In the Matter of Cp
This text of 625 S.E.2d 202 (In the Matter of Cp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE MATTER OF: C.P.
North Carolina Court of Appeals
Cabarrus County No. 01 J 153.
Kathleen Arundell Widelski for petitioner-appellee Cabarrus County Department of Social Services; Victoria Bost for Guardian ad Litem.
Franklin Plummer for appellee maternal relatives.
John Nance for respondent-appellee mother.
Rebekah W. Davis for respondent-appellant father.
HUNTER, Judge.
Respondent-father ("respondent") appeals from orders of the trial court adjudicating his minor child, C.P., neglected, and concluding that reunification and visitation between respondent and C.P. were not in the best interests of the child. Respondent contends that certain findings and conclusions by the trial court in its adjudication order are not supported by clear and convincing evidence, and that the trial court abused its discretion in its order of disposition. We affirm the orders of the trial court.
Respondent and respondent-mother married in October of 1997. Shortly after their marriage, respondent-mother gave birth to a child, T.P. Respondent was not T.P.'s biological father. C.P., respondent's biological daughter, was born in May of 1999. When C.P. was a few weeks old, respondent and respondent-mother placed physical custody of the infant with maternal relatives. T.P. remained with respondent and respondent-mother. Although respondent and respondent-mother visited C.P. and retained legal custody of the child, the maternal relatives remained C.P.'s primary caregivers.
Respondent and respondent-mother separated in September of 2000, and eventually initiated proceedings to determine custody of T.P. and C.P. On 9 May 2001, a civil custody hearing was held. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court found that neither respondent nor respondent-mother were fit and proper persons to have custody of C.P. and her sister, and placed temporary custody of the children with maternal relatives. In its 14 June 2001 civil custody order, the trial court specifically found that respondent was unfit in that:
a. He has occasional fits of temper and profanity which prevent him from providing suitable care and discipline for the minor children . . . .
b. He has left his minor child [C.P.] in the permanent care and control of [maternal relatives], who have taken good care of the minor child, and [he] did so both before and after the separation of the parties, from the age of 2 weeks.
c. While in the care of [respondent] for visitation, the minor children have suffered repeated unexplained injuries and patterns of bruises, and even a limp on one occasion, which appear to be more significant and more frequent than the ordinary playtime injuries expected among children of their ages.
d. [Respondent] has been classified as Behaviorally Handicapped since high school, and receives monthly payments for this disability in the amount of $530.00 per month. Though this disability does not prevent him from doing many things, it interferes significantly with his judgment and his ability to act as a full-time parent without assistance.
The trial court also found that neither respondent nor respondent-mother "provided any formal child support or consistent financial assistance" to the maternal relatives for their care of C.P. Respondent did not appeal from the 14 June 2001 civil custody order.
Following the civil custody hearing, the trial court ordered the Cabarrus County Department of Social Services ("DSS") to begin an immediate investigation into allegations raised at the hearing that T.P. had been sexually abused. Respondent-mother thereafter entered into a consent order in which she agreed that C.P. and T.P. were abused and neglected. The consent order allowed for monthly supervised visitation with C.P. DSS subsequently substantiated sexual abuse of T.P. by respondent, and the child was adjudicated abused and neglected as to respondent.[1]
On 4 March 2004, DSS filed a juvenile petition alleging C.P. lived in an environment injurious to her welfare while in her father's care and was therefore a neglected juvenile as defined by section 7B-101(15) of the North Carolina General Statutes. Specifically, the petition alleged C.P. was neglected in that her sibling, T.P., was adjudicated an abused and neglected child as to her legal father, [respondent], on November 19, 2003.
[C.P.], at the time [T.P.] was abused and neglected by her father, also had visitation with the father at [the] same time and location as [T.P.] and was in the same environment.
[C.P.] is a neglected child in that she visited in the home, and was in the care, of [respondent] where and when another child, [T.P.], has been abused and/or neglected.
The matter came before the trial court on 10 December 2004. DSS introduced evidence of the 14 June 2001 civil custody hearing order. Notably, the trial judge for the civil custody action was the same judge who presided over the adjudication hearing. At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court found C.P. to be neglected. A disposition hearing was held on 23 December 2004. In its subsequent order of disposition, the trial court determined that efforts to reunify C.P. and respondent would be futile and inconsistent with the child's needs. The trial court found that it was in C.P.'s best interests to be placed in the legal guardianship of the maternal relatives who had raised her. The trial court ordered respondent to have no direct contact with C.P., and placed future visitation between respondent and the child in the discretion of her legal guardians. From the orders of adjudication and disposition, respondent appeals. Respondent-mother does not appeal. By his first assignment of error, respondent contends that Findings of Fact Nos. 4 and 11 in the adjudication order are unsupported by the evidence and must be vacated. We do not agree.
Finding of Fact No. 4 provides as follows:
In the Consent Order signed by [respondent-mother], the mother of the juvenile [C.P.], the mother also stipulated to the following:
"[Paragraph] 5. On August 14, 2002, the mother stipulated that [T.P.], half sister to [C.P.], was a neglected child based upon the mother failing to provide proper care and supervision in that the child [T.P.] had been determined to have been definitely sexually abused and the mother continued to leave the child in the care of [respondent] when she believed he was the perpetrator of the abuse. The mother also failed to cooperate with the investigation regarding . . . the sexual abuse of [T.P.] [C.P.] is a neglected child in that she lived in the home where another child had been neglected."
Respondent contends that this recitation of the stipulation entered into by respondent-mother unfairly prejudices him and was used to support a finding of neglect. He argues the finding "insinuates that the father was the perpetrator in T.P.'s case" when in fact the trial court declined to find that respondent sexually abused T.P. We do not agree that the finding was improper or that it prejudiced respondent.
First, respondent does not argue that the finding is not supported or is contradicted by the evidence. In fact, the finding is an accurate recitation of respondent-mother's stipulation in her consent judgment. Further, any "insinuations" aside, Finding of Fact No. 4 does not find that respondent sexually abused T.P., only that respondent-mother believed he had. As noted supra, the same trial judge presided over the civil custody hearing and the adjudication and disposition hearings for T.P.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
625 S.E.2d 202, 175 N.C. App. 793, 2006 N.C. App. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-cp-ncctapp-2006.