In the Interest of S.P. and K.P., Minor Children, D.P., Mother

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 11, 2017
Docket16-1919
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of S.P. and K.P., Minor Children, D.P., Mother (In the Interest of S.P. and K.P., Minor Children, D.P., 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.

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In the Interest of S.P. and K.P., Minor Children, D.P., Mother, (iowactapp 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 16-1919 Filed January 11, 2017

IN THE INTEREST OF S.P. and K.P., Minor Children,

D.P., Mother, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Butler County, Peter B. Newell,

District Associate Judge.

A mother challenges the juvenile court’s finding in its dispositional order

that the Iowa Department of Human Services had made reasonable efforts

toward reunifying her family. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

David A. Kuehner of Eggert, Erb, Mulcahy & Kuehner P.L.L.C., Charles

City, for appellant mother.

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

General, for appellee State.

Elizabeth A. Batey of Vickers Law Office, Greene, guardian ad litem for

minor children.

Considered by Vogel, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ. 2

TABOR, Judge.

Teenagers S.P. and K.P. refuse to have contact with their mother, Dawn,

who is accused of dealing methamphetamine out of their home. On appeal,

Dawn contends the juvenile court erred in finding the Iowa Department of Human

Services (DHS) had made reasonable efforts at reunification when no visitation

had been scheduled during the five months the children had been removed from

her care. Although the social workers encouraged the children to see their

mother, the DHS insisted that given their ages, the children could not be forced

to attend visitation.

In looking at the record anew,1 we conclude the DHS failed to maintain

reasonable efforts toward reunification by delegating the decision regarding

visitation entirely to the children. At the next scheduled review hearing, the

juvenile court should scrutinize the discretion exercised by the DHS in

establishing or not establishing visitation, which would include securing a

recommendation from the children’s therapist regarding the feasibility of

reinitiating contact with their mother through family counseling.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

This child-welfare case opened in May 2016 when the Butler County

Sheriff arrested Dawn for operating while intoxicated (drugged driving) and found

eight grams of methamphetamine in her possession. The State charged Dawn

with possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver, a class “B” felony.

The DHS placed Dawn’s sixteen-year-old daughter, K.P., and fourteen-year-old

1 We review child-welfare cases de novo. See In re D.D., 653 N.W.2d 359, 361 (Iowa 2002). We are not bound by the juvenile court’s factual findings, but we give them weight, especially when credibility is at issue. See id. 3

son, S.P.,2 in the care of the mother’s cousin and her husband. The children had

stayed with these relatives on previous occasions and felt secure in their home.

The May 2016 incident was not the first family upheaval experienced by

these children. In the spring of 2011, S.P. and K.P. were adjudicated as children

in need of assistance (CINA) after authorities discovered their parents were

manufacturing methamphetamine. In 2012, the children lost their father to

suicide; the children were present in the home when he took his life, and S.P.

found his father’s body. To address their grief, the children participated in mental

health counseling from August 2013 to May 2014. A second CINA adjudication

occurred in September 2013 based on the mother’s drug use; that case was

closed in May 2014.

At a hearing on August 17, 2016, Dawn stipulated S.P. and K.P. were

CINA under Iowa Code section 232.2(6)(l) (2015) but urged the juvenile court to

establish visitation.3 Her attorney asked the court to “order that visitation take

place. Our concern is that if it’s not court ordered, that the children’s resistance

to have the visitation would prevent them from occurring.”4 The court responded:

I think that’s something that needs to be looked into a little bit more carefully. Again, I think if the children need mental health evaluations, we probably want to talk to their counselors about that and set up something where—I mean, if the counselors are willing to do that and there’s kind of a therapeutic setting, I think that we

2 The children both have had birthdays in the intervening months and are now ages seventeen and fifteen. 3 The children were not personally present at the August 17 hearing despite the presumption set out in Iowa Code section 232.91(3) that it is in the best interests of a child who is fourteen years or older to attend all hearings. The children were represented by guardian ad litem Elizabeth Batey at the hearing, but no record was made concerning the waiver of their presence. Batey did offer as an exhibit a letter S.P. had written to his mother asking her to sign a guardianship for his current caregivers. 4 The mother’s attorney also informed the court that his client had completed a month- long inpatient substance abuse program. 4

can do that. But I think it’s just a general proposition. It’s not the best thing to order that visitation occur.

The juvenile court explained that in some child-welfare cases it had

ordered visits “even though the children don’t want to have visits,” but here the

court believed it was appropriate to “move slowly” and “see how that progresses.”

In its August 17 adjudication ruling, the court ordered that any visitation between

Dawn and her children be at the discretion of the DHS.

No visitation had been arranged as of October 26, 2016. At a

dispositional hearing that day, DHS case manager Julie Sharp testified the

Family Safety, Risk, and Permanency (FSRP) worker had been encouraging

contact between the children and their mother, but the children “did not wish to

have any.”5 In her October 18 report to the court, Sharp relayed the FSRP

worker’s account that the children said they were “done” with their mother.

During FSRP home visits with the children on July 14 and September 1, the

worker placed phone calls to Dawn, but the children refused to talk. Dawn

reported to the DHS that she and K.P. had contact over Facebook in July, and

K.P. “was going to sneak out to meet her.” K.P. told the workers her mother was

“manipulative”—threatening suicide if K.P. did not meet her and asking K.P. what

her deceased father would think about her refusing to have contact with Dawn.

At the October 26 hearing, the mother’s attorney engaged in the following

exchange with Sharp regarding the inability of the DHS to establish contact

between Dawn and her children:

5 The children again were not present at the hearing, despite the presumption under section 232.91(3) that attending would have been in their best interests, and again, no record was made as to the waiver of their presence. 5

Q. What is the Department’s position about contact between the mother and the children? A. The Department has encouraged that contact and we ask them about it every—I ask them about it every time I see them. The FSRP provider continues to ask them about it during their, well, now biweekly status visits. Q. So what steps has the Department done to establish contact between mother and the children? A. As I said, we encourage that contact and we are supportive of that contact, but the children refuse it. Q. They are the ones dictating—the children are the ones dictating whether or not contact occurs? A. At this time, yes.

Sharp said the DHS permanency goal remained reunification with the

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