In re the Parental Rights to: S.A.J. & J.C.J.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 14, 2019
Docket35732-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Parental Rights to: S.A.J. & J.C.J. (In re the Parental Rights to: S.A.J. & J.C.J.) 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 Parental Rights to: S.A.J. & J.C.J., (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 14, 2019 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 Parental Rights to: ) No. 35732-5-III ) (consolidated w/ S.A.J. ) No. 35733-3-III) ) ) In the Matter of the Parental Rights to: ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) J.C.J. )

PENNELL, A.C.J. — Tabitha Stueckle appeals trial court orders terminating her

parental rights to her minor children, J.C.J. and S.A.J. We affirm.

FACTS

Ms. Stueckle is the mother of J.C.J. (a son born in 2007) and S.A.J. (a daughter

born in 2009). Ms. Stueckle was married to the children’s father for several years.

During the course of the marriage, Ms. Stueckle’s husband subjected her to physical and

emotional abuse. The abusive environment came to the attention of the Department of

Social and Health Services in 2010.

Once the Department became involved, Ms. Stueckle tried escaping her husband’s

abuse by moving into a domestic violence shelter with her children. Unfortunately, this

was not a lasting solution. Ms. Stueckle soon moved back in with her husband. She also Nos. 35732-5-III; 35733-3-III In re Parental Rights to S.A.J.

declined several services from the Department, although she eventually participated in a

parenting and a domestic violence class.

In 2012, the Department received a referral alleging Ms. Stueckle had physically

abused her son, J.C.J. Around that time, Ms. Stueckle had received diagnoses of

depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). She was engaged in

voluntary counseling on a monthly basis that began in 2012 and continued to the time of

trial. 1 A short time after the Department received the referral, Ms. Stueckle left her

children with their father in Omak and moved to the Tri-Cities. Although Ms. Stueckle

knew that leaving her children with their father placed them at risk, she felt unable to take

them with her.

Once Ms. Stueckle was out of the family home, her husband filed for dissolution

and he was designated primary custodian of the two children. Ms. Stueckle was given

visitation rights, but was rarely able to exercise them. From the time Ms. Stueckle left the

family home in 2012 until July 2014, she saw her children in person only three times.

1 At trial, it was revealed that Ms. Stueckle may have been receiving counseling from an occupational therapist instead of a mental health therapist. However, Ms. Stueckle had stated that she was unwilling to participate in any further counseling. In addition, there was testimony that Ms. Stueckle’s therapist at Lourdes Counseling Center in the Tri-Cities refused to release information to the Department.

2 Nos. 35732-5-III; 35733-3-III In re Parental Rights to S.A.J.

Ms. Stueckle’s move from Omak to the Tri-Cities enabled her to get on with her

life. She found a new partner, who was not abusive. She also had two additional

children.

Although Ms. Stueckle benefitted from leaving Omak, her two older children

suffered. J.C.J. and S.A.J. were subjected to years of physical abuse by their father, his

girlfriend, and other relatives. S.A.J. also suffered sexual abuse. By the time the

Department learned of this ongoing abuse, both children exhibited significant behavioral

challenges. Although J.C.J. was aged six and S.A.J. was aged four, the testimony at trial

was that neither child had been toilet trained. Both children engaged in violent outbursts

and S.A.J. acted out sexually. The Department placed both children in protective custody.

The Department filed a dependency petition for each of the children in April 2014.

In July, the children’s father agreed to a dependency order. He ultimately relinquished his

parental rights.

Because the Department lacked her contact information, Ms. Stueckle’s

involvement in the dependency was somewhat delayed. An agreed dependency order as

to Ms. Stueckle was finally entered in October 2014. Her parental deficiencies were

identified as: failure to protect her children, poor supervision, and poor parenting skills.

The court-ordered service plan required Ms. Stueckle to participate in and complete a

3 Nos. 35732-5-III; 35733-3-III In re Parental Rights to S.A.J.

parenting course, a parenting assessment, a domestic violence evaluation, and to submit to

random urinalysis (UA). Ms. Stueckle submitted all the requested UAs, each of which

resulted in negative findings.

Ms. Stueckle’s participation in services and visitation was hampered by a variety

of personal circumstances. She lived several hours away from J.C.J. and S.A.J. She was

dealing with a new family in the Tri-Cities. And, for the first several months of the

dependency, she was busy responding to a criminal case in the Tri-Cities. Although the

Department provided transportation assistance, Ms. Stueckle rarely found herself able to

visit her two older children in person. 2 Most of Ms. Stueckle’s visits with her children

took place via Skype video conferencing.

When Ms. Stueckle had interactions with J.C.J. and S.A.J., she struggled to

address their needs. Ms. Stueckle exhibited difficulty focusing on her children, she

frequently dismissed or would one-up the children’s statements, and her efforts to manage

the children’s behaviors were ineffective. Ms. Stueckle’s children did not react well to

her visits. During the time together, the children were emotionally withdrawn. After the

visits, both children exhibited increased instances of acting out.

2 In 2014, Ms. Stueckle attended 4 in-person visits with J.C.J. and S.A.J. In 2015 she attended at least 12 visits. But in 2016, Ms. Stueckle’s visits were less frequent and she only attended 1 in-person visit prior to the termination trial in 2017.

4 Nos. 35732-5-III; 35733-3-III In re Parental Rights to S.A.J.

The services that were provided to Ms. Stueckle had little impact on her parenting

skills. Ms. Stueckle attended a parenting course during the summer of 2015, but did not

demonstrate any observable improvement in her parenting methods. Ms. Stueckle also

attended a women’s empowerment group. Although Ms. Stueckle appeared comfortable

in the group, she failed to demonstrate much change in her behavior.

Ms. Stueckle also declined services that might have helped her meet the needs of

J.C.J. and S.A.J. Citing travel difficulties, she opted not to participate in therapeutic visits

with her children. These visits could have helped Ms. Stueckle learn about and attend to

her children’s special needs. Ms. Stueckle also declined participation in a year-long

domestic violence support program. Ms. Stueckle felt the group was inappropriate for her

because she believed it was designed for perpetrators of abuse, not victims. The

Department maintained the group was appropriate because Ms. Stueckle was no longer in

an abusive relationship and the program was designed to build personal accountability for

“both the abuser and the abused” in a “gender specific” format. Ex. 26 at 2.

During the course of the dependency, Ms. Stueckle participated in two parenting

assessments. The second assessment, completed in April 2017, noted Ms. Stueckle

demonstrated “extreme paranoia.” Report of Proceedings (Aug. 10, 2017) at 118. The

parenting assessment recommended a psychological / mental health evaluation to obtain

5 Nos. 35732-5-III; 35733-3-III In re Parental Rights to S.A.J.

an accurate diagnosis.

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