In the Interest of K.L.W. v. D.R.P.

131 S.W.3d 400, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 511
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 9, 2004
DocketNo. WD 62794
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 131 S.W.3d 400 (In the Interest of K.L.W. v. D.R.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals 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 K.L.W. v. D.R.P., 131 S.W.3d 400, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 511 (Mo. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

JOSEPH M. ELLIS, Chief Judge.

Appellant Lisa Meade appeals from a judgment entered in the Circuit Court of Jackson County dismissing her petition for the adoption of three-year-old K.L.W. and ordering K.L.W. placed in the temporary care and custody of Respondent Dorothy Patterson for subsequent adoption. For the following reasons, we reverse the judgment and remand the cause for an eviden-tiary hearing before a different judge.

[402]*402K.L.W. was born on July 2, 2000. KL.W.’s mother was Tiffany Renece Williams, and her putative father was Jeffrey Millner. At the time of her birth, K.L.W. had three half-brothers (T.W., born February 27,-1997; M.W., born May 17, 1998; and A.S., born June 19, 1999), all of whom were in the custody of her great-grandmother Norma Brown.

Upon her birth, K.L.W. was placed in the custody of the Division of Family Services (“DFS”). On July 4, 2000, DFS placed K.L.W. in the foster care of Respondent. At that time, Respondent’s biological daughter, her three adopted children, and three foster children were already living with Respondent.1

On November 9, 2001, all parental rights to K.L.W. were terminated. That same day, all parental rights to A.S. were also terminated, and A.S. was removed from the custody of his great-grandmother.

Because the family court commissioner handling the cases had expressed a preference that K.L.W. and A.S. be adopted as a sibling group, DFS began recruitment for an adoptive family that would accept both children. During-the DFS recruitment efforts, Respondent informed DFS that she would be interested in adopting K.L.W., but that she would not be interested in adopting A.S.

At an adoption staffing meeting on February 19, 2002, Appellant was chosen as the adoptive placement for K.L.W. and A.S.2 During that meeting, Respondent supported the placement of K.L.W. with Appellant. On February 28, 2002, Appellant filed petitions to adopt K.L.W. and A.S.

About that time, KL.W.’s mother had another child, T.M., KL.W.’s full sister, who was taken into DFS custody and was placed with Appellant. Appellant subsequently filed a petition to adopt T.M.

Starting in March 2002, DFS began conducting pre-placement visits between Appellant and K.L.W. at KL.W.’s daycare center. Shortly after these visits began, Respondent filed a grievance with DFS, claiming that she had heard that DFS was [403]*403going to move K.L.W. sooner than she thought it should and that Appellant and the DFS worker were rude to the people at KL.W.’s daycare center.

Late in the evening on April 2, 2002, K.L.W. was placed in Appellant’s home. On April 4, 2002, Respondent called Appellant’s home to speak to K.L.W. After that phone call, K.L.W. was upset. When Respondent called to speak with K.L.W. again the following day, Appellant told her that the phone calls would have to stop for a while until she had some time to bond with K.L.W. On April 5, 2002, Respondent sent a letter to the commissioner to complain about her inability to communicate with K.L.W. A handwritten note on top of the letter bearing the commissioner’s initials and dated April 8, 2002, stated, “Copy to parties then to social and adoption file.” After no action was taken on her letter to the commissioner and subsequent phone calls to numerous DFS workers, Respondent called the child abuse hotline on April 15, 2002, to report that Appellant was emotionally abusing K.L.W. by not allowing phone calls and visits with Respondent.

After Respondent made several more calls to the DFS office in Jefferson City, a mediation session was set up between Appellant and Respondent. At that mediation, it was decided that Respondent and her family would be allowed to have some supervised visitation with K.L.W. Those visits were supervised by Judith Anderson, a psychologist. Eventually, when Anderson determined that the visits were no longer beneficial to K.L.W., she terminated the visitation.

On May 8 and May 28, 2002, Respondent sent letters to the commissioner expressing concerns about KL.W.’s placement with Appellant. Handwritten notes on the top of these letters bearing the commissioner’s initials stated that copies of the letters were to be sent to the parties and the original was to be placed in the legal file.

On June 11, 2002, DFS placed Respondent’s foster care license on suspension effective June 6, 2002. On June 24, 2002, Respondent wrote a letter to the commissioner expressing her concerns about her suspension and DFS’s handling of KL.W.’s placement. Respondent also complained about the fact that she had not been receiving notice of hearings or DFS reports in the case and asked the commissioner if notices could be sent to her advising her of upcoming hearings and reviews in the case. A handwritten note on the top of Respondent’s letter, dated June 26, 2002, and bearing the commissioner’s initials, ordered the letter placed in the legal file, copies of the letter sent to all parties, and Respondent added to the “copy list” in the case.

Subsequently, on June 28, 2002, K.L.W.’s guardian ad litem filed a motion for change of judge for cause. The guardian ad litem’s motion for change of judge was denied by the commissioner on July 10, 2002, apparently without an evidentiary hearing.

Later that month, it was determined that A.S. and K.L.W. could be adopted separately, and A.S. was adopted by Melissa Mosher instead of Appellant. About that time, Appellant’s adoption of T.M. was finalized.3

About a week before Appellant’s petition to adopt K.L.W. was to be heard, Respondent filed a petition for the adoption of K.L.W. The petitions were heard by the family court commissioner on October 31, [404]*404November 1, November 7, and December 18, 2002.

On February 18, 2003, the commissioner entered his Findings and Recommendations. The commissioner dismissed Appellant’s petition and found that it was in K.L.W.’s best interests to be placed in the temporary care and custody of Respondent for subsequent adoption. The circuit court accepted the commissioner’s Findings and Recommendations and adopted them as its judgment later that day.

On appeal, Appellant argues that the commissioner improperly denied the motion for change of judge. That motion noted that the commissioner had received four ex parte letters from Respondent and averred that the commissioner had written instructions on the top of each of those letters. The motion asserted that, after having received a letter from Respondent on June 26, 2002, in which Respondent asked to be provided with notice of hearings in the case, the commissioner ordered that Respondent be placed on the “copy list.” The motion noted that Ms. Patterson was not a party to the current case and did not have a legitimate interest in the case as a former foster parent and asserted that the court had violated various statutes and court rules by adding her to the copy list. In addition, the motion made the following assertion:

On June 10, 2002, a review hearing was held in the case of [A.S.]. DFS objected to Ms. Patterson being allowed in the courtroom because she was not a party to the case nor the foster parent for the child. [The commissioner] allowed Ms. Patterson to remain in the courtroom. After the parties and attorneys had left the courtroom, Ms. Patterson returned to the courtroom and spoke to [the commissioner] at the bench.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.3d 400, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-klw-v-drp-moctapp-2004.