Jmo v. State Dept. of Human Resources

872 So. 2d 174, 2003 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 357, 2003 WL 21205833
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 23, 2003
Docket2011232
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 872 So. 2d 174 (Jmo v. State Dept. of Human Resources) 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
Jmo v. State Dept. of Human Resources, 872 So. 2d 174, 2003 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 357, 2003 WL 21205833 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

On January 24, 2002, the State Department of Human Resources ("DHR") filed an action in the Cullman Juvenile Court ("the trial court") seeking to terminate the parental rights of J.M.O. ("the mother") to C.G.M. ("the daughter"). The mother answered with a general denial of all the allegations set forth in DHR's complaint. On August 19, 2002, the trial court held a hearing and received ore tenus evidence. By an order dated August 27, 2002, the trial court terminated the mother's parental rights.

The trial court heard evidence supporting the following facts at the August 19, 2002, ore tenus hearing. In November 2000, the mother and the daughter arrived at Harbor House, a home for abused women, seeking shelter from the mother's boyfriend, L.C. ("the boyfriend"). Deborah Tucker, the executive director of Victim Services of Cullman, was employed as an assistant at Harbor House. According to Tucker, the mother claimed that she had been beaten by the boyfriend and forced by him to sexually abuse the daughter while he watched and fondled himself. Tucker informed the mother that Harbor House was required to report any instance of abuse to DHR. The mother acknowledged Harbor House's responsibility to report allegations of abuse to DHR, but she continued to implicate herself in the sexual abuse of her daughter.

Harbor House reported the alleged abuse of the mother and the daughter to DHR, which assigned Alicia Jennings, a DHR employee, to conduct the initial interview of the mother. According to Jennings, the mother claimed to have been abused physically and sexually as a child. Jennings testified that the mother's first *Page 176 child, a son who was born when the mother was 17 years old, was adopted after the mother's parental rights to that child were terminated by the State of Virginia, where she formerly resided. The mother, who was 26 years old at the time of this termination hearing, also reported to Jennings that she had experienced a miscarriage, that she had had a stillborn child, and that she had had a child that died two days after its birth. Jennings stated that the mother reported having used drugs during her other pregnancies, but that the mother stated that she could not remember whether she had used illegal drugs while she was pregnant with the daughter.

During the initial interview with Jennings, the mother identified the boyfriend as the man responsible for abusing her and forcing her to abuse the daughter. Jennings was told by the mother that she had been with the boyfriend since she was 17 years old; the boyfriend was 55 years old at the time of the hearing. The mother told Jennings that the boyfriend had beaten her repeatedly over the course of their relationship. Jennings testified that the mother reported that she was forced by the boyfriend to have group sex with him and other men they had met in bars and that he would often prostitute her to other men. The mother told Jennings that the boyfriend was bisexual and that they had engaged in unorthodox sexual behavior. During meetings that followed the initial interview, the mother repeated to Jennings the allegation that the boyfriend had forced her to sexually abuse the daughter while he watched and fondled himself. Based on the information relayed to Jennings by the mother, Jennings and other DHR staff members decided to take temporary custody of the daughter.

Paige Blackwood, a DHR caseworker, was assigned to design the mother's Individualized Service Plan ("ISP"), to arrange visitation between the mother and the daughter, and to conduct relative-resource identification and home studies. Blackwood testified that the mother attended every scheduled visitation with the daughter and that the mother and daughter bonded and enjoyed one another's company. However, Blackwood expressed concern over the fact that the boyfriend, the man the mother accused of beating her repeatedly, often accompanied her to those visitations. Blackwood stated that, although the mother agreed to attend DHR's parenting class, she never actually attended the classes because she was out of town with the boyfriend. The mother missed two out of her three ISP meetings.

Blackwood performed the search for relatives that could potentially take custody of the daughter based on information provided by the mother. The mother initially listed her half-sister as a relative resource, but she later told Blackwood that the half-sister was an unsuitable choice because she used illegal drugs. The mother also claimed that the half-sister's husband had raped her when she was pregnant with her son. L.C., the mother's relative, was disqualified because her father was married to the mother's biological mother; the maternal grandmother's parental rights to the mother had been terminated years before. The mother's adoptive mother, P.H., declined to take custody of the daughter because of her failing health. The boyfriend's relatives were not considered after a DNA test determined conclusively that he was not the daughter's biological father.

Dr. Louis Pope, a licensed psychologist at Alabama Psychological Service Center, interviewed the mother and performed her psychological evaluation. According to Dr. Pope, the mother spoke with him about her arrests, her depression, and her suicide attempts. Dr. Pope diagnosed the mother with a major depressive disorder *Page 177 and recommended further testing, which DHR did not authorize him to perform.

At the hearing, the mother denied having been forced by the boyfriend to sexually abuse the daughter. The mother testified that she created the story about being forced to sexually abuse her daughter in an attempt to solicit help from Harbor House. According to the mother's testimony, she grew up in the foster-care system and she knew that the best way to have a restraining order issued against the boyfriend was to report that she and her child were victims of physical and sexual abuse. The mother admitted that she told Jennings, Tucker, and Blackwood that she had sexually abused the daughter at the boyfriend's demand, but she testified that she had lied in order to obtain a restraining order against the boyfriend.

Although the mother testified that she had lied about the daughter's being sexually abused, she continued to assert that the boyfriend had physically abused her, that he had sold her to other men as a prostitute, and that she had been forced to engage in unorthodox sexual behavior with the boyfriend. The mother testified that she finally was able to leave the boyfriend when he checked into an alcohol-rehabilitation clinic. According to the mother, the boyfriend's stay in an alcohol-rehabilitation facility was her first chance to safely leave the boyfriend in the nine years they had known one another. The mother testified that the boyfriend had been able to find her at Harbor House, even though she had been staying there anonymously, and that he had followed her when she left Harbor House to run errands.

The mother's testimony confirmed that her parental rights to her first child, a son, were terminated by the State of Virginia because her living arrangement was determined to be unsuitable for a child. The mother stated that she was 17 years old at the time of the first termination proceeding and that she had not known how to properly care for the son.

The mother testified that the boyfriend was the father of the children that had died before birth or shortly thereafter. The daughter's father was and still is unknown. The mother testified that she notified DHR that R.D. could be the daughter's biological father. Blackwood stated that DHR ceased all attempts to contact R.D. or to perform a home study on his residence because the mother claimed that R.D.

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Related

A.D.B.H. v. Houston County Department of Human Resources
1 So. 3d 53 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
872 So. 2d 174, 2003 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 357, 2003 WL 21205833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jmo-v-state-dept-of-human-resources-alacivapp-2003.