In Re the Custody & Parental Rights of A.P.

2007 MT 297, 172 P.3d 105, 340 Mont. 39, 2007 Mont. LEXIS 540
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 2007
DocketDA 07-0336
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2007 MT 297 (In Re the Custody & Parental Rights of A.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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 Custody & Parental Rights of A.P., 2007 MT 297, 172 P.3d 105, 340 Mont. 39, 2007 Mont. LEXIS 540 (Mo. 2007).

Opinion

JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 A.H.P. appeals from an order of the Eighth Judicial District, Cascade County, terminating her parental rights. We affirm.

¶2 A.H.P. presents the following issue for review:

¶3 Whether the District Court’s termination of A.H.P.’s parental rights to A.P., pursuant to §§ 41-3-609(l)(d) and 41-3-423(2)(e), MCA, violated A.H.P.’s constitutional right to due process of law.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶4 A.H.P. is the natural mother of three children, A.P., D.P., and K.S. Each of the children has a different father. The Department of Public Health and Human Services (DPHHS) began receiving reports regarding A.H.P.’s parenting in 1997. These reports included allegations of physical neglect, exposure to unreasonable risk, physical abuse, medical neglect, and sexual abuse of A.P. by an unidentified man. DPHHS substantiated allegations against A.H.P. in December, 2001, August, 2004, December, 2004, and November, 2005.

¶5 The District Court granted DPHHS temporary investigative authority over the three children in October, 2004. The District Court adjudicated the children as youths in need of care. The District Court ordered A.H.P. to undertake a fifteen-month, five-step treatment plan on February 22, 2005. The treatment plan required A.H.P. to do the following: (1) achieve a healthy mental status; (2) learn to parent adequately; (3) maintain adequate housing and a safe environment for the children; (4) maintain a relationship with the children; and (5) *41 cooperate fully with DPHHS. DPHHS provided A.H.P. with counseling, training, and support in conjunction with the treatment plan.

¶6 A.P.’s natural father agreed to take temporary custody of A.P. on February 22,2005. The District Court granted him full custody on July 5,2005. The District Court consequently dismissed A.P. from the youth in need of care proceeding. A.P. resided with her father for nearly two years. Sadly, DPHHS removed A.P. from her father’s custody in January, 2007, after reports that he physically had abused her. A.P.’s father relinquished voluntarily his parental rights to A.P. on February 20, 2007, before the District Court had ruled on DPHHS’s petition to terminate involuntarily his parental rights.

¶7 In the meantime, the District Court had continued the youth in need of care proceeding regarding A.P.’s siblings, D.P. and K.S. A.H.P. only minimally complied with the five-step treatment plan during the court-ordered fifteen-month treatment period. A.H.P. failed to meet the first goal of achieving a healthy mental status. DPHHS had established specific steps to achieve the first goal, taking into account A.H.P.’s borderline low-average intellectual ability, recurrent depression, and lack of consistent employment and family support. The steps included maintaining consistent telephone service, consistently taking prescribed medication, taking the children to all of their scheduled medical visits, attending all of her scheduled medical visits, and attending mental health counseling. A.H.P. achieved none of these goals.

¶8 A.H.P. also did not achieve the second goal of learning to parent adequately. DPHHS administered intensive family services to A.H.P. between January and August, 2005, that enabled A.H.P. temporarily to regain custody of the infant, K.S. DPHHS again removed K.S. from A.H.P.’s custody after a social worker visited A.H.P.’s home unannounced. The social worker discovered that A.H.P. had allowed various adults to move into the home, including a new boyfriend. A.H.P. did not inform DPHHS of these changes and DPHHS had not approved of them, as required by the treatment plan.

¶9 The social worker reported that A.H.P. was not at home during the DPHHS home-visit. An unapproved babysitter was completely inattentive to K.S. during the 45-minute visit, while an unidentified man hid in an upstairs bedroom. The social worker reported unsafe and dirty conditions in the home. The social worker also observed that the babysitter allowed K.S. to eat old food from the floor. A.H.P. later reported to DPHHS that she had difficulty focusing on K.S. instead of focusing on her new boyfriend. A.H.P. admitted that her new boyfriend *42 had alcohol issues that resulted in his losing custody of his own children.

