Jordan Heath Joyce v. Botetourt County Department of Social Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 9, 2022
Docket0736223
StatusPublished

This text of Jordan Heath Joyce v. Botetourt County Department of Social Services (Jordan Heath Joyce v. Botetourt County Department of Social Services) 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.

Bluebook
Jordan Heath Joyce v. Botetourt County Department of Social Services, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Humphreys, Huff and AtLee Argued by videoconference PUBLISHED

JORDAN HEATH JOYCE OPINION BY v. Record No. 0736-22-3 JUDGE ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS NOVEMBER 9, 2022 BOTETOURT COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BOTETOURT COUNTY Joel R. Branscom, Judge

Wilson C. Pasley for appellant.

Matthew J. Schmitt (Mark C. Popovich; L. Brad Braford, Guardian ad litem for the minor child; Guynn, Waddell, Carroll & Lockaby, PC, on brief), for appellee.

Jordan Heath Joyce (“father”) appeals the order of the Botetourt County Circuit Court

(“circuit court”) terminating his parental rights to his child, N.J., pursuant to Code § 16.1-283(C)(2).

Father argues that the circuit court erred in finding that the Botetourt County Department of Social

Services (“the Department”) could not provide services to father because he was subject to a

protective order for the first year that N.J. was in foster care. Accordingly, he argues the evidence

was insufficient to prove the Department made reasonable and appropriate efforts with respect to

father to substantially remedy the conditions which led to or required continuation of N.J.’s foster

care placement.

BACKGROUND

“On appeal, ‘we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most

favorable to the prevailing party below, in this case the Department.’” Farrell v. Warren Cnty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 59 Va. App. 375, 386 (2012) (quoting Jenkins v. Winchester Dep’t of Soc.

Servs., 12 Va. App. 1178, 1180 (1991)). So viewed, the evidence established the following:

Father and Aiden Joyce (“mother”) are the biological parents to N.J., who is the subject of

this appeal.1 The Department became involved with the family in July 2018, shortly after father and

mother separated. At the time, four-year-old N.J. lived with mother and his twelve-year-old sister,

A.J. On July 22, 2018, mother made allegations that father had sexually abused A.J., and the

Botetourt County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court (“the JDR court”) entered an

emergency protective order against father. On August 14, 2018, the JDR court entered a two-year

protective order, prohibiting father from having contact with the children, “except through visitation

at Sabrina’s Place. (Only if juveniles wish to visit.)” The protective order stated that it expired on

August 14, 2020. In June 2019, father moved the JDR court to have the protective order dissolved.

The JDR court denied the motion; father did not appeal.

Also in June 2019, law enforcement responded to a call regarding A.J. hiding from her

mother in the woods. Law enforcement saw that mother and the children were living in

unacceptable conditions. Law enforcement contacted the Department, which found the living

conditions to be “unfit” for the children. On June 12, 2019, mother signed an entrustment

agreement, entrusting N.J. and A.J. to the care of the Department. Pursuant to the agreement, the

Department removed the children from the home, while mother had time to try to remedy the living

situation.

By August 12, 2019, mother had not remedied the living situation, and the JDR court

approved the Department’s petition to place the children in foster care, with a permanent goal of

returning the children to their home. On that date, the JDR court found that there was an existing

1 Mother’s parental rights to N.J. and her older child, A.J., were terminated at the same time as father’s parental rights to N.J. were terminated; mother did not appeal the circuit court’s ruling. Father is not the biological father of A.J. -2- protective order in place against father but ordered that father could have visitation with N.J. at the

Department’s discretion. However, in foster care plans prepared in November 2019, April 2020,

and September 2020, the Department explained, “Due to [N.J.’s] diagnosis and [father’s] current

health situation, [N.J.] does not visit with his father.” The foster care plans included no services for

father, and the Department’s only other reference to father in the plans was its conclusion that he

was “not a viable option” for relative placement because of a “current protective order.” Each of

these foster care plans described services and visitation efforts offered to mother to achieve the

stated goal of returning N.J. to his own home. The target date to accomplish the goal was

December 2020.

In April 2021, twenty-two months after the Department removed N.J. from the home, the

Department petitioned the JDR court for termination of parental rights as to father and mother. In

support of its petition, the Department cited mother’s unreliable income and housing and her failure

to follow through with substance abuse treatment. As for father, the Department stated that he

suffers with Parkinson’s disease and that he has had no contact with N.J. On July 20, 2021, the JDR

court terminated father’s parental rights to N.J. under Code § 16.1-283(C)(2). Father appealed to

the circuit court.

On February 2, 2022, the parties appeared before the circuit court for a de novo hearing on

the Department’s petition to terminate father’s parental rights. At the time of the hearing, N.J. was

eight years old. When he first entered foster care, N.J., who is on the autism spectrum, was “very

much out of control, at times,” according to his foster mother. N.J. “was nonverbal . . . he would

say words but he wouldn’t communicate at all . . . he was very smart but . . . he didn’t have any way

to express himself.” Since entering foster care, N.J. had made “leaps and bounds of improvement.”

N.J. was doing very well in his foster home.

-3- The Department presented evidence about the services it offered mother to help her achieve

the goal of returning N.J. to home. The Department admitted that it offered no services to father,

nor did it assist father in any way to communicate with N.J. The Department explained that initially

father was “not put in the service plan because . . . there was still a protective order so he couldn’t

have visitation.” The Department conceded that father contacted the Department about visiting N.J.

approximately seven times over the two-year period that N.J. had been in foster care.

Father cross-examined the Department about the foster care plans, which indicated that N.J.

did not visit with father because of N.J.’s autism diagnosis and father’s “current health situation.”

The Department explained that father never said “what he had going on” regarding his health, but

during the court hearings “he sat there and just shook, could hardly speak or anything.” The

Department admitted that it did not inquire into father’s health status but nevertheless determined

that it would not be in N.J.’s best interest to visit with him. The Department never offered father

visitation with N.J., even after the protective order was lifted and the Department determined that

the sexual allegations against father were unfounded.

Father testified that he wanted to reunite with N.J. and that he contacted the Department

“multiple times over the years” to inquire about visitation, to no avail. He also testified that he

contacted Sabrina’s Place about visitation; however, the representative from Sabrina’s Place told

father that he would have to consult with the Department about visitation. As for his health, father

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