In the Interest of J.S. and S.S., Minor Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 5, 2024
Docket24-0503
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of J.S. and S.S., Minor Children (In the Interest of J.S. and S.S., Minor Children) 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 J.S. and S.S., Minor Children, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0503 Filed June 5, 2024

IN THE INTEREST OF J.S. and S.S., Minor Children,

J.S., Mother, Appellant,

J.S., Father, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Joan M. Black,

Judge.

Parents separately appeal the termination of their parental rights.

AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.

Matthew Shimanovsky, Iowa City, for appellant mother.

Christopher J. Foster of Foster Law Office, Iowa City, for appellant father.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Tamara Knight, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

Sara Strain Linder of Linn County Advocate, Inc., Cedar Rapids, attorney

and guardian ad litem for minor children.

Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Greer and Badding, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

One step forward by these parents was always followed by one step back,

leaving them in almost the same place they started after sixteen months of

services. This oscillation between progression and regression resulted in

termination of the parents’ rights to their two children—born in 2014 and 2018—

under Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(f) (2024). On appeal, both parents challenge

the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the ground for termination, 1 argue

termination is not in the children’s best interests, claim the court should have

applied permissive exceptions, and request more time to work toward reunification.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In October 2022, the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services

received a report that the parents were living in a storage unit with their two children

and several dogs.2 The mother was reportedly using methamphetamine. The

State obtained an order for temporary removal and filed child-in-need-of-

assistance petitions. The parents avoided law enforcement and the department

for almost two weeks. Once they were located in early November, the children

were placed in foster care, and the mother was arrested on pending warrants.

1 Both parents’ petitions on appeal challenge the final element in section 232.116(1)(h). We consider their arguments as challenges to the final element of the ground under which their rights were terminated, section 232.116(1)(f), which is essentially identical to the final element in section 232.116(1)(h). 2 This was not the parents’ first interaction with the department. The mother’s

rights have been terminated to four other children. The father’s rights were terminated to two of these children as well. And in May 2020, the family voluntarily participated in services to remedy unsanitary conditions in their home. 3

Both children tested positive for methamphetamine. They were adjudicated as

children in need of assistance later that month.

The father tested positive for methamphetamine in late November and early

December. But later in December, the father (who had a medical marijuana card)

was only testing positive for THC. The mother was negative for all substances on

her drug tests in November and December. Meanwhile, the parents remained

homeless. The mother tested positive for methamphetamine in February 2023 and

the father in March. By May, however, the parents had secured suitable housing,

engaged in outpatient substance-use treatment, and progressed to semi-

supervised visits.

From there, the mother consistently tested negative for all drugs, at least

until late July, when she began testing positive for THC. But by then, she had

secured a medical marijuana card like the father. On two occasions in July and

August, the mother also tested positive for cocaine. The father tested positive for

cocaine five times between June and September, and he had a positive test for

methamphetamine in both May and July. He was also regularly positive for THC.

Because of the parents’ positive drug tests, and an incident where the mother

seemed to be under the influence at the oldest child’s school, visits reverted to fully

supervised in August.

Despite this inconsistent stretch of sobriety for the parents, they maintained

their housing through the permanency hearing in October. But the condition of

their apartment, where they kept one dog and five puppies, had deteriorated. Both

were unemployed, and neither had transportation. Still, the department

recommended giving the parents more time due to some of the progress they had 4

made. The court granted that request in its permanency order, extending the goal

of reunification for three months.

In those next three months, the parents consistently tested negative for

drugs, except THC. They started parenting education in October, and they again

progressed to semi-supervised visits in November. But in late December, the

parents were evicted from their apartment. Though they had known eviction was

possible since November, they did not tell the department until after it happened.

When they were evicted, the apartment had a heavy smell of cigarette smoke, and

the floor of the children’s bedroom was covered in dog feces. The parents told the

department they planned to stay in a hotel for a few days and then “couch surf”

with some friends. Their visits returned to fully supervised.

With this instability, the department recommended proceeding to

termination of parental rights. The State filed its petitions in January 2024. Soon

after, the father had another positive test for methamphetamine. The parents

obtained new substance-use evaluations and housing in February. But the

department was concerned about the parents’ ability to maintain that housing given

their continued unemployment and financial instability.

The termination hearing was held in March. Both parents testified they had

not used drugs, other than marijuana, since October 2022. The biggest issue at

the hearing was the parents’ financial instability. Their sole source of income was

the father’s social security disability benefits of $946 per month. The housing they

had recently obtained was a trailer they were buying on contract. The children’s

paternal grandfather, who had just been released from prison, was covering the

contract payments of $1000 per month. The parents’ other monthly expenses— 5

including the cost of their marijuana—left them with almost no disposable income.

Yet neither parent planned to find a job, though the mother was applying for social

security disability. And they had no plan for what would happen if the paternal

grandfather stopped covering their monthly trailer payment before it was paid off.

Their general answer was that they could rely on others to help them out.

One of the department caseworkers testified the parents were only able to

show limited “periods of change” before sliding “back downhill.” While the worker

acknowledged the parents had suitable housing at the termination hearing, she

believed their “ups and downs” with housing and finances prevented a return of

custody then or in the foreseeable future. The other caseworker who was involved

with the family echoed that belief. And while she recognized a bond between the

parents and children, she still recommended termination because

it’s been too long of a period of time of instability.

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Related

State v. Taylor
596 N.W.2d 55 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1999)
In the Interest of R.M.
431 N.W.2d 196 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1988)
In the Interest of A.M., Minor Child, A.M., Father
843 N.W.2d 100 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2014)
In The Interest Of D.W., Minor Child, A.M.W., Mother
791 N.W.2d 703 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2010)

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