Jessyca P., Bradon P. v. Dcs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedSeptember 15, 2015
Docket1 CA-JV 15-0040
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jessyca P., Bradon P. v. Dcs (Jessyca P., Bradon P. v. Dcs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jessyca P., Bradon P. v. Dcs, (Ark. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

JESSYCA P., BRADON P., Appellants,

v.

DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SAFETY, A.P., H.P., M.P., Appellees.

No. 1 CA-JV 15-0040 FILED 9-15-2015

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. JD510930 The Honorable Brian K. Ishikawa, Judge, Retired

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Gillespie, Shields, Durrant & Goldfarb, Phoenix By DeeAn Gillespie, Geoff Morris Counsel for Appellant Mother

The Stavris Law Firm, PLLC, Scottsdale By Alison Stavris Counsel for Appellant Father

Arizona Attorney General's Office, Tucson By Erika Z. Alfred, JoAnn Falgout Counsel for Appellee DCS JESSYCA P., BRADON P. v. DCS, et al. Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge Diane M. Johnsen delivered the decision of the Court, in which Judge Kent E. Cattani and Judge John C. Gemmill joined.

J O H N S E N, Judge:

¶1 Jessyca and Bradon P. ("Mother" and "Father," respectively) appeal the superior court's order adjudicating the couple's son and twin daughters as dependent children. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 Mother and Father are the parents of a son, born in 2006, and twin daughters, born in 2010. In early 2013, Mother was under a doctor's care for treatment of fibromyalgia, depression and anxiety. Because of her condition, she required assistance with certain tasks, and her physician prescribed a part-time caregiver for her. The State paid Father to be her caregiver; at the relevant time, he was paid for 28 hours a week of care.

¶3 On the afternoon of March 20, 2013, Mother was alone with the children while Father was helping a friend move. She telephoned Father to say she was feeling light-headed; Father called 9-1-1. When responders arrived at the family's home, the two girls, nearly three years old at the time, were in a bedroom whose entry was blocked by two "pressure gates," one fastened atop the other. A television and a VCR were placed in the hallway so that the girls could see them from their room. When responders questioned him, the boy, then six-and-a-half, said the girls usually stayed in their room behind the gates for most of the day. He told responders that he slid food to the girls beneath the gates.

¶4 After responders arrived, Mother briefly lost consciousness, then was transported to the hospital, and released later that day. At trial more than a year later, a firefighter who waited at the home for Father's arrival after the ambulance left testified the girls were dressed, they were not crying, their hair was combed and they appeared clean and healthy. According to a paramedic who accompanied Mother to the hospital, the home was "unkempt" and dirt and dishes were everywhere.

¶5 After conferring upon their return to the stationhouse, the responders contacted what is now the Department of Child Safety ("DCS")

2 JESSYCA P., BRADON P. v. DCS, et al. Decision of the Court

to report what they observed.1 Chief among their concerns was that they had found Mother home alone with the children, that she was using the gates to restrain the twins, that she seemed unable to care for the children, and an overall lack of cleanliness in the home. When a DCS worker came to the home later that night, Mother told her that she was not able to care for her children due to her medical problems.

¶6 Two DCS caseworkers visited the home at 9:30 a.m. two days later and found Mother again alone with the children and the twins in their bedroom behind the double-stacked gates. The caseworkers observed a "very foul odor" and saw that the home was "very dirty." There was "food all over the home," and the boy was eating out of a fast-food restaurant bag he said had been in his bedroom from the night before. A number of bottles and plates were on the floor near the television in the hallway outside the twins' room. The caseworkers questioned the boy, who again said the girls often were kept in their room behind the gates, and that although the twins ate dinner with the rest of the family, they were fed breakfast and lunch through the gates in their bedroom.

¶7 The caseworkers removed the children from the home that day, and DCS filed a dependency petition on March 26, 2013. The petition alleged Mother and Father were unable to parent their children due to neglect; it further alleged Mother was unable to parent due to health reasons and that Father was unable to parent due to failure to protect.

¶8 At a preliminary protective hearing on April 2, counsel was appointed for each of the parents and a guardian ad litem was appointed for the three children. After the case was transferred to another superior court judge, Father exercised his right to notice that judge; the case then was transferred again. At a status conference on August 13, the parties told the court they anticipated the hearing would require two half-days of testimony. The court then set trial for February 18 and 19, finding that both parents "waive time" and "that extraordinary circumstances exist and that a delay would be indispensable to the interest of justice." On the day that trial was to begin, however, the court continued the proceeding to May 2014 after DCS complained that Mother had yet to disclose material mental health records. In its minute entry, the court found "that good cause exists to continue the trial because the State was not provided the information,"

1 Pursuant to S.B. 1001, Section 157, 51st Leg., 2nd Spec. Sess. (Ariz. 2014) (enacted), the Department of Child Safety is substituted for the Arizona Department of Economic Security in this matter. See ARCAP 27.

3 JESSYCA P., BRADON P. v. DCS, et al. Decision of the Court

and further found "extraordinary circumstances exist and that a delay would be indispensable to the interest of justice."

¶9 Trial began on May 16, and continued on May 22, May 23, June 11, June 16, July 18, July 30 and August 5. Proceedings scheduled for August 26 were postponed due to an emergency in Father's counsel's family and were postponed again due to extraordinary storm conditions on another occasion. Further testimony finally was taken on October 29 and November 18. In all, 23 witnesses testified.

¶10 After the parties filed post-trial briefs, the court issued its order granting the dependency on January 23, 2015. The court found DCS had proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the girls "were neglected through the misuse and abuse of baby gates resulting in insufficient stimulation and supervision," that due to her medical condition, Mother required a caregiver, that Mother and Father had neglected the boy's "educational needs as he had an excessive amount of absences and unexcused absences," and that Father failed to protect the children by leaving them alone with Mother even though he knew that her "medical condition/limitations prevent[ed] her from safely parenting on her own." "Return of the children to the parents," the court found, "would place them at risk of abuse [and] neglect."

¶11 This court has jurisdiction over Mother and Father's timely appeals pursuant to Article 6, Section 9, of the Arizona Constitution, Arizona Revised Statutes ("A.R.S.") sections 8-235 (2015), 12-2101 (2015), and Rule 103 of the Arizona Rules of Procedure for the Juvenile Court.2

DISCUSSION

A. Delay in the Adjudication.

¶12 The dependency proceedings in this case were extraordinarily long; nearly 22 months elapsed between the filing of the dependency petition and entry of the superior court's order after trial.

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Jessyca P., Bradon P. v. Dcs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jessyca-p-bradon-p-v-dcs-arizctapp-2015.