IN THE MATTER OF O.R.
This text of 2019 OK CIV APP 58 (IN THE MATTER OF O.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma 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 O.R.
2019 OK CIV APP 58
Case Number: 117750
Decided: 09/20/2019
Mandate Issued: 10/16/2019
DIVISION I
THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA, DIVISION I
Cite as: 2019 OK CIV APP 58, __ P.3d __
IN THE MATTER OF O.R., AN ALLEGED DEPRIVED CHILD:
PAULA WINFREY, Appellant,
v.
STATE OF OKLAHOMA, Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF ROGERS COUNTY
HONORABLE TERRELL CROSSON, TRIAL JUDGE
REVERSED and REMANDED
Jeffrey A. Price, PRICE & SEARS, P.C., Muskogee, Oklahoma, for Appellant,
Kali Strain, Assistant District Attorney, Claremore, Oklahoma, for Appellee, State of Oklahoma,
Becki A. Murphy, Megan D. Martin, MURPHY FRANCY, PLLC, Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Appellees, Foster Parents,
Kacie Cresswell, BAYSINGER, HENSON, REIMER & CRESSWELL, Owasso, Oklahoma, for Appellee, O.R.,Minor Child.
¶1 Paula Winfrey is the paternal grandmother and former foster parent of O.R. The Department of Human Services removed O.R. from Winfrey's home when he was eight months old and she filed an objection requesting his return. The juvenile court denied her motion and she commenced this appeal. We interpret the applicable statute de novo and review the decision for an abuse of discretion.1
¶2 DHS is authorized to move a child in its custody from one foster placement to another when there is an emergency.2 The court may return a child to the objecting foster parent's home if it finds the decision to remove him was arbitrary, inconsistent with the child's permanency plan or not in his best interests.3 In this case, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing and denied Winfrey's motion on grounds it was filed too late. We hold (1) Winfrey's motion was not time-barred, (2) the decision to remove O.R. was not arbitrary, (3) the removal was not inconsistent with the permanency plan, and (4) the case must be reversed for a determination of O.R.'s best interests.
I.
The Objection was not Time-Barred
¶3 DHS must give a foster parent 5 days advance notice before removing a child from the foster placement, except in an emergency. 10A O.S. §1-4-805(A)(1)(a). If the foster parent objects, the objection must be filed within 5 days after receipt of the notice. §1-4-805(C)(2).
¶4 Law enforcement seized drugs on Winfrey's premises and DHS removed O.R. on July 25, 2018 without giving advance written notice. Winfrey filed an objection almost two months later, on September 20, 2018. The trial judge implicitly found that the removal was an emergency and apparently concluded that in such a case the foster parent is required to file an objection within 5 days of the date the child was actually removed. The statute, however, is silent as to when a foster parent must file an objection when a child is removed without notice.
¶5 The State argues that in an emergency situation the foster parents are given actual notice when the child is physically removed and therefore the same five-day period to object should apply - especially given the law's policy of expediency of permanency for deprived children. This is sound argument. Nevertheless, establishing time periods for requiring action such as filing an objection is a Legislative function. The court incorrectly held the motion was filed out of time under the statute.
II.
The Removal was not Arbitrary
¶6 The decision to remove O.R. from Winfrey's home was connected with police officers' discovery of eight pounds of methamphetamine on the premises. However, mitigating circumstances came to light after the child was removed and they support Winfrey's argument that O.R.'s safety was never in jeopardy. Winfrey concedes the police found drugs, but she proposes the court should have considered all of the circumstances and reached a different conclusion.
¶7 Ms. Winfrey leases a large five bedroom home. Her rental agreement includes an apartment above the garage and that is where someone else's drug stash was discovered. Although she has a key to the apartment she does not use it as living space and it is not accessible from inside her home.
¶8 Apparently, Ms. Winfrey's son put the drugs inside a safe within the apartment. Ms. Winfrey had no prior knowledge of the safe, the drugs, or her son's access to the apartment. The son, Dwayne Winfrey, is the biological father of O.R. and he was taken to jail. DHS removed O.R. and placed him with different foster parents.
¶9 Ms. Winfrey admits that an open investigation concerning the presence of drugs would be grounds for an emergency removal of a foster child. She contends, however, that §1-4-805 should be applied to take into account relevant information that was available but discovered after the emergency removal. According to Winfrey, if the facts later indicated there was no danger, then failing to return the child is an arbitrary decision.
¶10 An arbitrary decision is one that is made without consideration, without a determining principle, or in disregard of the facts. See Scott v. Oklahoma Secondary School Activities Association, 2013 OK 84, ¶34, 313 P.3d 891, 902. A court report filed by a Court Appointed Special Advocate indicates that CASA and DHS received a police report stating that Ms. Winfrey's home was raided and a large amount of drugs was found upstairs in a safe. The report states O.R. was removed from the home immediately and "the home of Ms.
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