In re Welfare of A.W.

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 2015
Docket90393-0
StatusPublished

This text of In re Welfare of A.W. (In re Welfare of A.W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Welfare of A.W., (Wash. 2015).

Opinion

/FlOE IN CLERKS OFFICI IUPREMe COURT, 8'DIII Ol'. .llti1CN This opinion was filed for record I ~B 19 2015 4 at 8:DOAYY:\ on·Fe_.b. ll1,201S 71zai~~· ~ ~ Ronald R. Carpen er Supreme Court Clark

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Welfare of A.W. and ) M.W. ) ) State of Washington, Department of Social ) and Health Services, ) No. 90393-0 ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) En Bane ) T.P., ) ) Appellant. ) Filed FEB 1 9 2015 )

FAIRHURST, J.-In 2010, the legislature enacted a new guardianship statute,

chapter 13.36 RCW (new statute), to create permanency for children in foster care

through the dismissal of dependency and the appointment of a guardian. RCW

13.36.010. This case involves whether the preponderance of the evidence standard

of proof satisfies due process and whether the record supports the trial court's

decision to appoint guardians. We answer both questions yes and affirm. In re Welfare ofA. W and M W, No. 90393-0

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) petitioned for an order

appointing a guardian for A.W. and M.W. pursuant to the new statute, and the

children's mother, T.P., 1 contested guardianship.

In 2009, both A.W. and M.W. came to the attention of DSHS after an

investigation showed that T.P.'s then 13 year old son, W.W., had sexually abused

M.W. and A.W. as well as a third sibling. 2 The abuse occurred while all three

children were in T.P.'s care. DSHS obtained a court order removing A.W., M.W.,

and the third sibling from T.P.'s home on September 17, 2009.

On September 21, 2009, DSHS filed a dependency petition on behalf of A.W.

and M.W based on former RCW 13.34.030(5)(c) (2003), which states that the child

"[h]as no parent, guardian, or custodian capable of adequately caring for the child,

such that the child is in circumstances which constitute a danger of substantial

damage to the child's psychological or physical development." In December 2009,

T .P. agreed to the dependency.

1 T.P. is the mother of six children. None of T.P. 's children are currently in her care. Two of T.P.'s children are now adults. A.W. was born on December 6, 2002, and M.W. was born on October 21,2000. The whereabouts of the father is unknown, and he defaulted at the guardianship trial. 2 DSHS' involvement with M.W. began when he tested positive for methamphetamine at birth. DSHS removed M.W. from his mother's care and established dependency. M.W. was returned to T.P.'s home in October 2001, and the dependency was dismissed in April2002. 2 In re Welfare of A. Wand M W, No. 90393-0

As part of dependency, DSHS identified several of T.P.'s parental

deficiencies: inadequate parenting skills, lack of awareness of sexual abuse issues,

possible substance abuse issues, and mental health issues. The court entered

dispositional orders placing the children in out of home care, and requiring T.P. to

engage in services including parenting evaluation, mental health counseling,

services through the Sexual Assault Response Center, substance abuse assessment,

and random urine analysis (UA). A.W.'s and M.W.'s dependencies were reviewed

at the required six month intervals. 3 See RCW 13.34.138.

In March 2010, the court approved transitioning the children to T.P.'s home

contingent on T.P.' s compliance with court ordered services and a DSHS safety plan

that continued until the guardianship. The court ordered services were similar to

those required as part of dependency and included a parenting evaluation, mental

health counseling, Family Preservation Services (FPS), submitting to random UAs,

and obtaining and maintaining a safe place to live. A safety plan outlines the

conditions for the children to be returned home and is created once a parent engages

in FPS. Dr. Michelle Leifheit provided FPS to T.P., and T.P. agreed to the safety

plan developed by Dr. Leifheit and DSHS. A term in the safety plan prohibited T.P.

3 The dependencies were reviewed on March 9, 2010, July 13, 2010, September 27, 2010, January 24,2011, June 21,2011, October 11, 2011, April2, 2012, and October 1, 2012. 3 In re Welfare ofA. W. and M W., No. 90393-0

from allowing her significant other, S.B., to have unsupervised access to the children

because S.B. did not pass DSHS' background check.

In December 2010, the transition to T.P.'s home was terminated because a

DSHS social worker making a home visit discovered S.B. alone with the children.

Additionally, despite the past abuse inflicted by W.W., T.P. permitted him to have

frequent visits with the children.

Dr. Naughne Boyd, a psychologist, performed a psychological evaluation on

T .P. in March 2011, diagnosing her with polysubstance dependence, attention deficit

hyperactivity disorder, and adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depression.

Dr. Boyd determined that if T.P. tested positive for methamphetamine again, it

would not be in the best interests ofthe children to return them to T.P.'s custody.

T.P. was charged with possession of methamphetamine in May 2012.

According to T.P., her relationship with S.B. 4 along with the passing of her father in

September 2012 led to increased stress that created difficulties completing DSHS

services and drug treatment.

At the guardianship hearing in March 2013, A.W. was 10 years old and M.W.

was 12 years old. T.P. admitted that her parental deficiencies were not adequately

4 T.P.'s relationship with S.B. fell apart after he physically assaulted her, and she obtained a no contact order against him. Despite the no contact order, T.P. had contact with S.B. in November 2012. 4 In re Welfare of A. W. and M W., No. 90393-0

remedied and that she was not capable of parenting a child. Nonetheless, T.P.

asserted that she was improving and the children could be returned to her care in the

near future. T.P. stated that she needed more time to adjust to her medication and

learn about her mental health issues and that she could do this within the next three

months. 5 T.P. also noted that throughout the proceedings there was no doubt that she

loved and was bonded with her children and that A.W. and M.W. loved her as well.

The trial court found that based on T.P.'s substance abuse, poor judgment,

incarcerations, chaotic lifestyle, failure to remedy parental deficiencies, and the

length of time of this case, there was little likelihood that conditions could be

remedied such that the children could be returned to T.P. in the near future. The trial

court entered findings and conclusions and an order appointing guardians for A.W.

and M.W. pursuant to the new statute.

T.P. appealed and argued that (1) establishing a guardianship under the new

statute using the preponderance of the evidence standard is unconstitutional because

it violates due process and (2) even if preponderance of the evidence is the correct

standard, the trial court's factual findings were not supported by substantial

5 Dr. Leifheit testified that T.P. missed several appointments and demonstrated a lack of follow-through during FPS. Dr. Leifheit also testified that T.P. began to stabilize when she was on the proper medication. 5 In re Welfare ofA.

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