Matter of CW
This text of 1997 SD 57 (Matter of CW) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the Matter of the Abuse and Neglect of C.W., B.W. and A.W., and Concerning L.W., R.S. and E.S.
Supreme Court of South Dakota.
*904 Jane Loveland Doyle of Doyle and Doyle, Rapid City, for appellant mother, L.W.
Mark Barnett, Attorney General, Joan P. Baker, Assistant Attorney General, Pierre, for appellee State of South Dakota.
Nora K. Kelley, Rapid City, for appellee child, C.W.
Thomas E. Graslie, Rapid City, for appellee father, E.S.
PER CURIAM.
[¶ 1] Mother appeals from a trial court's order awarding custody of C.W. to Father. We affirm.
FACTS
[¶ 2] Mother has three children, A.W., born October 28, 1987; B.W., born December 10, 1989; and C.W., born November 20, 1991. C.W. was born three and one-half months prematurely and has physical and mental developmental delays. All three children have different fathers.
[¶ 3] In October 1993 the children were placed in protective custody of the Department of Social Services (DSS) following allegations, later admitted by Mother, that:
1) on October 19, 1993, C.W. and A.W. were outside in T-shirts and shorts and left unattended;
2) on October 24, 1993, C.W. was sitting in the middle of the road and was almost run over;
3) in 1993 [Mother] disciplined B.W. and A.W. with a wooden spoon and a belt; and disciplined C.W. with her hand.
The record also indicated Mother's home did not provide a healthy environment as there was old food on every surface and in every room and trash and dirty diapers lying about. The children were placed in foster care and their fathers contacted. By stipulation of all parties, on November 1, 1993, legal and physical custody of A.W. was granted to A.W.'s father. B.W.'s father, a resident of North Dakota, requested his parental rights be terminated. C.W.'s father, a resident of Texas, indicated he was interested in obtaining custody of C.W. B.W. and C.W. were placed in foster care and returned to Mother in January 1994.
[¶ 4] C.W.'s father had been expressing interest in C.W. since learning of his existence in 1992. The child was conceived in 1991 during the five months that Father dated Mother while he was in the U.S. Air Force. Father received orders to go to Guam but reported Mother did not wish to accompany him there. She was unaware of her pregnancy when he left and he remained unaware of C.W.'s existence until he received notice from the Office of Child Support Enforcement in July 1992 some nine months after C.W.'s birth. Blood tests established the probability that he was C.W.'s father but he wanted DNA testing as absolute proof. He also indicated to Mother that if C.W. was his child, he wished to have full custody of him.
[¶ 5] On March 4, 1994, DSS was again granted protective custody of B.W. and C.W. after Mother was arrested on felony drug charges of possession and distribution of methamphetamines. The children were again placed in foster care. Mother voluntarily committed herself to a psychiatric ward of a local hospital where she was diagnosed with drug-induced psychosis and a thyroid condition. Following release from the hospital, she completed an inpatient alcohol and drug program and counseling sessions. She remained cooperative with DSS. She attended after-care and parenting classes and visited her children. She pled guilty to the criminal charges against her and sentencing was set for August. Her children remained in foster care.
[¶ 6] By August 1994, paternity had been conclusively established for C.W. through *905 DNA testing. Custody continued with DSS, however, after it informed the trial court it believed separation B.W. and C.W. would be harmful to them. A home study of Father's home in Texas was ordered.
[¶ 7] Father of C.W. appeared with his wife at an October 1994 review hearing. At this time, Mother was serving a 180-day term in the Pennington County Jail as part of a suspended imposition of sentence; she was present at the hearing. Visitation with her children was being arranged through DSS. Mother had recently had work-release privileges revoked due to her being fired from her job but continuing to leave the jail as if she were going to work. Father again expressed his desire to have custody of C.W. The results of the home study were positive with the reservation that Father and his wife needed to take parenting classes as C.W. was a special-needs child. A psychologist's evaluation of B.W. and C.W. opined both children were sufficiently strong emotionally to handle the separation. The trial court, over Mother's objections, ordered temporary physical custody of C.W. to Father in Texas, finding such placement to be in C.W.'s best interests and the least restrictive alternative. The trial court stated it would reserve jurisdiction of the case to monitor it. C.W. was placed in Father's custody on October 11, 1994 and DSS continued supervision of the placement through an interstate compact with Texas social services agencies.
[¶ 8] At additional review hearings in November 1994 and January 1995, legal custody of both children was continued with DSS, with physical custody of B.W. in foster care and physical custody of C.W. with Father in Texas. When C.W. first arrived at Father's, though he was then almost three years old, he was not toilet-trained, his speech was unintelligible, and he often fell when running. Reports from the Texas agency consistently showed C.W.'s placement with Father to be appropriate. Father and his wife took parenting classes, enrolled C.W. in speech therapy and in a school for his special needs, and worked with him at home.
[¶ 9] On January 18, 1995, Mother signed a Family Service Agreement with DSS. DSS told Mother that upon her successful completion of the plan, she could have more visits with B.W. and C.W. and there was the possibility of returning physical custody of her children to her. In February 1995, Mother was released from jail and reintegration of B.W. into Mother's home began. No reintegration procedures were initiated for C.W.
[¶ 10] At a March 14, 1995 review hearing, the court ordered custody of C.W. to continue with his Father in Texas. By this time Mother was out of jail, had secured employment, and was still cooperating with DSS. Reintegration was continuing with B.W. However, DSS would not return B.W. to Mother because Grandmother was living in the home; B.W. exhibited behavior problems following visits with Grandmother. B.W.'s treating psychologist reported B.W. had acquired age-inappropriate sexual knowledge alleged to result from a visit with A.W. and that B.W. reported having secrets with her Grandmother. Mother's plan was to move from Grandmother's home by May 1.
[¶ 11] At an April 10, 1995 review hearing, the court continued custody of B.W. with DSS. The court also ordered physical and legal custody of C.W. to Father in Texas. However, the court promised Mother a hearing, after B.W. was established in her home, regarding the issue of visitation and permanent custody of C.W.
[¶ 12] At a May 23, 1995 review hearing, it was determined B.W. would return to Mother's home after the school year. The court expressed this case was "almost like a divorce case" regarding C.W.[1] In June, physical custody of B.W. was returned to mother with legal custody to be returned within one month. At a June 21, 1995 motion hearing, *906 Mother moved for summer visitation with C.W.
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1997 SD 57, 562 N.W.2d 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-cw-sd-1997.