In re T.W.R.

887 P.2d 941, 1994 Alas. LEXIS 123
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1994
DocketNo. S-5591
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 887 P.2d 941 (In re T.W.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re T.W.R., 887 P.2d 941, 1994 Alas. LEXIS 123 (Ala. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

After the State claimed that two of her children were children in need of aid and took custody of them, T.R. (the mother) underwent parenting education. When the State concluded that her progress was inadequate, the superior court allowed the State to take custody of the third child, and ultimately terminated T.R.’s parental rights as to all three children. T.R. now appeals. We affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

At the center of this case are three boys: J.P.M., born June 2, 1985; T.W.R., born August 25, 1988; and P.S.R., born April 11, 1991. R.R. is the natural father of T.W.R. and P.S.R. K.M. is the natural father of J.P.M. R.R. relinquished his parental rights to T.W.R. and P.S.R. K.M. did not oppose the State’s efforts at any stage of the proceedings, and purportedly told the State that he would consent to adoption by J.P.M.’s foster parents. The mother asserts that her sons should be returned to her custody.

On July 27, 1990, the Aaska Department of Health & Social Services (the Department) filed a petition for temporary custody of T.W.R. and J.P.M., alleging that they were children in need of aid (CINA):

The parents have not been meeting physical, mental, emotional and social needs of their children which has resulted in both children failing to thrive and serious developmental delays. The conditions of filth the children live in are to the extent that even after being in alternative care for a week upon being examined by Dr. Berge-son, [T.W.R.] still has cradle cap and a diaper rash, and [J.P.M.] is off the chart in the past 2 months (no growth).

The petition was signed by Kim L. Brewis, the social worker who had been handling the case.

Brewis, T.R., and R.R.1 stipulated to temporary custody until October 27, 1990, and acknowledged that “active participation in individual counseling and progress toward addressing the issues” would be necessary if there were to be any hope of the boys being released from state custody. They also acknowledged that the decision whether to return the boys to the parental home would be up to the Department. Under the stipulation, the parents would attend parenting classes, and would be allowed regularly scheduled visits with the boys, arranged by Brewis.

On November 20, 1990, the Department filed a petition for adjudication of CINA status and for temporary custody of T.W.R. and J.P.M. for a period not to exceed two years. The petition noted:

The parents are unable to meet the physical, mental, emotional, and social needs of [943]*943their children which has resulted in both children failing to thrive and serious developmental delays. [R.R.] is presently incarcerated at [Fairbanks] Correctional Center and [the mother] is unable at this time to meet the needs of her children.

Everyone involved2 signed a second stipulation waiving a hearing and agreeing that an additional one year of state custody would be in the best interests of the children. R.R. and the mother reaffirmed their willingness to undergo parenting classes and counseling. The superior court entered an order adjudging the children to be in need of aid, and placing them in the Department’s custody for a period not to exceed one year.

On November 20, 1991, the Department petitioned for another extension, this time for two years. This petition suggested that R.R. was the primary threat to the children’s well-being:

[R.R. and the mother] have not successfully dealt with the abuse them children suffered in counseling. We believe the children are still at risk of being harmed and that [the mother] is unable to protect her children if [R.R.] intended to do them harm. We believe further services are necessary to assure the children’s [safety]. Services are to include anger and stress management, continued individual and joint counseling, foster care for the minors, and further parenting education.

Brewis’s annual report recommended continuation of the status quo, and listed the expected date of the children’s return to the parental home as “[u]ncertain and dependent on the parents [sic] understanding and meeting the needs of their children and providing a safe and nurturing home for them.” The guardian ad litem (GAL) filed a report that also placed blame on R.R., quoting a psychological profile of him that stated that all parties would have “blood on their hands” if the boys were returned.

In January 1992, T.R., R.R., and K.M. stipulated to another year of state custody, and the superior court entered an order consistent with that stipulation. The mother requested overnight visits. Brewis filed an affidavit on April 6, 1992 that stated:

We do not believe substantial progress has been made by [R.R.] in complying with the terms of the stipulation.
[If R.R. were present,] [w]e do not believe [the mother] would supervise closely enough and would be unable to overrule [R.R.] in the children’s behalf to protect them if necessary.

The superior court ordered the Department to permit an overnight visitation between T.R. and the children “provided that [R.R.] is not in the home and has no contact with the children.”

On June 24, 1992, R.R. filed a relinquishment of parental rights to T.W.R. On the same day, the Department filed a petition for temporary custody of the third son, P.S.R., and for a CINA determination as to P.S.R. The petition stated that P.S.R. had been ill for approximately two months, and that T.R. and R.R. appeared “to be unable to provide the physical and emotional nurturance and or the medical care required for the minor to recover.” T.R. did not oppose thirty-day temporary custody for the Department. The superior court granted the Department temporary custody for thirty days.

Thereafter T.R. moved for regular unsupervised visitations. The GAL and the Department opposed this motion. The GAL informed the court, additionally, that P.S.R. was failing to thrive, and that the GAL believed that T.R. was unable to care for any of her children. Therefore, the GAL recommended termination of T.R.’s parental rights. As noted above, until that point, the goal of T.R. and the State had been the return of the boys to T.R.

A temporary custody hearing was then held, at which the parties requested a trial on the issue of termination of T.R.’s parental rights. The parties also stipulated to an extension of state custody until the conclusion of the trial. The case was set for trial for the week of November 16, 1992, and temporary custody was extended through the [944]*944superior court’s resolution of the termination question.

R.R. filed a second relinquishment of parental rights, this time to both T.W.R. and P.S.R., and the superior court ordered the rights relinquished. On September 21, 1992, the Department filed a petition seeking an adjudication of P.S.R.’s CINA status, and requesting temporary custody for a period not to exceed two years. On the same day, the Department also filed a petition asking the superior court to terminate the parental rights of K.M. and T.R., on the basis that KM. had no interest in maintaining a parent-child relationship with J.P.M. and that T.R. was unable to meet her children’s needs.

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Bluebook (online)
887 P.2d 941, 1994 Alas. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-twr-alaska-1994.