Mann v. Oklahoma Department of Institutions
This text of 1983 OK 43 (Mann v. Oklahoma Department of Institutions) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The issue in this appeal is the proper interpretation of 10 O.S.1981, § 1130 A(5):1 must there be two incidents of physical abuse against a child before parental rights to that child can be terminated?
Jerry L. was three years old when the district attorney filed a petition alleging the child was deprived: sexually molested by his mother and stepfather. Evidence at trial showed the child had contracted anal gonorrhea, that the parents were overheard talking about performing various unnatural sexual acts with the child and that several photographs depicted the parents and child nude. The trial court found Jerry L. deprived and gave custody to the appellee. Some six months later the trial court heard a petition to terminate the parental rights of the parents, and so ordered the termination.
The termination was granted on grounds of violation of 10 O.S.1981, § 1130 A(5) with custody in DISRS. The district attorney [1373]*1373admitted there are no second grounds for termination under § 1130 A(3)2 because the parents were not given a set of conditions or criteria to meet within the three-month statutory period.
The mother argued at trial, and here, that § 1130 A(5) is inappropriate in this case because it requires a “subsequent” act of child abuse before parental rights can be terminated and that a subsequent hearing be held under 1130 A(5) or 1130 A(3). In other words parental rights can only be terminated in this case upon the second act of physical child abuse; a single incident alone will not suffice.
The district attorney decries that interpretation, arguing that a child should not be sent back into the house where he was physically abused once, in effect handcuffing the state (in a termination hearing) until a second act of abuse. The district attorney says if parents mutilate a child or attempt to kill, they are faced with the identical situation as they face here: returning the child to the home to await a second act of abuse before parental rights can be terminated.3 The trial court might establish conditions for the parents to meet, but what conditions guard against a second act of abuse, he asks?
The district attorney interprets subsection 5 to provide the parents with a right to a separate, complete, independent hearing on issue of abuse before the termination question could be litigated.
Both parties cite us to Matter of Baby Girl Williams, 602 P.2d 1036 (Okl.1979), in which two statements appear which may pertain to this case: (1) “Our termination statute requires a showing that permanent termination is necessary to protect the physical or mental or moral health of the child.” Can such be honestly denied in the instant case? and (2) “If no standards of conduct are set out at the adjudication stage, the parent is given no notice as to what he or she will be called upon to prove to the court in a later termination hearing.” As the prosecutor noted, will a condition that the parent not further physically abuse her child offer any protection to the child? It is not as if the house was dirty and the mother could clean it.
Title 10 O.S.1981, § 1130 A(5) states in part:
“A finding (of abuse) .. . specifically ... in a child dependency neglect action in a proceeding in the juvenile division of a district court.” (Parenthetical phrase supplied)
authorizes termination of parental rights. The trial court in this dependency neglect action made findings of fact that the child (1) had been sexually molested, (2) had been forced to perform unnatural sexual acts and (3) was infected with a loathsome disease. Such findings fall squarely within the parameters of section 5 and authorize termination of parental rights.
In our opinion it is clear the Legislature could not have intended to allow a child to [1374]*1374suffer two acts of serious physical abuse before permitting the state to terminate parental rights. There can only be one finding from this court: that when the trial court finds the act of physical abuse so serious and of such an extreme nature that it must remove the child from the custody of the parents, it may then entertain a petition to terminate parental rights. To hold that the trial court may remove a child from the home under a petition alleging the child is deprived, but may not terminate parental rights until a second act of abuse occurs, is an effort in futility: a second such act normally should not occur with the child in a foster home under custody of the Department of Human Services. In this situation, however, the evidence must be clear and convincing4 that the physical abuse occurred and that it endangered the physical health or welfare of the child. As we said in In re T.H.L., 636 P.2d 330, 334 (Okl.1981):
“The interest of children in a wholesome environment has a constitutional dimension no less compelling than that the parents have in the preservation of family integrity. In the heirarchy of constitutionally protected values both interests rank as fundamental and must hence be shielded with equal vigor and solicitude.” 5
We find authority for our action today under the broad auspices of subsection B of § 1130:
“However, nothing contained herein shall prevent a court from immediately assuming custody of a child and ordering whatever action may be necessary ... to protect his health or welfare ...”
The case of Lyni P., an alleged deprived child, 626 P.2d 864 (Okl.1981) is overruled in so far as same is in conflict with this case.
TRIAL COURT AFFIRMED.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1983 OK 43, 662 P.2d 1372, 1983 Okla. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-oklahoma-department-of-institutions-okla-1983.