Matter of Custody and Parental Rights of Fm

811 P.2d 1263, 248 Mont. 358, 48 State Rptr. 407, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 106
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1991
Docket90-600
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 811 P.2d 1263 (Matter of Custody and Parental Rights of Fm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Custody and Parental Rights of Fm, 811 P.2d 1263, 248 Mont. 358, 48 State Rptr. 407, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 106 (Mo. 1991).

Opinion

JUSTICE TRIEWEILER

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*359 The natural parents of F.M., Jr., appeal from the order of the First Judicial District Court terminating their parental rights and awarding custody and care of F.M. to the Montana Department of Family Services. We affirm.

The issue raised by the parents on appeal is as follows:

Did the District Court abuse its discretion when it terminated the parental rights of the father, F.M.M., and the mother, K.N.M.?

F.M. was bom August 21, 1989. However, the involvement of the Montana Department of Family Services (Department) with F.M.’s family began shortly after they arrived in Montana in 1987. In 1987, F.M.M. and K.N.M., along with their daughter, M.M., moved to Lincoln, Montana, from New Hampshire. Shortly thereafter, the Department began to receive reports that M.M. was being abused by her parents.

On January 26,1988, M.M. was admitted to St. Peter’s Community Hospital with extensive bruises covering her body. These bruises were later determined to be the result of physical abuse.

On June 27, 1988, the District Court found M.M. to be a youth in need of care, granted temporary custody to the Department for six months, and ordered a treatment plan for K.N.M. and F.M.M.

On July 25, 1988, the District Court approved a treatment plan requiring the parents to obtain psychological counseling, attend parenting classes, and maintain visitation with M.M. As part of the treatment plan, the parents began therapy with Dr. Richard J. Emery, a clinical psychologist. In their therapy with Dr. Emery, the parents denied any abuse of their daughter. They explained to Dr. Emery that M.M.’s bruises were caused by the fact that M.M. walked into furniture because of lack of sleep and that she had fallen down some stairs.

Dr. Emery believed that M.M. was physically abused by one or both of her parents, and recommended continued therapy and parenting classes. On February 7, 1989, the District Court approved a second treatment plan requiring continued therapy and increased visitation for the parents.

F.M. was bom August 21, 1989, and M.M. was reunited with the family at approximately the same time. Once again, on November 6, 1989, the District Court granted the Department temporary investigative authority of M.M. The resulting investigation revealed abuse of both M.M. and F.M. Later, on November 15, 1989, the District *360 Court granted the Department emergency temporary custody of both children pending a hearing.

The District Court held hearings on November 22 and December 15, 1989. The Department warned that the same pattern of abuse affecting M.M. was beginning to emerge with respect to F.M.

At the hearing, Mary Lou Nielson, a neighbor, testified that on two or three occasions she observed the mother, K.N.M., pretending to drop a sleeping F.M., jolting him awake. Donna Hale, a clinical social worker, testified that this act by K.N.M. is “a horrifying thing to do to a baby’ and would create a “profound emotional disturbance in an infant.” Kathleen Jury, a pastor, along with Nielson, testified that they had watched K.N.M. sticking her tongue in F.M.’s mouth. At a subsequent hearing, Dr. Emery testified that this behavior constitutes sexual abuse. Both Jury and Nielson also testified that K.N.M. made comments and jokes about F.M.’s genitalia. Furthermore, Nielson testified that K.N.M. told her that “sometimes when she changes him [F.M.], she plays with him so to speak.” Finally, Jury testified that the parents gave F.M. Tylenol and codeine to induce sleep, even though there was no indication, according to Jury, that F.M. was ill.

On January 4, 1990, the District Court entered an order finding F.M. a youth in need of care “because of apparent sexual acts perpetrated against him by his mother, along with other acts to be determined abusive or neglectful.” The District Court also found that M.M. “continues to be a youth in need of care because of continuing abuse of her by her parents.” The District Court removed the children from the home and granted custody of the children to the Lewis and Clark County Department of Family Services. Furthermore, the court approved a treatment plan which required K.N.M. and F.M.M. to obtain psychological counseling, including a sex offender evaluation, if recommended by their therapist, and to maintain regular, supervised visitation with F.M.

On February 9,1990, the District Court entered an order terminating the couple’s parental rights to M.M. The District Comet found that the parents had made no significant progress upon the objectives of their previous treatment plans and that they needed long-term therapy to acquire appropriate parenting skills. The parents did not contest the District Court’s order terminating their parental rights.

Later that spring, on April 12, 1990, the Department filed a petition for termination of the couple’s parental rights regarding F.M. At the termination hearing, the couple’s primary therapist, Dr. *361 Emery, testified that the parents had made no real progress in therapy until April 17, at which time the couple admitted only to abusing their daughter, M.M. Dr. Emery testified that the couple still denied abusing F.M., and concluded his testimony by maintaining that the couple’s therapy had been unproductive in regard to F.M. due to their persistent denials of abuse.

Dr. Dwight Leonard, a psychologist who is Director of Psychology at Shodair Children’s Hospital, also testified about his therapy sessions with K.N.M. and F.M.M. Dr. Leonard believed that the parents had made progress in their therapy and that if they continued to make progress, there was a good possibility F.M. could be returned to the couple. Dr. Leonard estimated that F.M. could be returned to his parents in two to three months if they continued to progress in therapy. Dr. Emery disagreed, and thought it would take perhaps a year of successful therapy before F.M. could be returned to his parents.

On June 21, 1990, the District Court continued the matter for 90 days to provide a further opportunity for the parents to complete the goals of their treatment plan. In addition, the court ordered Dr. Emery to provide the court with progress reports on the parents’ therapy.

The District Court held a final round of hearings on October 2 and 16, 1990, At that time, Dr. Emery testified that the couple made no progress in therapy, a condition which he believed was unlikely to change in the future. Dr. Emery concluded that the parents remained a definite risk to F.M.

After terminating their therapy with Dr. Emery, the parents began seeing Craig Simmons, a licensed clinical social worker. Mr. Simmons, like Dr. Emery, testified that F.M. would not presently be safe with his parents and there remained a “long road” of therapy for F.M.’s parents.

In contrast, Dr. Leonard testified that in his opinion, F.M. could be safely returned to his parents. However, he also testified that he had met only three times with F.M.’s parents since the earlier hearings in May, and that he had not had an opportunity to observe the interaction between F.M. and his parents. Dr. Leonard was also willing to accept F.M.’s parents’ explanation that they did not abuse F.M.

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Bluebook (online)
811 P.2d 1263, 248 Mont. 358, 48 State Rptr. 407, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-custody-and-parental-rights-of-fm-mont-1991.