Jeff and Melissa Fitzpatrick v. State of Tennessee Department of Children's Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 18, 2014
DocketM2013-00823-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jeff and Melissa Fitzpatrick v. State of Tennessee Department of Children's Services (Jeff and Melissa Fitzpatrick v. State of Tennessee Department of Children's Services) 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
Jeff and Melissa Fitzpatrick v. State of Tennessee Department of Children's Services, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 20, 2013 Session

JEFF and MELISSA FITZPATRICK v. STATE OF TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN’S SERVICES

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Putnam County No. 2012-202 Ronald Thurman, Chancellor

No. M2013-00823-COA-R3-CV - Filed March 18, 2014

The petitioners are foster parents who were indicated by the Department of Children’s Services as perpetrators of child neglect for “lack of supervision” and also for “environmental neglect.” The lack of supervision allegation arose out of an incident in which a foster child who was placed in the petitioners’ home was found fondling the private parts of a younger foster sibling on two occasions during the same evening. The environmental neglect allegation was due to the condition of the petitioners’ home when the DCS investigator arrived to look into the report of child-on-child sexual abuse. The petitioners requested an administrative hearing. After a four-day contested case hearing before an administrative law judge, the indication for environmental neglect was deemed unfounded, but the indication for lack of supervision was upheld. The petitioners filed a petition for judicial review in chancery court, and upon reviewing the record, the court upheld the indication for lack of supervision. The petitioners appeal to this Court, arguing that there is no substantial and material evidence to support their indication for lack of supervision, that they have been denied procedural and substantive due process, and that they are entitled to an award of attorney’s fees incurred in defending against the allegation of environmental neglect that was deemed unfounded, as well as the allegation of lack of supervision. For the following reasons, we affirm the decision of the chancery court in part, and we reverse in part and remand for further proceedings.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part and Remanded

A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., joined. Melanie Lane, Jamestown, Tennessee, for the appellants, Jeff and Melissa Fitzpatrick

Robert E. Cooper, Jr, Attorney General and Reporter, Mary Byrd Ferrara, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, State of Tennessee Department of Children’s Services

OPINION

I. F ACTS & P ROCEDURAL H ISTORY

In September of 2009, the Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) placed six foster children in the home of foster parents Jeff and Melissa Fitzpatrick. The six children were siblings. At the time of the placement, the youngest of the six foster children was a newborn baby, and the oldest foster child was about 9 years old. The oldest child was removed from the Fitzpatricks’ home at some point due to behavioral issues that posed a threat to the younger children, so five foster children remained in the Fitzpatrick home thereafter. The Fitzpatricks also had two daughters of their own who lived with them.

The incident that gave rise to these proceedings occurred on May 9, 2011, after the foster children had been in the Fitzpatrick home for about twenty months. The Fitzpatricks had sent the children to their bedrooms, on the third level of the Fitzpatrick home, for “quiet time” before bed. At around 8:00 or 8:15 p.m., Mr. and Mrs. Fitzpatrick were on the first level of the home watching television, when Mr. Fitzpatrick heard a noise from upstairs. He went to third level of the home, to the bedroom that was shared by two of the foster children, seven-year-old male SR and three-year-old male IR. Mr. Fitzpatrick found both boys on the bottom bunk bed, which was the bunk belonging to three-year-old IR, and SR had his hands down IR’s pants. Mr. Fitzpatrick reportedly “got onto” the boys and told them to stop, he instructed them to get into their own beds, and then he went back downstairs. Mr. Fitzpatrick told his wife about what he had witnessed, and the Fitzpatricks decided to call the children’s DCS case manager the next morning. The Fitzpatricks continued to watch television on the first level of the home until shortly after 10:00 p.m. The Fitzpatricks then went to their bedroom on the second level of the home to get ready for bed. They heard another noise coming from the third level at that time, and Mr. Fitzpatrick went to investigate. The lights were off in the boys’ room, but the television was on, and the boys were engaged in the same behavior. Mrs. Fitzpatrick heard Mr. Fitzpatrick yell at the boys, and she immediately ran upstairs to the boys’ room, where she saw both boys on the bottom bunk bed, and SR was taking his hands out of IR’s pants. Mr. Fitzpatrick scolded the boys again and instructed them to get into their own beds, to keep their hands to themselves, and to go to sleep, and he warned that he had better not see such behavior again or hear another noise coming from the room. The Fitzpatricks then returned to their bedroom on the second level and discussed the

-2- situation. They agreed to call the DCS case manager the next morning.

At 7:44 a.m. the following morning, May 10, Mrs. Fitzpatrick called the children’s DCS case manager, Marcia King, to report the incident. Ms. King came to the Fitzpatrick home that afternoon to discuss the implementation of a “safety plan” that required constant visual observation of either SR or the remaining children in the home and required that SR sleep in a room by himself. It was agreed that IR would sleep in the Fitzpatricks’ bedroom on a loveseat for the time-being. The safety plan also required that a motion detector be placed outside of SR’s room in order to alert the Fitzpatricks if SR left his bedroom.

Two days later, on the afternoon of May 12, a case manager with the DCS Special Investigations Unit1 , Eunice Leckey, and a detective from the local sheriff’s department, Roger Cooper, went to the Fitzpatricks’ home to investigate the report due to the allegation of child-on-child sexual abuse. Mrs. Fitzpatrick was casually interviewed for forty-five minutes to an hour, and the parties discussed the possibility of placing SR in respite care in another home. Ms. Leckey then stated that she needed to observe the rest of the Fitzpatricks’ residence, so the Fitzpatricks led the investigators on a walkthrough of the home. The first floor of the residence, where the interview had taken place, was neat, clean, and organized; however, Ms. Leckey and Detective Cooper were somewhat concerned that an unloaded Russian assault rifle was sitting in the living area leaned against the fireplace. The second floor, where the Fitzpatricks’ bedroom was located, was somewhat “more disorganized” and “cluttered.” The youngest foster child, who was twenty months old at the time, regularly slept in a playpen in the study/exercise room on the second floor, and the investigators observed cat feces inside the playpen on the baby’s bedding. There was also a stack of books on top of a gun safe that was adjacent to the playpen, which Ms. Leckey feared could fall onto the baby, and there were items on the floor in the room that Ms. Leckey perceived as hazardous to a baby. The third floor of the home consisted of one large bathroom and four bedrooms. As previously mentioned, the two male foster children, ages three and seven, shared one bedroom. The two female foster children, ages four and nine, shared another bedroom. The Fitzpatricks’ youngest daughter, age six, had her own bedroom on the third floor, although she never slept in the room and instead slept on a couch in her parents’ bedroom. The Fitzpatricks’ other daughter who lived in the home, Megan, was eighteen or nineteen years old at the time, and she also had her own room on the third floor.

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