In the Interest of J.S.-g., Minor Child, R.S., Mother

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 17, 2016
Docket16-0794
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of J.S.-g., Minor Child, R.S., Mother (In the Interest of J.S.-g., Minor Child, R.S., Mother) 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.

Bluebook
In the Interest of J.S.-g., Minor Child, R.S., Mother, (iowactapp 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 16-0794 Filed August 17, 2016

IN THE INTEREST OF J.S.-G., Minor child,

R.S., Mother, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Pottawattamie County, Gary K.

Anderson, District Associate Judge.

A mother appeals the juvenile court’s modification order removing her

child from her care and placing the child with the father. REVERSED AND

REMANDED.

Te’ya T. O’Bannon-Martens of O’Bannon Law, P.C., Council Bluffs, for

appellant mother.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Mary A. Triick, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

Roberta J. Megel of the State Public Defender’s Office, Council Bluffs, for

minor child.

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

POTTERFIELD, Presiding Judge.

A mother appeals the juvenile court’s modification order removing her

child from her care and placing the child with the father. She argues no clear and

convincing evidence existed to support the juvenile court’s decision—a decision

contrary to the recommendations of both the Iowa Department of Human

Services (DHS) and the child’s guardian ad litem—because there was not clear

and convincing evidence suggesting the child was at risk of harm that could be

avoided only through a change of placement. Furthermore, the mother argues

the evidence presented to the juvenile court did not support the conclusion that

placing the child with the father was in the child’s best interests. We hold the

juvenile court did not have clear and convincing evidence to justify the

modification placing the child with the father. We therefore reverse the juvenile

court’s modification order and remand for further proceedings.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In November 2014, DHS received information the mother had committed

an assault in the presence of her two-year-old son, J.S.-G. The reported victim

of the assault was the child’s maternal grandmother. A child abuse assessment

completed by DHS confirmed the assault and also revealed the mother was

using methamphetamine. When DHS became involved, J.S.-G was living with,

and being cared for by, the maternal grandmother. She had taken primary

responsibility for the care of J.S.-G., and she reported the mother’s contact with

the child was intermittent.

On November 14, 2014, the juvenile court found clear and convincing

evidence to justify J.S.-G.’s removal from the care of his mother and placed the 3

child with his maternal uncle and aunt. In addition to its inclusion of the DHS

findings regarding the mother, the juvenile court noted several issues regarding

the father—he lived in Nebraska, had recently been arrested on drug charges

and for operating while intoxicated, and had not seen J.S.-G. since May of 2014.

Following an adjudicatory hearing, J.S.-G. was adjudicated to be a child in

need of assistance (CINA) on January 26, 2015, pursuant to Iowa Code section

232.2(6)(c)(2) and (6)(n) (2013). The juvenile court ordered that the child remain

with his maternal uncle and aunt. The court also ordered both the mother and

the father to complete substance abuse evaluations and follow all resulting

recommendations for treatment.

Following the CINA adjudication, the mother sought substance abuse

treatment at an inpatient program at Family Works. In a February 10, 2015

dispositional order, the juvenile court noted the mother’s active participation and

high level of engagement in the program. At the time, J.S.-G. had already been

participating in overnight and weekend visits with his mother at Family Works

with good results. The juvenile court ordered that the child be placed with the

mother at Family Works, subject to DHS supervision. That placement was

continued in a May 1, 2015 review order. The juvenile court noted the mother

continued to make progress in the program, J.S.-G. was acclimating well to the

placement, and all of the child’s needs were being met.

The mother graduated from Family Works in June 2015, and she moved

with J.S.-G. into the maternal grandmother’s home. By August 2015, however,

the mother began to miss her outpatient treatment appointments. She admitted

to relapsing and using methamphetamine twice. The mother was referred to a 4

thirty-day treatment program at Prelude in Des Moines, where she was admitted

on October 6, 2015. She was discharged from that program when she left the

facility in order to attend an October 19, 2015 CINA review hearing. As a result

of the mother’s relapse and discharge from the Prelude program, the juvenile

court placed J.S.-G. in the care of the maternal grandmother in its October 26,

2015 order. The mother was allowed to live in the same home with the child

while she obtained further treatment.

The mother then entered intensive outpatient treatment with Heartland

Family Service but was unsuccessfully discharged soon afterward due to a lack

of participation and noncompliance with drug screens. Despite this third setback,

the juvenile court ordered that J.S.-G. remain with the maternal grandmother in

its January 14, 2016 review order.

On March 14, 2016, the mother was admitted into the inpatient women

and children’s facility at the Jackson Recovery Center in Sioux City. DHS placed

J.S.-G. with the mother later the same month without a formal order from the

juvenile court. When the case came up for a review hearing on April 27, 2015,

both the State and the child’s guardian ad litem recommended the court order

that the child remain with his mother in the program. No testimony was

presented by the mother, the State, or the guardian ad litem. The State

summarized its recommendation as follows:

The mother’s done very well in her treatment program. The child has been with her on a visit for approximately thirty days, and everything is going well up there in the program, so the recommendation from DHS is that she—the child continue to be placed with the mother. 5

Those sentiments were echoed by the recommendation from J.S.-G.’s guardian

ad litem:

Your Honor, no evidence or testimony. If this hearing was twenty days ago, I might have a different recommendation, but at this point in time, I am in agreement with the recommendation that [the child] stay with his mother at Jackson Recovery, and I would ask that the parties be granted concurrent jurisdiction to settle matters of custody and support . . . . No additional services are being requested.

The mother’s attorney also informed the court of her accomplishments

As stated by [the State], [the mother] is doing extremely well right now. She’s been in Jackson Recovery for—I believe it’s forty- six days, and she is already I believe they call it a senior mentor. She’s doing extremely well in the program. [J.S.-G.] is doing extremely well with her, and all reports coming out of Jackson [Recovery] right now are glowingly positive on both of them, so we would be in agreement with the recommendations as they are set forth right now. We would resist the recommendation of concurrent jurisdiction as my client would like to have the opportunity to complete her treatment and continue following through with the recommendations of the court.

The father was present and testified at the hearing. He also presented

testimony from the child’s paternal grandmother. The father and paternal

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