Richmond Department of Social Services v. Crawley

625 S.E.2d 670, 47 Va. App. 572, 2006 Va. App. LEXIS 38
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 31, 2006
Docket1220052
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 625 S.E.2d 670 (Richmond Department of Social Services v. Crawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richmond Department of Social Services v. Crawley, 625 S.E.2d 670, 47 Va. App. 572, 2006 Va. App. LEXIS 38 (Va. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

BENTON, Judge.

The Richmond Department of Social Services appeals the trial judge’s denial of its petitions to terminate Ashley Crawley’s residual parental rights and to grant the Department the authority to place the children for permanent adoption. The Department contends that it met its burden of proof and that the trial judge’s decision was plainly wrong and without evidence to support it. We disagree and affirm the judgment.

*575 I.

On appeal, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to Ashley Crawley, as the prevailing party below. See McGuire v. McGuire, 10 Va.App. 248, 250, 391 S.E.2d 344, 346 (1990). So viewed, the evidence proved Crawley gave birth to a daughter on September 22, 2000, and a son on December 5, 2001. Crawley was last a full-time employee in 2000, the year her daughter was born. In April 2001 before her son was born, Crawley and her husband were living in an apartment. That month, Crawley and her husband separated, and Crawley had to leave the apartment they had been leasing. From that time to August of 2003, Crawley lived in various hotels with her children.

After their separation, Crawley and her husband had an informal agreement that she would care for their children and he could visit with them on weekends. In late 2002, however, Crawley’s husband absconded with their children and kept them for three or four months. For a while, Crawley could not find him or the children. After locating her husband, Crawley filed a petition for custody of the children. When Crawley attended the custody hearing, she learned her husband was in jail and the children were in foster care. The Department returned the children to Crawley and filed a petition against Crawley’s husband for neglect and abuse.

The Richmond Department of Social Services assigned Linda Muhammed, a caseworker, to assist Crawley and her children in stabilizing their circumstances. On August 6, 2003, Muhammed helped Crawley, who was then homeless, to obtain living accommodations in a hotel. With guidance from Mu-hammed, Crawley found an apartment that was appropriate for her and the children, but was unable to secure a co-signer as required by the lessor. Muhammed also tried to help Crawley find employment, and she testified Crawley “did very well” in the Department’s programs to encourage employment and to maintain financial services. However, in September of 2003, Crawley was hospitalized and underwent surgery for a medical condition.

*576 Prior to hospitalization, Crawley arranged for her cousin to care for the children. While Crawley was in the hospital, her cousin took the children to their paternal grandmother, who later contacted the police and requested them to place the children elsewhere. When the Department informed Crawley of the children’s plight, Crawley arranged for the children’s sitter to care for them. After caring for the children a short while, the sitter was unable to provide for the children and maintain her work schedule. The Department then filed a petition for custody and transferred the children to foster care in October 2003 because no family member was able to care for them.

While Crawley was in the hospital, Deshanda Artis, a foster care worker, received the case and contacted Crawley. Crawley told Artis she did not know when the hospital would release her and she had no place to live. When Crawley left the hospital, she contacted Artis and asked to see her children. Artis arranged a visit for Crawley with the children and began to help Crawley in her search for housing. Artis also referred Crawley to various programs that the Department required Crawley to complete in order to regain custody of her children, including substance abuse assessment, a parenting class, and an anger management class.

Between October 20 and the following January, Artis had only sporadic contact with Crawley. During this time, Crawley was unemployed and lived in hotels while waiting for housing to become available through the public housing authority and an apartment complex. In the meantime, Crawley had developed a good relationship with the children’s foster parent and made arrangements with the parent to regularly visit her children. Crawley, however, missed a meeting she had scheduled with Artis and did not receive the referral information the Department had prepared for the programs she was required to complete. Crawley did not participate in these programs.

Crawley was incarcerated on January 2, 2004, for forging, uttering, and grand larceny. Crawley testified that she re *577 ceived forged checks as payments for completing odd jobs. Initially, she cashed the checks without realizing they were forged but continued to cash the checks after learning of the problem. Crawley testified that she received a fifty-year sentence, which was suspended except for two years and two months incarceration. During her incarceration, Crawley maintained contact with her children. The foster parent arranged three contact visits and one non-contact visit between Crawley and the children. The foster mother also testified that Crawley called the children almost every night and that Crawley has a positive relationship with her children. The foster care worker agreed that Crawley loves her children and testified that Crawley has expressed a desire to have her children returned to her when she is released from jail.

During her incarceration, Crawley finished a twelve-week substance abuse program at the jail. She investigated taking an anger management class and a parenting class, but she learned that the jail only offered these classes to male prisoners. Crawley testified that she does not have any definite plans for how she will obtain employment or secure housing after her release. She described possible avenues, however, by which she may be able to reach those goals. Crawley testified that she recognizes the need to independently provide for her children and herself.

Although the juvenile and domestic relations district court granted the Department’s petition to terminate Crawley’s parental rights, on appeal to the circuit court the trial judge ruled that terminating Crawley’s parental rights was not in the children’s best interests. In denying the Department’s petitions, the trial judge reasoned as follows:

The Court has to decide whether Ms. Crawley without good cause has been unwilling or unable to remedy substantially the conditions which led to or required continuation of the children’s foster care placement. And I think the evidence leads to that conclusion that she has not done it. But we’ve got to look at the reasons she hasn’t done it. She hasn’t done it — at least since January of last year — because she’s *578 been incarcerated. She doesn’t really have a good excuse for not doing it before then____
So I guess in a technical sense, the Department has carried its burden of showing by clear and convincing evidence that Ms. Crawley had not remedied substantially the conditions that led to the children being in foster care. But there’s another very important part of this puzzle ... [a]nd that is whether termination of Ms. Crawley’s parental rights [is] in her children’s best interests.

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Bluebook (online)
625 S.E.2d 670, 47 Va. App. 572, 2006 Va. App. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-department-of-social-services-v-crawley-vactapp-2006.