In the Interest of A. E., a Child (Father)

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 23, 2024
DocketA24A1018
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of A. E., a Child (Father) (In the Interest of A. E., a Child (Father)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of A. E., a Child (Father), (Ga. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., HODGES and WATKINS, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

August 23, 2024

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A24A1018. IN THE INTEREST OF A. E., a child.

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

The father of A. E. (“the Father”) appeals from a juvenile court order granting

temporary custody of A. E. to the Fulton County Division of Family and Children

Services (“DFCS”). He contends, and DFCS agrees,1 that the order is not supported

by clear and convincing evidence of dependency due to his unfitness as a parent.

Based on the record before us, we agree. Therefore, we reverse in part the juvenile

court’s order finding A. E. dependant as to the Father and remand the case with

1 DFCS concedes that the juvenile court’s ruling was unsupported by adequate evidence of parental unfitness. The child’s attorney filed an appellate brief in support of the juvenile court’s order. instruction to hold a review hearing under the present circumstances and applicable

law in light of the holding herein.

Viewed in the light most favorable to the juvenile court’s factual findings,2 the

record, which is not materially disputed, shows that A. E. was born in April 2023 to

unwed parents living together. Leading up to A. E.’s birth, the Father attended

prenatal care appointments with A. E.’s mother (“the Mother”), and after A. E.’s

birth, the Father worked and supported the family financially while the Mother stayed

home to care for A. E. The Father engaged in caregiving activities at home in his spare

time.

At some point in September 2023, the Mother left A. E. unsupervised while the

Father was at work. At that time, the Father became aware and called the police for

a welfare check. Police responded and arrested both parents, charging them with

reckless conduct and abandonment of a child. Due to the parents’ resulting

incarceration, A. E. was placed temporarily with DFCS shortly after midnight that

night. The parents were ordered to have no contact with each other or A. E. The same

2 See In the Interest of Z. A., 370 Ga. App. 424 (1) (897 SE2d 639) (2024). 2 month, the court held a preliminary protective hearing at which both parents

stipulated that there was probable cause to find that A. E. was dependent.

During this timeframe, after the parents bonded out of jail, the child was

returned to the Mother pursuant to a protective order, and the parents had various

disputes that culminated in the Mother leaving the residence and leaving A. E. with

the Father. The Father made arrangements for his cousin to care for A. E. while he

worked, and this arrangement continued with A. E. thriving in the cousin’s and

Father’s care. The Father also provided financial support to the cousin and regularly

cared for A. E. when he was not working. It is undisputed that the parents have not

reconciled and do not live together, and the Mother did not object to the cousin’s care

of A. E.3

In October 2023, DFCS filed a dependency petition, alleging in part that the

parents left A. E. at home unsupervised, and the next day, the Father filed a petition

for legitimation. A week later, DFCS amended its dependency petition to strike out

the allegation that the Father left the child at home alone without adequate

3 The Mother has since developed a working relationship with the cousin regarding visitation. 3 supervision, and it added the fact that the Father was at work at the time A. E. was

unsupervised.

On November 14, 2023,4 pursuant to an October hearing on the dependency

petition,5 the juvenile court entered an order provisionally returning custody to the

Mother, noting that the no-contact order had been lifted as to both parents with

respect to the child. The court also noted that it had continued the matter of the

Father’s legitimation pending the results of a DNA test, but it listed as a finding of

fact that the Father “has failed to legitimate the child,” despite his pending petition

for legitimation. The court concluded that A. E. was dependent “in that the parents

left the child alone without supervision, leaving the child at imminent risk of danger.”6

The court held that eventual return to the home was not contrary to the welfare of the

child. It appears that, as a practical matter, A. E. often remained with the Father’s

cousin due to the Mother’s lack of stable housing.

4 The order was signed on November 13 and filed the next morning. It appears that at the hearing the court orally set a hearing date for the legitimation on November 11. 5 The court returned A. E. to the Mother at the October hearing. 6 (Emphasis supplied.) 4 Meanwhile, the court had held a judicial review hearing on November 13, 2023,

and also addressed the Father’s legitimation petition. It granted the legitimation in an

order entered November 17, 2023 , but the court ultimately continued the hearing on

the merits of the existing protective order due to the absence of the assigned case

worker. But over argument to the contrary by the Father, DFCS, and the child’s

attorney, the juvenile court entered an order on November 21, 2023 (“Interim

Order”),7 awarding temporary physical and legal custody to DFCS. The Interim

Order included the following legal conclusions:

The child remains a dependent child as to the father because he has not been granted legal custody of the child and regularly works long hours and cannot consistently supervise his child. The father does not reside with the child. . . . While the father has been proactive in ensuring the child may stay with a relative, he does not have custody and is not able to supervise the child the vast majority of the week given his busy work schedule. Given the specific facts and patterns of behavior in this case — the parents were both arrested and have pending criminal charges for failure to supervise their child, the parents fought in front of the [guardian ad litem (“GAL”)] resulting in a safety plan being enacted, the police have again been called out again to the parents’ home, and the mother has now accused the father of domestic violence — the Court does not see the status quo as

7 This order was entered nunc pro tunc to November 13, 2023. 5 tenable or the most productive way to effectuate a resolution of this matter.8

The Father filed a timely notice of appeal from this order.9 During the pendency

of the appeal, the juvenile court has entered two review orders that appear in the

appellate record: an Order of Disposition and 75-Day Judicial Review (entered January

16, 2024) and a Status Review Hearing Order (entered June 17, 2024). In light of his

notice of appeal, the Father objected to the parts of the January 2024 order invoking

a case plan listing certain requirements for him. Both subsequent orders list the

Father’s work schedule as the primary reason he is unable to care for A. E.,10 and the

8 (Emphasis supplied.) 9 See In the Interest of S. W., 363 Ga. App. 666, 668-669 (1) (872 SE2d 316) (2022) (“This Court has held that custody orders entered by juvenile courts in dependency proceedings are directly appealable. . . . This includes temporary or interlocutory custody orders issued in dependency proceedings.”), citing In the Interest of S. J., 270 Ga. App.

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Related

In re D. H.
342 S.E.2d 367 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1986)
In the Interest of S. J.
607 S.E.2d 225 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2004)
In the Interest of T. H.
735 S.E.2d 287 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2012)

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In the Interest of A. E., a Child (Father), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-a-e-a-child-father-gactapp-2024.