M.A. v. C.S. and A.S.

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMarch 10, 2023
DocketCL-2022-0677
StatusPublished

This text of M.A. v. C.S. and A.S. (M.A. v. C.S. and A.S.) 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
M.A. v. C.S. and A.S., (Ala. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Rel: March 10, 2023

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023 _________________________

CL-2022-0676 and CL-2022-0677 _________________________

M.A.

v.

C.S. and A.S.

Appeals from Lee Juvenile Court (JU-20-227.01 and JU-20-227.02)

PER CURIAM.

In these consolidated appeals, M.A. ("the father"), the father of B.A.

("the child"), appeals from identical judgments that the Lee Juvenile

Court ("the juvenile court") entered in each of two dependency actions

pertaining to the child. Those judgments vested the father with custody CL-2022-0676 and CL-2022-0677

of the child but found that the child remained dependent as to the father

and granted C.S. and A.S. ("the maternal grandparents"), the child's

maternal grandparents, visitation with the child. On appeal, the father

challenges the juvenile court's judgments insofar as they found that the

child remained dependent as to the father and granted the maternal

grandparents visitation with the child. Because we conclude that the

juvenile court could not reasonably have been clearly convinced from the

evidence that the child remained dependent as to the father when it

entered its final judgments, we dismiss the appeals with instructions to

the juvenile court to vacate its judgments, to dismiss the actions in which

it entered the judgments, and to allow custody of the child to be returned

to the father.

Background

T.S. ("the mother"), the child's mother, is deceased. Before her

death, the mother and the father were in a romantic relationship and

lived together but were never married. The child was born in November

2018. After the child's birth, the child was in the custody of the mother

and the father until the mother's death in August 2020.

2 CL-2022-0676 and CL-2022-0677

In May 2020, the father was hospitalized because of a drug

overdose. Subsequently, in July 2020, the father was hospitalized a

second time because of a drug overdose. During this second hospital stay,

the father's physicians discovered that he had a brain lesion. On August

29, 2020, while the father was still hospitalized, the mother used illicit

drugs and died as a result. When the father had recovered from his

second drug overdose, he underwent successful surgery to remove the

brain lesion.

In September 2020, the maternal grandparents filed a dependency

petition regarding the child in the juvenile court. In their petition, they

alleged that the child was dependent because, they said, the mother had

died and the father was unable to discharge his parental responsibilities.

The maternal grandparents' petition sought custody of the child if the

juvenile court found that the child was dependent but did not seek

visitation if the juvenile court did not find the child dependent. A few

days after the maternal grandparents filed their petition, E.A. ("the

paternal grandmother"), the father's mother and the paternal

grandmother of the children, also filed a dependency petition regarding

the child in the juvenile court. The juvenile court assigned the maternal

3 CL-2022-0676 and CL-2022-0677

grandparents' action ("the .01 action") a .01 designator and assigned the

paternal grandmother's action ("the .02 action") a .02 designator.

The juvenile court ordered the father and the child to submit to

DNA testing, and the results of the DNA testing confirmed that the

father is the child's father. On September 29, 2020, the juvenile court

held a hearing regarding both the maternal grandparents' petition and

the paternal grandmother's petition. On September 30, 2020, the juvenile

court entered identical orders in both the .01 action and the .02 action.

Those September 30, 2020, orders stated that the father had agreed at

the hearing that the child was dependent, granted the maternal

grandparents pendente lite custody of the child, granted the father

supervised visitation, and required the father to satisfy the requirements

of a to-do list that was attached to the order. The to-do list attached to

the September 30, 2020, order required the father to refrain from using

drugs and alcohol; to submit to hair-follicle drug testing before

modification of the September 30, 2020, order; to submit to a substance-

abuse assessment as soon as possible; to follow the recommendations

made in the substance-abuse assessment; to obtain and maintain stable

housing; to obtain and maintain stable employment; to submit to a

4 CL-2022-0676 and CL-2022-0677

mental-health assessment as soon as possible; and to comply with the

recommendations made in the mental-health assessment.

On October 19, 2020, the East Alabama Mental Health Center

performed a substance-abuse assessment and a mental-health

assessment on the father. The substance-abuse assessment

recommended that the father receive substance-abuse treatment. The

father subsequently completed an outpatient substance-abuse-treatment

program on April 8, 2021. The mental-health assessment did not

diagnose the father as suffering from a mental illness; however, he

voluntarily participated in individual counseling and followed a

physician's suggestion that he take buspirone and citalopram for anxiety

and depression. He testified that he was not receiving counseling for

anxiety and depression. He said that he was in a good mood most of the

time.

The father submitted to hair-follicle drug tests in December 2020,

April 2021, June 2021, and March 2022. The results of all his drug tests

were negative for the presence of illicit drugs.

After the father recovered from the surgery to remove his brain

lesion, he obtained and maintained employment. When the juvenile court

5 CL-2022-0676 and CL-2022-0677

held the final dispositional hearing, the father had been working for the

same employer for five months.

When the hospital discharged him following his brain surgery, the

father initially lived with the paternal grandmother, her husband, and

the father's brother; however, two months before the final dispositional

hearing, the father rented and moved into his own three-bedroom, two-

bathroom house ("the rental house").

Following a review hearing, the juvenile court, on June 29, 2021,

entered identical orders in both the .01 action and the .02 action that

granted the father unsupervised visitation with the child and ordered

him to pay the maternal grandparents child support in the amount of

$359 per month.

On March 30, 2022, the juvenile court held a final dispositional

hearing. At that hearing, the father testified that he had satisfied all the

requirements listed on the to-do list attached to the juvenile court's

September 30, 2020, order. He testified that he had most recently

submitted to a hair-follicle drug test on March 16, 2022, two weeks before

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M.A. v. C.S. and A.S., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ma-v-cs-and-as-alacivapp-2023.