Samuel "trae" Jones v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child

2023 Ark. App. 559
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 6, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 559 (Samuel "trae" Jones v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child) 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
Samuel "trae" Jones v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child, 2023 Ark. App. 559 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 559 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-23-433

SAMUEL “TRAE” JONES Opinion Delivered December 6, 2023 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE VAN BUREN V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 71JV-21-6] ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR HONORABLE SUSAN WEAVER, CHILD JUDGE APPELLEES AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

Appellant Samuel “Trae” Jones appeals the March 2023 circuit court order that

terminated his parental rights to his son born in March 2021.1 Samuel argues that the circuit

court clearly erred in finding that the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS)

proved statutory grounds against him and that it was in his son’s best interest to terminate

his parental rights. We affirm.

This child’s older brother, who was born in March 2020, tested positive for

amphetamine and THC at his birth, and he was placed into foster care with a relative in

October 2020. DHS took emergency custody of the child involved in the current case in

March 2021 because his mother, Haley Cornelius, tested positive for methamphetamine.

1 The circuit court terminated the parental rights of the biological mother, Haley Cornelius, in May 2022. Haley is not a party to this appeal. Haley admitted that she had used methamphetamine on and off since 2017, and she told a

DHS investigator that Samuel also used methamphetamine. Samuel was not married to

Haley nor did they live together, but they maintained some type of relationship. Samuel was

on parole for drug-related charges and had admitted using methamphetamine two days

before their son was born. DHS was ordered to provide Samuel services and for Samuel to

cooperate with those services.

After a hearing in April 2021, the circuit court found Samuel noncompliant. He had

not completed parenting classes, submitted to home visits, visited his son, or gained

employment. The child was adjudicated dependent-neglected in May 2021 due to Haley’s

drug use. Both parents were ordered to complete their case plan designed to help them

become sober, stable parents with appropriate housing and income to support their son.

The parents were permitted four hours a week supervised visitation. Also in May 2021,

Samuel was arrested and jailed on drug-possession charges.

In July 2021, the circuit court found that Samuel is the child’s biological father by

DNA test results submitted to the court. However, Samuel remained in jail until February

2022 when he went to drug rehabilitation, which was a condition of his criminal case. Until

May 2022, Samuel’s supervised visitation had been sporadic. However, by May 2022, Samuel

had completed rehabilitation and had employment. The circuit court determined that

Samuel should be given additional time to try to unify with his son. This gave Samuel several

more months to prepare for custody of his son.

2 Samuel was ordered to abide the case plan and find stable, appropriate housing. DHS

scheduled four-hour supervised visits on Saturdays to accommodate Samuel’s work schedule,

but Samuel did not take full advantage of those opportunities to visit. His stated reasons for

not coming for visits ranged from helping his mother pack, to forgetting the appointment,

to visiting other family members. He sometimes left his four-hour visits early. Samuel said

he was having truck issues at one point, so he was offered to visit via Zoom, but he did not

want to participate. When Samuel did visit his son, he was advised to wash his hands and

change his clothing because his son was sensitive to second-hand smoke and other air

pollutants. Irritants would create an asthma-type breathing problem, and the child would

have to use an inhaler. Samuel did abide the request to change clothes and wash his hands,

given that Samuel smokes both marijuana and cigarettes, although Samuel was not happy

about being asked. Samuel was offered additional visitation time, but he told a DHS worker

that he “enjoys his four hours once a week and that’s about all he’s willing to do.”

Samuel had completed inpatient rehabilitation and apparently was successful in

keeping his methamphetamine addiction at bay. Samuel, however, continued to smoke

marijuana; he did not have a medical prescription to use marijuana. Samuel’s hair-follicle

testing between May and October 2022 showed an increase in the amount of THC.2 He

2 In September 2022, Haley (whose parental rights to this child had already been terminated) had another baby boy with Samuel, but the child tested positive for THC at birth and was removed from her custody. Samuel was not given custody of that child. That child is the subject of a separate DHS case.

3 submitted to six outpatient therapy sessions between September 2022 and January 2023. In

therapy, he admitted having used methamphetamine, alcohol, and marijuana in the past,

but he said he continued to use only marijuana because it helped with his anxiety,

depression, and PTSD.

The child remained in the same foster home and was receiving occupational and

speech therapy. The child was monitored for his breathing disorder, but the child was

making progress, and the DHS worker testified that there were no barriers to this child being

adopted, especially at such a young age.

Samuel maintained gainful employment since May 2022, but he did not obtain stable

housing despite being reminded that stable housing would be important in achieving

custody. In October 2022, Samuel told DHS that he had a place to live but that it was not

ready. Samuel was staying with his brother in an apartment in Conway or staying with his

mother in Greers Ferry, but he was working on and checking on the other place in Greers

Ferry.

The termination hearing was conducted over three days in January and February

2023. It was at the termination hearing that Samuel produced a lease dating back to

September 2022, but he said it was still not ready for his son because he was building his son

a bed. Although Samuel knew that his son has breathing issues, Samuel continued to smoke

marijuana and cigarettes. The circuit court noted that Samuel did not take advantage of extra

opportunities to visit with his son. The circuit court found that giving more time or services

4 to Samuel would not change the results because Samuel manifested incapacity and

indifference to making himself ready to take custody of his son.

The circuit court also found that DHS had proved that it was in this child’s best

interest to terminate his father’s parental rights. The circuit court considered the likelihood

that this child would be adopted, pointing to the testimony that there were no known

barriers to this child being adopted, and found the DHS witnesses credible in their

statements that Samuel’s sobriety was a continued concern, that Samuel maintained a

relationship with the biological mother who was not believed to be sober, that Samuel

displayed lack of interest in additional visitation, and that Samuel failed to obtain stable

housing.

In sum, the circuit court found that DHS had proved by clear and convincing

evidence two statutory grounds for termination (the noncustodial parent’s one year failure-

to-remedy ground and the subsequent-other-issues ground)3 and that it was in the child’s best

interest to terminate Samuel’s parental rights. The circuit court entered a detailed order,

and this appeal followed.

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Related

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