In the Matter of: Alex B.T.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 15, 2011
DocketW2011-00511-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of: Alex B.T. (In the Matter of: Alex B.T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of: Alex B.T., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON October 26, 2011 Session

IN THE MATTER OF: ALEX B.T.

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. CH-08-1030 Walter L. Evans, Chancellor

No. W2011-00511-COA-R3-PT - Filed November 15, 2011

This is a termination of parental rights case. The legal guardians of the child filed a petition to terminate Mother’s parental rights based on her alleged willful failure to visit and support the child. The trial court found that Mother’s efforts to visit and support had been frustrated by the legal guardians’ actions. Therefore, the trial court concluded that Mother’s failure to visit and support was not willful. Because the legal guardians failed to prove any of the grounds required to terminate Mother’s parental rights, the trial court denied the petition. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3. Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., and D AVID R. F ARMER, J., joined.

Linda Lynn Walls Holmes, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellants, Rondey M. and Rosalind M.

Victoria W. Gillard, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Jacquininia W. and Unknown Biological Father.

Gregory S. Gallagher, Memphis, Tennessee, Guardian Ad Litem.

OPINION

I. Background The minor child Alex B.T.1 was born on October 4, 2002 to Respondent/Appellee Jacquininia W. (“Mother”). Mother placed one man’s last name on the child’s birth certificate, but the child was later unofficially adopted by Mother’s husband and Mother began referring to the child using her husband’s last name.2 However, later paternity testing proved that neither the man whose name was on the birth certificate, nor Mother’s husband was the biological father of the child.3

Sometime in April 2003, Mother was incarcerated for domestic violence. Over the weekend while Mother was in jail, the child’s maternal grandmother (“Grandmother”) took possession of the child. While Grandmother was visiting her other daughter, an unrelated woman named Carolyn B. offered to help Grandmother care for the child while Mother was incarcerated. Subsequently, Rosalind M. (“Rosalind”), Carolyn B.’s sister, offered to care for the child in order to help Mother and Grandmother. Rosalind and her husband Rondey M. (together, “Appellants” or “Legal Guardians”) proceeded to take care of the child on and off until an order giving the Appellants temporary custody was entered in 2003 in the juvenile court. At this time, Mother was awarded supervised visitation once a month with the child at Grandmother’s home.

In 2005, the juvenile court returned the child to Mother’s custody. However, Mother’s ill health4 made it difficult for her to care for the child. By order of June 8, 2006, the court found the child dependent and neglected and custody was awarded to the Appellants. Mother, however, retained “reasonable and liberal visitation” rights.

After the entry of the order in 2006, both the Appellants and Mother agree that Mother had no visitation with the child, nor did she provide any financial support for the child. While the Appellants argued that the failure to visit and support was willful, Mother asserted that she made several attempts to call, visit, and support the child financially, all of which were rebuffed by the Appellants.

On June 3, 2008, the Appellants filed a petition to Terminate Mother’s and Unknown

1 In termination of parental rights cases, it is the policy of this Court to remove the names of minor children and other parties in order to protect their identities. 2 At the time of the trial, all the parties and the child’s school records referred to the child with Mother’s husband’s last name, rather than the name on the child’s birth certificate. 3 The biological father of the child remains unknown. 4 Mother suffers from Graves disease and, during this time, her illness became so serious as to require surgery to remove her thyroid.

-2- Biological Father’s parental rights and to adopt the child. A default judgment was entered against Unknown Biological Father and his rights were terminated by a supplemental order dated April 29, 2011.5 After Biological Mother, acting pro se, filed an answer to the petition, an attorney was appointed for her by the court.

A hearing was held on December 8, 2010. During the hearing, Mother testified that she attempted to call the Appellants to speak with her son approximately 15 times per month; however, the Appellants either did not answer the phone, hung up on Mother, or informed her that the child was not available. Mother testified that, once when she called the house, Rondey returned the call and threatened her, telling her that “there’s nothing down there that belong[ed] to [Mother].” Mother testified that she attempted to file an internal affairs complaint against Rondey, who is a Memphis Police Officer, but never followed through. In addition, Mother’s other children often called the Appellants to speak with the child; usually the children were more successful in getting to speak with Alex. However, they were only allowed to speak with the child for short periods of time and, after one incident when the children allegedly called late at night, Rondey filed a police report against the children for making harassing phone calls. After that, Mother directed her children not to call the Appellants again.

Mother further testified that she had attempted to offer financial assistance to the Appellants, by purchasing the child’s school uniforms and other items of clothing, but that she was informed that her help was neither wanted, nor needed. Mother testified that she was employed at the time of the hearing; however, she did not testify that she was employed in the four months preceding the filing of the termination of parental rights petition. In fact, Mother testified that she was not employed prior to October 2008 and that her unemployment was due to her illness.6

Mother also testified that, sometime after custody was temporarily given to the Appellants in 2006, she returned to juvenile court to request a rehearing. However, juvenile court personnel told her that she needed to wait six-months-to-a-year to file a petition for custody to be returned to her. According to Mother, she became ill at that time and was not able to return to court until after the petition to terminate her parental rights was filed, though she had yet to receive notice of the petition. Because of the filing of the termination petition,

5 The termination of Unknown Biological Father’s parental rights are not the subject of the instant appeal. 6 Attorney for the Appellants asked Mother if she was employed in October of 2008, which was four months after the filing of the petition to terminate Mother’s parental rights. Mother was never asked whether she was employed during the four months preceding the petition. Mother did testify, however, that her illness made her unable to work for much of 2008.

-3- the juvenile court dismissed Mother’s petition to change custody pending resolution of this action in chancery court. Only at this point, Mother alleged, did she learn of the petition to terminate her parental rights, even though it had been filed months earlier.

Finally, Mother testified that her name was not put on any daycare or school documents, nor was the school informed that she had liberal visitation rights; consequently, she was not allowed to visit with the child. According to Mother, she only learned that the child was in a certain daycare center after she attempted to enroll another of her children there. Once Mother learned that the child was at that daycare, the Appellants immediately moved the child to a different daycare.

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