J.W. v. D.W.

835 So. 2d 206
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 10, 2002
Docket2000221
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 835 So. 2d 206 (J.W. v. D.W.) 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.W. v. D.W., 835 So. 2d 206 (Ala. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinions

MURDOCK, Judge.

This matter was initiated on June 30, 2000, when B.K.W., the natural father, filed a petition seeking custody of his three-year-old daughter, S.D.W. In his petition, the father alleged that J.W., the natural mother and custodian of the child, had been neglectful in caring for the child, and that placing the child in his custody would serve the best interests of the child. Several days after he filed his petition, the mother filed a separate action seeking to establish paternity and seeking child support. The juvenile court set the father’s petition for a hearing on July 24, 2000, and appointed a guardian ad litem to represent the interests of the child in that action. The juvenile court continued the hearing on July 20, 2000, due to the maternal grandmother’s hospitalization. The hearing was continued a second time to September 25, 2000, on the mother’s motion so as to accommodate her plans concerning her impending marriage to a man domiciled in Illinois. The mother also moved to consolidate the pending custody action with the petition seeking to establish paternity and seeking child support. The juvenile court granted that motion. On September 21, 2000, the paternal grandparents, Do.W. and De.W., moved to intervene in the action to seek pendente lite custody and permanent custody of the minor child. On that same date, the parties filed a joint motion seeking a continuance of the hearing.

The hearing in this matter took place on October 3, 2000. Immediately before the hearing, the juvenile court granted the grandparents’ petition to intervene. In his opening remarks, the father’s attorney informed the court that the father was undergoing inpatient treatment for drug dependency and that he was about four weeks away from completing the program. The attorney informed the court that because of that circumstance, the father was willing to stipulate that the paternal grandparents were a better choice to be the child’s custodians than he would be. The father made it clear, however, that he was not withdrawing his petition for custody as against the mother.

The hearing proceeded, and the paternal grandmother and four “peer”1 witnesses, [208]*208who described themselves as acquaintances of the mother, testified that the mother had been neglectful of the child’s needs. The paternal grandmother testified that the mother had resided in her home with the father for several months during the couple’s trial “engagement.” She described the mother as obsessed with communicating on the Internet to the point that she had completely ignored the child’s cries and had left the child in wet diapers. The paternal grandmother further testified that the mother had delayed seeking necessary dental treatment for the child and that the mother would commonly postpone picking up prescriptions for the child’s ear infections. The paternal grandmother testified that the mother had moved out of her home after a physical altercation between the two of them over the issue of baby-sitting for the child.

The four peer witnesses testified that they had “hung out” and “partied” with the mother and that they had witnessed the mother bring the child to parties and poker games, at which the mother had drunk alcohol to excess. One of the witnesses testified that he had seen the mother smoking pot. These witnesses provided additional testimony that the mother had ignored the child’s needs while in their presence, and that the mother had permitted the child to cry continuously without attention unless someone volunteered to assist the child. Two of the witnesses testified that they had escorted the mother to her house, which she and the minor child shared with the maternal grandmother, on occasions when she had consumed so much alcohol that she was incapable of walking the short distance to her house while carrying her child. These witnesses testified that on such occasions they would either remain at the mother’s house for the night or they would put the child in her crib while the mother went to sleep in her bed in her inebriated condition. These two witnesses testified that the mother’s home was unkempt and that the kitchen was filthy, with cockroaches crawling on the floor. In addition to the four witnesses who testified against the mother, the paternal grandparents’ attorney proffered three additional witnesses who had also socialized with the mother and who would give similar testimony; however, the parties entered into a stipulation that the testimony of those additional witnesses would be substantially similar to the other “peer” witnesses and that they therefore did not need to give testimony in the cause.

The paternal grandmother testified that the child had developed rampant decay in six of her front teeth as a result of being put to bed with a bottle. She further testified that one of those teeth had had to be extracted due to extensive decay. The paternal grandmother stated that the mother had pointed out a brown spot on one of the child’s front teeth to the paternal grandmother in October 1999. The paternal grandmother testified that she had agreed with the mother at that time that the child needed to be seen by a dentist and that, she had offered at that time to pay a portion of the child’s dental bill. She testified that she reminded the mother several times that she needed to make a dental appointment for the child, but that the mother had faded to make the necessary arrangements.

The paternal grandmother testified that on June 15, 2000, she and the mother had taken the child to see Dr. Jo Anne Jackson, a pediatric dentist. The paternal grandmother stated that Dr. Jackson had recommended stainless-steel crowns for [209]*209the affected teeth, but that the mother had objected to the proposed treatment because Dr. Jackson would not allow a parent to accompany the child during the procedure and because the doctor planned on restraining the child during the treatment and using only a local anesthetic rather than general anesthesia. The paternal grandmother explained that because of these objections, the mother insisted upon seeking a second opinion.

The paternal grandmother testified that she had then made a series of appointments with Dr. Michael Anglin, another pediatric dentist, but that the mother had ultimately canceled those appointments, claiming that she had scheduling conflicts that had arisen on the appointed dates.

The record reveals that several days after the father filed the petition for custody, the mother sought dental treatment for the child at the dental school at the University of Alabama in Birmingham (“UAB”). The UAB records revealed that the student dentists planned to use the same restorative procedure using the same anesthetic Dr. Jackson had initially recommended. The mother listed Medicaid as the child’s dental insurer. Dr. Robert De-Shazer, a family dentist, testified as an expert at the hearing. Dr. DeShazer had examined the child in preparation for his testimony and stated that restoration of the child’s teeth would involve the placement of stainless-steel crowns on the affected teeth, with possible nerve treatments if the decay extended into the nerves. He further testified that if the decay extended to the point beyond which this approach was feasible, the affected teeth would require extraction and replacement by a partial denture to provide space into which the child’s permanent teeth could grow.

The mother and the maternal grandmother testified on the mother’s behalf.

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Jw v. Dw
835 So. 2d 206 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
835 So. 2d 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jw-v-dw-alacivapp-2002.