In The Interest of: A.M.W., S.W., R.W., F.W., A.C.W., and G.W.; Juvenile Officer; and Department of Social Services, Children's Division v. A.W.; and P.G.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 2022
DocketWD84846 and WD84850
StatusPublished

This text of In The Interest of: A.M.W., S.W., R.W., F.W., A.C.W., and G.W.; Juvenile Officer; and Department of Social Services, Children's Division v. A.W.; and P.G. (In The Interest of: A.M.W., S.W., R.W., F.W., A.C.W., and G.W.; Juvenile Officer; and Department of Social Services, Children's Division v. A.W.; and P.G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals 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.M.W., S.W., R.W., F.W., A.C.W., and G.W.; Juvenile Officer; and Department of Social Services, Children's Division v. A.W.; and P.G., (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

IN THE INTEREST OF: A.M.W., ) S.W., R.W., F.W., A.C.W. and G.W.; ) WD84846 consolidated with ) WD84850 Juveniles, ) ) OPINION FILED: JUVENILE OFFICER; and ) ) May 31, 2022 Respondent, ) ) DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL ) SERVICES, CHILDREN'S ) DIVISION, ) ) Respondent, ) vs. ) ) A.W.; and ) ) Appellant, ) ) P.G., ) ) Appellant. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri Honorable Jalilah Otto, Judge

Before Division Four: Cynthia L. Martin, C.J., Anthony Rex Gabbert and Janet Sutton, JJ.

In these consolidated appeals, P.G. (Mother) and A.W. (Father) appeal a Jackson

County Circuit Court, Family Court Division (court), judgment terminating their

parental rights to A.M.W., S.W., R.W., F.W., A.C.W., and G.W. (collectively, the children). 1 The court determined that termination of both Mother and Father’s parental

rights was appropriate on the basis of abuse or neglect under section 211.447.5(2),

failure to rectify under section 211.447.5(3), and parental unfitness under section

211.447.5(5)(a). 2 The court also found that termination of both Mother and Father ’s

parental rights was in the children’s best interest. Mother and Father challenge the

court’s findings of abuse or neglect, failure to rectify, and parental unfitness as against

the weight of the evidence. Mother also contends that the court abused its discretion

in determining that termination was in the children’s best interest. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background 3

Mother and Father are the natural parents of the children. 4 The family has had

a long history with child protective services due to concerns of substance abuse,

unsanitary living conditions, and lack of supervision since 2010. When Mother lived

in Arkansas in 2011, 5 the family was involved with Children’s Services. A.M.W., V.W.,

and S.W. were removed and placed in foster care due to concerns of substance abuse,

and V.W.’s mental health and instability. V.W. was hospitalized at a psychiatric

residential treatment facility, he expressed homicidal and suicidal ideations, and he

1 At the time of the trial, the children were between two and eleven years old.

2 Statutory references are to RSMo (2016) as supplemented. 3 “When reviewing a judgment terminating parental rights, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the judgment.” In re D.L.S., 606 S.W.3d 217, 220 n.1 (Mo. App. W.D. 2020). 4 Mother and Father are also the natural parents of V.W. (DOB 1/23/2004), but their parental rights to V.W. were not at issue in this termination case. A case worker testified that, at the time of the trial, the goal for V.W. was Another Planned Permanent Living Arrangement (APPLA) by way of a legal guardianship. 5 Father was working in Wyoming.

2 admitted that he attempted to take his then two-year-old sister’s diaper off, and said, “I

put my weenie in her mouth.”

The family moved to Missouri, and in 2014, there was a report of unsanitary

living conditions. Children’s Division provided services to the family which included

a 6-8-week intensive in-home service program to address concerns of unsanitary living

conditions. During this program, service providers were in the home for 30 -40 hours

per week to provide instruction to Mother and Father to remedy the issues that led to

Children’s Division involvement.

In 2015, shortly after the service program was completed, the Juvenile Officer

filed a petition alleging concerns of drug-related abuse and neglect. Mother and Father

stipulated to, and the court sustained, allegations in an amended petition in March 2015.

Mother admitted that she abused illegal substances such that her ability to parent was

impaired, that F.W. and Mother tested positive for marijuana and amphetamine a t

F.W.’s birth in January 2015, that she used methamphetamine from approximately May

2014 until July 2014, and that she used marijuana daily including during her pregnancy

and while parenting. Father admitted that he abused illegal substances such that hi s

ability to parent was impaired, and that he used methamphetamine until approximately

January 2015 while having custody of the children. Mother and Father also stipulated

V.W., A.M.W., S.W., R.W., and F.W. were without the proper care, custody, and support

necessary for their well-being, and that the children were at risk of further harm or

neglect.

V.W., A.M.W., S.W., R.W., and F.W. were removed from the home. The family

entered Family Drug Court, and Mother and Father were offered services including

3 drug treatment and testing, parenting education, psychological evaluations, individual

and family therapy, and family reunion services. During that case, A.M.W. and V.W.

were in a behavior program, they received therapy and psychiatric services, and S.W.

and R.W. were set up with an early childhood development program. The court released

the family from family court jurisdiction in June 2016, and the children reunified with

Mother and Father.

In December 2017, the Juvenile Officer filed a petition alleging concerns of

drug-related abuse and neglect. Mother and Father stipulated to, and the court

sustained, allegations in an amended petition in March 2018. Mother admitted to drug

use during her pregnancy, that she gave birth to A.C.W. and G.W. in November 2017,

and that at their birth, A.C.W. and G.W. tested positive for substances including

methamphetamine, amphetamines and THC/cannabinoids. Father stipulated that he

had a history of substance abuse. Mother and Father stipulated that Children ’s Mercy

Hospital had diagnosed G.W. with failure to thrive in December 2017, and they

acknowledged that V.W., A.M.W., S.W., R.W., and F.W. were previously under

jurisdiction due, in part, to Mother and Father’s drug use. Mother and Father stipulated

V.W., A.M.W., S.W., R.W., F.W., A.C.W., and G.W., were without the proper care,

custody, and support necessary for their well-being and that the children were at risk

of further harm or neglect.

The children were placed in Children’s Division custody, and the court ordered

Children’s Division to provide services to the family, including the following:

substance abuse treatment and testing, therapy, parenting education, parent aides,

4 psychological evaluations, a behavioral interventionist, a psychiatric evaluation for

Mother, and a domestic-violence evaluation for Father.

During the case, Children’s Division provided eleven different parent aides to

Mother and Father to assist in supervised visits by the children with Mother and Father.

The parent aides monitored the visits and paid attention to the parent -child bond,

parent-child communication, discipline, child management, and parental attention to

the children’s physical and emotional needs. At one point, Mother and Father had

between 65-80 hours per month of parent-aide services, while the typical number of

parent-aide hours was 40. Parenting education was provided as one-on-one time with

the parents, as needed for redirection, and before and after visitation s for debriefing.

Additionally, the parent aides and family-support team used a variety of methods of

instruction to assist Mother in basic parenting methods, due to her intellectual

disability. A parent aide even called multiple agencies and providers t o set up services

for Mother, rather than Mother doing so on her own.

In August 2018, V.W.

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In The Interest of: A.M.W., S.W., R.W., F.W., A.C.W., and G.W.; Juvenile Officer; and Department of Social Services, Children's Division v. A.W.; and P.G., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-amw-sw-rw-fw-acw-and-gw-juvenile-moctapp-2022.