Marvin J. & Rosemary S. Walter v. Arlene B. Thiessen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 2, 2020
Docket79533-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marvin J. & Rosemary S. Walter v. Arlene B. Thiessen (Marvin J. & Rosemary S. Walter v. Arlene B. Thiessen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marvin J. & Rosemary S. Walter v. Arlene B. Thiessen, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Custody of C.W., Minor Child, No. 79533-3-I (consolidated with 79600-3-I) MARVIN J. WALTER and ROSEMARY S. WALTER, DIVISION ONE

Appellants/Cross-Respondents, UNPUBLISHED OPINION V.

ARLENE THIESSEN,

Respondent/Cross-Appellant. FILED: March 2, 2020

SMITH, J. — Arlene Thiessen appeals from an order awarding custody of

C.W. to Marvin and Rosemary Walter.1 She asserts the trial court abused its

discretion in finding her currently unfit to parent C.W. based on her alcoholism

and recent relapses with alcohol use. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTS

Arlene Thiessen is the mother of two children, seven-year-old E.B. and

three-year-old C.W. Respondents Marvin and Rosemary Walter are the paternal

grandfather and step-grandmother of C.W. C.W. and E.B. do not share the same

biological father.

1 On January 28, 2020, this court granted the parties’ voluntary motion to dismiss the Walters’ appeal, leaving only Thiessen’s cross appeal for this court to address. No. 79533-3-1/2

Thiessen acknowledges that she struggles with alcoholism and

methamphetamine addiction. Prior to 2017, Child Protective Services (CPS)

received several reports alleging drug and alcohol abuse and child neglect by

Thiessen, all of which were determined to be unfounded. Thiessen nevertheless

engaged in alcohol and drug treatment and mental health treatment services at

the request of CPS pursuant to these referrals between July 2014 and October

2017.

In February 2017, when C.W. was two months old, his father Kipp Walter

passed away unexpectedly. At that time, Thiessen and her children were living

with Kipp on his boat at a marina in Tacoma. In April 2017, Thiessen and her

children moved into an apartment near the Walters in Skagit County.

On October 16, 2017, Thiessen was arrested for driving under the

influence (DUI) with both of her children in the car.2 She subsequently agreed to

place her children in CPS custody for 90 days while she entered into an intensive

outpatient treatment program for drug and alcohol abuse. Although Thiessen

wanted the siblings to remain together, CPS placed C.W. with the Walters and

E.B. in foster care. Thiessen also voluntarily agreed to participate in additional

services to address parental issues, to continue receiving treatment from her

mental health counselor, and to attend AA meetings.

CPS determined that E.B. and C.W. could be returned to Thiessen after

the 90-day voluntary placement agreement was complete. However, on

2Thiessen’s DUI charge was dismissed in exchange for pleading guilty to a negligent driving charge. 2 No. 79533-3-1/3

December 8, 2017, the Walters filed a nonparent custody petition for C.W. On December 22, 2017, the court entered a temporary nonparent custody order

awarding custody of C.W. to the Walters and allowing Thiessen supervised

daytime visitation of three hours once per week. CPS returned E.B. to

Thiessen’s custody in December 2017. Were it not for the temporary nonparent

custody order, CPS would have also returned C.W. to Thiessen’s custody at the

same time.

Between her DUI arrest in October 2017 and the trial in September 2018,

Thiessen had four relapses of alcohol use. In December 2017, she took some

sips of beer and then called her sponsor. In April 2018, she bought a small bottle

of liquor, “took a couple swigs,” then self-reported to CPS and her chemical

dependency counselor. In June 2018, she drank “[what] could have been vodka”

while E.B. was at a skating rink. She did not drink to intoxication, and she self-

reported this relapse. In September 2018, a couple of weeks prior to trial,

Thiessen consumed two one-ounce bottles of Fireball and a beer while E.B. was

at school. Thiessen did not self-report this relapse. It was discovered when

Thiessen’s chemical dependency counselor, Joanna Farnsworth, spoke with

Thiessen on the phone and thought she sounded “emotional.” Farnsworth asked

Thiessen to walk to her office immediately for an individual session. There,

Farnsworth observed that Thiessen appeared to be intoxicated. Farnsworth then

asked Thiessen whether she had been drinking, and Thiessen admitted she had.

Farnsworth directed Thiessen to contact her sober support network and arranged

3 No. 79533-3-1/4

for her Parent-Child Assistance Program (PCAP) advocate to be present when

E.B. returned from school.

The court-appointed guardian ad litem (GAL), Annalise Martucci, testified

twice at the custody trial. Martucci testified that her pretrial report recommended

that C.W. should continue to reside primarily with the Walters at least temporarily with increased visitation for Thiessen. Martucci agreed that “concerns with

regard to parental unfitness persist to this day” and expressed “real concern

about [Thiessen’s] ability to safely supervise both boys at the same time at this

point.” She predicated her opinion on “the fact that [Thiessen] does not have an

ongoing history of being clean,” as well as Thiessen’s lack of coping skills, her

mental and physical health issues, and the stress of watching two children.

Martucci also expressed concern about Thiessen’s pattern of conflicting

statements regarding her drug and alcohol use and her “history of receiving

services and then falling back into very dangerous behavior.” Martucci did not

rule out the possibility that Thiessen would eventually be capable of parenting

C.W. in her own home but did not believe she was there yet.

Farnsworth testified regarding Thiessen’s September 2018 relapse. On

cross-examination, Farnsworth acknowledged that Thiessen had failed to

accurately report the last date she used methamphetamines. She also

acknowledged that urinalysis had failed to catch any of Thiessen’s relapses.

Martucci subsequently returned and testified that Thiessen had failed to inform

her that she had relapsed in June and September 2018. Martucci learned of

4 No. 79533-3-1/5

these relapses via Farnsworth’s trial testimony. Based on that new information,

Martucci testified she “would easily say that I believe [Thiessen] is unfit.”

Thiessen’s CPS caseworker Monica Glausen also testified twice at trial. Glausen initially testified that Thiessen was “doing well with services” and that

she did not have any concerns about returning C.W. to Thiessen’s care as long

as she has a safety plan in place. Glausen stated that she was aware Thiessen

had relapsed in December2017 and “maybe another time.” Following

Farnsworth’s testimony regarding Thiessen’s recent relapses, Glausen returned

and testified that relapses are an expected “part of recovery” and that this new

information did not change her opinion that E.B. and C.W. are safe in Thiessen’s

care. She further testified that she did not believe Thiessen’s relapse placed

E.B. at risk because there was a safety plan in place.

After a five-day bench trial, the court awarded custody of C.W. to the

Walters. The court entered the following pertinent findings: The child’s mother, Respondent Arlene Thiessen, is currently unfit due to alcoholism as shown by a relapse in her recovery program and use of alcohol shortly before trial. Although Petitioners contend Respondent is unfit for numerous reasons, the only basis Respondent is currently unfit is because of her alcoholism and recent relapses with alcohol.

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