N.G. v. Pike County Department of Human Resources

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 28, 2023
DocketCL-2022-0965
StatusPublished

This text of N.G. v. Pike County Department of Human Resources (N.G. v. Pike County Department of Human Resources) 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
N.G. v. Pike County Department of Human Resources, (Ala. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

REL: April 28, 2023

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023 _________________________

CL-2022-0965 _________________________

N.G.

v.

Pike County Department of Human Resources __________________________

CL-2022-1000 ___________________________

C.G.

Pike County Department of Human Resources

Appeals from Pike Juvenile Court (JU-22-44.01) CL-2022-0965 and CL-2022-1000

EDWARDS, Judge.

In May 2022, the Pike County Department of Human Resources

("DHR") filed a dependency petition in the Pike Juvenile Court ("the

juvenile court") seeking to have S.G. ("the child"), the child of N.G. ("the

mother") and C.G. ("the father"), declared to be a dependent child. After

a trial held on July 25, 2022, the juvenile court entered a judgment on

August 1, 2022, determining the child to be a dependent child, awarding

his legal custody to DHR, and relieving DHR of making reasonable efforts

to reunify the child with the mother and the father. The mother filed a

postjudgment motion, which the juvenile court denied on August 27,

2022, and the mother filed a timely notice of appeal on September 3, 2022.

Her appeal was docketed as case number CL-2022-0965.

The juvenile court, in compliance with Ala. Code 1975, § 12-15-

312(e), held a permanency hearing on August 29, 2022. After that

hearing, the juvenile court entered a permanency order on September 1,

2022, approving the concurrent permanency plans of adoption by current

foster parent or adoption by an unidentified resource. The father filed a

motion seeking reconsideration of the September 1, 2022, permanency

2 CL-2022-0965 and CL-2022-1000

order and a notice of appeal from that order on September 15, 2022. The

juvenile court denied the father's motion to reconsider on September 18,

2022. The father's appeal was docketed as case number CL-2022-1000.

We consolidated the mother's appeal and the father's appeal ex mero

motu.

The juvenile court took testimony relating to the child's dependency

at several evidentiary hearings, including at two shelter-care hearings

held on May 12, 2022, and on June 1, 2022, at a hearing on the mother's

motion to amend the shelter-care order and for visitation held on June

27, 2022, and at the trial on the dependency petition held on July 25,

2022. 1 The testimony and evidence presented at those hearings reveals

that the child was initially taken into DHR's custody on May 11, 2022,

when Joseph Donofrio, a law-enforcement officer employed by the City of

Troy Police Department, contacted DHR during his response to a

1The transcript of the trial on the dependency petition, which was transcribed from a video recording, reflects that the dependency trial was held on July 14, 2022; however, the record reflects that, although the dependency trial was, at one time, scheduled for July 14, 2022, the juvenile court granted a motion to continue the trial and rescheduled it for July 25, 2022. 3 CL-2022-0965 and CL-2022-1000

domestic-violence incident between the mother and the father. Donofrio

testified that the father had requested that law-enforcement officers

come to the mobile home in which he and the mother were living when

the mother returned to that mobile home after her release from jail,

following the expiration of a 24-hour hold resulting from her arrest for

domestic violence on or about May 10, 2022. Donofrio indicated that the

father reported that the mother was beating on the door and that he was

concerned that the mother was not taking her mental-health medication

or had possibly taken illegal drugs. According to Donofrio, the mother

was upset and wanted to leave the residence with the child, who was in

the mobile home with the father.

Donofrio described the mobile home as being in a state of

"renovation," with extension cords lying around the interior of the mobile

home and bare plywood floors. He also said that the mobile home was

"not really a good place for a baby." Donofrio said that the parents were

known to local law-enforcement officers because of the number of

domestic-violence calls received from the mother and the father. He

testified that, to his knowledge, neither the mother nor the father had

4 CL-2022-0965 and CL-2022-1000

transportation or employment and neither had friends or family in the

area.

Donofrio then described his attempts to persuade the father to

relinquish the child to the on-call DHR caseworker, Amy Floyd. Donofrio

said that the father was uncooperative and that the father, who was

holding the child in his arms, had walked to a table in the bedroom and

picked up a knife. According to Donofrio, he became concerned for the

safety of the child and that the incident might become a hostage

situation, so he unholstered his taser, which, he said, had prompted the

father to return the knife to the table. Donofrio admitted that he had

been unable to establish a rapport with the father, so, Donofrio said, he

had requested that another law-enforcement officer attempt to convince

the father to relinquish the child to DHR, which attempt, he said, had

been successful.

Floyd testified similarly regarding the incident with the knife. She

described the father as being uncooperative and belligerent and reported

that he had used profanity during the incident. According to Floyd, the

mother had been very angry when Floyd arrived at the mobile home that

5 CL-2022-0965 and CL-2022-1000

evening. Floyd also said that the mother was emotional and crying and

that she had used profanity but that she had later calmed down. She

testified that the mother had told her that evening that she had nowhere

to go and that she and the father had no relatives in the area.

The mother testified that she has 10 surviving children and that

the father is the father of 9 of those children. She admitted that, as of

the date of the dependency trial, none of her children lived with her or

had been reared by her. In fact, the mother admitted that she had

voluntarily relinquished her parental rights to at least five of her

children and that her parental rights to two of her children had been

involuntarily terminated by an Alabama court. The mother testified that

she and the father had been in a relationship for 15 years. She described

their relationship as abusive but also admitted that, at times, she had

been the perpetrator of domestic violence between her and the father.

The mother testified that she had left the father in October 2021

and entered a domestic-violence shelter for homeless pregnant women in

Baldwin County called Mary's Shelter Gulf Coast ("the shelter").

Although the mother indicated that she had been doing well in the

6 CL-2022-0965 and CL-2022-1000

shelter, where she had received counseling, had participated in Narcotics

Anonymous ("NA") meetings, had been pursuing her GED, and had

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Db v. Madison County Dhr
937 So. 2d 535 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2006)
D.P. v. State Dept. of Human Resources
571 So. 2d 1140 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1990)
Y.N. v. Jefferson County Department of Human Resources
67 So. 3d 76 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2011)
K.C. v. Jefferson County Department of Human Resources
54 So. 3d 407 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2010)
F.V.O. v. Coffee County Department of Human Resources
145 So. 3d 27 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2013)
G.C. v. G.D.
712 So. 2d 1091 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1997)
T.D.P. v. D.D.P.
950 So. 2d 311 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
N.G. v. Pike County Department of Human Resources, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ng-v-pike-county-department-of-human-resources-alacivapp-2023.