Lauderdale County Dhs v. Thg

614 So. 2d 377, 1993 WL 2772
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1993
Docket90-CA-0713
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 614 So. 2d 377 (Lauderdale County Dhs v. Thg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lauderdale County Dhs v. Thg, 614 So. 2d 377, 1993 WL 2772 (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

614 So.2d 377 (1992)

LAUDERDALE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES, By Clayton R. BARNETT, Social Services Area Director and A.M.G., a Minor, By and Through Her Next Friend, Clayton R. Barnett
v.
T.H.G. and L.D.G.

No. 90-CA-0713.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

December 31, 1992.
Concurring Opinion March 18, 1993.

Michael C. Moore, Atty. Gen., Kay Hardage, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, John L. Prichard, Deen Cameron & Prichard, Meridian, for appellants.

Leslie C. Gates, Meridian, for appellee.

Shirley Payne, Horn & Payne, Jackson, for amicus curiae.

Before ROY NOBLE LEE., C.J., HAWKINS, P.J., and McRAE, J.

McRAE, Justice, for the Court:

In this appeal from the Chancery Court of Lauderdale County, we consider the very narrow question of whether, in a termination of parental rights proceeding based on the mental illness of both natural parents, otherwise privileged medical and psychiatric information concerning the parents should be admissible, thus waiving any privilege. While we decline to create an exception to the evidentiary rule, Miss. R.Evid. 503, the psychiatrist/psychologistpatient privilege, we find that other evidence, lay testimony or Miss.R.Evid. 706, which allows the court to appoint expert witnesses on its own motion or by motion of the parties, afford the chancellor an opportunity to consider evidence which will be helpful to the trier of fact without infringing upon the rights of the parents. *378 Accordingly, we remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

A.

The facts of this case tell the sad story of a little girl born to parents who long have battled serious and debilitating mental illnesses. A.M.G. was removed from her parents' home when she was six months old and placed with foster parents who now wish to adopt her. Several months later, upon the direction of the Youth Court, the Lauderdale County Department of Human Services initiated termination of parental rights proceedings pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. § 93-15-103(3)(d)(i) (Supp. 1992), which provides for termination when a parent "exhibits ongoing behavior" such as mental illness, which is unlikely to change over time and makes the parent unable to provide acceptable care for the child.

A.M.G.

A.M.G. was born on November 17, 1987, to Lloyd and Tina G. Because of her parents' long and well-documented histories of mental illness, her progress was monitored by the Lauderdale County Department of Human Services (hereinafter "Human Services") as well as by the Lauderdale County Health Department (hereinafter "Health Department"). On April 5, 1988, Leslie Sanders, a registered nurse at the Health Department, notified Human Services of a possible problem with the child's parents. On that date, Tina had taken A.M.G. to the Health Department's pediatric clinic for a checkup. While in the waiting room, the baby was crying and screaming to the point of upsetting other patients, and her mother did nothing to console her. She stopped crying as soon as the nurse picked her up and cuddled her. Dr. Cherry Clark, the examining physician, testified that when asked why the baby was screaming,

[Tina] went into this delusional explanation about the Bible says that the left hand should not know what the right hand is doing and that some people out in the waiting room had different jewelry, silver and gold, and when the silver and the gold crossed, it was causing electrical shock to the baby.

Dr. Clark further testified that:

they believed the baby also had specific powers, that one of the notes that I have recorded at the time was that the baby was able to see much better with her eyes closed than with them open, and the baby had special powers and one other thing that had me concerned was that they believed that the baby's cereal was stunting her growth.

Examination of the child revealed a continuing "failure to thrive" or "inadequate weight gain," which had been documented by nurses at the clinic. Dr. Clark testified that she believed the parents were making every effort to feed the baby, but that it was "more emotional neglect and abuse I was worried about and stability and the formula mixing, the feeding, the weight gain, the emotional comforting of the child and the delusions that were in play at the time had me very concerned." She recommended making a referral to Human Services for daily visits to monitor the home environment and to supervise the baby's care.

Immediately after receiving the call from the Health Department, Human Services obtained a custody order from the Youth Court and removed A.M.G. from her parents' home. She was placed in a foster home, where the record indicates she quickly flourished.

Vicky Whitlock, the Lauderdale County Social Services worker assigned to the case, testified that Human Services had made no effort to return A.M.G. to her parents nor offered them parenting skills classes. She had made only brief home visits to the parents to schedule visits with A.M.G. Further examination by the court adduced testimony that at the time the petition was filed, Human Services had spoken only with Lloyd's father, Tina's mother, and the couple's minister to determine their fitness as parents.

Human Services did provide the parents with the opportunity to have supervised *379 visits with A.M.G. The record indicates that there were nine such visits between April 13, 1988, and November 15, 1989. These visits were unhappy experiences for both A.M.G. and her parents. Miss Whitlock testified on direct examination that:

The last visit was very much like the previous visits. It seems though that as [A.M.G.] has grown older or as she has grown, the visits have been more and more upsetting for her. At the last visit, the foster parents had brought her and left her at our office before the [parents] arrived. She was very content, very happy, chattered with me, played with others in the office, took a candy or sucker from people, and was very happy. The instant that she seen [sic] her parents, she became very tense, she clung to me, she first started to whimper and then cried. She cried uncontrollably, buried her head in my shoulder. At points, I had to take her from the room just to try to calm her down. She turns red and breaks out in splotches or hives all over and it is just very, very — she is just very upset and this was not just on the last visit, but that's the way all the visits have been. They have become worse.

Consequently, a hearing was held in Youth Court and on January 18, 1990, Judge Coleman temporarily stopped visitations pending further orders by the court.

B.

Lloyd and Tina have each suffered from chronic mental illness since their late teens. Lloyd has been consistently diagnosed as schizophrenic-paranoid type. Tina has been variously diagnosed as schizophrenic-schizo-affective type, schizophrenic-paranoid type and more recently, as "exhibiting more of the bi-polar cycles of affect disorder with intermittent psychotic features rather than a classic schizophrenic disorder" and a paranoid personality disorder. Both have spent most of their adult lives under both in-patient and out-patient psychiatric care, requiring extensive hospital stays following a variety of sometimes bizarre and dramatic psychotic episodes. Both require constant medication to maintain functional normalcy.

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Bluebook (online)
614 So. 2d 377, 1993 WL 2772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lauderdale-county-dhs-v-thg-miss-1993.