In the Interest of T.D. and T.D., Minor Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 5, 2022
Docket22-1231
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of T.D. and T.D., Minor Children (In the Interest of T.D. and T.D., 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 T.D. and T.D., Minor Children, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-1231 Filed October 5, 2022

IN THE INTEREST OF T.D. and T.D., Minor Children,

A.H., Mother, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, David F. Staudt,

Judge.

A mother appeals the denial of her request to terminate the guardianship of

her children. AFFIRMED.

Nina Forcier of Forcier Law Office PLLC, Waterloo, for appellant mother.

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

General, for appellee State.

Mark A. Milder of Mark Milder Law Firm, Denver, attorney and guardian ad

litem for minor children.

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

BADDING, Judge.

On the brink of having her parental rights to her two oldest children

terminated, the mother agreed to a guardianship with the maternal grandmother

under Iowa Code section 232.104(2)(d)(1) (2019). Two years later, the mother

asked the juvenile court to end the guardianship and return the children to her care.

The court denied that request, finding it would not be in the children’s best

interests. The mother appeals.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In May 2018, the mother made a bottle for her two-month-old baby, J.W.,

and put him in bed with his father. She woke up her two older children,1 born in

2007 and 2012, before she left for work. A couple of hours after the older children

left for school, the father called the mother because J.W. was vomiting blood. The

mother met the father at urgent care, where the baby was transferred to a hospital.

Once at the hospital, staff discovered J.W. had bilateral subdural hematomas, a

right parietal skull fracture, and retinal hemorrhages, along with healing rib and

femur fractures. A medical team concluded “the child experienced a non-

accidental head trauma (physical abuse).”

The two older children were removed from the mother’s care and eventually

placed with the maternal grandmother. When J.W. was discharged from the

hospital, he was placed into foster care while the Iowa Department of Human

Services2 continued its investigation. Both parents denied knowing the cause of

1Their father is deceased. 2We note the department has since merged with the Iowa Department of Public Health, thus culminating in the Iowa Department of Health and Human 3

their son’s injuries. The mother also initially denied that the father had a criminal

history, even though she knew that he had spent seventeen years in prison for

abusing an eleven-month-old child. No criminal charges were ever filed, although

the department’s child abuse assessment ultimately concluded a preponderance

of the evidence “point[ed] to [the father] as the person responsible” for the injuries.3

The mother stipulated that the two oldest children, along with J.W., should

be adjudicated as in need of the court’s assistance. As the child-in-need-of-

assistance cases progressed, the infant was transitioned from foster care into his

maternal grandmother’s home, where he has since remained. J.W.’s traumatic

brain injuries have left him with permanent cognitive impairment. He is blind,

unable to walk or talk, and in need of twenty-four-hour care.

Despite her belief that the father caused their son’s injuries, the department

received multiple reports that the mother continued her relationship with him. She

also periodically tested positive for marijuana. And she had a strained relationship

with the oldest child, who wrote a letter in 2018 “requesting not to have visits with

her mother.” The mother and that child participated in counseling with minimal

success. All the child would state is that her mother “has a temper, is domineering,

unapproachable, and controlling.”

Services. See In re D.B., No. 22-0979, 2022 WL 3906768, at *1 n.3 (Iowa Ct. App. Aug. 21, 2022). 3 A second investigation was opened in November 2018 “after an anonymous

report was made claiming [the mother] dropped [the baby] in a carrier . . . and the child fell down the stairs before he was placed in the bed with [the father].” The allegation was not founded because the anonymous reporter “would not step forward,” according to a report written by a court-appointed special advocate. 4

In May 2019, the department recommended that a petition to terminate both

parents’ rights be filed. The State did so, and a combined permanency and

termination hearing was set for October. Meanwhile, the mother secretly gave

birth to another baby after hiding her pregnancy from the department. The

department learned of the birth and removed that child from the mother’s care.

Though the department suspected that J.W.’s father was also the father of the new

baby, paternity testing showed it was a different man—but one who also had a

violent past. Child-in-need-of-assistance proceedings for that child were started

around the same time the permanency and termination hearings were set for the

three oldest children.

On the day of those hearings, the parties informed the juvenile court they

had agreed that the mother would consent to the termination of her parental rights

to J.W. and guardianship of the two older children with the maternal grandmother.

The court found a guardianship was in the children’s best interests, noting they

had thrived in the grandmother’s care. The court accordingly ordered “pursuant to

Iowa Code section 232.104 that a guardianship within juvenile court is established

for the minor children.” A review hearing was set for September 2020.

By the time of that review hearing, the maternal grandmother had adopted

J.W. The mother was still involved in juvenile court proceedings for the youngest

child. She continued to use marijuana and associate with questionable individuals.

Her relationship with a man who was gang-affiliated led to a drive-by shooting at

her home. And she was arrested for operating while intoxicated. All parties agreed

the guardianship for the oldest children should be continued. 5

The mother turned things around in 2021. Permanency in her youngest

child’s case was deferred, and a trial home visit began in April 2021. An August

report to the court noted the mother “has grown into a protective parent and

individual that puts the safety and well-being of her child first.” That child’s case

was accordingly closed. Soon after, ahead of the annual review hearing in the

oldest children’s cases, the mother indicated that she wanted the grandmother’s

guardianship to end.4 After a September report from the children’s guardian ad

litem stated that both children wanted to stay with their grandmother, a hearing

was set to determine whether the guardianship should continue.

The mother’s oldest child was the first witness to testify at the hearing in

February 2022. She explained that she wanted to continue living with her

grandmother because she felt safe there. The child testified that her mother is

“very judgmental. . . . [S]he just makes everything harder than it has to be.” She

also said that she would not feel comfortable or safe living with the mother because

of the “people she hangs around.” The second oldest child did not testify, but he

told the guardian ad litem in an updated report before court that he was happy with

the way things were.

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Related

In the Interest of A.S.T.
508 N.W.2d 735 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1993)
State v. Bergmann
633 N.W.2d 328 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2001)
Lynn G. Lamasters Vs. State of Iowa
821 N.W.2d 856 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2012)
In the Interest of A.R. and A.R., Minor Children
932 N.W.2d 588 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2019)
L.N.S. v. S.W.S.
854 N.W.2d 699 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2013)

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