In the Interest of J. L. Y.

361 S.E.2d 246, 184 Ga. App. 254, 1987 Ga. App. LEXIS 2215
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 18, 1987
Docket74646, 74647
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 361 S.E.2d 246 (In the Interest of J. L. Y.) 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 J. L. Y., 361 S.E.2d 246, 184 Ga. App. 254, 1987 Ga. App. LEXIS 2215 (Ga. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Beasley, Judge.

Both mother and father of J. L. Y. appeal from the juvenile court’s order terminating their parental rights. Their appeals are consolidated.

J. L. Y. was born in 1978 to Patricia Bivens and Jimmy Yaughn while Mrs. Bivens was still married to another. Yaughn took the male child, then age four, away from the mother who lived in south Georgia and he and the child moved to Gainesville. In 1982, J. L. Y. was first brought to the attention of Department of Family and Children Services because of complaints of physical abuse and alcohol abuse by Yaughn.

Case No. 74646

The mother’s appeal we examine. While Bivens claimed not to know the whereabouts of the child, her sister was keeping him for Yaughn in 1983 and the uncontradicted evidence at the hearing showed that she knew of his location at least by November 1983. She made no effort to contact the child until the Department of Family and Children Services discovered her name and contacted her in July 1984. At that time she did begin to visit with the child and in March 1985 she attempted to obtain custody of him. The court at that time found that the child was deprived on the ground that she had abandoned the child and was unfit. The order was not appealed.

Although Bivens was granted visitation rights by that order, she made no attempts to see the child after April 1985, when she had telephone contact with him.

1. The mother challenges the termination on the ground that there was insufficient evidence from which to find abandonment because there was no evidence that she intended to “sever entirely” the parental relationship. This is not the appropriate question to address, however, in the context of the order appealed. That order took as its premise the unappealed order of 1985 finding that she had abandoned the child. Not having appealed, she is bound by that determination. See OCGA §§ 9-12-40; 9-12-42; Blackburn v. Blackburn, 168 Ga. App. 66, 72 (2) (308 SE2d 193) (1983); Wehunt v. Wren’s &c. Condo. Assn., 175 Ga. App. 70, 73 (4) (332 SE2d 368) (1985); First Fed. Savings &c. Assn., of Gainesville v. Gainesville Nat. Bank, 224 Ga. 150, 151 (160 SE2d 372) (1968). Thus, as to the mother, the question is only *255 whether the court was correct in finding that the requirements of OCGA § 15-11-81 (b) (4) (A) & (C) had been met.

The termination of parental rights is a decision of drastic significance which requires deliberate scrutiny and caution. In re N. F. R., 179 Ga. App. 346, 348 (346 SE2d 121) (1986). It is done based only on clear and convincing evidence. Blackburn v. Blackburn, 249 Ga. 689, 694 (292 SE2d 821) (1982). On review of such a decision, the standard is whether after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the appellee, any rational trier of fact could have found by clear and convincing evidence that the natural parent’s rights to custody have been lost. Blackburn, supra at 694.

So viewing the evidence, it showed that the mother did not have any contact with the child after April 1985, thus totally failing to communicate with the child, provide any support for the child, or to comply with the court’s plan designed to reunite her with the child. OCGA § 15-11-81 (C). The only reason alluded to in the evidence for this failure (the mother did not testify) was her fear of the father, as previously communicated to caseworkers. A caseworker had specifically asked her about this in October 1985, however, and the mother had denied that this was a concern.

The court’s finding as to the mother is affirmed. See Tyner v. Tyner, 170 Ga. App. 877, 878 (1) (318 SE2d 675) (1984).

Case No. 74647

2. The father’s appeal we examine under the same standard. Soon after he arrived in Gainesville with the child, he was reported to the Department of Family and Children Services for abuse and neglect of the child and alcohol abuse. A file was opened and the Department of Family and Children Services began to work with him in a relationship that lasted four years. Twice in 1983 the father gave custody of the child to the Department of Family and Children Services so that he could be detoxified at the Georgia Mental Health Institute. On one of these occasions he lied to the Department of Family and Children Services as to the reason for the temporary custody. Although the order is not in the record, it is not disputed that in August 1983 the father and the Department of Family and Children Services entered into a consent order by which he was to maintain physical custody of the child while the Department of Family and Children Services had legal custody. In April 1984, the father went before a citizens review panel which apparently reviewed the situation and made recommendations as to the father’s recovery and planned reconciliation with his child. On May 30, 1984, pursuant to the Department of Family and Children Services’ petition, the child was declared to be deprived, and legal and physical custody were placed in the De *256 partment. In that consent order, which forms the core of the present dispute, the father was ordered to do three things in order to regain custody of his son: (1) attend Alcoholics Anonymous three times a week; (2) provide the name of his AA sponsor to the Department of Family and Children Services; and (3) refrain from drinking any alcoholic beverages. All of these steps were to be done until August 1, 1984, when, if he complied, the child was to be returned. He did not.

Upon the hearing of the mother’s petition for custody in 1985 at which the father was present and participated, the court made the following finding concerning the father: “the father . . . has failed to comply with this Court’s order of May 30, 1984 in that he has not attended Alcoholics Anonymous meetings at least three times a week, failed to provide sponsor’s name to Department of Family and Children Services, failed to refrain from drinking alcoholic beverages

Again, the Department tried to work with the father, setting up a plan for him to take antabuse and be routinely tested for alcohol abuse, since by this time he was refusing to go to the mental health agency for counseling and the agency had exhausted the programs to try with him, for he would not cooperate and had finished none of the treatment he had begun. He was not successful on the antabuse and testing program because he was able to take antabuse and continue to drink, which he did.

In March 1986, another order was entered by the court, apparently in another effort to arrange for the child’s return to the father. Although this order is not in the record, it is not disputed that it required the father to continue working, to improve the living conditions, to go twice weekly for breath tests, to continue with counseling; it specified that if he ever registered .05 on his test, the child would be taken away.

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Bluebook (online)
361 S.E.2d 246, 184 Ga. App. 254, 1987 Ga. App. LEXIS 2215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-j-l-y-gactapp-1987.