In Re the Welfare of A.H.

402 N.W.2d 598, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 17, 1987
DocketC1-86-1316
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 402 N.W.2d 598 (In Re the Welfare of A.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Welfare of A.H., 402 N.W.2d 598, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4167 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

CRIPPEN, Judge.

A mother whose parental rights were terminated pursuant to three statutory grounds appeals from the judgment and order denying a new trial. We affirm.

FACTS

R.W.H. and appellant C.A.H. were married in November 1977 and are the parents of three minor children: A.H., born December 31, 1977; J.H., born November 23, 1979; and C.H., born August 28, 1982. C.A.H., the children’s mother, was their primary caretaker, with R.W.H. providing little or no parenting.

In 1980, C.A.H. began receiving psychiatric counseling for help with recurring episodes of believing someone was trying to break into her house in order to injure or kill her. These experiences were incapaci *600 tating and prevented her from adequately caring for her children. C.A.H. has since been determined to have a paranoid schizophrenic disorder. She is treated with antidepressant and antipsychotic medications, but she often fails to consistently take her medication and continues to have psychotic episodes. She has occasionally been hospitalized during particularly severe crises.

Respondent Scott County began providing the family with a variety of social services soon after R.W.H. and C.A.H. married. This assistance intensified due to C.A.H.’s mental illness and included homemaker and social worker services, parenting skill instruction, day care for the children, public health nursing, financial assistance to repair the family’s home and pay heating bills, transportation for C.A.H. to medical and counseling appointments, and enrollment of A.H. and J.H. in a Developmental Achievement Center (DAC).

From 1978 through September 1983, county workers documented numerous examples of parental inadequacies, including repeated failures to keep the house clean and to bathe, clothe, or feed the children. In addition, J.H. suffered several injuries while C.A.H. was at home with the children. In October 1982, J.H. wandered onto the highway in front of the family’s house and was hit by a ear, breaking her leg; in July 1983 she was seriously injured by a dog while playing outside; and in August 1983 J.H. fell out of a second floor window, came back inside, and lay down on the sofa without C.A.H. being aware that she had fallen. J.H. was hospitalized for head injuries following this last episode. R.W.H. never assumed any parental duties and would take the children to his parents’ home when C.A.H. was hospitalized or otherwise incapacitated.

In September 1983, C.A.H. suffered a mental crisis, and she approached Scott County Human Services (SCHS) for help with the children. She and R.W.H. signed a voluntary placement agreement with the county and the children were placed in a foster home. Their foster mother, Sarah Mobley, described A.H. (then nearing age 6) and J.H. (nearing age 4) as small, pale, and thin, missing large chunks of hair, unable to wash their faces, brush their teeth, comb their hair, dress themselves, use eating utensils, drink from a cup, or go to the bathroom without help. Mobley and aides at the DAC described J.H. She showed no natural curiosity, avoided all eye contact, and spoke unintelligibly. C.H. (age one) had only four teeth, could not chew or eat solid food, did not communicate with either sounds or eye contact, and did not know how to sit up, crawl, or pick things up. Evaluations performed by psychologist Dr. Susan DeVries in January 1984 confirmed that all three of the children were severely developmentally delayed.

Initially, R.W.H. and C.A.H. visited the children on a fairly regular basis, usually twice a week. However, SCHS terminated visitation in January 1984 because of its negative effect on the children. Mobley stated that A.H. and J.H. hid their shoes and coats when they were to go meet their parents, that J.H. sometimes returned from visits in almost a catatonic state, and that C.H. returned without clean diapers. When visits took place at the foster home, Mobley observed that neither parent exerted any control over the children and that R.W.H. did not participate unless the children approached him. A.H. and J.H. cried, ran uncontrolled around the house, or hid in the bathroom during the visits. C.H. did not appear to recognize or respond to his parents in any way, and they also paid little attention to him, to the point of ignoring him as he was choking on a piece of cellophane paper during one visit.

In January 1984, respondent county petitioned to terminate the parental rights of R.W.H. and C.A.H. Psychologist Dr. Lowell Campbell evaluated the parents in April 1984 and concluded that “it is highly unlikely that significant positive and permanent changes in the psychological and parental functioning of [R.W.H. and C.A.H.] will occur regardless of the interventions which are taken.” Throughout 1984, county social workers continued reg *601 ular counseling and parental skills training sessions with C.A.H., but reported no progress.

Campbell re-evaluated R.W.H. and C.A.H. in April 1985. He reported that since his April 1984 contact with C.A.H. he had been called upon to help her four times, twice in February 1985. He stated that on these occasions C.A.H. was “clearly out of touch with reality and required rather extensive phone consultation during the early morning hours to calm her down.”

Campbell concluded from his April 1985 evaluation that R.W.H. and C.A.H. “appeared essentially unchanged from my 1984 evaluation,” and that they “continue to show little, if any, insight into their own psychological functioning, roles and responsibilities as parents.” The “consultation did not provide me with any new hope that they are in a better position to parent their children at this point in time than they were one year ago.” He recommended “that all three children will be best served by placement outside of the parental home and that termination of parental rights is a necessity in this ease.”

In May 1985, Dr. DeVries re-evaluated the children and reported satisfactory progress, although they still exhibited developmental delay. DeVries also evaluated R.W.H. and C.A.H. and recommended a trial series of supervised visits with the children. However, DeVries concluded the children should continue to stay in foster care because R.W.H. and C.A.H. had not shown an ability to meet the “special educational needs [of A.H. and J.H.], which include a high need for environmental stimulation to maintain their cognitive growth,” or to provide the necessary “model of healthy social and emotional behavior” for all three children.

In July 1985, by stipulation of the parties and parental admissions of neglect of the children, the county agreed to amend its 1984 petition to a neglect petition, subject to review after five months. The parties further stipulated to a transfer of legal custody of the children to SCHS. In addition, the parents agreed to comply with the following conditions: (1) participation in the county’s Family Reunification Program, (2) involvement in the children’s schooling by attending all meetings and following all suggestions, (3) regular meetings with county social workers; (4) involvement of the children in individual therapy as determined by SCHS; and (5) visitation with the children as determined and structured by the Family Reunification Program staff. C.A.H. further agreed to take her prescribed medication and participate in individual therapy. R.W.H. further agreed to find employment.

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Related

In Re the Welfare of the Children of S.W.
727 N.W.2d 144 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2007)
In Re Child of E.V.
634 N.W.2d 443 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2001)
In Re the Welfare of A.J.C.
556 N.W.2d 616 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1996)
In Re the Welfare of J.S.
470 N.W.2d 697 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1991)
In Re the Welfare of D.I.
413 N.W.2d 560 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
402 N.W.2d 598, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-welfare-of-ah-minnctapp-1987.