In the Interest of D.J. and B.J., Minor Children, T.J., Mother, C.J., Father

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 11, 2017
Docket17-0923
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of D.J. and B.J., Minor Children, T.J., Mother, C.J., Father (In the Interest of D.J. and B.J., Minor Children, T.J., Mother, C.J., Father) 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 D.J. and B.J., Minor Children, T.J., Mother, C.J., Father, (iowactapp 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-0923 Filed October 11, 2017

IN THE INTEREST OF D.J. and B.J., Minor Children,

T.J., Mother, Petitioner-Appellee,

C.J., Father, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Clayton County, Alan D. Allbee,

Associate Juvenile Judge.

The father appeals the juvenile court’s order terminating his parental rights

to his children, pursuant to chapter 600A. AFFIRMED.

Cory R. Gonzales of Law Firm of Cory R. Gonzales P.L.L.C., Strawberry

Point, for appellant father.

Justin M. Vorwald of Ehrhardt, Gnagy, McCorkindale & Vorwald, Elkader,

for appellee mother.

Considered by Vogel, P.J., and Potterfield and Mullins, JJ. 2

POTTERFIELD, Judge.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Tonya (mother) and Clint (father) divorced in 2012. They had two children

together: D.J., born in 2005; and B.J., born in 2008. The parties were awarded

joint legal custody and shared physical care of their children under the dissolution

decree. The parties waived child support. The mother and father lived close to

each other, and the children would alternate weeks between the mother’s and

father’s care.

In September 2014, the mother suspected the father was using

methamphetamine while caring for the children after the children reported

abnormal behavior from the father during a visit. The children reported the father

was sleeping all day and they were required to cook their own meals on an open

fire. The children also reported the father would disappear for an hour in his

camper with a friend. The mother testified the father had a significant amount of

weight loss and “open sores all over.”1 Following the suspicion of drug use, the

mother refused to allow the children to visit the father under the terms of the

dissolution decree unless the father submitted to a drug screening.

The father filed a motion for contempt based on the mother’s refusal to

allow visitations. The matter came on for a hearing, and in its January 2015

order, the court found the mother was not in contempt of court. The court based

its findings on the concern for the safety of the children due to the father’s un-

1 The mother also testified she was familiar with the effects of methamphetamine usage in and around the user’s mouth—also known as “meth-mouth”—based on her training and experience as a dental assistant. 3

kept residence, deteriorating physical appearance, and association with

individuals known to use drugs. The court held:

The conduct by [the mother] was justified by her genuine concerns about the welfare of the children. The request for a drug screen test was reasonable, in view of past history, current evidence, and the widespread availability of street drugs. Therefore, her actions were not willful and do not constitute contempt of court.

The court further held the mother must “immediately comply with all provisions of

the present decree providing the respondent with full access to the children” if the

father produced written drug screening results showing no positive tests for

illegal substances. The father did not provide any drug screening results.

In June 2015, an application for involuntary commitment for a

substance-abuse-related disorder was filed against the father.2 The father was

evaluated in a hospital for approximately eleven days. The physician’s report

evaluating the father’s condition indicated a “long-standing history of alcohol and

amphetamine dependence.” The report also stated the father was a danger to

himself due to “depression, passive suicidal ideation, and refusing treatment.”

The father, however, was discharged based on a report stating, “[The father]

does not appear to need further substance abuse treatment due to no substance

use for several months and no abuse for several years.” The involuntary

commitment proceeding was dismissed in October 2015.

In July 2015, the court held a hearing on the mother’s previously filed

petition to modify the custody provisions of dissolution decree based on the

2 The details of the proceedings are not apparent from the record. 4

father’s illegal drug use.3 The court modified the dissolution decree to provide

the mother sole physical custody of the children. The court held, “Respondent’s

apparent return to the usage of illegal controlled substances now interferes with

his ability to care for the children. There is evidence in the record of poor

decision making by the father, as it pertains to the children’s supervision.” The

modification also provided for visitation with the father supervised by the

children’s paternal grandmother. Unsupervised visitation could continue if the

father established he has been drug-free for three months and complies with all

substance-abuse treatment recommendations. The father was also required to

pay $784.25 per month in child support and $3,137.00 in arrearage.

Supervised visitation continued with the father and the paternal

grandparents through October 2015 until the mother learned of an incident during

a visitation where the paternal grandparents left the children unsupervised with

the father for sixty to ninety minutes on Halloween. Following the incident, the

mother would not allow the paternal grandparents to supervise visitations

between the children and the father due to her concerns over the safety of the

children. The father has not had an official visitation, spoken over the phone, nor

engaged in electronic or written correspondence with the children since the

Halloween incident. The father did not attempt to modify the decree or seek an

alternative supervisor for visitations.

3 The hearing was originally continued based on the father’s mental-health evaluation for methamphetamine abuse and other related disorders during the involuntary-commitment proceedings. 5

In January 2017, the mother filed a petition for the termination of the

father’s parental rights to the children pursuant to Iowa Code section 600A.5

(2017), alleging the father abandoned the children. On February 21, the father

admitted to the use of methamphetamine after the police conducted a traffic stop

and arrested him for operating under the influence. The father’s urine test

confirmed his admission, as the urinalysis was positive for methamphetamine.

At trial, the children’s guardian ad litem (GAL) recommended it is in the

children’s best interest to terminate the father’s rights and stated the children feel

abandoned by their father. The father argued the mother prevented the father

from engaging with the children and termination is not in the children’s best

interests. The record from trial also shows the father failed to make child support

payments and has a balance of $18,037.75 in unpaid support payments. The

father testified he could not make payments because he lost his logging job due

to emotional stress and has no source of income. However, the district court

found the father’s loss of employment was not involuntary. The father did not

seek unemployment benefits or apply for social security disability.

In its June 2 ruling, the court addressed the father’s argument that the

mother prevented him from visitation:

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