R.F. v. Lowndes County Department of Human Services

17 So. 3d 1133, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 585, 2009 WL 2857184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 8, 2009
Docket2008-CA-00257-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 So. 3d 1133 (R.F. v. Lowndes County Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.F. v. Lowndes County Department of Human Services, 17 So. 3d 1133, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 585, 2009 WL 2857184 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IRVING, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. The Lowndes County Department of Human Services (LCDHS) filed a petition to terminate the parental rights of R.F. 1 in the County Court of Lowndes County, and the county court granted the petition. Aggrieved, R.F. appeals and asserts: (1) that the decision by the county court to terminate her parental rights was not supported by clear and convincing evidence, (2) that the county court erred in terminating her parental rights after having found that there did not exist a deep-seated antipathy by the minor child toward her, (3) that the county court erred in failing to consider alternatives to termination of parental rights, and (4) that the county court erred in finding that there was no requirement that the guardian ad litem meet with her.

¶ 2. Finding no reversible error, we affirm the judgment of the county court.

FACTS

¶3. R.F.’s child, T.D.F., was born on July 3, 2001. On or about August 8, 2001, T.D.F. was placed in the care and custody of LCDHS due to failure to thrive and neglect. T.D.F. was then placed in the home of J.C. and G.C., and he has remained with them ever since.

*1135 ¶ 4. On September 7, 2007, LCDHS filed a petition to terminate R.F.’s parental rights. A hearing was held on the matter on December 13, 2007. During the hearing, Dr. Priscilla Roth-Wall, a clinical psychologist, testified that she had evaluated R.F. upon the request of LCDHS. She stated that R.F. has mild mental retardation and that she easily mistrusts others. Dr. Roth-Wall further stated that R.F. has difficulty with authority and has thoughts of retaliation and revenge. She opined that R.F. has a schizoid personality. According to Dr. Roth-Wall, R.F. is unable to care for a young child. Dr. Roth-Wall testified that she observed T.D.F. on several occasions and that he related well to J.C. and G.C. She concluded that termination of R.F.’s parental rights is in T.D.F.’s best interest.

¶ 5. Kessle Hughes, one of the initial social workers assigned to T.D.F.’s case, testified that the initial service agreement R.F. entered into on August 23, 2001, included such tasks as “parenting classes, drug testing, counseling, obtaining a job or source of income, housing, cooperating with social workers, visitation, [and] keeping contact or communication with the agency.” Hughes testified that R.F. did not comply with any of these tasks.

¶ 6. Debbie Sturgis, an LCDHS family protection specialist, testified that the LCDHS was ordered to proceed with the termination of R.F.’s parental rights in January 2004. She stated that after the LCDHS was ordered to proceed with the termination of parental rights, it no longer worked with R.F. because she “had been out of the picture for so long.” Sturgis stated that she was assigned to work T.D.F.’s case in February 2006, when T.D.F.’s biological father, T.C.T., was trying to intercede and obtain custody. 2 Sturgis testified that “after [T.C.T.] came back into the picture, I decided that I wanted to help [R.F.] get on Social Security disability because I thought that she was in need of it.” According to Sturgis, about six months after she began working with T.C.T., she received an order that “said something about doing a service agreement with [R.F.].” Sturgis stated that she informed R.F. numerous times that she needed to come into the LCDHS office and do a service agreement but that R.F. never came. Sturgis further stated that J.C. and G.C. were the only parents that T.D.F. knew.

¶ 7. Donna Reeves, the LCDHS area social work supervisor, testified as follows in regard to the observations she made about R.F.’s visits with T.D.F.:

[T.D.F. has] been with [the LCDHS] for six years. [R.F. has] seen him 34, 35 times for an hour or less at each visit in that time period. She’s gone at least twice for over a year without seeing him at all. True, we were away from our office location, but we have offered her transportation. There just hasn’t been any opportunity to make a relationship with him, and I think the child has been resistant to it. He is better now than he’s ever been about visitation except maybe before he started walking after his infancy. And to be fair to her, she was good with him at these visits. She would speak softly to him. She would, you know, try to play with him. She would comfort him when he cried when he was an infant. He would scream so badly during those early visits that the people from economic assistance and child support would wander up the hall and ask could they help us, could they help us because he was screaming so desperately and loudly. He got better over time. And then she would disap *1136 pear for long periods of time, and it was like starting over when she would come back. She was essentially a stranger to him each time she would be gone at least a year and then come back.

Reeves further testified that she believed termination of R.F.’s parental rights was in T.D.F.’s best interest.

¶ 8. R.F. testified that as of the date of trial, she had a job and an apartment and that she was saving money to purchase a car and a house. She further testified that her employer would not allow her time off to visit with T.D.F. and that if she were absent too regularly, she would lose her job. When questioned about the two instances when she went for over a year without visiting T.D.F., R.F. stated that she had difficulty obtaining transportation to the LCDHS office.

¶ 9. In determining that termination of R.F.’s parental rights was in T.D.F.’s best interest, the county court stated in pertinent part:

It is the court’s opinion that the primary concern in this court is the child. He is six years old. He has not been in your custody, [R.F.], since he was five weeks old. If the court removes him now, he will lose his mother. You have done phenomenally in the past 15 months. The court is amazed at what you’ve accomplished. And if this court could, the court would turn the clock back to 2001, but the court does not have that power. I can’t turn it back. It has been running. It’s run for six years. And certainly the statute speaks to deep-seated antipathy, but the court does not find that there is any deep-seated antipathy by your child against you. But what the court does find under [Mississippi Code Annotated section] 93-15-105 is that your child has been in the care and custody of a licensed child care facility for well over a year. He’s been there almost six years. That for the majority of those six years, [R.F.], you have struggled to get your life in order. And I know at 20 [years of age] versus 26 [years of age] there is a substantial difference, and you’ve made major accomplishments in the [past] 15 months, which would make you 24 [years old] to 26 [years old]. But the court cannot take a child that’s gone from five weeks to six years and pull him backwards to meet your accomplishments. It’s the old two steps forward and 15 steps backwards. The court cannot do that and does not think it’s reasonable and it thinks it would be devastating to your son. And accordingly, the court, realizing the effect it’s going to have on you, is going to terminate the parental rights.

¶ 10.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 So. 3d 1133, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 585, 2009 WL 2857184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rf-v-lowndes-county-department-of-human-services-missctapp-2009.