Joy S. (J.S.) Mother) v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 2016
DocketS16184
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joy S. (J.S.) Mother) v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS (Joy S. (J.S.) Mother) v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joy S. (J.S.) Mother) v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS, (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

NOTICE Memorandum decisions of this court do not create legal precedent. A party wishing to cite such a decision in a brief or at oral argument should review Alaska Appellate Rule 214(d).

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

JOY S., ) ) Supreme Court No. S-16184 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court No. 3PA-13-00167/ ) 00168 CN v. ) ) MEMORANDUM OPINION STATE OF ALASKA, ) AND JUDGMENT* DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & ) SOCIAL SERVICES, OFFICE OF ) No. 1603 – December 14, 2016 CHILDREN’S SERVICES, ) ) Appellee. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Palmer, Eric Smith, Judge.

Appearances: Laurence Blakely, Assistant Public Defender, and Quinlan Steiner, Public Defender, Anchorage, for Appellant. Jonathan Woodman, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Craig W. Richards, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee. Rachel Levitt, Assistant Public Advocate, Palmer, and Richard Allen, Public Advocate, Anchorage, for Guardian ad Litem.

Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger, and Carney, Justices.

* Entered under Alaska Appellate Rule 214. I. INTRODUCTION The superior court terminated a mother’s parental rights to her children after hearing evidence of the mother’s substance abuse, mental illness, and domestic violence. The court accepted a psychologist’s diagnosis of bipolar disorder and faulted the mother for her failure to accept the diagnosis and seek treatment for it. The mother argues that the court erred both in finding that she failed, within a reasonable time, to remedy the conditions that placed her children at risk of harm and in finding that returning the children to her care would likely cause them serious emotional or physical damage. She contends that the evidence of her mental illness is conflicting and that the court failed to give sufficient weight to the fact that she completed some treatment for her substance abuse and mental health problems after trial. Because the record supports the superior court’s findings, we affirm the termination order. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Background Joy S. and Cary F. are the parents of Olin, born in 2009, and Emeric, born in 2011.1 The Office of Children’s Services (OCS) filed an emergency petition for temporary custody of the two children in December 2013. According to the petition, OCS had begun investigating the parents a few months earlier after receiving a report that Joy was using drugs and exhibiting signs of mental illness. OCS found evidence of drug use, domestic violence, and “extremely unbalanced” behavior on Joy’s part, but it put off further action after Joy and the children “engaged in services with community agencies” and the children’s daycare reported that it had no concerns.

1 We use pseudonyms to protect the parties’ privacy. Cary voluntarily relinquished his parental rights, which are not at issue in this appeal. Both children are Indian children under 25 U.S.C. § 1903(4) (2012). -2- 1603 According to the petition, OCS soon received another report that Joy was threatening to kill herself, feeling “helpless and hopeless” and “overwhelmed.” OCS implemented a safety plan and placed the children with Cary, “who agreed to protect the children until [Joy] engaged in additional services.” But OCS had concerns about Cary as well due to his “affiliates and assaultive history.” And when Joy obtained a temporary domestic violence restraining order against him, he returned the children to her without informing OCS. Alaska State Troopers later contacted Joy and the children and found “a heavy thick odor of marijuana in the residence” even though Joy had told OCS she had stopped using the drug. The court held a hearing on OCS’s petition in December 2013 and found on “a probable cause basis that the children [were] children in need of aid” because of the risk of mental injury from their parents’ conduct.2 Following a contested adjudication hearing a few months later, the court found by a preponderance of the evidence that the children were children in need of aid because of domestic violence in the home, both parents’ substance abuse, Joy’s mental health problems, and Cary’s abandonment. B. Termination Of Parental Rights In January 2015 OCS petitioned to terminate Joy’s parental rights. The termination trial took place in July and August 2015. After trial but before the superior court issued its findings, Joy filed a “Motion to Release Custody and to Return Indian Children to Biological Mother,” along with an affidavit explaining that she had completed treatment for substance abuse and post-traumatic stress disorder at an outpatient clinic where she had begun treatment a few weeks before trial began. Joy’s affidavit also attacked the fitness of the children’s current placement. The court denied

2 See AS 47.10.011(8). -3- 1603 Joy’s motion without a hearing, but it took her new allegations into consideration in its termination order, ultimately deciding that they “did not require any change in the court’s analysis.” The court terminated Joy’s parental rights in December 2015. It found that Olin and Emeric were children in need of aid for three different but factually interrelated reasons. First, the court found that the children had been “subjected to mental injury and are at risk of mental injury due to domestic violence in their parents’ home.”3 The court recounted several incidents of domestic violence between Joy and Cary, at least one of which the children witnessed; it found that both children had developed behavioral problems involving “anger issues, outbursts, and an inability to regulate their own emotions,” at least in part because of the violence they had witnessed; and it noted with concern Joy’s apparent inability to recognize the seriousness of the problem and the impact violence had on the children. Second, the court found that Joy’s ability to parent was substantially impaired by her addictive or habitual use of marijuana, and that her drug abuse resulted in a substantial risk of harm to the children.4 The court noted that Joy had been repeatedly diagnosed with drug dependence and advised to seek treatment but that she relied on marijuana to self-medicate to manage her mental health and, at least until the very eve of trial, was not interested in trying to quit. The court found credible Joy’s “testimony that she had finally decided that she needed to stop smoking marijuana and to cease relying on it to manage stress,” and it credited her post-trial assertions “that she has remained clean and completed her substance abuse treatment.” But the court also noted that “her sobriety is very recent,” that she naively believed 72 hours of sobriety

3 See AS 47.10.011(8)(A), (B)(i). 4 See AS 47.10.011(10).

-4­ 1603 “means [the problem is] defeated,” and that she failed to recognize the inappropriateness of her past drug use, making it “not at all clear that she fully understands her potential for relapse.” Finally, the court found that Olin and Emeric were children in need of aid because of Joy’s mental illness, “linked with past detrimental behavior.”5 The court found that Joy had “correctly been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and borderline personality features.” It described a number of instances in which Joy had been unable to control her behavior: frightening OCS workers with her angry outbursts, stalking her children’s foster mother, requiring police intervention, and incurring criminal charges. The court’s findings about Joy’s mental illness were buttressed by its own observations of her during trial, where it found her testimony “at times erratic, inconsistent, and incoherent” and her attitude often inappropriately angry and resistant.

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Joy S. (J.S.) Mother) v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joy-s-js-mother-v-state-of-alaska-dhss-ocs-alaska-2016.