In re the Termination of: J. B.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 19, 2016
Docket33115-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Termination of: J. B. (In re the Termination of: J. B.) 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 Termination of: J. B., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED April 19, 2016 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division Ill

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

In the Matter of the Parental Rights to ) No. 33115-6-111 ) (consolidated with J.B.; L.W.-B.; and J.W.-B. ) No. 33116-4-111 ) No. 33117-2-111 ) No. 33118-1-111 ) No. 33119-9-111) ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION )

PENNELL, J. -This case involves an appeal of an order terminating parental rights.

Both parents contend the statutory "best interests of the child" standard in RCW

13.34.190 is unconstitutionally vague. In addition, the father, L.W., challenges several

factual findings pertaining to his order of termination. We find no error and affirm.

FACTS

J.B. is the mother of three minor children. L.W. is the presumed father of J.B.'s

middle child (a son) and alleged father of J.B.'s youngest child (a daughter).

In March 2013, the trial court found all three children dependent based on

concerns about abuse and neglect. The dispositional orders required J.B. and L.W. to

participate in services. Initially, the parents were compliant. However, by mid-2013,

things changed. Despite caseworkers' assertions they were willing to schedule around

L.W.'s schedule, L.W. cited his work schedule as the reason for not engaging in services.

J.B. similarly stopped using the offered services. Caseworkers had difficulty contacting

J.B. and L.W. over the course of the dependency. J.B. abandoned visits with her oldest No. 33115-6-III (consol. w/ Nos. 33116-4-III, 33117-2-III, 33118-1-III and 33119-9-III) In re Parental Rights to JB.; L. W-B.; and J W-B

child not long after the dependency was initiated. The trial court eventually ordered

J.B.'s visits with her oldest child be stopped at J.B.'s request. J.B. and L.W. stipulated to

suspending visitation with the two children held in common in June 2013. J.B.'s visits

with the two younger children were reinstated in September 2013, but L.W.'s were not as

he failed to attend the hearing.

On December 2, 2013, the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS)

moved to terminate parental rights as to all three children. Trial was held on October 28-

30, 2014. During trial, the court heard testimony from numerous witnesses and reviewed

33 exhibits. Throughout the trial, J.B.'s attendance was intermittent and L.W. only

briefly attended on the final day of trial before returning to work.

The trial court found both J.B. and L.W. unfit to parent. With respect to L.W. (the

only parent challenging the court's findings), the court cited the abuse L.W. inflicted on

two of the three children, his failure to engage successfully in the recommended services,

dangerous discipline used with the children, his refusal to acknowledge his mental health

disorders, drug problems apparently no longer in remission, his failure to meet simple

conditions to reinstate visits with the two youngest children, and his failure to understand

J.B. 's deficiencies. The trial court went on to note case-specific factors supporting the

children's need for permanency and showing termination was in the children's best

2 No. 33115-6-111 (consol. w/ Nos. 33116-4-111, 33117-2-111, 33118-1-111 and 33119-9-111) In re Parental Rights to J.B.; L. W-B.; and J. W-B

interests. Among other things, the court discussed J.B. and L.W. 's behavior during a

parenting assessment, the younger children's anxious attachment to their parents, the

treating therapist's conclusion J.B. and L.W. were unaware of how their behavior affected

the children, L.W.'s use of inappropriate discipline, the children's fear of their parents,

and the progress the children had made in their foster homes.

ANALYSIS

Substantial Evidence

L. W. contends the court's findings of fact in support of termination were

unsupported by the evidence. During the proceedings below, the State was required to

prove the statutory factors justifying termination by clear, cogent, and convincing

evidence. RCW 13.34.190(1 )(a)(i). With this burden satisfied, the State was then

required to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that termination would be in the

best interests of the children. In re Welfare ofC.B., 134 Wn. App. 942, 952, 143 P.3d

846 (2006).

We will uphold the trial court's findings on appeal so long as they are supported by

substantial evidence in light of the applicable burden of proof. Id. at 952-53.

"Substantial evidence is evidence sufficient to persuade a fair-minded rational person of

the truth of the declared premise." Id. at 953. The trial court's decision is entitled to

3 No. 33115-6-III (consol. w/ Nos. 33116-4-III, 33117-2-III, 33118-1-III and 33119-9-III) In re Parental Rights to J.B.; L. W-B.; and J. W-B

deference, and this court does not judge the credibility of witnesses or weigh the

evidence. Id. at 952-53.

L.W. makes three challenges to the trial court's findings. He argues the court erred

in finding (1) his two children were anxious about his availability, (2) his son was afraid

of him, and (3) he made no positive changes throughout the dependency.

L. W.' s first assignment of error appears to center on the concern that the trial court

simply held L.W.'s lack of visitation against him. This was not the case. While the trial

court recognized L.W.'s children had a better relationship with him than their mother,

numerous witnesses testified to the children's anxious attachment to their father.

Furthermore, the treating therapist, Dr. Moore, explained that L.W. failed to appreciate

the emotional impact on his children when he did not show up for visits. Substantial

evidence supports the trial court's finding that L.W.'s children were anxious about his

availability.

Next, L.W. challenges the court's finding that his son was afraid of him. L.W.

contends substantial evidence does not support this finding because there was testimony

his son's previous foster father also traumatized him. 1 L.W. does not challenge the trial

1 In a footnote, L. W. argues finding of fact XVII is not supported by substantial evidence for the same reason. That finding states the allegations in the termination petition are true and adopted as a finding of fact. It is unclear what exactly L.W. is

4 No. 33115-6-III (consol. w/ Nos. 33116-4-III, 33117-2-III, 33118-1-III and 33119-9-III) In re Parental Rights to JB.; L. W.-B.; and J W.-B

court's finding that L.W. had "beat his son with belts and cords" and that he engaged in

"[ d]angerous discipline rising to torture." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 171-72. Nor does he

challenge the finding that L. W. abused J.B.' s oldest child in the presence of his son.

Perhaps not surprisingly, given this level of abuse, several witnesses testified that L. W. 's

son displayed fear specific to his father. Again, substantial evidence supports the trial

court's findings.

Lastly, L.W. challenges the trial court's conclusion he made no positive changes

throughout the dependency. He argues he did engage in services, although the demands

of his work schedule interfered with their completion. He points to his positive

interactions with his two children as further support. L.W.

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