In the Interest of A.S. and A.S., Minor Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 29, 2023
Docket22-2102
StatusPublished

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

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In the Interest of A.S. and A.S., Minor Children, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-2102 Filed March 29, 2023

IN THE INTEREST OF A.S. and A.S., Minor Children,

C.C., Mother, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Carrie K. Bryner,

District Associate Judge.

A mother appeals the termination of her parental rights to her two children.

AFFIRMED.

Eric S. Mail of Puryear Law P.C., Davenport, for appellant mother.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Diane Murphy Smith, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

Dana A. Judas of Nazette, Marner, Nathanson & Shea, LLP, Cedar Rapids,

attorney and guardian ad litem for minor children.

Considered by Bower, C.J., and Badding and Buller, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

A mother in the throes of her bipolar disorder appeals the termination of her

parental rights to her two children, born in 2014 and 2018, under Iowa Code

section 232.116(1)(e) and (f) (2022). The mother claims that if she is given more

time, she can “overcome the[] hurdles” that led to her children’s removal from her

care in May 2021 “to reach a point where the children could be returned to her

custody.” As a result, she contends it “was error for the trial court to conclude that

the grounds for termination existed.” Our review is de novo. In re L.B., 970

N.W.2d 311, 313 (Iowa 2022).

Unpacking the mother’s claim, it is evident that she concedes the children

could not have been returned to her care at the time of the termination hearing.

See Iowa Code § 232.116(1)(f)(4) (requiring “clear and convincing evidence that

at the present time the child cannot be returned to the custody of the child’s parents

as provided in section 232.102”); see also In re D.W., 791 N.W.2d 703, 707

(Iowa 2010) (interpreting the statutory language “at the present time” to mean “at

the time of the termination hearing”). And for good reason. The mother, who

described herself as a vagabond, did not have a home or job when the termination

hearing was held. She was also resistant to any treatment for her substance-

abuse issues or her mental health.

Both children were born with marijuana in their system. And when they

were removed from the mother’s care and placed into their father’s, they both

tested positive for ingestion of marijuana. The mother’s marijuana use has

persisted throughout the case. All her drug tests were positive for marijuana, with

several exceeding the maximum testing level. Though she was ordered to obtain 3

a substance-abuse evaluation in August when the children were adjudicated in

need of the court’s assistance, she did not comply with that directive until May

2022, shortly before the first day of the termination hearing in June. That

evaluation diagnosed her with a “severe marijuana use disorder due to her chronic

and heavy use of marijuana” and recommended treatment, which she did not

pursue. See In re O.N., No. 17-0918, 2017 WL 3525324, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App.

Aug. 16, 2017) (affirming termination of parental rights of parent who had not

resolved her issues with substance abuse).

The mother blamed her marijuana use on her post-traumatic stress disorder

and anxiety, which she said were worsened by the court’s involvement. But the

mother took no steps to address her mental health until more than one year after

the children were removed. She testified that she was diagnosed with bipolar

disorder when she was twelve years old and hospitalized for a time. The mother

stopped taking medication to treat that illness when she turned eighteen. When

asked whether her mental health impacted her ability to care for the children, the

mother responded: “The disability with bipolar actually makes me a more exciting

parent, more fun, more involved.” The evidence showed the opposite.

The mother placed the oldest child in her parents’ guardianship in 2017. At

trial, she claimed that was to keep the father from obtaining custody of her: “[H]e

can’t take something from me that I don’t have.”1 But the order opening the

1The father petitioned the district court for custody of the children in June 2019. He did not learn about the guardianship until that November, which he later successfully terminated. After concurrent jurisdiction was granted by the juvenile court, the district court placed the children in the father’s physical care in June 2021. 4

guardianship stated the mother could not care for the child. When the youngest

child was born in 2018, the mother spent several days in the psychiatric inpatient

ward because she was in a “full intensity [m]anic episode” and refusing any

medications. The consulting psychiatrist observed the mother did not “have insight

for the need for treatment and her judgment is impaired to make decisions for her

treatment.”

The mother’s lack of insight continued after that court committal. A child

protective worker with the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services

testified that fourteen assessments were completed on the family, with another

twenty-four reports rejected for assessment. The worker testified that most of the

assessments were “spurious,” often involving complaints about normal childhood

bruises or scratches the youngest child got in the father’s care. These

investigations, according to the worker, were invasive and traumatic for the

children. Yet reports of child abuse continued to be made against the father right

up until the afternoon before the last day of the termination hearing in July 2022.

The evidence suggested the mother made many of these reports to try to

get the children removed from the father. Her crusade against the father escalated

so much that she posted videos of the children on her YouTube page,

accompanied by commentary bashing the father and his girlfriend. Her vitriol

extended to all of the professionals involved in the case, with websites dedicated

to attacking the father’s attorney and the children’s guardian ad litem, along with

posts on social media claiming the child protective worker disseminated child

pornography and a department supervisor “had possible alcohol delirium.” The

mother would send relentless text messages and emails to everyone in the case, 5

personally attacking the professionals trying to help her. See In re J.M.A.,

No. 09-1228, 2009 WL 3380063, at *1–2 (Iowa Ct. App. Oct. 21, 2009)

(considering the father’s hostility and threats to the department’s staff in finding

additional time was not warranted).

This conduct, which spilled over to the mother’s supervised visitation with

the children, led the juvenile court to suspend in-person visitation in September

2021 and enter a detailed communication plan for the mother. From then until

February 2022, the mother only had video visits with the children. But when she

continued to send emails in violation of the plan, the court suspended even those

video visits, which did not resume until shortly before the termination hearing. See

In re M.W., 876 N.W.2d 212, 223–24 (Iowa 2016) (finding that the failure “to

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