In the Interest of: JN, minor child, RN v. The State of Wyoming

2024 WY 105, 556 P.3d 748
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 2024
DocketS-24-0072
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2024 WY 105 (In the Interest of: JN, minor child, RN v. The State of Wyoming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court 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: JN, minor child, RN v. The State of Wyoming, 2024 WY 105, 556 P.3d 748 (Wyo. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING

2024 WY 105

APRIL TERM, A.D. 2024

October 4, 2024

IN THE INTEREST OF: JN, minor child,

RN,

Appellant (Respondent), S-24-0072 v.

THE STATE OF WYOMING,

Appellee (Petitioner).

Appeal from the District Court of Laramie County The Honorable Thomas T.C. Campbell, Judge

Representing Appellant: Brittany Thorpe, Domonkos & Thorpe, LLC, Cheyenne, Wyoming.

Representing Appellee: Bridget Hill, Wyoming Attorney General; Christina F. McCabe, Deputy Attorney General; Wendy S. Ross, Senior Assistant Attorney General.

Office of the Guardian ad Litem: Joseph R. Belcher, Director; Kim Skoutary Johnson, Chief Trial and Appellate Counsel.

Before FOX, C.J., and BOOMGAARDEN, GRAY, FENN, and JAROSH, JJ. NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third. Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be made before final publication in the permanent volume. GRAY, Justice.

[¶1] This case comes before us for a second time. Previously, we reversed and remanded the juvenile court’s order changing the permanency plan from family reunification to adoption (original order) because the juvenile court failed to address whether the Department of Family Services (DFS) had made reasonable efforts to reunify RN (Mother) with her son, JN, as required by Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14-3-431(f). Int. of JN, 2023 WY 83, ¶¶ 10, 18, 534 P.3d 455, 458, 460 (Wyo. 2023). On remand, the juvenile court determined, based on the evidence before it at the time of its original order, that DFS had made reasonable efforts to reunify Mother with JN. Mother appeals, challenging the juvenile court’s refusal on remand to reconsider its original order based on new evidence and its decision that it was in JN’s best interests to change the permanency plan from family reunification to adoption. We affirm.

ISSUES

[¶2] Mother raises one issue which we restate as two:

1. Did the juvenile court err on remand when it refused to reconsider its original order changing the permanency plan from family reunification to adoption based on new evidence?

2. Was there sufficient evidence supporting the juvenile court’s decision that it was in JN’s best interests to change the permanency plan from family reunification to adoption?

FACTS

[¶3] On April 9, 2021, a police officer with the Cheyenne Police Department responded to a local hotel because Mother refused to leave at her scheduled checkout time. Mother, who was with her six-year-old son, JN, was intoxicated. Mother told the officer she was planning to go home with JN but her “pretty violent boyfriend” also lived with them. JN confirmed Mother’s boyfriend was violent. The officer took JN into protective custody due to Mother’s intoxication and inability to provide him a safe place to live. Mother was transported to the local emergency room, where she tested positive for amphetamines and had a blood alcohol content of .323.

[¶4] On April 12, 2021, the State, through the district attorney’s office, filed a petition alleging Mother had neglected JN. The next day, the juvenile court held a shelter care hearing and found it was contrary to JN’s welfare to remain with Mother. It placed JN in the temporary custody of the State, and DFS placed him in nonrelative foster care. The

1 court ordered the permanency plan to be family reunification. It appointed an attorney for Mother, a guardian ad litem (GAL), and a court-appointed special advocate (CASA) for JN.

[¶5] In June 2021, DFS developed a case plan that required Mother to provide for JN’s basic needs, engage in therapeutic counseling with JN, maintain sobriety, submit to weekly random drug testing in Cheyenne, obtain adequate housing, and address her relationship with her abusive boyfriend. About two months later, in August 2021, the parties entered into a consent decree holding the neglect petition in abeyance for six months. The consent decree required Mother to comply with the law and her case plan and to refrain from using drugs, alcohol, and nonprescription mood-altering substances. If Mother complied with these requirements, the court would dismiss the neglect petition.

[¶6] Mother made some progress on her case plan. She was employed, obtained safe and appropriate housing, and participated in supervised visitation and therapeutic parenting sessions with JN. However, she continued to have contact with her abusive boyfriend and failed to submit to random drug testing in Cheyenne, instead paying out-of-pocket for scheduled drug testing in Colorado. These drug tests were negative for illegal drugs.

[¶7] On January 5, 2022, the multidisciplinary team (MDT)—Mother, the DFS caseworker, the assistant district attorney, JN’s foster mother, the GAL, and JN’s therapist, among others—met and recommended Mother be allowed to transport JN from school to her home for unsupervised visitation with the condition that preceding each transport, Mother provide proof of a negative drug test. The MDT also filed a motion with the juvenile court to extend the consent decree for six months to allow Mother more time to work her case plan. The juvenile court granted the motion.

[¶8] Between January 24, 2022, and February 24, 2022, Mother transported JN from school to her home only one time. This was because she either missed or refused to take a drug test or tested presumptive positive for methamphetamine. These problems led to the termination of Mother’s permission to transport JN for unsupervised visitation, but the MDT agreed to reevaluate the situation if Mother complied with random drug testing three times a week for three weeks and all tests were negative for illegal drugs. During the three- week trial period, Mother tested negative seven times, failed to appear for testing six times, and once tested presumptive positive for methamphetamine. Mother was also late for her therapeutic parenting sessions with JN. Unsupervised visitation was not reestablished, but arrangements were made for supervised visits.

[¶9] In March 2022, the State filed a motion to revoke the consent decree. It alleged that since November 2021, Mother had missed 29 drug tests, refused to test 9 times, and tested positive for methamphetamine 4 times. Mother contested the revocation allegations, and the juvenile court scheduled an evidentiary hearing for August 19, 2022. In the meantime, Mother continued to miss drug tests and maintained her relationship with her abusive

2 boyfriend. Although she continued supervised visitation with JN, he was “unhappy or stressed out” and began exhibiting troubling behaviors, including smearing feces on his foster mother’s bathroom wall.

[¶10] Mother failed to appear at the scheduled hearing on the motion to revoke the consent decree. The juvenile court revoked the consent decree and adjudicated JN neglected by Mother. It ordered the permanency plan to remain family reunification.

[¶11] In September 2022, the case plan was updated to require Mother to attend inpatient drug treatment. That same month, the MDT met and could not reach a unanimous decision on the permanency plan. JN’s foster mother reported that during the summer, JN began “really, really hyperactive behaviors like touching everything, forgetting everything” and these behaviors were ongoing. He also began lying and stealing. She recommended the permanency plan be changed from family reunification to adoption. The CASA agreed with this recommendation, sharing that JN “really wants to just stay with [his foster mother] . . . .

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2024 WY 105, 556 P.3d 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-jn-minor-child-rn-v-the-state-of-wyoming-wyo-2024.