In the Interest Of: J. v. J., a Child (Mother) v. State of Georgia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 30, 2014
DocketA14A0943
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest Of: J. v. J., a Child (Mother) v. State of Georgia (In the Interest Of: J. v. J., a Child (Mother) v. State of Georgia) 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. v. J., a Child (Mother) v. State of Georgia, (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., MILLER and DILLARD, 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. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

October 30, 2014

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A14A0943. IN THE INTEREST OF J. V. J., A CHILD.

DILLARD, Judge.

The mother of a minor child, J. V. J., appeals from an order of the Juvenile

Court of Houston County terminating her parental rights and its subsequent denial of

her motion for a new trial, arguing that the court lacked clear and convincing

evidence to support its finding that the cause of her child’s deprivation was likely to

continue. For the reasons set forth infra, we reverse.

Viewed in the light most favorable to the juvenile court’s findings,1 the

evidence showed that J. V. J. was born on September 25, 2012, and was immediately

removed from her mother’s custody by the Department of Family and Children

Services (“the Department”) because her mother previously lost parental rights to

1 In the Interest of T. W., 297 Ga. App. 886, 886 (678 SE2d 546) (2009). three other children and had a history of instability and drug use. Nine months later,

on June 26, 2013, the juvenile court held a termination hearing, during which the

mother admitted that she used crack cocaine two or three times per week for ten

years. The mother contended, however, that her drug use ceased when she learned

that she was pregnant with J. V. J. in March 2012.2 Further, the mother testified that

she had no relationship with five of her six children, and that her parental rights as

to three of those children were terminated.

The mother visited J. V. J. regularly since her birth and, even though the

Department never provided her with a case plan, she independently decided to attend

a 15-week parenting course, complete an outpatient substance-abuse program, earn

her high-school diploma, and enroll in college to become a medical assistant.

Regarding her finances, the mother testified that she received a Pell Grant and student

loans for school and, if J. V. J. were returned to her, that she could apply for

temporary assistance for needy families. Further, the mother explained that she was

trying to “get [her] life together and be a better mom” and, as she would be unable to

have other children, she wanted to prove that she could care for J. V. J.

2 There is no evidence that J. V. J. tested positive for cocaine at birth.

2 The evidence also shows that, although the mother had been unemployed for

the last ten years,3 she had lived in the same apartment for approximately two years

(since July 18, 2011). The mother’s boyfriend moved in with her shortly after J. V.

J. was born, and he paid most of their living expenses. And while the mother and

boyfriend knew that the boyfriend was not J. V. J.’s biological father, they

nevertheless signed an acknowledgment of legitimacy, indicating that he was the

father.

On September 27, 2012, two days after J. V. J.’s birth, the mother and her

boyfriend tested positive for cocaine and, on May 21, 2013, the boyfriend tested

positive a second time. Three weeks later, in June 2013, the boyfriend paid for an

independent drug test and, this time, he tested negative for cocaine. The technician

who administered the May test testified that the boyfriend’s positive drug test in May

showed a low level of cocaine, indicating that “he was trying to quit” or “cut down

some.” The evidence presented below further shows that, in March 2013, the

boyfriend successfully completed a substance-abuse program.

3 The mother testified below that she did “do a little cleaning up for her mother” in order to “make a little money.”

3 The director of a women’s rehabilitation center testified that the mother had

enrolled in an outpatient substance-abuse program. And while she had been

noncompliant in the past, the mother had done “exceptionally well” in the program

this time. Indeed, she ceased using drugs in October 2012, and since then, tested

negative for drugs 32 times. Moreover, when the mother completed the program, she

enrolled in a support group for recovering addicts and participated in every program

the center offers, including a job-readiness program.

A case manager testified that the Department did not develop a case plan for

J. V. J. and, in fact, did nothing to assist the mother or work towards reunification.

The case manager had no contact whatsoever with the substance-abuse program, but

she nevertheless confirmed that the mother had been drug-free for at least 90 days

preceding May 2013, when she tested negative for drugs. And when the case manager

supervised visits, she noticed that the mother played with her child, bonded with her,

and appeared to love her. Further, despite “transportation issues,” the mother never

missed a scheduled supervised visit with her daughter. Additionally, J. V. J.’s Court

Appointed Special Advocate (“CASA”) visited the mother’s home, which included

a room with a baby bed, diapers, and baby clothes, and she found it pleasant,

moderately furnished, and clean. And based on the home visit and her contact with

4 J. V. J. and her mother, the CASA believed reunification was indeed an option and

that the mother was able to care for the child.

J. V. J.’s foster mother testified that she adopted two of J. V. J.’s biological

siblings, and that she and her husband desired to adopt J. V. J. as well. At the close

of the hearing, J. V. J.’s guardian ad litem commended the mother, stating “[s]he’s

managed to completely turn her life around and it’s very impressive.” Nonetheless,

she agreed with the Department’s recommendation to terminate the mother’s parental

rights based on her boyfriend’s “substance abuse issues.”

On August 8, 2013, the juvenile court terminated the mother’s parental rights.

The court first found that the mother was not credible because she signed an

acknowledgment falsely representing that her boyfriend was J. V. J.’s father.

Moreover, the court determined that termination was warranted because the mother

had a long history of chronic instability and drug abuse, and she lived with a man

dependent upon cocaine. And noting that the mother’s parental rights to three of her

other children were terminated, the court found that she was unstable regarding her

ability to meet J. V. J.’s needs, and that no evidence suggested she would ever

develop that ability. The court was also adamant that J. V. J. “CANNOT live with [

] [the mother’s boyfriend].” Finally, the court concluded that it was in J. V. J.’s best

5 interests to terminate her mother’s parental rights because “it would be unspeakably

inhumane to the child to remove her from the [foster] home.”

The mother then filed a motion for a new trial, arguing that the court lacked

sufficient grounds for termination and that the Department failed to show instability.

The court denied the motion, reiterating its initial findings. Thereafter, the mother

filed an application for a discretionary appeal, which we granted. This appeal follows.

On appeal, the mother maintains that the juvenile court terminated her parental

rights without clear and convincing evidence that the cause of J. V. J.’s deprivation,

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