Nicholas Mills v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children

2022 Ark. App. 197, 644 S.W.3d 256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 4, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 Ark. App. 197 (Nicholas Mills v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicholas Mills v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children, 2022 Ark. App. 197, 644 S.W.3d 256 (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 197 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-21-582

Opinion Delivered May 4, 2022

NICHOLAS MILLS APPEAL FROM THE YELL APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, NORTHERN DISTRICT V. [NO. 75NJV-20-15]

ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR HONORABLE TERRY SULLIVAN, CHILDREN JUDGE APPELLEES AFFIRMED

PHILLIP T. WHITEAKER, Judge

Nicholas Mills appeals a Yell County Circuit Court order terminating his parental

rights to his children, KM and LM.1 On appeal, he challenges only the circuit court’s best-

interest finding, claiming the evidence showed that he had made significant and consistent

progress during the pendency of the action, that his children were bonded to him, and that

he was on a course to have a trial home placement. We affirm.

Ronni Partain and Nicholas Mills are the biological parents of KM and LM. On June

4, 2020, the children were removed from their physical and legal custody after the Dardanelle

1 The parental rights of Ronni Partain, the children’s biological mother, were also terminated. She is not a party to this appeal. As a result, this opinion will focus only on the facts and procedural history as they pertain to Mills. Police Department received a hotline report that the children had been left at home

unattended. While Partain was at home with the children and Mills was at work, a neighbor

found three-year-old KM alone in a parking lot of their apartment building. KM was wet and

covered in something sticky. Out of concern, the neighbor went to Partain and Mills’s

apartment, found the door open, and called out several times. She heard a baby crying but

received no other response. She stepped inside and saw eleven-month-old LM on the

bathroom floor covered in something soapy. The neighbor contacted 911, and officers and

paramedics were dispatched.

Officers on scene contacted Partain. She claimed that KM was supposed to be

watched by a neighbor and that she had been taking a nap with LM. She claimed that LM

must have wandered off while she was asleep and that she would never put her children in

danger. Officers reported, however, that Partain was incoherent and struggling to focus, and

her apartment was littered with dangerous items within reach of the children, including

knives, bug spray, tools, medications, scissors, and window cleaner. 2

Meanwhile, the paramedics found LM lethargic and almost unresponsive, and Partain

was unable to advise them whether LM had ingested any chemicals or poison. He was rushed

to the emergency room at Dardanelle Regional Medical Center. At the hospital, both Partain

and Mills were administered drug tests. Partain tested positive for methamphetamine,

amphetamine, THC, and benzodiazepine. Mills tested positive for THC, methamphetamine,

2 Partain was arrested on the charge of endangering the welfare of a minor.

2 and amphetamine. As a result, the Arkansas Department of Human Services (Department)

exercised a seventy-two-hour hold on the children and initiated dependency-neglect

proceedings. The court subsequently adjudicated the children dependent-neglected due to

parental unfitness as a result of Partain’s and Mills’s drug use, their failure to protect, and

environmental neglect.3

Throughout the proceedings, the court monitored the services provided to Mills and

his efforts at compliance. At the onset, the court set reunification as the goal of the case. In

addition, the court ordered Mills to follow the case plan, maintain stable employment and

housing, submit to a drug-and-alcohol assessment, remain drug-free, and submit to a

psychological evaluation and participate in counseling.

The court conducted two review hearings to monitor the parties’ compliance. At the

first review hearing, the court concluded that Mills was not in compliance with the case plan

in part because he had been unable to pass a drug screen on the day of the hearing. He was

ordered to sign a HIPAA release and to complete a drug-and-alcohol assessment forthwith.

At the second review hearing, the court concluded that Mills had only minimally

complied with the case plan. While he had finished his parenting classes, Mills had failed to

comply with numerous orders. He did not have stable housing or employment; his license

was suspended, and he did not have transportation; he had not completed his drug-and-

alcohol assessment; and he had missed six visits with his children—three because Partain

3 The adjudication hearing occurred in August 2020, but the order was not filed until November 3, 2020.

3 tested positive for COVID-19, and three were no-shows. While he had completed his

psychological evaluation, Mills had been discharged from counseling with Counseling

Associates and refused to return to River Valley Psychiatry, although he testified that he

intended to return to counseling and had an appointment scheduled the next week. The

court also noted that Mills had a long list of previous criminal charges and that his criminal

history included having been on parole and an early termination from drug court. Perhaps

of more significance, the court noted that Mills was currently facing charges of possession of

drug paraphernalia and criminal trespass that had arisen since the initiation of the

dependency-neglect proceeding. In light of this, the court found that Mills had not benefited

from the services provided by the Department and had failed to regularly take advantage of

the services offered.

The court subsequently conducted a permanency-planning hearing wherein it found

that the parents’ complete lack of progress in the case plan and towards rehabilitating their

circumstances prevented a trial placement or return of custody and changed the goal of the

case to termination of parental rights. As a result, the Department filed the petition to

terminate parental rights.4

The court conducted a termination hearing in August 2021. After hearing the

testimony and considering all the evidence before it, the circuit court entered an order

4 The petition alleged that termination was in the best interest of the children and cited six statutory grounds for termination. Because Mills does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence concerning the statutory grounds, we will not recite the detailed allegation of grounds.

4 terminating Mills’s parental rights. The court specifically found that the Department had

proved all six statutory grounds alleged in the petition and that the children are adoptable.

The court further found that the children would be subject to potential harm if returned to

Mills’s care and custody. In so finding, the court found that Mills had lived in several

temporary locations throughout the case and had failed to obtain and maintain safe, stable,

and appropriate housing; that he had completed his psychological evaluation and drug-and-

alcohol assessments but had failed to follow through with recommended treatment and had

tested positive for controlled substances; and that he had been terminated early from drug

court and had garnered further criminal charges since the case’s inception despite being on

parole. As a result, the court concluded it was in the best interest of the children to terminate

his parental rights.

Mills filed a timely notice of appeal from the termination order. He does not

challenge the court’s findings with respect to the statutory grounds nor does he challenge

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2022 Ark. App. 197, 644 S.W.3d 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholas-mills-v-arkansas-department-of-human-services-and-minor-children-arkctapp-2022.