In the Interest of Q.C., A.G., and A.G., Minor Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 18, 2024
Docket24-1469
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of Q.C., A.G., and A.G., Minor Children (In the Interest of Q.C., A.G., and A.G., 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 Q.C., A.G., and A.G., Minor Children, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-1469 Filed December 18, 2024

IN THE INTEREST OF Q.C., A.G., and A.G., Minor Children,

J.G., Mother, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Wapello County, Richelle Mahaffey,

Judge.

A mother appeals the district court’s removal, adjudicatory, and

dispositional orders. AFFIRMED.

Denise M. Gonyea of McKelvie Law Office, Grinnell, for appellant mother.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Mackenzie Moran, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

Sarah Wenke, Ottumwa, guardian ad litem for minor children and attorney

for minor child Q.C.

Jonathan Willier, Centerville, attorney for minor child A.G.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Badding and Chicchelly, JJ. 2

SCHUMACHER, Presiding Judge.

A mother appeals following the district court’s dispositional order that

confirmed her three children’s adjudication as children in need of assistance and

continued their removal from her custody. She challenges the children’s initial

removal, subsequent adjudication, and continued removal at disposition. Upon

our de novo review, we affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

The Iowa Department of Health and Human Services has an extensive

history with the mother of these children. Her oldest child turned eighteen while

this appeal was pending; the other two are now sixteen and nine years old. 1 The

department was involved with the family in 2009, 2011, and 2021 because of the

mother’s substance use. And the department became involved in 2022 because

the mother was living with a registered sex offender. The sex offender was the

mother’s stepfather who, according to a child protective assessment, was

convicted of two counts of third-degree sexual abuse in 2004 involving female

children. The mother maintained that she needed to live with him so that she could

care for her mother, who was bedridden. The department gave her information

about services available in the community to help provide care for dependent

adults, and the mother and children moved out of the home.

But in March 2024, the department received a report that the family was

again living with the stepfather. The mother dodged the department’s efforts to

contact her, until her arrest at the beginning of April for driving while barred,

1 The children’s fathers have not appealed. 3

possession of drug paraphernalia, and possession of methamphetamine, third

offense. The police report stated the mother was driving the vehicle when it was

stopped for a traffic violation. Her “purse was on the arm rest middle area between

the two front seats.” Inside the purse, officers found “a plastic baggie with crystal

residue” and “a used hypodermic needle” with a clear substance that field tested

positive for methamphetamine. And in the arm rest under the purse, officers found

“several small zipper baggies, similar to the one found in the purse. One of the

baggies contained a usable quantity of a white crystalline substance” that also field

tested positive for methamphetamine.

The department removed the youngest child from the mother’s custody and

placed her with a maternal aunt, where she has since remained. Because the

department could not locate the oldest child, and the middle child was believed to

be living with his father under a district court custodial decree,2 the department did

not include those children in the removal request. The State petitioned to have the

oldest and youngest children adjudicated as in need of the court’s assistance in

April.

Towards the end of April, the department opened a new assessment for the

middle child upon receiving a report that he had been running away from his

father’s home and “exhibiting numerous behaviors,” like skipping school and

“threatening to slash the car tires, put holes in the walls, [and] break electronics.”

The father told the department that if the child was found, he could not return to

the father’s home “due to his chronic running behaviors and unwillingness to

2 The decree placed the child in the parties’ joint legal custody and the father’s

physical care, with visitation for the mother at the father’s discretion. 4

engage in treatment to address his mental health diagnoses” of attention deficit

and oppositional defiant disorders. The State filed a child-in-need-of-assistance

petition for the middle child at the beginning of May, while his location was still

unknown. The mother maintained that she did not know where he was, though the

father told the department that he had heard the mother was hiding the child. The

mother arrived at the adjudication hearing in June with the child, who said that he

did not want to return to his father’s home. The parents agreed to a safety plan

placing the middle child in the aunt’s home, but he returned to the father’s home

after about a month. While there, the child assaulted his father. He was later

arrested and placed in shelter care. Neither the father nor the aunt would take the

child back into their homes, and the department could not find a foster care

placement for him.

The district court granted the State’s petitions in July, removed the oldest

and middle children from the mother’s custody, and adjudicated all three children

as in need of the court’s assistance under Iowa Code section 232.96A(3)(b), (14),

and (16)(d) (2024). The middle child was also adjudicated under

section 232.96A(6), (7), (11), and (12). The court noted that since the mother’s

release from jail in April, she “has not been cooperating with” the department:

She has declined to provide drug screens when requested. She has not signed requested releases. She has not completed a substance abuse evaluation. [The mother] denies any methamphetamine use. Yet [she] has claimed she will check herself into in-patient treatment. This has not yet happened. [The] mother has not participated in any mental health services.

The court concluded it was not safe for the children “to be residing with a parent

who is using methamphetamine and who lacks a safe residence.” The mother was 5

directed to address her substance use, find safe and stable housing, and “share

what she knows about [the oldest child’s] whereabouts” so her safety could be

assured.

The mother had not done any of these things by the dispositional hearing in

September, although the oldest child had been located and was living with her

father. On the department’s recommendation, and the oldest child’s request, the

district court’s dispositional order placed the child “in the care of her father

only . . . under the supervision of the Department,” with her case to “automatically

close” on the child’s eighteenth birthday. The middle child had “absconded from

his placement and has been on the run for approximately two weeks.” The attorney

for that child urged the court to allow him to live with the mother. The mother

requested the same. The court denied their requests and ordered the middle and

youngest children to remain in the custody of the department “for placement in

relative care, fictive kin, foster care, and/or shelter care.”

The mother now appeals the children’s initial removal, adjudication as

children in need of assistance, and the court’s disposition continuing their removal

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Related

In the Interest of J.R.H.
358 N.W.2d 311 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1984)
In the Interest of A.M.H.
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Hyler v. Garner
548 N.W.2d 864 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1996)
In the Interest of Long
313 N.W.2d 473 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1981)
In the Interest of J.S. & N.S., Minor Children, A.S., Mother
846 N.W.2d 36 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2014)
In the Interest of C.B.
611 N.W.2d 489 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2000)

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