In Re the Interest of A.M.W.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 2014
DocketED100740
StatusPublished

This text of In Re the Interest of A.M.W. (In Re the Interest of A.M.W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Interest of A.M.W., (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Su the Missourt Court of Appeals Eastern District

DIVISION THREE

IN RE THE INTEREST OF A.M.W. ED100740

Appeal from the Circuit Court of St. Louis County

) ) ) ) ) ) 13SL-JU00077 ) ) Honorable John D. Warner, Jr. ) ) Filed: October 7, 2014 Introduction

This is a sad case of a young girl who became a mother at fifteen years of age, a child herself at the time, to a daughter, A.M.W. This young mother (Mother) inappropriately disciplined her daughter when the child was four, which brought the family to the attention of the Children’s Division. Four years later, Mother, now twenty- three years old and more mature, is facing the permanent loss of her daughter through the Circuit Court, Juvenile Division’s Guvenile court) involuntary termination of her parental rights. The termination is not due to a current risk of abuse to the child, but to Mother’s failure to follow the instructions of the Children’s Division.

Mother now appeals the juvenile court’s Judgment and Order terminating her

parental rights to her daughter, AM.W. Because the termination was not supported by sufficient evidence, we reverse the juvenile court’s order and remand for entry of a new judgment in accordance with this opinion. Background

Mother is the natural parent of A.M.W., born on October 22, 2006. On October 29, 2010, the Department of Social Services, Children’s Division (Children’s Division) took immediate temporary protective custody of A.M.W. following an incident where Mother struck A.M.W, with a belt on her neck, legs, and arms, causing red marks, welts, and bruises.

At a December 6, 2010 hearing on the temporary placement of A.M.W., the juvenile court found A.M.W. had been abused or neglected, took jurisdiction over her, and placed her in foster care. At this hearing and at later hearings, the juvenile court ordered Mother to participate in a parenting assessment, to participate in counseling, to successfully complete parenting classes, to work toward obtaining her GED, to maintain suitable housing, to obtain and maintain suitable employment, and to participate in a medical or psychiatric assessment concerning her Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) diagnosis. Mother’s service plan established that Mother would visit with A.M.W, at least twice per month and provide financial contributions toward her support. Later, the juvenile court also ordered that A.M.W. shall have no contact with any adult without prior approval from Children’s Division and that A.M.W., shall have no contact with Mother’s boyfriend without the agreement of A.M.W.’s therapist.

In January of 2013, Children’s Division filed a petition to terminate Mother’s parental rights (TPR), The petition asserted A.M.W. had been in foster care for at least

fifteen of the most recent twenty-two months, A.M.W. had been adjudicated abused or

neglected in December of 2010, the conditions which led to the juvenile court’s assumption of jurisdiction still persisted, potentially harmful conditions existed with little likelihood that the conditions would be remedied, and the continuation of the parent-child relationship greatly diminished A.M.W.’s prospects for integration into a stable and permanent home.

The evidence adduced at the TPR trial revealed the following. Mother was supposed to have visitation with A.M.W. at least twice a month, according to her service plan. In the thirty-three months between November 2010 and July 2013—which was the timeframe testified to at trial—Mother complied with the service plan’s twice-a-month visitation for twenty-four months, but did not comply for nine months. The foster care coordinator testified that mother missed twenty-three visits with A.M.W., but our review of the record and testimony reveals that in total, Mother missed seventeen scheduled visits with A.M.W.: twice when she had no transportation, twice for job interviews, five times when she failed to call to confirm the appointment, | four times when she canceled the appointment, and four times when she simply failed to appear for a confirmed appointment. Of the four times when she failed to show for a confirmed appointment, she later explained that for two of them she had misunderstood the time. A.M.W. would become very upset when Mother missed visits. Mother also refused to schedule visits between December 15, 2011, and January 31, 2012, because she was angry that she was being denied unsupervised visitation.

Mother’s visitation was mostly supervised. Children’s Division denied Mother unsupervised visitation because she allowed her boyfriend, J.R., to be present for

A.M.W.’s visits, even though Children’s Division had not granted him permission to

' The visitation procedure was that Mother would call the day before the scheduled visit to confirm.

have contact with AM.W. J.R. is the father of Mother’s younger child. Children’s Division denied J.R. permission based on its 2010 finding by a preponderance of the evidence that J.R. committed child abuse or neglect. Specifically, J.R. had made an alcoholic beverage for himself in a child’s sippy cup and the drink was then given’ to a child, resulting in the child’s hospitalization with a blood alcohol content of .41. J.R. provided certificates of having completed parenting programs. Mother, however, testified at trial that she and J.R. are no longer in a relationship and are just friends.

Mother completed a parenting assessment, which recommended parenting classes. Mother participated in the SMART Parenting program until the program ended for lack of funding in December of 2011. SMART Parenting program documentation showed that Mother completed thirty-five home visits between December of 2010 and November of 2011, five of which were with AM.W. The SMART Parenting educator reported that Mother was nurturing, loving, and appropriate toward A.M.W. during their visits, and that Mother was cooperative and open to learning and discussing new parenting skills. The SMART Parenting educator stated that she had “no safety concerns” and did not believe A.M.W. would be at risk of being harmed if she were returned to Mother’s custody.

Mother began seeing Natasha Turner for counseling services in September of 2011, and was still seeing her at the time of trial. Turner testified at trial that she had given Mother an initial diagnosis of ADHD, which affects her ability to follow through, to organize her life, and her short-term memory. Turner testified that once she had

established a system with Mother where her appointments were scheduled on her phone,

* The record is silent as to who gave the drink to the child. We note that the child at issue in that case was neither A.M.W., nor A.M.W.’s sister.

Mother stopped missing appointments. Mother had been prescribed medicine for her ADHD, but she did not take the medicine consistently. Turner testified that Mother was serious about trying to address her issues. Turner had observed Mother with A.M.W. and with her other daughter, and Turner testified that Mother was implementing what she had Jearned in the SMART Parenting programs, specifically regarding being patient. Turner agreed on cross-examination that she did not know of a medical diagnosis of ADHD, but pointed out that a doctor had prescribed Mother ADHD medication.

Mother was ordered to work on obtaining her GED. Although Mother registered for GED classes more than once, including with the Carondelet Literacy Program, she attended sporadically. Mother took the GED test in July of 2013, but she did not pass all sections.

Mother was ordered to maintain steady employment but failed to do so. She reported several low-wage jobs, but each lasted only a month or so. At the time of trial, Mother had been hired full time at Comcast making $9.00 per hour but had not started yet.

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