11, 1997 Ariz. App. LEXIS 80 (Ark. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

GRANT, Judge.

This ease involves a private dependency petition filed by the six-year-old child’s maternal grandparents on January 19,1995. At a Review of Temporary Custody Hearing on February 13,1995, the juvenile court refused to return physical custody of the child to the father while the dependency proceeded. The Arizona Department of Economic Security Child Protective Service (“C.P.S.”) was joined as a co-petitioner at the conclusion of the temporary hearing. After a six-day trial, *386 the court found the child to be dependent as to the father and ordered the child to be placed out of the home, granting custody to the maternal grandparents. The father timely appealed the juvenile court’s dependency ruling and its order of out-of-home placement. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On March 6, 1995, the court held a pretrial conference as to the father, and scheduled a trial for May 15 through 18, 1995. On April 26, 1995, a pre-trial conference was held as to the mother and the child was found dependent as to the mother. The father filed a Motion to Continue the Contested Dependency Hearing because he was unable to complete interviewing potential witnesses and could not attend the trial in May. The court granted the father’s motion to continue and allowed him to complete discovery.

The hearing was held from August 21 to 24, 1995, and continued on December 19 and 20, 1995. Extensive testimony was presented in the six-day hearing. The court admitted caseworker reports into evidence over the father’s hearsay objection. On January 4, 1996, the court found the child dependent as to her father. The father timely appealed. On March 7, 1996, the father filed his Statement of Grounds of Appeal and Memorandum of Points and Authorities. On July 22, 1996, the father filed a supplemental brief.

This action stems from a violent altercation between the father and his girlfriend while the child was in the home. After the altercation, a friend of the father placed the child with the maternal grandparents. After that placement, the maternal grandparents filed this action because they observed alarming behavior by the child. C.P.S. joined the maternal grandparents in this action.

The maternal grandparents previously sought custody of the child by filing a dependency petition in 1991, but that action was consolidated with a related domestic relations case between the mother and father. At the time this action was filed, the father had custody of the child and the mother had visitation rights. Visitation for the mother would normally occur at the maternal grandparents’ home. Just prior to the filing of the petition in this action, the mother was jailed on charges of allegedly participating in a murder. In this action the mother does not contest the placement with the maternal grandparents.

The petition alleged and the juvenile court testimony related to an incident of domestic violence. During a dispute between the father and his girlfriend, a gun was discharged while the child was in the home. Leaving the child in the home, the father left before the police arrived. At the contested dependency trial, the father admitted that the gun discharged; however, he maintained that while threatening him his girlfriend discharged the gun. When questioned, the father admitted that he did not check on the child following the firing of the gun. He asserted, “She was still asleep this whole time, even when the police were there. I felt there was no reason to disturb her, let her know any knowledge of it happening.” Later, on January 12, 1995, in front of the child and the father’s girlfriend, the father threatened to kill himself and the child. After the police were called by the father’s girlfriend, the father fled the residence, again leaving the child.

C.P.S. presented testimony at trial that the father’s relationship with the girlfriend was volatile. According to one of the couple’s acquaintances, “[The father] agreed with me that they had a problem, that they fought all the time.” The paternal grandfather also testified that the father and his girlfriend had a verbally and physically abusive relationship. The father and the girlfriend had obtained restraining orders against one another before the filing of this dependency petition.

Following the altercation on January 12, 1995, the father went to the residence of a friend. There, the father made physical threats toward his girlfriend. The friend testified:

And so we went into the house and he started telling me that he was going to die that night and that he was going to kill his girlfriend ... and cut her breast implants *387 and go back to the house and call the police and tell the police what he had just done. And when the police showed up he was going to rush at the police and make the police shoot him so that he could die that night.

The father left the Mend’s home, but later called the Mend and told her that he had taken an overdose of pills. The Mend then called 911 to report a suicide attempt and to make arrangements to place the child with the maternal grandparents.

The juvenile court heard expert testimony from the child’s evaluating psychologist, the child’s therapist, the child’s counselor, and a psychologist who interviewed the father. All mental health professionals expressed the opinion that the child had been emotionally abused and that out-of-home placement was warranted. The child’s evaluating psychologist, Dr. Hollenbeek, Ph.D, diagnosed the child as suffering from adjustment disorder with depressed mood and concluded that she had an internalized pervasive fear because of her father’s aggressive and volatile behavior. He testified that during his evaluation session with the child, she was upset and despondent and she told him that her father had threatened to kill his girlMend and another individual. Dr. Hollenbeek testified about the results of his interview with the child as follows:

[S]he felt like running when she was at her father’s house. She made reference to stating that he’s not very nice. She indicated to me that dad has two guns he shoots bad people with. She was afraid. She felt he was mean____ What I did believe very strongly was that ... this is a child who was in fact very fearful of the father at the time____ [T]his still is a child who had a significant degree of emotional fear____ [T]o place the child back in that situation without resolving it would only increase that level of fear that the child was experiencing [and] in a sense that’s almost tormenting the child in my belief.

According to the child’s counselor, Dr. Robbie Adler-Tapia, her distress and accompanying behaviors were significant enough for diagnosis. He testified that “she did display enough symptomatology for an adjustment disorder and that diagnosis in a child that age is a grave concern for me. It can cause consistent and life-long problems.”

Dr. Henley, a psychologist who interviewed the father, diagnosed him as suffering from a “personality disorder.” He recommended out-of-home placement for the child. Dr. Henley determined that the child would be at risk if she were returned to the father. He stated that the father

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Bluebook (online)
956 P.2d 511, 191 Ariz. 384, 243 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 11, 1997 Ariz. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-appeal-in-maricopa-county-juvenile-action-no-jd-6123-arizctapp-1997.