In the Matter of the Termination of Parental Rights To: Jpl, Minor Child, Jennifer Anne Hood v. State of Wyoming, Ex Rel. Department of Family Services

2021 WY 94
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 17, 2021
DocketS-21-0018
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2021 WY 94 (In the Matter of the Termination of Parental Rights To: Jpl, Minor Child, Jennifer Anne Hood v. State of Wyoming, Ex Rel. Department of Family Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court 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 Matter of the Termination of Parental Rights To: Jpl, Minor Child, Jennifer Anne Hood v. State of Wyoming, Ex Rel. Department of Family Services, 2021 WY 94 (Wyo. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING

2021 WY 94

APRIL TERM, A.D. 2021

August 17, 2021

IN THE MATTER OF THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO: JPL, minor child,

JENNIFER ANNE HOOD,

Appellant (Respondent),

v.

STATE OF WYOMING, ex rel. DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY SERVICES,

Appellee (Petitioner). S-21-0018, S-21-0019 IN THE MATTER OF THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO: JPL, minor child,

GERALD LEAVITT,

Appellee (Petitioner). Appeal from the District Court of Laramie County The Honorable Peter H. Froelicher, Judge

Representing Appellant Jennifer Anne Hood: Brianne C. Phillips of Overstreet Homar & Kuker, Cheyenne, Wyoming.

Representing Appellant Gerald Leavitt: Deborah L. Roden of Woodhouse Roden Nethercott, LLC, Cheyenne, Wyoming.

Representing Appellee: Bridget L. Hill, Wyoming Attorney General; Misha Westby, Deputy Attorney General; Jill E. Kucera, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Shawnna M. Lamb, Senior Assistant Attorney General. Argument by Ms. Kucera.

Guardian ad Litem: Joseph R. Belcher, Director, Wyoming Office of Guardian ad Litem; Kimberly Skoutary Johnson, Chief Trial and Appellate Counsel.

Before FOX, C.J., and DAVIS*, KAUTZ, BOOMGAARDEN, and GRAY, JJ. * Chief Justice at time of oral argument.

BOOMGAARDEN, J., delivers the opinion of the Court; KAUTZ, J., files a specially concurring opinion.

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third. Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be made before final publication in the permanent volume. BOOMGAARDEN, Justice.

[¶1] Jennifer Hood (Mother) and Gerald Leavitt (Father) appeal the district court’s order granting the Wyoming Department of Family Service’s petition to terminate their parental rights under Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14-2-309(a)(iii) and (a)(v). We affirm the district court’s ruling under Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14-2-309(a)(v).

ISSUES

[¶2] The issues in this case are:

I. Did the district court have subject matter jurisdiction?

II. Does sufficient evidence support the district court’s determination that the Department presented clear and convincing evidence that Mother and Father are “unfit to have custody and control of the child” pursuant to Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14-2-309(a)(v)? 1

BACKGROUND

[¶3] The Department has been working with the Hood/Leavitt family since 2015, when a neglect case was opened based on the Department’s concerns that Mother was educationally neglecting her son HB. 2 The educational neglect case was ongoing when, on January 4, 2018, Mother tested presumptive positive for methamphetamine, law enforcement arrested her and Father on warrants, 3 and law enforcement took JL and HB into protective custody.

Juvenile Court Proceedings

[¶4] On January 5, 2018, the district attorney filed a petition alleging Mother and Father neglected JL. 4 The juvenile court promptly held a shelter care hearing. The parties

1 Because neither Mother nor Father raises the issue, we do not consider whether the Department’s reasonable efforts should be a requirement in determining parental fitness under § 14-2-309(a)(v). See Dunlap v. State of Wyo., Dep’t of Family Servs. (In re BAD), 2019 WY 83, ¶¶ 22–39, 446 P.3d 222, 227– 33 (Wyo. 2019) (Fox, J., specially concurring). 2 HB is JL’s half-brother. Mother and Father began their relationship in 2010, when HB was almost two years old. JL was born in 2012. 3 Mother’s presumptive positive test was confirmed with a hair follicle test. Father tested positive for THC in jail. 4 HB was not included in this petition because he had an ongoing case. The two cases proceeded concurrently.

1 stipulated to continued shelter care and JL remained in the Department’s custody. At an initial hearing a few weeks later the parents denied the neglect allegations.

[¶5] Two events central to this appeal occurred in April 2018. First, the Department placed JL in relative foster care with Father’s brother and sister-in-law. 5 Second, Department caseworker Carly Drew Hutchinson 6 filed a Family Service Case Plan without Mother’s or Father’s signature after they did not call or attend meetings to discuss it. The plan identified the following safety issues and risks based on the Department’s assessment: homelessness, unemployment, mental health, substance abuse, and criminal activity. The parents’ plans were nearly identical. Each included general requirements related to the proceedings, and communication and cooperation with the Department. Each plan specified an objective—along with corresponding goals and steps—on housing, mental health, substance abuse, criminal activity, and financial stability. Mother’s plan identified an additional mental health step.

[¶6] The court issued a series of orders between May and July 2018. In its order following adjudication, it found: the parents had neglected JL, returning her home would be contrary to her welfare, and it was in JL’s best interest to remain in the State’s custody. The court ordered a multidisciplinary team to convene and return for final disposition. On final disposition, the court ordered legal custody remain with the State and physical placement remain at the discretion of the Department in consultation with the guardian ad litem. It designated family reunification as the permanency plan and ordered the parents to work their case plans. The court preserved the status quo following the June 2018 review hearing and ordered the parents to sign and follow their case plans.

[¶7] The permanency plan remained reunification until January 2019, when the court changed it to adoption, and relieved the Department of further reunification efforts. Formal visitation stopped around that same time on the recommendation of several multidisciplinary team members.

[¶8] The Department’s April and June 2019 reports recommended that JL remain in relative foster care, and noted that the parents still did not cooperate with their case plan goals, stay in communication with their caseworker Ms. Batista, cooperate with drug testing, or maintain stable housing.

[¶9] In August 2019, the Department filed an updated Family Service Case Plan after Mother told Ms. Batista she would not work a case plan signed by Ms. Hutchinson. Ms.

5 JL remained with the same foster family for two and a half years, through the termination trial. It was a potential adoptive home. 6 Mother did not get along with Ms. Hutchinson, who worked with the family from October 2017 through September 2018. She got along better with Department caseworker Breanna Batista, who inherited the case from Ms. Hutchinson in October 2018 and worked with the family through the termination trial in August/September 2020.

2 Batista replaced Ms. Hutchinson’s name with hers and updated the due dates. Otherwise, the plans remained the same because neither parent had addressed the issues identified a year prior.

[¶10] The court allowed JL to move to Texas with her foster family in April 2020. Mother and Father did not mind JL moving to Texas, but they did not want her to move with her current foster family.

[¶11] The Department’s June 2020 report identified the progress Mother and Father made since Fall 2019. As to drug testing, Mother had consistently attended all scheduled testing since her release from jail and tested negative. Father had submitted to drug tests following his release from jail but missed several between November 2019 and February 2020. He submitted to a hair follicle test in March 2020 and it was negative for all substances.

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