Patrick G. v. Dcs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMay 1, 2018
Docket1 CA-JV 17-0520
StatusUnpublished

This text of Patrick G. v. Dcs (Patrick G. v. Dcs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick G. v. Dcs, (Ark. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

PATRICK G., Appellant,

v.

DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SAFETY, H.G., SALT RIVER PIMA MARICOPA INDIAN COMMUNITY, Appellees.

No. 1 CA-JV 17-0520 FILED 5-1-2018

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. JD30498, JS18878 The Honorable Cari A. Harrison, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

John L. Popilek, P.C., Scottsdale By John L. Popilek Counsel for Appellant

Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix By Sandra L. Nahigian Counsel for Appellee Department of Child Safety PATRICK G. v. DCS, et al. Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Kenton D. Jones delivered the decision of the Court, in which Presiding Judge Randall M. Howe and Judge James B. Morse Jr. joined.

J O N E S, Judge:

¶1 Patrick G. (Father) appeals the juvenile court’s order terminating his parental rights to H.G. (Child). For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 In May 2015, the Department of Child Safety (DCS) filed a petition alleging Child and her three half-siblings were dependent as to their mother (Mother) based upon grounds of neglect and substance abuse.1 At the time, Father had approximately seven months left to serve of a 10.5- year prison term imposed following his plea of guilty to armed robbery and aggravated assault occurring in 2006 when Child was only five months’ old. Because both Father and Child are enrolled members of the Salt River Pima- Maricopa Indian Community (the Community), the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA), 25 U.S.C. §§ 1901 to 1963,2 applies to the severance proceedings.

¶3 Father, who had previously had no contact with Child, was encouraged to engage in whatever services were available to him in prison. In July 2015, the juvenile court authorized visits between Child and her paternal uncle (Uncle), also a Community member. Uncle facilitated cultural activities for Child and telephone calls between Child and Father. Father was released on community supervision in September 2015 and began participating in urinalysis testing and supervised visitation. After

1 We view the evidence in the light most favorable to upholding the juvenile court’s order terminating parental rights. Yvonne L. v. Ariz. Dep’t of Econ. Sec., 227 Ariz. 415, 422, ¶ 27 (App. 2011) (citing Maricopa Cty. Juv. Action No. JD-5312, 178 Ariz. 372, 376 (App. 1994)).

2 Absent material changes from the relevant date, we cite a statute’s current version.

2 PATRICK G. v. DCS, et al. Decision of the Court

Father demonstrated thirty days’ sobriety, DCS referred Father for parent aide services. In January 2016, Child was placed with Uncle.

¶4 In late June 2016, Father began to feel overwhelmed, stopped participating in services, and ceased all contact with Child and DCS. Mother continued to comply with the case plan, however, and the dependency was dismissed in November 2016 after Child and her half- sister were returned to Mother’s care.3 The following month, DCS received reports of domestic violence and illegal drug use in Mother’s home and, again, removed the children. Child and her half-sister were placed with their maternal grandmother (Grandmother). Child continued to visit Uncle on the Community reservation on weekends.

¶5 At the time, Mother reported Father was “on the run for violating probation.” Indeed, the record shows Father had begun abusing alcohol and absconded from community supervision. He was eventually caught and reincarcerated in December 2016 but did not attempt to contact Child or DCS, and DCS did not learn of his reincarceration until March 2017.

¶6 Meanwhile, DCS filed a second dependency petition, and the juvenile court adopted a case plan of severance and adoption, noting that Father had failed to maintain an appropriate relationship with Child or demonstrate a sober and crime-free lifestyle. The court also permitted the Community to intervene. See 25 U.S.C. § 1911(c) (granting an Indian child’s tribe the right to intervene in “any State court proceeding for the foster care placement of, or termination of parental rights to, an Indian child”). DCS promptly filed a petition to terminate the parent-child relationship. When Father was released in August 2017, he began weekly supervised visits with Child but did not participate in any other services through DCS or the criminal court.

¶7 At the contested dependency and severance trial in October 2017, the DCS caseworker testified Grandmother was meeting Child’s needs and willing to adopt her. She reported visitation with Father was going fine, but that Child, only a few days shy of her twelfth birthday, did not want to live with Father because “he doesn’t know her.” Rather, Child wished to remain with her half-sister and would consent to an adoption by Grandmother.

3 Child’s other two half-siblings were successfully reunified with their father in February 2016.

3 PATRICK G. v. DCS, et al. Decision of the Court

¶8 The DCS caseworker also testified that termination was in Child’s best interests. Although Father had begun building a relationship with Child when she was first removed, that relationship was damaged when he violated his community supervision and disappeared for seven months without any explanation. Thus, the caseworker surmised Child would both be harmed through continuation of the unstable relationship, and benefitted by termination that would free her to live in a safe, stable, permanent, and drug- and alcohol-free home with Grandmother.

¶9 The Community case manager testified as an ICWA expert that DCS had made active efforts to preserve the Indian family, but they had been unsuccessful because Father had failed to engage in services or remedy his deficiencies. Therefore, the expert believed Child was at risk of serious emotional and physical injury if left in Father’s care. The expert added that the Community supported Child’s placement with Grandmother, who had been encouraging Child to maintain contact with Father’s family.

¶10 Father testified he had absconded because “[i]t was too much,” he was “overwhelmed,” and he “didn’t know how to be a dad.” By the time of trial, however, Father had recently married, obtained employment as a landscaper, and signed a lease on an apartment large enough to afford Child her own room. He believed the parenting and anger management classes he completed in prison had remedied his negative behaviors such that he could meet Child’s needs. It had never occurred to Father to tell DCS about his new wife, and the juvenile court later took judicial notice of a pending family court action that revealed Child’s new stepmother had abandoned her own four children, failed to participate in reunification therapy, and was facing termination of her parenting time. Father said he was unaware of the family court case and did not know if his wife or her children would act appropriately around Child.

¶11 After taking the matter under advisement, the juvenile court found that Child was dependent as to Father and that termination of his parental rights was warranted upon grounds of abandonment. The court also found that DCS had made active efforts to provide rehabilitative services to Father, those efforts had been unsuccessful, and Father’s continued custody of Child would likely cause Child serious emotional or physical damage. The court then terminated Father’s parental rights to

4 PATRICK G. v. DCS, et al. Decision of the Court

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Patrick G. v. Dcs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-g-v-dcs-arizctapp-2018.