¶10 A.H.P. also failed to achieve the third goal of maintaining adequate housing and a safe environment for the children. A.H.P. could not remember to pay rent monthly. She often faced eviction during the treatment period. A.H.P. failed to consider the children’s safety when bringing people into the home. She allowed several unapproved adults to move in without her social worker’s approval. A.H.P. brought three different boyfriends with substance abuse and mental health issues into the home during the fifteen-month treatment period without informing the social worker. A.H.P. also continually failed to make adequate childcare arrangements for K.S.

¶11 A.H.P. failed to achieve the fourth goal of maintaining a relationship with her children. A.H.P. was erratic in attending scheduled visits with K.S. after DPHHS had returned the child to foster care. As a result, DPHHS required A.H.P. to arrive at the appointment before K.S.’s foster family would leave their home to transport the child to the visit. A.H.P. missed 14 of 40 scheduled visits. A.H.P. also failed to achieve the fifth and final goal of her treatment plan-cooperating with DPHHS. She failed to sign all of the necessary DPHHS releases, did not maintain weekly contact with her social worker, and did not address her problems or concerns with her social worker.

¶12 The District Court held a hearing on DPHHS’s petition to terminate A.H.P.’s parental rights to A.P.’s siblings, D.P. and K.S., on February 6,2007, nearly a month after DPHHS had removed A.P. from her father’s custody. A.H.P. voluntarily relinquished her rights to D.P., but not K.S., on February 13, 2007. The court concluded that A.H.P. had failed to follow the treatment plan in a meaningful way. The court terminated A.H.P.’s parental rights to K.S. on March 1, 2007.

¶13 DPHHS petitioned for involuntary termination of A.H.P.’s parental rights to A.P. on April 2, 2007. DPHHS asserted that A.P.’s case met the statutory criteria for termination of A.H.P.’s parental rights, pursuant to §§ 41-3-609(l)(d) and 41-3-423(2)(e), MCA, in light of the District Court’s recent decision to terminate parental rights to A.P.’s sibling, K.S. The DPHHS social worker testified at the May 1, 2007, hearing. The social worker outlined A.H.P.’s myriad and well-documented parenting issues since 1997. The social worker detailed A.H.P.’s failure to comply with the February, 2005, treatment plan in the youth in need of care proceeding that originally covered A.P. and her two siblings.

*43 ¶14 A.H.P. presented two objections at the hearing. First, A.H.P. argued that evidence from the termination proceeding regarding A.P.’s sibling was irrelevant to DPHHS’s petition to terminate A.H.P.’s parental rights to A.P. Second, A.H.P.’s counsel argued in the alternative that the statutes that allow a district court to terminate parental rights to one child on the basis of the previous termination of parental rights to the child’s sibling created a statutory presumption of parental unfitness. A.H.P.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matter of J.B. Jr. YINC
2016 MT 68 (Montana Supreme Court, 2016)
In re I.T.
2015 MT 43 (Montana Supreme Court, 2015)
Matter of I.T.
2015 MT 43 (Montana Supreme Court, 2015)
Matter of J.W.
2013 MT 201 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)
In re J.W.
2013 MT 201 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)
In Re Sir Messiah T.
782 N.W.2d 320 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2010)
Kulstad v. Maniaci
2009 MT 326 (Montana Supreme Court, 2009)
Sports Shooting Ass'n v. State, Mt. Dept. of Fwp
2008 MT 190 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
In re A.H.D.
2008 MT 57 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
In Re MP
2008 MT 39 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
In the Matter of Tsb
2008 MT 23 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
In re T.S.B.
2008 MT 23 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 MT 297, 172 P.3d 105, 340 Mont. 39, 2007 Mont. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-custody-parental-rights-of-ap-mont-2007.