In the Interest of R.E. and A.E., Minor Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 18, 2025
Docket25-0088
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of R.E. and A.E., Minor Children (In the Interest of R.E. and A.E., 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 R.E. and A.E., Minor Children, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 25-0088 Filed June 18, 2025

IN THE INTEREST OF R.E. and A.E., Minor Children,

Z.E., Father, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Mitchell County, Elizabeth Batey,

Judge.

A father appeals the juvenile court order terminating his parental rights to

his two minor children. AFFIRMED.

Jesse Marzen of The Lawyers, PLLC, Hampton, for appellant father.

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

General, for appellee State.

Danielle M. Ellingson of Noah, Smith, Sloter & Ellingson PLC, Charles City,

attorney and guardian ad litem for minor children.

Considered without oral argument by Schumacher, P.J., and Buller and

Sandy, JJ. 2

SANDY, Judge.

A father appeals the juvenile court order terminating his parental rights to

his two minor children. The father challenges the statutory grounds for termination

and argues termination is not in the children’s best interests.

Upon our de novo review of the record, we affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Z.E. is the father of R.E. and A.E. R.E. was born in 2022, and A.E. was

born in 2024. The father is married to the children’s mother. In June 2023, the

family came to the attention of the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services

(HHS) after reports were received that the parents’ mobile home was in

ramshackle condition. According to reports, the parents’ mobile home had “human

feces and urine in buckets, trash all over the floor, dog feces all over the floor,

moldy walls, moldy food, maggots, flies, [and] no running water or an operational

toilet.” At the time HHS received these reports, the mother was pregnant with A.E.

The unsanitary condition of the mobile home ultimately led to the parents being

evicted.

After HHS confronted the parents about the unsanitary condition of their

mobile home, they voluntarily agreed to place R.E. with his maternal grandparents.

Shortly thereafter, the State filed a child-in-need-of-assistance (CINA) petition for

R.E. R.E. was adjudicated in need of assistance in September. Initially, the

juvenile court placed R.E. in the mother’s custody, on the condition that she would

reside in the home of the maternal grandparents. But after the mother refused to

follow the juvenile court’s condition, R.E. was placed in the custody of HHS and

placed with maternal grandparents. 3

A few months after A.E.’s birth in early 2024, HHS received reports alleging

that the parents’ new apartment the parents was in unsanitary condition.

According to reports, the family’s landlord checked on the apartment after he

received information that the mother and father had traveled out of state and

locked their dogs in the apartment’s bathroom. As the landlord approached the

apartment, “the odor was so bad that he could smell it down the hallway.” Upon

entering the apartment and opening the bathroom door, the landlord found the

bathroom “completely filled” with dog feces and urine. The mother and father were

subsequently evicted from this apartment for failure to pay rent.1

Following the report about the parents’ new apartment, HHS filed for an ex

parte temporary removal order for A.E. in March. This was granted by the juvenile

court, and A.E. was placed in the temporary custody of HHS. The State then filed

a CINA petition for A.E. A.E. was adjudicated in need of assistance in May and

placed in the custody of HHS for purposes of placement with relatives. A.E. was

also placed with the maternal grandparents.

Beyond the mother and father’s inability to provide stable and sanitary

housing, there have been concerns about their mental health, a history of domestic

abuse in their relationship, and their inability to properly supervise the children

1 Of note, after the mother and father were evicted from their mobile home, they

moved to a rental home. However, they were evicted from the rental home in December 2023 “due to owing nearly $4000 in rent and utilities.” The mother and father subsequently moved into the apartment. After being evicted from the apartment, the mother and father moved into another rental home. However, they were quickly kicked out of this home over a dispute with their landlord about rent payments. The mother and father then proceeded to live out of a storage unit. 4

throughout the underlying CINA cases. The father did little to address these

issues.

Regarding the father’s mental health, the record reveals he has self-

reported previous diagnoses of “PTSD, overactive anxiety, ADHD, depression,

and borderline bipolar disorder.” The father obtained two mental health

evaluations—both of which recommended that he participate in individual therapy

and receive a medication evaluation—over the course of this case. However, the

father never received a medication evaluation. And while at one point the father

consistently engaged in individual therapy on a weekly basis, he was

unsuccessfully discharged from therapy for missing too many appointments shortly

before the termination hearing. The father’s therapist reported to HHS that the

father “was not taking [therapy] seriously anymore.”

As for the history of domestic abuse in the mother and father’s relationship,

the record discloses that the father has previously been convicted of domestic

abuse assault with intent to inflict serious injury for assaulting the mother. The

father received probation for this offense, and a no-contact order was in place

between the mother and father from September 2021 to March 2022. And

Chandler Santee—the HHS case worker assigned to the family—testified at the

termination hearing that the mother disclosed to him that the father “was last

physical in January when she was pregnant with [A.E.]”

Lastly, HHS has consistently expressed doubt about the mother and father’s

ability to adequately supervise the children. A month before the termination

hearing, the father’s six-year old son from a prior relationship came to stay with the 5

mother and father for a few weeks.2 One morning, while the mother and father

were sleeping, the father’s son “ingested Ajax cleaner” that was left unsecured in

the home. Instead of immediately taking the child to the emergency room, the

father proceeded to call the child’s mother and demand that she pay for half of the

hospital bill.

While the father’s son was staying with the mother and father, they also had

one supervised visit with A.E. and R.E. During this visit, the social worker observed

that “there was lighter fluid and hydrogen peroxide within accessibility” of R.E. and

A.E. on a television stand. At one point, the social worker observed A.E. holding

herself up with the help of the television stand as it was shaking. The social worker

had to instruct the mother to grab A.E., “as [the mother] and [father] were distracted

on their phone[s].” Of note, the mother and father never progressed beyond

supervised visitation with the children.3

Due to the mother and father’s failure to ameliorate concerns expressed

throughout the underlying CINA cases, the State filed petitions to terminate their

parental rights to R.E. and A.E. The juvenile court held a termination hearing in

November 2024. During the hearing, the juvenile court heard testimony from the

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Related

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 M.W. and Z.W., Minor Children, R.W., Mother
876 N.W.2d 212 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)
In The Interest Of D.W., Minor Child, A.M.W., Mother
791 N.W.2d 703 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2010)
In the Interest of C.B.
611 N.W.2d 489 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2000)
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628 N.W.2d 25 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2001)

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