Moore v. Department of Institutions, Social & Rehabilitative Services

1976 OK 191, 558 P.2d 371
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 28, 1976
Docket48570
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1976 OK 191 (Moore v. Department of Institutions, Social & Rehabilitative Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Department of Institutions, Social & Rehabilitative Services, 1976 OK 191, 558 P.2d 371 (Okla. 1976).

Opinion

BARNES, Justice.

This appeal is brought by Doris Jean Moore, Appellant, the mother of Anthony Eugene Moore, Angelia Moore, and Terry Moore, from an adverse final order rendered against her by the Trial Court terminating her parental rights to the aforementioned children on May 19, 1975.

The pertinent facts leading to this appeal are as follows. The three children, all born out of wedlock to Appellant, who was 22 years old at the time of the May, 1975, hearing, were placed in emergency custody of Appellee, Department of Institutions, Social and Rehabilitative Services, by the Oklahoma County District Court on or about May 7, 1974. The same date Appellant appeared with counsel at a hearing and agreed custody should remain in Ap-pellee pending filing of a petition and hearing on the merits.

Petition was filed May 8, 1974, alleging the children were neglected by reason of improper parental care and that the home was unfit by reason of the mother’s neglect. At a hearing held June 24, 1974, the children were made wards of the Court as adjudicated dependent-neglected children. Temporary custody was restored to Appellant mother subject to intensive supervision of custody by Appellee on the express condition that Appellant was not to utilize the maternal grandmother as a baby-sitter for the children. Thereafter, the Appellant gave birth to a fourth child born out of wedlock, Rochell, whose custody is not at issue in this appeal.

On October 18, 1974, Appellee, pursuant to court order, submitted a report to the Court as to the current care of the children by Appellant. That report alleged the children were in ill health, living in a state of filth, and were in the primary physical care of their alcoholic maternal grandmother, which allegations were denied by Appellant and made part of the report.

On October 28, 1974, the Oklahoma County Juvenile Bureau filed an instrument entitled “Supplemental Petition ‘A! ”, re-adopting the language of the original petition and naming Rochell in the proceedings. October 30, 1974, upon issuance of a proper order, all four children were again placed in protective custody. Upon *373 examination, the children were found to display evidence of severe neglect.

On October 31, 1974, an Amended Supplemental Petition A was filed by Appellee praying for termination of parental rights. January 24, 1975, Appellant appeared in Court with counsel and the allegations of the petition were sustained by the evidence. However, the Trial Court continued the matter of disposition until March 24, 1975, and requested Appellee to conduct another home study of Appellant. Dispositional hearing was held May 19, 1975, at which time Appellant appeared in Court with counsel and the Court terminated her parental rights as to Anthony Eugene Moore, Angelia Moore, and Terry Dean Moore, after a full evidentiary hearing. From that decision Appellant brings this appeal.

That portion of the Trial Court’s order which permits Appellee to plan for, place for adoption or consent to the adoption of the three children was stayed by this Court pending appeal. The Trial Court ordered the fourth child, Rochell Moore, to remain a ward of the Court as a dependent and neglected child, and her custody is not at issue herein.

Appellant urges as error on appeal that (1) the Trial Court’s order is contrary to law and not supported by the evidence; (2) is contrary to the best interests of the children; (3) was based upon errors of law in rulings made by the Trial Court, and (4) was based in substantial part upon written home evaluations and reports to the Court made by Social Workers, denying Appellant her right to confront and cross-examine witnesses against her.

Under the first proposition Appellant argues the Trial Court improperly placed the burden of proof on the mother to demonstrate that a change of condition had occurred so that her parental rights should not be terminated.

Title 10 O.S.1971, § 1130, governs termination of parental rights and sets out various grounds wherein termination will be proper. It includes the following phrase:

“* * * and the parent has failed to show that the conditions have been corrected within a period of six (6) months after the child, or children, were adjudged dependent or neglected and a permanent termination of parental custody of the child, or children, is necessary to protect its physical or mental health or morals; provided further, that the court may extend the time in which such parent may show the condition has been corrected, . . . ” (Emphasis ours)

Appellant argues this statute erroneously placed the burden on the parent, rather than the State.

The hearing provided by § 1130, supra, is merely a continuation of the hearing in which it has already been determined that Appellant has neglected her children, but it affords her the opportunity to show that she has corrected the conditions previously adjudicated. We therefore hold that this is not a violation of her constitutional rights.

In the instant case the petition for termination of parental rights was sustained January 24, 1975, but the Court granted additional time for the Appellant to show a change of condition. On May 19, 1975, the Trial Court found the Appellant was unable to carry the burden of evidence or persuasion which had shifted to her after the petition was sustained. The May 19, 1975, hearing was a continuation of the earlier hearing of January 24, 1975, for dispositional purposes.

We agree with Appellee that when the hearing reconvened on May 19, 1975, the State was not required to show cause again. The Appellee was only required, as the moving party with the ongoing burden of proof, to overcome Appellant’s burden of evidence or persuasion on the issue of a change of condition.

Appellant next argues the Trial Court’s decision was not supported by the *374 evidence in that it was based only on evidence of prior neglect and not upon evidence of present unfitness. In support of this contention, Appellant relies in part on the language contained in 10 O.S.1971, § 1101 and § 1130, as being in the present tense, thereby indicating a legislative intent that the findings of fact must be made as of the time of the hearing, and that the conduct that precipitates the finding of neglect must still be occurring at the time of the hearing in order to support termination.

At the dispositional hearing the Appellant mother and two Social Workers, under whose direction written reports were prepared, testified. Based on their investigations prior to January, 1975, the Social Workers recommended termination of Appellant’s parental rights. Their testimony at the May 19, 1975, dispositional hearing reflects the Appellant repeatedly left the children in the care of their alcoholic maternal grandmother; that the home environment was filthy; that the children were ill dressed and poorly fed; that the children suffered from severe diarrhea and diaper rash, and that cockroaches and other insects were found in their waste; and that they otherwise showed evidence of neglect.

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Bluebook (online)
1976 OK 191, 558 P.2d 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-department-of-institutions-social-rehabilitative-services-okla-1976.