Mc v. Km

788 So. 2d 166
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 29, 2000
Docket2981062 and 2981063
StatusPublished

This text of 788 So. 2d 166 (Mc v. Km) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mc v. Km, 788 So. 2d 166 (Ala. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

788 So.2d 166 (1999)

M.C.
v.
K.M. and J.M.
R.M.
v.
K.M. and J.M.

2981062 and 2981063.

Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama.

December 10, 1999.
Rehearing Denied February 4, 2000.
Certiorari Quashed December 29, 2000.

*168 George A. Nassaney, Jr., Tuscaloosa, for appellant M.C.

Katie Seals Ferguson, Tuscaloosa, for appellant R.M.

Cheryl Blume Stahl of Stahl & Stahl, P.C., Tuscaloosa, for appellees.

Alabama Supreme Court 1990946.

THOMPSON, Judge.

M.C. (the "mother") and R.M. (the "father")[1] appeal the termination of their parental rights as to their daughter, H.M. (the "child").

The record indicates that the mother was married to another man when the mother and the father began their relationship. The mother later divorced her husband; her ex-husband has custody of the minor son from that marriage.

The mother and father never married. The father had only intermittent contact with the mother during her pregnancy. It is undisputed that the mother used illegal drugs, including crack cocaine, during her pregnancy. Although the father denied the mother used cocaine in his presence during the pregnancy, the mother testified that she did use crack cocaine with the father immediately after being released from the hospital following an episode of "false labor."

The child was born in March 1996. When the child was born, she tested positive for cocaine. The Department of Human Resources ("DHR") immediately began attempting to assist the mother in obtaining treatment for her drug problem.

The parties' testimony regarding the time that they lived together was vague. It appears that the mother, father, and child lived together for a few months at some point after the child was born. The mother and child also lived with the mother's grandmother. It is undisputed that the mother used illegal drugs during the first year of the child's life. However, the testimony of the witnesses at trial established that the mother took adequate care of the child during that time.

LaWanna Kennedy, a DHR social worker, testified that in 1996 she attempted to place the mother in a drug-rehabilitation facility. The mother left that facility within two weeks, without completing the program. The father picked the mother up from the rehabilitation facility and took her and the child to Chicago, where he was living at the time. The mother eventually returned to Alabama. Kennedy testified that although she knew the father to be the putative father of the child, she never had an address for him and that he contacted her only one time.

In February 1997, the mother was arrested for violating her parole. The mother *169 had been on parole for theft. Her parole was revoked after the results of a drug-screening test revealed that she was using illegal drugs. At the time of her incarceration, the mother left the child in the care of the mother's grandmother. After a few days, the child's great-grand-mother called DHR and informed a social worker that she was not physically capable of taking care of the then 11-month-old infant. The child was taken into protective custody at that time.

When the child was placed into protective custody in February 1997, no relatives were willing or able to take the child into their homes. In February 1997, the father contacted Kennedy to ask for custody of the child. Kennedy told the father that he had to establish his paternity of the child in order to receive visitation rights, to be considered as an alternative for placement of the child, or to receive custody of the child. DHR provides services only for the legal parents of a child. The father admitted at trial that he knew when the child was taken into protective custody that he must establish his paternity of the child in order to have visitation with the child or to obtain custody of the child.

When the child was taken into protective custody, she was placed in foster care in the home of K.M. and J.M. When the child was placed in that foster home, K.M. was described to the DHR social workers as a distant relative of the mother's. At trial, the witnesses were unable to explain the complicated familial connection between the mother and K.M. The best attempt to explain the connection suggested that K.M. had apparently at one time been married to an uncle of one of the mother's cousins. It is undisputed that the mother and K.M. are not related by blood, that any relation-by-marriage was tenuous at best, and that the two women had not met before the child was placed in foster care in K.M.'s home.

The child was declared to be a dependent child, at a hearing conducted in May 1997. The mother had been released from jail at that time and was in a drug-treatment facility; she did not complete that program. The mother testified that she did not know about the dependency hearing but that the DHR social workers knew she was in drug treatment. The father testified he did not receive notice of the dependency hearing either. We note that at that time, the father had made no effort to establish his paternity of the child.

After the child was declared dependent and placed in DHR's custody, the DHR social workers were unable to contact the father. The mother did not know where the father was; he had moved several times. The father had told Kennedy in February 1997 that he was living with an aunt in Alabama but that he did not know the aunt's address. The father did not inform DHR of his whereabouts until early 1998.

In June 1997, Kristy Holt was assigned to be the social worker for this case. Holt testified that when she first received the assignment of this case, she had no knowledge of the whereabouts of either the mother or the father. In July 1997, the mother first contacted Holt to arrange visitation with the child. Holt testified that the mother visited the child although she knew that after the visit she would be arrested on several outstanding warrants. The mother was arrested after that July 1997 visit. She remained incarcerated until October 1997. It is not clear from the record why the mother was released from jail; at one point, both she and Holt thought that the mother would serve some time in prison.

The mother continued visiting with the child while she was in jail because K.M. *170 took the child to the jail to visit the mother. At trial, it was undisputed that K.M. and the mother worked together to minimize the confusion and stress for the child. The women decided to have the child call the mother "Momma" and K.M. "Mommy."

We note that C.C., the mother's ex-husband, also occasionally took the child and his and the mother's son to visit the mother. At that time, the child's paternity was in question. C.C. told the social workers that there was a small chance that he was the father of the child; however, C.C. believed that the child's father was R.M. At trial, C.C. testified that he tried to facilitate a relationship between his son and the child, who are half-siblings.

Holt testified that the mother had drug and alcohol problems during the time she worked with her. Holt testified that she asked the mother to take four random drug screenings. Holt informed the mother that those drug-screening tests must be taken within 24 hours of the request for the test. The mother took the first test immediately after the request; the results indicated that the mother was positive for illegal drug use. On each of the remaining three drug-screening requests, the mother waited four days after the request to take the tests; all of those tests were negative.

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M.C. v. K.M.
788 So. 2d 166 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1999)

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788 So. 2d 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mc-v-km-alacivapp-2000.