In Re Yve S.

819 A.2d 1030, 373 Md. 551, 2003 Md. LEXIS 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 27, 2003
Docket24, 50, Sept. Term, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by138 cases

This text of 819 A.2d 1030 (In Re Yve S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Yve S., 819 A.2d 1030, 373 Md. 551, 2003 Md. LEXIS 152 (Md. 2003).

Opinion

HARRELL, Judge.

I.

These combined cases arose initially from a determination by the District Court of Maryland, sitting in Montgomery County as the Juvenile Court, 1 to change the permanency plan for a twelve year-old child, Yve S., from the goal of reunification with her biological mother, Yvonne S., to one of long-term foster care. The Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services (the “Department”) initiated the proceedings on 26 February 1997 by filing a petition with the District Court alleging that Yve S. was a Child in Need of Assistance (“CINA”). 2 On 10 June 1997, following three days of hearings, the juvenile court found Yve S. to be a CINA and committed her to the Department for foster care. After 13 months, on 31 July 1998, Yve S. was returned, temporarily as it turned out, to her mother, Yvonne S., under an Order for Protective Supervision. Eleven days later, on 11 August 1998, the juvenile court held an emergency hearing and, again, placed Yve S. in the Department’s custody and returned her to foster care.

*559 A little over 7 months later, in March of 1999, the juvenile court convened a permanency planning hearing for Yve S. At the end of four non-consecutive days of hearings, the court ordered, on 20 September 1999, that the goal of the permanency plan for Yve S. should be termination of parental rights (“TPR”) and adoption.

On 20 March 2000, the court convened a permanency planning review that would spread over more than a year. By the time of a hearing on 20 October 2000, the Department advocated changing the permanency plan goal from TPR/adoption to reunification with the mother; however, the court declined to change the goal of the plan. The court held additional review hearings on 13 and 20 December 2000, 15 and 16 February 2001, and 28 March 2001. On 28 March 2001, at the conclusion of the last day of the hearing process that had begun the previous March, the court changed the permanency plan from TPR/adoption to long-term foster care. Yvonne S. noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals.

On 8 November 2001, while Yvonne S.’s first appeal was pending in the Court of Special Appeals, the juvenile court convened another review hearing. 3 The juvenile court concluded that hearing on 20 December 2001, at which time it issued an order reaffirming the content of its 28 March 2001 order. Yvonne S. noted a second appeal.

On 23 January 2002, the Court of Special Appeals filed an unreported opinion in the first appeal affirming the juvenile court’s 28 March 2001 order, which had changed Yve S.’s permanency plan to long-term foster care. Yvonne S. filed a petition for writ of certiorari asking this Court to review that decision. Thereafter, Yvonne S. petitioned this Court to issue *560 a writ of certiorari to the Court of Special Appeals before it could decide her second appeal regarding the 20 December 2001 order of the juvenile court. On 8 May 2002, this Court granted both petitions and consolidated the cases. In Re: Yve. S., 369 Md. 178, 798 A.2d 551 (2002).

Subsequently, on 20 April 2002 and 16 July 2002, the juvenile court — now the Circuit Court for Montgomery County (see n. 1 supra), but with the same judge sitting by special designation during calendar 2002 — held another review hearing in Yve S.’s case and entered a new order establishing permanent foster care as the goal of the permanency plan. Yvonne S. noted a third appeal to the Court of Special Appeals and shortly thereafter filed with regard to that appeal a petition for writ of certiorari with this Court. On 22 August 2002, we granted that petition, In re Yve S., 370 Md. 268, 805 A.2d 265 (2002), and transferred the appeal to our regular docket. Because the third appeal raised issues concerning the jurisdiction of the juvenile court to act while an appeal of its earlier order on the same subject matter was pending, it was not consolidated with the earlier cases, but was briefed separately. All of the cases, however, were argued on the same day. We shall decide all issues raised with this single opinion.

II.

Issues

Petitioner, Yvonne S., presents the following questions for our consideration, which we rephrase as follows:

1. Does the fact that a parent has a mental illness that is being successfully managed nevertheless provide a “compelling reason” to deny reunification and instead adopt a permanency plan of long-term foster care?
2. Is it proper to allow a social worker to give her opinion as to the demeanor of the parent when the parent testified, and to give her opinion of the substance of the parent’s testimony?
*561 3. Did the trial court err in refusing to recuse itself from further participation in this case?
4. Whether the trial court erred in changing the permanency plan from long-term foster care to permanent foster care during the pendency of the appeal on the former determination?

III.

Yve S. entered into the .Montgomery County foster care system in February of 1997, at the age of six, after the Department received reports that she was not being fed adequately and that she and her mother, Yvonne S., were homeless. Prior to this, Yvonne S. and Yve S. led a nomadic lifestyle. In 1990, they lived in Key West, Florida, where Yve S. was born. In 1991, they lived in Maryland; in 1992, they lived in Martinsburg, West Virginia. In 1993, they lived in Millville, West Virginia, where Yve S. was first taken into foster care. In 1994, they moved to Gaithersburg, Maryland, and then to Westminister, Maryland, in 1995. In 1996, they moved to North Carolina. Finally, in 1997, they returned to Montgomery County.

Soon after Yve S. was placed in foster care in Montgomery County, the Department learned that Yvonne S. had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and schizo-affective disorder, dating back to her teens. A psychiatric evaluation of Yve S. resulted in a diagnosis of “acute stress reaction,” chronic post-traumatic stress disorder, and dissociative disorder. Yve S. also displayed symptoms of possible physical and sexual abuse and, in July of 1997, alleged that she had been molested by a boyfriend of Yvonne S.

Yvonne S. complied with the Department’s recommendations for mental health treatment and parenting classes. As a result, she and Yve S. were reunited in June of 1998. In July 1998, the juvenile court approved Yvonne S.’s request to move to the Outer Banks of North Carolina, where she had leased a mobile home. Montgomery County, however, never initiated a home study nor completed a proper interstate compact for the *562 Dare County, North Carolina, family welfare authorities to implement. After only a few days in North Carolina, the Dare County Department of Social Services found it necessary to remove Yve S. from Yvonne S.’s care. Yvonne S. had been evicted from the trailer, and allegedly had left Yve S.

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Bluebook (online)
819 A.2d 1030, 373 Md. 551, 2003 Md. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-yve-s-md-2003.