In the Interest of C. A. J., a Child

771 S.E.2d 457, 331 Ga. App. 788
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 10, 2015
DocketA14A1826
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 771 S.E.2d 457 (In the Interest of C. A. J., a Child) 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 C. A. J., a Child, 771 S.E.2d 457, 331 Ga. App. 788 (Ga. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

BOGGS, Judge.

In this private deprivation action brought by the maternal grandmother of nine-year-old C. A. J., the trial court found the child to be deprived and placed her in the permanent custody of the grandmother. 1 For reasons that follow, we affirm the deprivation determination, but we are constrained to reverse the permanent custody award, and therefore remand for further proceedings.

1. On appeal from a deprivation finding, we construe the evidence favorably to the juvenile court’s ruling and determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found by clear and convincing evidence that the child was deprived. See In the Interest of M. M., 315 Ga. App. 673, 676 (2) (727 SE2d 279) (2012). This court does not weigh the evidence or resolve issues of witness credibility. Id. Rather, we defer to the juvenile court’s factfinding and “affirm unless the appellate standard is not met.” Id.

So viewed, the record shows that the mother and C. A. J.’s putative father had a volatile relationship that involved frequent fighting, verbal abuse, and physical confrontations. The two never married, but they lived together following C. A. J.’s birth at various residences in Georgia and South Carolina. At some point while the mother and father were together, the mother entered into a romantic relationship with the father’s brother, Phillip Jones. When the father found out about the affair, he warned the mother not to expose C. A. J. to Jones, who had previously been convicted of child molestation.

In May 2011, the mother ended her relationship with the father and moved into her parents’ home with C. A. J., who was then five years old. The mother continued seeing Jones following the move, spending the majority of her time at his residence while C. A. J. remained at the grandparents’ home. According to the grandmother, the mother’s personal possessions were at their home, but the mother “was never physically” there. The mother subsequently married Jones and became pregnant with his child. C. A. J., however, remained with her grandparents.

On November 1, 2011, the mother visited her parents’ home and had a heated argument with the grandmother in front of C. A. J. While C. A. J. watched, the mother shoved the grandmother against a wall and threatened to remove C. A. J. from the home. Two days later, the grandmother filed a private deprivation petition alleging *789 that the mother was unable to provide a stable home for C. A. J., was mentally incapable of caring for her, and had not supported her financially since leaving her with her grandparents. Through this petition, the grandmother requested legal and physical custody of C. A. J.

Following a December 2011 hearing, the juvenile court found C. A. J. to be deprived based on, among other things, the mother’s failure to protect C. A. J. from exposure to domestic violence; her relationship with Jones, a convicted child molester and registered sex offender; and her decision to permit interaction between Jones and C. A. J. The juvenile court awarded temporary custody to the grandmother and entered a concurrent plan of reunification and nonreunification. It also developed reunification case plan goals that required the mother to obtain a psychological evaluation and follow all treatment recommendations; demonstrate an ability to protect C. A. J. from domestic violence and sexual abuse; and pay child support.

The mother submitted to a psychological evaluation on January 30,2012, and the evaluating psychologist recommended that she take part in counseling. The mother commenced counseling the following May with goals to evaluate her relationship with Jones and address how she could keep C. A. J. safe from the risk he posed as a sex offender. In the meantime, C. A. J. also began therapy. According to C. A. J.’s therapist, the child immediately indicated that she liked living with her grandparents because her parents often fought, which she found distressing. She also reported that she was afraid of Jones, who was mean to her and watched her while she undressed.

In April 2012, the grandmother informed C. A. J.’s therapist that C. A. J. had been “very agitated” after returning from a recent visit with the mother. C. A. J. subsequently told the therapist that during the visit, Jones stated that he loved her, sat her on his lap, kissed her on the lips, and placed his hands inside her thighs. Believing that C. A. J. had disclosed an incident of molestation, the therapist reported the outcry to the Department of Family and Children Services (“DFACS”). Jones was arrested in May 2012, and, based on C. A. J.’s initial outcry as well as disclosures in other interviews, he was charged with aggravated child molestation and child molestation. Shortly after Jones’s arrest, the juvenile court suspended all contact between the mother and C. A. J., citing the mother’s failure to protect her daughter from Jones, her assertions in court that Jones was innocent and that C. A. J. had lied about the molestation, and the possibility that she might try to influence C. A. J.’s testimony.

According to the grandparents, the mother made little effort to check on C. A. J.’s well-being after the juvenile court suspended *790 contact. She also offered minimal financial support for C. A. J., making only one of the monthly child support payments required by her case plan goals.

At an October 2012 evidentiary hearing, the mother testified that, through counseling, she had learned that she needed to end her relationship with Jones to protect her daughter. But she admittedly maintained contact with Jones following his May 2012 arrest, visiting him in jail, writing him letters, and speaking with him by telephone. She asserted, however, that she had recently “separate [d]” herself from Jones. According to the mother, she no longer communicated with or visited him, and she informed him in August 2012 that she wanted a divorce. Nevertheless, she had not commenced divorce proceedings at the time of the hearing, and less than one month before the hearing, she told Jones over the telephone that she loved him.

The mother further claimed that the grandmother is controlling and manipulative, and that the grandfather sexually abused her when she was five years old. The abuse allegations, however, were investigated by DFACS after the mother made an outcry to a teacher, and the grandfather was not arrested or charged with a crime. The mother also told an evaluating psychologist that she had never been abused as a child, and she requested that the grandfather accompany C. A. J. on supervised visitations. Moreover, significant evidence demonstrates that C. A. J. has thrived in her grandparents’ care. The grandparents and other family members testified that the mother did not attend to the needs of C. A. J., who exhibited behavioral problems, had nightmares, and was withdrawn when she first came to live with the grandparents. But with the help of therapy and a stable environment, C. A. J. has adjusted well, is happy, and no longer displays aggressive behaviors.

Following the October 2012 hearing, the juvenile court once again deemed C. A. J. deprived based on, among other things, the mother’s instability, her unresolved mental health concerns, her involvement with Jones, and her failure to meet C. A. J.’s emotional needs. We find no error.

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Bluebook (online)
771 S.E.2d 457, 331 Ga. App. 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-c-a-j-a-child-gactapp-2015.