J.H. v. Jefferson County Department of Human Resources (Appeal from Jefferson Juvenile Court: JU-20-1429.02).

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 13, 2024
DocketCL-2024-0569
StatusPublished

This text of J.H. v. Jefferson County Department of Human Resources (Appeal from Jefferson Juvenile Court: JU-20-1429.02). (J.H. v. Jefferson County Department of Human Resources (Appeal from Jefferson Juvenile Court: JU-20-1429.02).) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.H. v. Jefferson County Department of Human Resources (Appeal from Jefferson Juvenile Court: JU-20-1429.02)., (Ala. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Rel: December 13, 2024

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2024-2025 _________________________

CL-2024-0569 _________________________

J.H.

v.

Jefferson County Department of Human Resources

Appeal from Jefferson Juvenile Court (JU-20-1429.02)

LEWIS, Judge.

J.H. ("the father") appeals from a judgment entered by the Jefferson

Juvenile Court ("the juvenile court") terminating his parental rights to

P.P.H. ("the child"), who was born in December 2020. We affirm the

juvenile court's judgment. CL-2024-0569

Procedural History

On October 17, 2023, the Jefferson County Department of Human

Resources ("DHR") filed in the juvenile court a petition to terminate the

parental rights of the father and of R.P. ("the mother") to the child. On

January 25, 2024, the father filed a motion requesting that custody of the

child be transferred to the child's paternal grandmother C.W. ("the

paternal grandmother"). The paternal grandmother filed a motion to

intervene in the termination-of-parental-rights action on March 5, 2024.

The child's foster parents, An.M. and Ad.M., filed a motion to intervene

on March 20, 2024. Those motions were granted on April 1, 2024. On

April 24, 2024, the juvenile court entered an order awarding the paternal

grandmother "unsupervised daytime visitation, with the minor child, for

three (3) hours, one day, every other week."

After a trial, the juvenile court entered a judgment on May 29, 2024,

terminating the parental rights of the father and of the mother to the

child. The juvenile court made the following findings, which are

pertinent to the issues raised on appeal:

"…[M]uch of the trial revolves around whether DHR has exercised reasonable efforts as it relates to exploring paternal relatives as possible placements for custody of the child and whether this Court can conclude that there are no viable 2 CL-2024-0569

alternatives to the termination of the parents['] parental rights. More specifically, DHR's first attempt, after three years that this child had been in foster care, to perform an Accurint search and to send out letters to the paternal side of the family was made for the first and only time in January 2024. Also, called into question was the fact that the letters that were sent out in January of 2024 were back dated January 2023 and whether this was a mistake or an attempt to make it appear as if DHR had made this attempt earlier. In defense of DHR, the parents also have the responsibility of making DHR aware of these alternate relative placements. The only relative that the father provided DHR with was the [child's] paternal aunt [Jan. H. ("the paternal aunt"),]…, o[n] March 2022[,] and for whatever reason, that placement did not work out. That the father then waited until August 2023 to provide the name of his mother, [the paternal grandmother.] DHR has investigated these names as requested by the father once those names were presented.

"There is no dispute that DHR worked with [the] paternal aunt … around approximately June 2022 until approximately June 2023. DHR worker stated that DHR did not look into any other paternal relatives while they were working with the [paternal] aunt. DHR did testify that although they were working with the paternal aunt … for many months, phone calls were made to both the paternal grandmother and paternal grandfather, with the social worker and [the paternal aunt] on [a] conference call with them and that the paternal grandparents were aware of the child being in foster care, they were aware that [the paternal aunt] was attempting to gain custody of the child and that at that time, the [paternal] grandmother could not obtain custody of the child because she was taking care of her very ill husband and that the [paternal] grandfather stated that he would support and assist [the paternal aunt] if she got custody. The telephone calls were made sometime between June 2022 and June 2023. Furthermore, when DHR was investigating [the paternal aunt] as a possible relative

3 CL-2024-0569

placement, [the paternal aunt] listed the paternal grandmother and paternal grandfather as her family support/backup if she needed help raising the child. [The paternal aunt] does not deny this but says she hardly talks to her parents, even though she listed them as her support, and that because they don't talk a lot, they probably did not know she had listed them as her support. That though there were at least two attempts and possibly a third attempt to place the child with [the paternal aunt], it did not work out and the child remained in foster care. The point of all of this reference is that this is where this Court can positively connect the paternal grandparents['] knowledge of the child being in foster care as the social worker, the [paternal] aunt and the paternal grandmother all remember talking to each other (again, the [paternal] grandfather was not present at court to testify) about supporting their daughter if she got custody proving that [the] paternal grandmother … and the paternal grandfather … had knowledge that the child was not in the care of the parents, that their daughter, [the paternal aunt], was attempting to get custody, that they were willing to assist their daughter if she got custody but did not make any request for custody at that time and they were aware of DHR's involvement with their grandchild.

"It also appears that neither grandparent ever attempted to visit with this child until somewhere around August of 2023 when there was a motion made by father's attorney for a home evaluation and request for visitation for the paternal grandmother and in December 2023 that actual visitation started. Furthermore, it was not until March 5, 2024[,] that the grandparents filed their Motion/Petitions for Intervention in this case. Also, though the Court understands that the [paternal] grandfather … lives in another state, it speaks volumes that he was not present for this termination trial, though he has been allowed to intervene as a party.

"A lot of blame has been put on DHR for things it should have done and did not do throughout this case and rightfully

4 CL-2024-0569

so, however, there has to be much blame put on these parents for their deficiencies as this child has been in foster care for three and a half years with little to no change in their circumstances and withholding the names of any relatives until the midnight hour. There must also be blame put on these grandparents, even though officially, they may not have received a letter from DHR until January or February 2024, the [paternal] grandparents have known this child was not in custody of the parents, they have known that their daughter, [the paternal aunt], was attempting to get custody of the child, that it was not until August 2023 that paternal grandmother … began to show interest in the child by requesting through her son[']s attorney a home evaluation and visitation and it was not until March 5, 2024[,] that the paternal grandparents filed for intervention in this case.

"Furthermore, a lot of fuss was made about DHR waiting until January 2024 to send out letters to the paternal side of the family.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
J.H. v. Jefferson County Department of Human Resources (Appeal from Jefferson Juvenile Court: JU-20-1429.02)., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jh-v-jefferson-county-department-of-human-resources-appeal-from-alacivapp-2024.