In Re the Custody & the Parental Rights of J.H.

1998 MT 128, 958 P.2d 1191, 289 Mont. 111, 55 State Rptr. 504, 1998 Mont. LEXIS 110
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1998
Docket97-650
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1998 MT 128 (In Re the Custody & the Parental Rights of J.H.) 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 & the Parental Rights of J.H., 1998 MT 128, 958 P.2d 1191, 289 Mont. 111, 55 State Rptr. 504, 1998 Mont. LEXIS 110 (Mo. 1998).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 In proceedings before the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, Michelle Hamlin’s custodial rights as the mother of J.H., R.H., D.H., and R.H. were awarded to the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services. Hamlin appeals. We affirm.

¶2 The issue is whether the District Court abused its discretion when it awarded Hamlin’s custodial rights to the Department.

¶3 J.H., R.H., D.H., and R.H. were declared youths in need of care in November 1995. At that time, the children were living with their maternal aunt and uncle because their father was in jail for domestic abuse and their mother, Hamlin, was having trouble seeing to their needs, such as getting them to school. Hamlin and the children’s father were divorced. The aunt and uncle’s home became the children’s foster care placement. At the time of the June and July 1997 hearing on the Department’s petition to terminate Hamlin’s parental rights, J.H., R.H., D.H., and R.H. ranged in age from three to eleven years old and had been living with their aunt and uncle for two years.

¶4 When the children were declared youths in need of care, Hamlin and the Department entered into a treatment plan agreement which, *113 by its terms, could be completed within six months. The plan required Hamlin to: submit to therapy for co-dependency, self-esteem, and other issues relating to her failure to adequately care for the children; successfully complete an anger management program to address domestic violence issues; successfully complete parenting classes; attend a survivor group to deal with victimization; demonstrate her ability to parent through employment, stable housing, and attending to her emotional needs; schedule and maintain visits with the children without entertaining others during those visits; continue to work in the Healthy Start program; and obtain a chemical dependency evaluation and follow the recommendations of that evaluation.

¶5 The Department presented evidence that Hamlin initially had been consistent about visiting her children under her treatment plan, but when she was reminded that she was not to bring others with her to visit her children, she began missing visits. In January 1996, she told her sister with whom the children were living that she was leaving town permanently, but told her sister not to tell the children. Hamlin then moved to Wyoming with her boyfriend.

¶6 After Hamlin moved to Wyoming, her Helena, Montana, caseworker arranged for an interstate compact to allow her to complete her treatment plan in Wyoming. However, Hamlin did not keep her Wyoming caseworker informed of her changing whereabouts. The Wyoming caseworker notified the Montana caseworker in September 1996 that he wanted to close the case because he was unable to locate Hamlin.

¶7 The Department presented testimony that although Hamlin’s chemical dependency evaluation resulted in a recommendation that she obtain inpatient chemical dependency treatment, she did not show up for such treatment when it was arranged for her. In Wyoming, she attended one mental health counseling session and had not started parenting classes. She did not complete other counseling as required under her treatment plan. She had not maintained stable housing or employment. She claimed that she underwent a second chemical dependency evaluation which concluded that she was not chemically dependent, but she did not have the written results because she was unable to pay for the evaluation.

¶8 After she moved to Wyoming, Hamlin initially maintained telephone contact with the children but that ceased in October 1996. Although she sent the children Christmas presents and birthday presents from Wyoming, the birthday presents all arrived late. Hamlin *114 visited her children on three days in May 1996 when she had a court appearance in this matter. There were no other visits between Hamlin and the four children between January 1996 and the June and July 1997 hearing.

¶9 The three oldest children were all receiving mental health counseling. All three suffered from psychological problems which the counselor identified as resulting from living in their parents’ violent and chaotic household and then being confused about why they no longer lived with their parents. Their counselor testified that they did not view living with their mother as a possibility for them in the future. Hamlin’s oldest son suffered from a chronic, low-grade depression. The second-oldest child, R.H., suffered from an anxiety disorder. D.H. had some depression and repression of emotions and had “acted out” by starting fires. The youngest child, R.H., was less than one year old when he moved in with his aunt and uncle and did not remember Hamlin.

¶10 All the professionals agreed that the children desperately need permanency — to know where they will be living for the long term. By all accounts, the children have improved in school attendance and performance and emotionally while living with their aunt and uncle’s family. The aunt testified that the children love their mother and miss her, but that they do not want to move to Wyoming. She further testified that she and her husband were willing to commit to long-term foster care of all four children.

¶ 11 The court determined that Hamlin had failed to comply with the provisions of her treatment plan and that she had abandoned the children by failing to have any contact with them between May of 1996 and the hearing. The court further determined that the children needed to be placed permanently, and that this needed to happen immediately: “The children cannot wait any longer to see if their mother might someday become an adequate parent to them.” The court determined that it was in the best interests of the children to remain in the home of their aunt and uncle, and awarded their care and custody to the Department until they are eighteen years of age, with the recommendation that they be placed with the aunt and uncle. The court further ordered that Hamlin shall have contact with the children only if the Department determines contact to be in the children’s best interests, and that any visits shall be therapeutically supervised unless the children’s therapist determines that supervision is not necessary.

*115 ¶12 In a companion case, the District Court placed the custodial rights of the children’s father with the Department. The father did not appeal, but Hamlin does.

DISCUSSION

¶13 Did the District Court abuse its discretion when it awarded Hamlin’s custodial rights to the Department?

¶ 14 Although Hamlin, in her brief, characterizes the District Court’s decision as one terminating her parental rights to her children, the court did not terminate her parental rights. The court concluded in part as follows:

The State has presented a compelling case to terminate [Hamlin’s] parental rights to the children and to place the children with the Department with the right to consent to the adoption of the children. Under the unique circumstances of this case, however, the Court concludes that it would not be appropriate to do so, at least at this time.

Instead, the court declared J.H., R.H., D.H., and R.H.

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Related

In Re LMAT
2002 MT 163 (Montana Supreme Court, 2002)
In Re TC
2001 MT 264 (Montana Supreme Court, 2001)
In Re the Custody & Parental Rights of M.W.
2001 MT 78 (Montana Supreme Court, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
1998 MT 128, 958 P.2d 1191, 289 Mont. 111, 55 State Rptr. 504, 1998 Mont. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-custody-the-parental-rights-of-jh-mont-1998.