Jeff Rouse and Tammy Rouse v. Russell County Department of Social Services, Debra Gibson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 15, 2005
Docket0944043
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jeff Rouse and Tammy Rouse v. Russell County Department of Social Services, Debra Gibson (Jeff Rouse and Tammy Rouse v. Russell County Department of Social Services, Debra Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Jeff Rouse and Tammy Rouse v. Russell County Department of Social Services, Debra Gibson, (Va. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Bumgardner, McClanahan and Senior Judge Willis Argued at Salem, Virginia

JEFF ROUSE AND TAMMY ROUSE

v. Record No. 0944-04-3

RUSSELL COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, DEBRA GIBSON, THELMA CASTLE AND JAMES CASTLE

MATTHEW CODY, ESQUIRE GUARDIAN AD LITEM FOR INFANT CHILD MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1057-04-3 JUDGE RUDOLPH BUMGARDNER, III FEBRUARY 15, 2005 JEFF ROUSE, TAMMY ROUSE, RUSSELL COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, DEBRA GIBSON, JAMES CASTLE AND THELMA CASTLE

DEBRA GIBSON

v. Record No. 1074-04-3

RUSSELL COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, JAMES CASTLE, THELMA CASTLE, JEFF ROUSE AND TAMMY ROUSE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF RUSSELL COUNTY Keary R. Williams, Judge

Patricia E. Smith (Bradford & Smith, P.C., on briefs), for Jeff Rouse and Tammy Rouse.

A. Benton Chafin, Jr. (Chafin Law Firm, P.C., on briefs), for Russell County Department of Social Services.

Martin Wegbreit (Southwest Virginia Legal Aid Society, on briefs), for Debra Gibson.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. Susan D. Oglebay for Thelma Castle and James Castle.

Matthew J. Cody, Jr., Guardian ad litem for the infant child.

The trial court heard petitions for termination of parental rights and two competing

petitions for custody of an infant together. It terminated the mother’s parental rights to her

2 ½-year-old child but delayed making a final custody decision because it found that the

department of social services had not adequately investigated placement of the child with his

relatives.

The infant was born June 24, 2001 with a nearly complete blockage of his

gastro-intestinal tract. Surgery corrected that condition, but his mother was unable to provide the

meticulous care that the surgery and his condition demanded. She was mentally retarded with an

I.Q. of 68. Upon the child’s discharge from the hospital, the department removed him from the

mother and placed the eleven-week-old infant with therapeutic foster parents with whom he

remains. The juvenile and domestic relations district court approved the emergency removal

finding “medical neglect, and . . . reasonable efforts have been made to prevent removal.”

The department’s initial goal was to return the child to the mother, and that remained the

goal until September 6, 2002 when it filed a permanency plan changing the goal to adoption. It

filed a petition to terminate the parental rights a month later, and the juvenile and domestic

relations district court approved the goal of adoption at the end of October. The district court

never heard the termination or custody petitions because all concerned agreed to dispense with a

hearing there and appeal immediately to the circuit court. The district court entered consent

judgments that terminated the mother’s parental rights, continued legal custody of the child with

the department and physical custody with the foster parents, and denied custody to the mother’s

aunt and uncle.

-2- The circuit court held an ore tenus hearing October 31, 2003, issued letter opinions on

December 19, 2003 and March 22, 2004, and entered its final order April 7, 2004. It terminated

the mother’s parental rights but found that the department of social services failed to investigate

placement with a relative as required by Code § 16.1-283. The trial court found the department

“failed to adequately seek out and discover collateral relatives who were interested in custody of

the child.” It concluded that “preferred placement of this child would lie with the child’s natural

relatives, James and Thelma Castle.”

The trial court postponed a final custody determination for twelve months. During that

period, it continued legal custody with the department and continued physical custody with the

foster parents, but it increased visitation for the interested relatives and ordered expert evaluation

of the relationship of the infant with the foster parents and the aunt and uncle. The decisions of

the trial court generated three separate appeals, which we have consolidated.

The foster parents, Jeff and Tammy Rouse, contend the trial court erred in hearing the

termination and custody petitions together; in postponing the final custody decision; in finding

the department had not adequately investigated a family placement; in not mitigating harm to the

child; and in directing the parties to cooperate with an expert selected by the court to evaluate

relationships with the child. The child’s guardian ad litem, Matthew J. Cody, filed a separate

appeal though it presents nearly identical questions and arguments.

The mother and her aunt and uncle, Thelma and James Castle, contend the trial court

correctly found the department inadequately considered placement with the family. While the

mother does not seek to have the child returned to her, she and her relatives maintain the trial

court could not terminate parental rights before the department met the requirement of Code

§ 16.1-283 that it adequately consider placement with relatives.

-3- The department of social services contends it adequately investigated placement with

relatives. It maintains the trial court erred in not granting custody to the foster parents after

terminating the mother’s parental rights because it was in the child’s best interest. The

department argues the petition by the relatives for custody was not timely because the district

court previously adjudicated adequacy of the investigation when it approved the permanency

plan. The department argues alternatively that any failure to investigate relative placement was

harmless because the trial court acquired the necessary information at trial.

One fundamental issue constitutes the keystone upon which all other issues in this case

depend: did the department adequately investigate placement with family members. The trial

court found it did not. If the evidence permitted the trial court to make that finding, it is binding

on appeal, and all the other issues resolve themselves in logical sequence according to

established precedent.

In reviewing the adequacy of the department’s investigation, we view the evidence in the

light most favorable to the prevailing party below and grant to it all reasonable inferences fairly

deducible therefrom. Logan v. Fairfax County Dep’t of Human Dev., 13 Va. App. 123, 128, 409

S.E.2d 460, 463 (1991). The department made two inquiries about relative placement. The first

occurred the day before the child was discharged from the hospital. A caseworker asked the

mother if anyone could help her care for the child. The mother indicated there was no one to

help, so the department removed the child and placed him in the foster home. The department

had dealt with the mother previously and knew her limited mental capacity.1 It also knew the

1 The department became involved with the mother before the child was born when it received a complaint of inadequate supervision and inadequate hygiene for her three other children. -4- mother’s parents and a sister who resided in the area.2 It considered those relatives unsuitable

for placement because of prior, founded complaints.

Ten months after the removal, the case manager asked the mother whether any relatives

were willing to take custody of the child. The mother suggested her aunt and uncle, who lived in

South Carolina.

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