In the Interest of C.P.B.

641 S.W.2d 456, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3219
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 21, 1982
Docket43895
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 641 S.W.2d 456 (In the Interest of C.P.B.) 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 C.P.B., 641 S.W.2d 456, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3219 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

PUDLOWSKI, Judge.

This is an appeal by the natural mother of C.P.B. and K.A.B. from a judgment and order of the juvenile court terminating her parental rights. 1 The order placed custody of the children with the Department of Family Services of Jefferson County and recommended that the maternal grandparents be given the first opportunity to petition for transfer of custody and adoption. We reverse and remand.

Appellant was married in November, 1969. Two children were born of this marriage: C.P.B. in October, 1970, and K.A.B. in September, 1972. Shortly after the birth of K.A.B., the father left the marital home for several months. Appellant became depressed and sought counselling. The father returned, but a second separation took place in 1976 and in September, 1976 appellant and the father were divorced. Appellant was granted custody of the children and the father was ordered to pay child support. Although the father has shown little interest in visiting the children, he has continued to make regular support payments.

In April, 1977, the Jefferson County Division of Family Services received a child abuse hotline referral concerning C.P.B. and K.A.B. After an investigation, the Division took custody of the children with the approval of the Juvenile Court in Jefferson County.

The children were placed in a foster home, where they resided until July, 1979, at which time they were placed in a second foster home. The children received regular visits from appellant (except for a short period after a divorce from her second husband). They have also maintained contact with their maternal grandparents.

Appellant has sought to have the children returned to her. In June, 1979, she entered into a court-approved “180-day plan” with the Division of Family Services. The plan required that she adopt a budget, attend regular psychological counselling sessions, visit her children regularly, and keep regular appointments with her social worker. The basic purpose of that plan was to evaluate appellant and prepare her for a possible return of custody. Additional conditions were to be imposed contingent upon return of the children. Shortly before the expiration of the 180-day period, the Division of Family Services advised appellant that it had decided to withdraw all visitation rights and seek termination of her parental relationship. The petition for termination was filed in March, 1980. The petition alleged that appellant had failed to comply with the court-ordered plan, had abused her children by causing physical and emotional injury to them, and that appellant “did not demonstrate or attempt to demonstrate the mental stability or knowledge and skill required to provide for the safety and proper care” of her children.

The trial transcript fills 8 volumes, totaling almost 600 pages. The court heard testimony from several social workers, a home economist, and a psychologist, each of whom had dealt with appellant on various occasions. The maternal grandmother also *458 testified, as did the appellant. Some of the social workers testified that appellant had appeared to be emotionally stable and cooperative. Others maintained that appellant was hostile and subject to frequent mood changes. They noted that appellant’s visits with her children were sometimes marred by arguments appellant had with the social workers who were present. On a few occasions, she also became angry with her children. Other social workers testified that their colleagues were prejudiced against appellant and considered her to be a “lost cause.”

A clinical psychologist testified that she had worked with appellant on at least a weekly basis for several months. She stated that appellant was not always “in touch with reality” and that she had recommended hospitalization for appellant. She declined to enter the hospital. Appellant did, however, faithfully keep scheduled appointments. She noted that appellant was able to function quite well for limited periods of time but would react poorly to stressful incidents by swearing and shouting. This anger was expressed verbally. Appellant did not appear to be a violent person. The psychologist diagnosed appellant as suffering from a borderline personality disorder, not a psychosis. Such disorder would be treatable under proper conditions, i.e., if appellant obtained stable employment and received support from persons around her. However, it did not appear likely that appellant’s circumstances would change in a manner favorable to treatment. The psychologist concluded that appellant’s situation (the divorces, loss of custody, therapy, and frequent visits of social workers) would be stressful for any normal person and that her reactions were not solely a product of her mental condition. The doctor opined that a normal person, subjected to similar pressures, would react with some of the same feelings of anger, suspiciousness, and depression as the appellant.

The maternal grandmother testified that she and her second husband, residents of Tennessee, had continually expressed an interest to Division of Family Service workers in having the children live with them. The children had visited the grandparents’ home in Tennessee on several occasions before they were removed from appellant’s custody and the grandparents occasionally visited or called the children in St. Louis. They regularly sent gifts to the children. The maternal grandmother stated that she and her husband had a comfortable income of $30,000 annually. She also described the dimensions of their home and their relationship within the extended family.

Appellant testified about her medical history and her relationship with her children. She denied abusing the children physically. She stated that she loved her children and had cooperated with the Division of Family Services in an effort to regain custody.

The trial court issued substantially identical orders terminating the parental rights of appellant as to each child. The orders, in pertinent part, stated that:

The Court finds it has jurisdiction herein .... The Court makes two findings: first, the parental rights of the natural parents should be terminated ...; second, that the family ties should be maintained if at all possible.
The Court finds that the mother suffers from a personality disorder which the doctor says under stress results in paranoid behavior, that paranoid episodes are treatable but that the mother’s prognosis for the personality disorder is that it will probably never be any better. Further, the Court finds that the mother has injured the child and can see prospect and potential of harm in the episodes which are dangerous to the welfare and well-being of the child if the parent-child relationship was allowed to continue.
The maternal grandmother has appeared here personally and expressed love and consideration for her grandchildren and also expressed a willingness on the part of herself and her husband to care for the child. The Court finds it to the best interest of the child that he have a stable relationship rather than foster care

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Bluebook (online)
641 S.W.2d 456, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-cpb-moctapp-1982.