O.R. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services

932 P.2d 1303, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 14
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1997
DocketNos. S-7436, S-7446
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 932 P.2d 1303 (O.R. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O.R. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, 932 P.2d 1303, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 14 (Ala. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

C.K., the mother, and O.R., the father, appeal the termination of their parental rights over A.R., their daughter. C.K. and [1306]*1306O.R. challenge the superior court’s finding that they abandoned A.R. They also argue that the court, in determining A.R. to be a child in need of aid, failed to consider adequately that they and two of C.K.’s relatives are willing to care for her. In addition, C.K. disputes the court’s findings that her harmful conduct toward A.R. is likely to continue and that the Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS) made reasonable efforts at reunifying her with A.R.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A.R. was born nine weeks prematurely on June 11, 1994. She tested positive for cocaine and suffered from respiratory difficulties, including strep pneumonia. Because of her health problems, she remained in the hospital’s neo-natal intensive care unit until July 5, 1994, and required hospitalization three more times in the next four months. A year after her birth, A.R. underwent surgery to correct her breathing difficulties. The surgery minimized most of her respiratory problems, but she remains vulnerable to serious illness and attention disorders.

A.R. is C.K.’s eighth child. The two children born to C.K. prior to A.R. also tested positive for cocaine at birth. DHSS removed all of C.K.’s other children in 1991 and 1992 and placed them under the guardianship of relatives in other states. O.R. has two other children who live with their mother in another state. O.R. and C.K. are not married.

DHSS initially took emergency custody of A.R. on June 13, 1994, two days after her birth, because she tested positive for cocaine. On June 15,1994, in response to a petition by DHSS, C.K. and O.R. stipulated to ninety days temporary custody with the state. The court extended custody at a review hearing on September 13, 1994, until a trial on November 28, 1994, on DHSS’s petition for adjudication of A.R. as a child in need of aid (Adjudication Trial).

There was little visitation between A.R. and her parents in the more than five months between A.R.’s birth and the adjudication trial. Although C.K. and O.R. appear to have visited the child regularly during the three weeks that she remained in the hospital after her birth, their visits almost entirely ceased after she was discharged. Between July 5 and November 28, C.K. visited only twice, once in July and once in September, and O.R. visited only once, accompanying C.K. on the July visit.

In its findings and order following the November 28, 1994 trial, the superior court stated that it found this “lack of visitation by either parent ... troubling because it means that neither of them could possibly have established a relationship with A.R. with so little contact.” The court further noted A.R.’s “special medical needs which require careful attention and care from her primary care takers” and stated that “[njeither [C.] K. or [sie][OJ R. is capable of providing that level of attention and care at this time.”

Based on these findings, the court determined that A.R. was a child in need of aid “in that she has no one able or willing to care for her at this time and she has effectively been abandoned, whether or not her parents’ abandonment of her was conscious or intended.” The court awarded custody of A.R. to DHSS for one year. In its order, the court stated that “[i]t is essential that each parent get treatment for his or her own needs as soon as possible and begin to establish contact with the child so that they can learn what her needs are and how to provide for them.” Furthermore, a stipulation signed by O.R. and given to C.K.’s attorney stated that DHSS would “consider filing a petition to terminate parental rights” if C.K. and O.R. had not made “progress toward being able to demonstrate [they are] capable of earing for” A.R.

Despite this warning, however, C.K. did not visit A.R. in the next five months. She also failed to follow through on a recommendation to obtain treatment for her substance abuse problem. On April 29, 1995, C.K. was arrested for violation of probation and selling cocaine. At the time of the termination trial she was incarcerated and awaiting sentencing.

Shortly after the adjudication trial, O.R. was arrested and incarcerated until February 5, 1995. While in jail, he had one visit with A.R. in January 1995. After his release from jail, however, he did not visit A.R. until [1307]*1307he was again incarcerated in May 1995 on charges of sexual abuse of a minor, distributing alcohol to a minor, and misconduct involving weapons.

There were occasional obstacles to visitation during the time between A.R.’s initial discharge from the hospital and the time at which both parents were incarcerated. Between December 6 and December 20, C.K.’s social worker was on leave, and between December 16 and January 1, A.R. left the state with her foster parent. DHSS also canceled several visits in January for reasons ■beyond C.K. and O.R.’s control. This left,' however, approximately seventy-seven scheduled visits that C.K. missed when she was not in jail and about seventy scheduled visits O.R. missed when he was not in jail.

In the five months after they were both incarcerated, C.K. and O.R. each had three visits with A.R. Bureaucratic delays', A.R.’s surgery in June, and a trip to Florida with her foster parents apparently made it impossible for A.R. to visit the jail more frequently-

On June 1,1995, DHSS filed a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights, alleging abandonment. After a five-day trial beginning October 30, 1995, Judge Mary E. Greene terminated the parental rights of C.K. and O.R. and placed A.R. in the custody of DHSS for the purpose of finding her a permanent home. C.K. and O.R. appeal.

III. DISCUSSION1

A. Did the Superior Court Err in Determining that A.R. Is a Child in Need of Aid Under AS 4.7.10.010(a)(2)?

1. The superior court properly found that C.K and O.R. physically abandoned A.R.

To terminate parental rights under AS 47.10.080(c)(3),2 a court must first establish jurisdiction over the child by determining that the child is a “child in need of aid” (CINA) under AS 47.10.010(a)(2).3 E.J.S. v. Department of Health & Social Servs., 754 P.2d 749, 750 (Alaska 1988). In this case, the court concluded that it possessed CINA jurisdiction over A.R. under the “physical abandonment” provision of AS 47.10.010(a)(2)(A). C.K. and O.R. both challenge this determination.

The test for physical abandonment under subsection (A) is “two-pronged: the superior court must find (1) that the parent’s conduct implied a conscious disregard for parental obligations; and (2) that the parent’s conscious disregard led to the destruction of the relationship between the parent [1308]*1308and the parent’s children.” A.M., 891 P.2d at 820. The first prong of this test

focuses on the objective conduct of the parents in discharging their parental responsibility. Thus, abandonment is not determined by the parent’s subjective intent or on the parent’s wishful thoughts and hopes for the child....

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Bluebook (online)
932 P.2d 1303, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/or-v-state-department-of-health-social-services-alaska-1997.