In Re the Welfare of P.J.K.

369 N.W.2d 286, 1985 Minn. LEXIS 1087
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 14, 1985
DocketC6-83-2026
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 369 N.W.2d 286 (In Re the Welfare of P.J.K.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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 P.J.K., 369 N.W.2d 286, 1985 Minn. LEXIS 1087 (Mich. 1985).

Opinion

YETKA, Justice.

This case comes to this court on a petition for further review of the court of appeals’ decision, 356 N.W.2d 69, reversing the decision of the Hennepin County Juvenile Court terminating the parental rights of the father. We reverse the court of appeals and reinstate the judgment of the juvenile court.

Minn.Stat. § 260.221 (1984) allows termination of parental rights for any one of a number of grounds. The juvenile court terminated the father’s parental rights on three of the statutory grounds. They are:

That a parent is palpably unfit to be a party to the parent and child relationship because of a consistent pattern of specific conduct before the child or of specific conditions directly relating to the parent and child relationship either of which are determined by the court to be permanently detrimental to the physical or mental health of the child; or That following upon a determination of neglect or dependency, reasonable efforts, under the direction of the court, have failed to correct the conditions leading to the determination; or
* * * * * *
That the child is neglected and in foster care.

Minn.Stat. § 260.221, subds. 4, 5, 7 (1984). We find that there is adequate evidence to sustain the trial court’s finding on each of these separate grounds, and we, therefore, reverse the court of appeals.

A brief summary of the facts is required. The father of the two children whose welfare is the subject of this case is mentally retarded with an IQ of 68. Throughout his life, he has shown an inability to hold a job for any length of time. He and the children’s mother, who is also mentally retarded, separated in October 1974 and dissolved the marriage in September of 1975.

Their two children are also mentally and emotionally handicapped. P.J.K., who is now 11, is more handicapped than his brother J.L.K., who is now 10. P.J.K. has difficulty walking, dressing, and relieving himself. He is reluctant to talk and far behind his age group in school. J.L.K. is developmentally delayed. Although given to nervousness, facial tics, and speech problems, he is the brighter, more active, and more outgoing of the two. J.L.K. looks after P.J.K. much of the time and often answers for P.J.K. when P.J.K. is spoken to.

After the dissolution, the children were in the custody of their mother. The living conditions were so dismal that the children *288 were removed from the mother’s custody, determined dependent, and placed in a shelter. During the whole time that the children were in their mother’s custody, the father never visited them or expressed any concern for their living conditions.

After the children were removed, the father petitioned for their custody. A custody study was conducted. It recommended that, as of January 8, 1979, neither parent should have custody, but that the county should retain custody under the dependency and neglect statutes. The author of the study had serious doubts about the father’s fitness as a parent:

[The father], similarly, appears a slow-learning and inadequate person who has, at best, limited knowledge of his children’s problems and needs. There is ample indication that if both [P.J.K.] and [J.L.K.] are to grow into healthy, happy, reasonably well-adjusted children, they will need the very best in a home environment, adequate parenting, love, guidance, and supervision, if this is to be accomplished. It seems apparent that [the woman], who [the father] plans to marry, has neither the intellectual ability to care for herself, much less assume responsibilities for two children, particularly two children who have been as deprived and neglected as these. I am gravely concerned with regard to [the father’s] temper, his seeming inability to hold jobs and more importantly, his lack of any real understanding of his children. For these reasons I cannot recommend [the father] as a custodian for his children.

The matter was resolved by a court order on May 11, 1979. The father admitted that the children were dependent. Under that disposition, the father was required to seek individual counseling, attend parenting classes, follow through on any recommendation of a psychological evaluation, meet with a social worker to inform that social worker of his address, and visit with the children under supervision.

The father has done little to follow through with the goals of the 1979 order. Some individual counseling apparently was provided. The father also attended group parenting classes under Dr. Pi Nian Chang, a pediatric psychologist with the University of Minnesota. Dr. Chang recommended that the father stop attending, however, when, early on, it became evident that the father was not benefiting because of his inability to comprehend and discuss the class topics. In a report, Dr. Chang wrote, “However, I do see the need for continuous enrollment in parent training groups so that he will develop more concrete skills.” The father attended no other parenting classes.

The father’s relationship with the social workers on his case has been turbulent. He believes that he has been persecuted and given the “run-around” in the social work bureaucracy. He has been verbally abusive to both the social workers and to the foster parents of his children. In short, the father blames Hennepin County for keeping his children away from him and refuses to work with them.

Visitation has also been a problem. On the rare occasions when he has visited the children, their reactions have been adverse. Both foster mothers noticed that, after the visits, the children would be hyperactive and upset for several days, rocking and wetting their beds. When the father did not visit the children, they were less agitated, the rocking and bedwetting subsided. The boys hardly ever talked about their father when he was away.

The father’s visitation record has been poor. From the May 11, 1979 order until August 1979, the father visited the boys under supervision. Barbra Jarmuzek, the boys’ foster mother at the time, had a number of altercations with the father. He shook his fist at her because she had taken tinker toys with sharp ends away from the boys for fear they might poke themselves in the eyes. Another time, late in returning the children to the foster home, the father, in an argument with Ms. Jarmuzek, cursed her and created a disturbance in the neighborhood. Because of the father’s *289 abusiveness, visitation was suspended until December of 1979.

In December of 1979, Southside Services, Inc., provided a staff member, Lynda Mea-dor, to supervise the father’s visits with the children. After about a year of providing supervision, however, Southside could not afford to continue and had to transfer the supervision to Domestic Relations Services. The father would not accept supervised visitation and would not see his children until a year later in December 1981.

Shortly thereafter, the father disappeared. Social services looked for him, but could not find him. The father’s own attorney did not know where he was. It eventually came to light that he had moved to the Iron Range to find work.

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Bluebook (online)
369 N.W.2d 286, 1985 Minn. LEXIS 1087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-welfare-of-pjk-minn-1985.