In THE INTEREST OF D. C. S., CHILDREN (MOTHER)

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 2024
DocketA23A1492
StatusPublished

This text of In THE INTEREST OF D. C. S., CHILDREN (MOTHER) (In THE INTEREST OF D. C. S., CHILDREN (MOTHER)) 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 D. C. S., CHILDREN (MOTHER), (Ga. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DILLARD, P. J., RICKMAN and PIPKIN, 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

March 15, 2024

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A1492. IN THE INTEREST OF D. C. S. et al., children.

PIPKIN, Judge.

We granted the Mother’s application for discretionary appeal to review her

claim that the evidence was insufficient to support the juvenile court’s order

terminating her parental rights to her children D. C. S. and E. A. S. As more fully set

forth below, we now affirm.

The record shows that D. C. S. was born September 5, 2014, and E. A. S. was

born May 30, 2019. The children, both males, were removed from the Mother’s

custody in March 2021 after reports of physical abuse and neglect, which included

hitting D. C. S. in the face and making his nose bleed and leaving E. A. S. in a playpen

all day while she slept after working at night. The local Department of Family and Children Services (“DFCS”) filed a dependency action in juvenile court, and,

following a hearing, the juvenile court entered an adjudication of dependency on April

9, 2021. DFCS was granted temporary custody of the children, and when no suitable

relatives could be found, the children were placed in foster care with non-relatives.

The juvenile court held a hearing on April 14, 2021 on the continued

dependency of the children and the implementation of a reunification case plan for the

Mother. The juvenile court entered an order of disposition on May 6, 2021, approving

a concurrent reunification and adoption plan. Pursuant to the case plan, the Mother

was required to complete a number of goals, including that she maintain clean and

stable housing; remain drug and alcohol free as demonstrated by six consecutive

months of negative drug screens; complete parenting classes; complete a

psychological evaluation and follow any recommendations resulting from the

evaluation, which might include various types of counseling or therapy; complete

anger management counseling; maintain regular employment; support the children

as required by law; maintain regular visitation with the children; and maintain contact

with DFCS.

2 Although the Mother made some progress on completing her case plan, she was

unable to regain custody of the children, and they continued to live in foster care. In

November 2022, DFCS filed a Petition for Termination of Parental rights against the

Mother and putative fathers of the children, neither of whom had previous contact

with the children. A hearing was held on the petition on February 21, 2023. Following

the hearing, the juvenile court terminated the parental rights of the Mother and the

putative fathers, and the Mother filed an application for discretionary appeal.1 We

granted the Mother’s application, and this appeal followed.

1. The Mother’s sole contention on appeal is that the evidence was insufficient

to support the termination of her parental rights. We start with our standard of review.

On appeal from an order terminating parental rights, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the juvenile court’s judgment in order to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found by clear and convincing evidence that the natural parent’s rights to custody have been lost. We neither weigh evidence nor determine witness credibility, but defer to the juvenile court’s findings of fact and affirm unless the appellate standard is not met.

1 The putative fathers did not attend the termination hearing and did not seek to appeal the termination of their parental rights. Accordingly, we do not address any issues relating to the fathers in this appeal. 3 In the Interest of E. M., 347 Ga. App. 351, 354 (2) (819 SE2d 505) (2018). However,

“this deferential standard of review is tempered by the fact that there is no judicial

determination which has more drastic significance than that of permanently severing

a natural parent-child relationship. It must be scrutinized deliberately and exercised

most cautiously.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) In the Interest of D. M., 339 Ga.

App. 46, 46 (793 SE2d 422) (2016).

(a) Factual Background. Viewed in the appropriate light, the evidence shows the

following. The Mother has three children – the two children at issue here and an older

male child, M. R. S., who was born in April 2011, while the Mother was married to

Franklin Shelley. Franklin testified that the Mother and he married in 2010 and at that

time they were living in Washington State where he was stationed with the Navy. He

said they continued to live in Washington State after M. R. S. was born in 2011, but

in January 2013, he was transferred to Kings Bay, Georgia. He said the Mother and M.

R. S. remained in Washington State until July 2013, when he received a call that the

Mother had been arrested and that M. R. S. had been taken into protective custody.

Franklin testified that he traveled to Washington State and brought M. R. S. back with

him and that M. R. S. never lived with his Mother again after Franklin brought him

4 back to Georgia. Franklin and the Mother divorced in June 2014, and he was granted

full legal and physical custody of M. R. S. Franklin also testified that the Mother was

held in contempt several times for failure to pay court-ordered child support, and that,

when he married Eileen Shelley in September 2016, the Mother’s parental rights to

M. R. S. were terminated so Eileen could adopt the child.

Before her divorce from Franklin was final, the Mother became pregnant by

another man with D. C. S. The Mother testified that she suffered from postpartum

depression after the birth and that she was working two jobs, so she placed D. C. S. in

the care of her sister for several months. The Mother testified that D. C. S. also lived

with a babysitter and the sitter’s husband for a period of time in 2015 and 2016;2 she

said she could not remember how she found this babysitter or how long she had known

the couple before she left D. C. S. in their care.

Eileen Shelley testified that she and Franklin would sometimes help the Mother

out by babysitting D. C. S. but that they lost contact with the Mother and D. C. S. in

early 2016. Eileen said that sometime later that year, they were contacted by Linda and

2 The Mother testified that one reason she allowed others to care for D. C. S. was that she was trying to protect him if she got jailed for non-payment of child support for M. R. S. 5 Ashley Reeves,3 who said that D. C. S. was living with them, and that they were

hoping to re-establish a relationship with Franklin and Eileen so he could see his half

brother, M. R. S.; they also said they were looking for support and someone to lean on

if they had questions. Eileen testified that Franklin and she subsequently developed

a “great” relationship with the Reeveses and that they frequently got together so that

D. C. S. and M. R. S. could play together. This continued until around March 2017,

when the Reeveses, who had been granted a temporary guardianship of D. C. S. in

June 2016,4 asked if Eileen and Franklin could take care of D. C. S. because the

Reeveses were moving out of state for a job offer and were unsure if they could take

D. C. S. across state lines.

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