Matter of Welfare of Brown

296 N.W.2d 430
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 30, 1980
Docket50315
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 296 N.W.2d 430 (Matter of Welfare of Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Welfare of Brown, 296 N.W.2d 430 (Mich. 1980).

Opinion

PETERSON, Justice.

Appellant sought and was granted discretionary review of an order of the Family Division of the Carver County Court terminating her parental rights to four minor children on the grounds, set forth in Minn. Stat. §§ 260.221(b)(2) and 260.221(b)(5) (1978), that she had substantially and continuously or repeatedly failed to give them *432 necessary parental care and protection and that, following a determination that the children were neglected, reasonable efforts under the direction of the court had failed to correct the conditions leading to the neglect determination. Prior to filing the petition in this court, appellant appealed to the district court which affirmed the orders after determining that the county court properly admitted several records and reports of medical personnel and social workers into evidence and that the record contained clear and convincing proof of the existence of the statutory grounds upon which the termination order rested. We have reached the same conclusions and consequently affirm.

The children’s father, appellant’s husband, died in October 1973 while the family was living in Chicago. Both parents had come from Minnesota and appellant shortly moved to Carver County. On March 22, 1976, the Family Division of the Carver County Court adjudged that Bradley, who was born in 1964, Brenda, born in May 1967, Peter, born in March 1970, and Scott, born in June 1971, were neglected upon findings that they were without proper parental care by reason of the faults or habits of appellant; that they were without such care because she neglected or refused to provide it; that she was experiencing emotional problems and had a problem with alcohol to the point that her judgment and ability to provide parental care was lessened; that the children had missed school; and that appellant could not control them. 1 Legal custody of the children was then transferred to the Carver County Family Service Department and was renewed thereafter until February 1978 when the petition to terminate appellant’s parental rights was filed.

At the hearing on this petition Mary Her-ek, a social worker assigned to work with the family in May 1976, testified that she initiated contacts with appellant in response to which appellant said she would cooperate with the agency in order to regain custody of her children. In July 1976 appellant decided to return to live in Chicago and then agreed with Miss Herek that she would try to call or write each child at least once a month and also would try to visit them once a month. In spite of this agreement she had very little contact with the children following her move, although Miss Herek brought Bradley, Peter, and Brenda to Chicago to visit appellant in her home for an overnight visit in June 1977.

The testimony of several social workers established that at the time of the neglect adjudication all of the children were emotionally disturbed to some degree. Peter and Brenda lived with their aunt until November 1977 and received counseling at Wilder Child Guidance Clinic for several months. At the time of the termination hearing, both still required special help in some school subjects but had improved in social adjustment and were adjusting well to foster homes in Ramsey County in which they had been placed when their aunt could not continue to care for them.

The youngest child, Scott, was placed in a foster home following the neglect adjudication, but adjusted poorly. In the summer of 1977 he was referred by the Carver County Family Service Department to the University of Minnesota Hospitals for evaluation and testing because of aggression, hyperactivity, and speech problems. He received evaluation first as an outpatient and then was admitted to the inpatient children’s unit for a 6-week period during which a number of professionals in various medical disciplines were involved in his care. Brian Guidera, an instructor in child and adolescent psychology at the University and treatment coordinator in the inpatient unit, testified that his function was to work with those involved in treating a child, his family, and social agencies, and also to coordinate the treatment required for the child. He said those involved in treating the child *433 made reports of their findings and that he kept such reports as part of the child’s medical file in the regular course of activities as a treatment coordinator. Over appellant’s objection, a report from the Cleft Palate Clinic stating that the child’s speech defect did not result from a physical cause was admitted into evidence. Guidera also testified that he had prepared a discharge summary, admitted into evidence over appellant’s objection, which described Scott as having much anxiety about the instability in his life, depression, low self-esteem, and hyperactivity. The discharge summary recommended that Scott live in a residential treatment center which could meet his needs for at least 9 months.

After Scott’s discharge from the hospital, he was placed at the Bush Center in accordance with this recommendation. A letter from Guidera to a staff member at the center containing a summary of the information and recommendations of the discharge summary was also received in evidence over appellant’s objection. Ramon Reina, a social worker at Bush, testified that a psychological assessment made by a psychologist at the University on August 30, 1977, and an evaluation summary of that date made by the psychologist and a doctor had been forwarded to Bush when the child came there, had been kept in the file relating to Scott since then, and that this was the regular course of practice. These reports, as well as reports from social workers, counselors, a teacher, a psychiatrist, and a speech pathologist who worked with the child after his transfer to Bush, were similarly identified as records regularly kept in the files of children at Bush and were received as business records over appellant’s objection.

Reina testified that Scott had become less aggressive and had made progress in his speech, learning, and behavior at Bush, but that the boy still needed structured school and social settings. Dr. Phillip L. Edward-son, a psychiatrist who had interviewed Scott, agreed that he would continue to need more structure than the average child because of his difficulty in controlling his impulses, but felt that ultimately he could live in a foster home offering a regular routine and consistent limits on his behavior. He foresaw the need of such an environment until Scott reached the end of adolescence.

Bradley, who had been placed at another residential center for disturbed children, Gerard Schools, in January 1976, continued to live there until August 1977. Joanne Barr, a psychologist at that center, testified that Bradley had been first diagnosed by the staff as having a behavior disorder, a diagnosis later changed to depressive neurosis. She said that the boy would become very disturbed when his mother failed to contact him and would sometimes run away. Appellant withdrew him from the center in August 1977 against the advice of the staff, after he had run away and come to Chicago. He lived there with her until December 26, 1977. During this time Jan Budziszewski, a social worker in a private agency which had been contacted by the Carver County Family Service Department through the DuPage County Department of Children and Family Services to assist appellant and Bradley, arranged for a psychiatric examination of the boy.

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Related

In Re the Welfare of the Children of J.B.
698 N.W.2d 160 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2005)
In re the Welfare of D.N.
523 N.W.2d 11 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1994)
Matter of Dn
523 N.W.2d 11 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1994)
In Re the Welfare of J.K.
374 N.W.2d 463 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1985)
In Re the Welfare of R.T.
364 N.W.2d 884 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
296 N.W.2d 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-welfare-of-brown-minn-1980.