In re the Custody of: S.F-T.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 9, 2016
Docket32367-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Custody of: S.F-T.C. (In re the Custody of: S.F-T.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Custody of: S.F-T.C., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED

FEBRUARY 9, 2016

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

) In the Matter of the Custody of ) No. 32367-6-III S.F.-T.C., ) ) A Minor Child. ) ) Janet Carey, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION Nick Carey, ) Laura Carey, ) Respondents, ) ) v. ) ) Jasmine Rose Carey, Mother, )

Kyle Carey, Father, Deceased, )

)

Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, C,J. - Following an eight-day trial that took place in September

2013, the superior court for Benton County awarded nonparental custody of Jasmine C.'s

then nine-year-old daughter, S., to her paternal uncle and aunt. The trial court's fmdings

of fact included its finding that'the petitioning uncle and aunt had not "established by

clear and convincing evidence, nor even by a preponderance of the evidence, that

[Jasmine] is an unfit parent." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 338. But relying on the opinions of No. 32367-6-III In re the Custody ofS.F.-T.C

three witnesses that S. had suffered an unusual and risk-presenting amount of trauma

during the first seven-and-a-halfyears of her life, the court concluded that there would be

actual detriment to S. 's future growth and development if she were returned to her

mother's care.

In nonparental custody cases, when properly applied, the nonparent will meet the

actual detriment standard solely in "extraordinary circumstances." In re Custody of

B.MH., 179 Wn.2d 224,236,315 P.3d 470 (2013) (quoting In re Custody ofShields, 157

Wn.2d 126, 145, 136 P.3d 117 (2006)). The nonparent must show that the child has

significant special needs that would not or could not be met in her parent's custody, or

some serious diagnosed emotional instability that will be exacerbated by the placement.

In re Custody ofJ.E., 189 Wn. App. 175, 189-90,356 P.3d 233, (2015). The actual

detriment standard is not met by showing that nonparental custody is in the child's best

interests.

The superior court's findings in this case do not reflect extraordinary

circumstances, nor was the evidence at trial sufficient to support findings that would, in

tum, support a conclusion that placement would result in actual detriment to S.'s future

growth and development. Accordingly, we reverse the custody decree.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Jasmine C. married S.'s father, Kyle, 18 days after her 16th birthday. She gave

birth to S. when she was 18 years old. Kyle and Jasmine took drugs together, including

No. 32367-6-III In re the Custody o/S.F.-T.e.

methamphetamine, and they had a stormy relationship. They divorced in March 2007,

when S. was two-and-a-half years old. Despite testing positive for methamphetamine

during the dissolution proceedings, Jasmine was awarded custody of S.

In January 2008, Jasmine learned from three-and-a-half-year-old S. that Will

Higgins, a friend of Kyle's who had lived in the past in the couple's household and was

living in Jasmine's home at the time, had sexually assaulted S. Jasmine sought and

obtained protection orders for S. and initiated and cooperated with a police investigation

that led to Higgins' conviction. Jasmine also began taking S. to Lyn Lang, a mental

health counselor, to address emotional fallout from the assault.

In December 2008, police received a report that led them to visit Jasmine's

apartment, which they found to be unsanitary and in disarray. The investigating officer

told Jasmine he would file a report with Child Protective Services. When a follow-up

visit in January 2009 revealed unchanged conditions, S. and a younger stepsister-B.,

Jasmine's child with another man-were placed in protective custody. Kyle thereafter

sought to modify the parenting plan for S., and in June 2009 he was granted full custody.

The parenting plan entered at that time provided that Jasmine would initially be permitted

one four-hour visit with S. each week, but visits were required to be supervised by a

licensed and approved provider and Jasmine was required to "pay all costs associated

with this supervision." CP at 17.

No. 32367-6-III In re the Custody ofSF.-TC.

Jasmine, who presented evidence of chronic medical problems, was prescribed

medications and continued to use and abuse drugs for the next several years. She did not

see S. during the three years that Kyle had custody.

In early January 2012, Jasmine gave birth to a third daughter, 1. A dependency

was filed before Jasmine could take J. home from the hospital. The Department of Social

and Health Service's offer of services during the dependency was the beginning of a

process through which Jasmine began addressing her parental deficiencies. After

successfully participating in the services, Jasmine regained custody of J. on May 17,

2012, and the dependency was dismissed.

On March 1, 2012, while the dependency proceeding dealing with 1. was ongoing,

Kyle committed suicide. Two weeks later, Nick and Laura Carey, Kyle's brother and

sister-in-law, filed a nonparental custody petition seeking custody of S. Janet Carey,

Kyle's mother, joined the petition. We sometimes refer to the petitioners hereafter as

"the Careys."

Jasmine opposed the petition and sought to have the court return custody of S. to

her. The court granted temporary custody of S. to Nick and Laura Carey.

After filing the petition for nonparental custody, Janet Carey contacted Ms. Lang,

and arranged to renew counseling for S. with Ms. Lang. In response to Jasmine's early

requests for visitation with S., the superior court entered an order on April 19,2012,

indicating it would rely on Ms. Lang for a "time frame and parameters & all details re:

No. 32367-6-III In re the Custody of8.F.-T.C.

reintroduction & reunification of Jasmine wi [S.]" CP at 545. Janet Carey was opposed

to S. having any visitation with Jasmine, and even Ms. Lang favored no visitation.

Although Ms. Lang was notified by Jasmine's lawyer of the court's request for a

reunification plan on April 24, 2012, and spoke with both parties' attorneys about the

court's order on May 3,2012, Ms. Lang failed to make any recommendation.

Jasmine sought to be reintroduced to S. for at least 10 months before the

reintroduction occurred. While it is not clear from our record on appeal how Jasmine was

finally able to secure visitation beginning in early February 2013, she may have acted on

the 2009 parenting plan, because she began visitation at Kids at Heart, a supervised

visitation provider. Between then and the time of trial, the court twice increased her

visitation, removing any requirement for supervision and ordering that Jasmine's other

children could occasionally be included in her visitation with S.

Trial of the petition for nonparental custody took place over eight days in late

September 2013 and early October 2013. Dozens of witnesses were called. While the

trial court concluded in its decision that Jasmine was a fit parent, it entered one-and-a­

half pages of findings in support of its conclusion that there would be actual detriment to

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