Sheboygan County DH & HS v. J. L.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 3, 2024
Docket2023AP001884
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sheboygan County DH & HS v. J. L. (Sheboygan County DH & HS v. J. L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheboygan County DH & HS v. J. L., (Wis. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. January 3, 2024 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Samuel A. Christensen petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2023AP1884 Cir. Ct. No. 2022TP14

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT II

IN RE THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO S.L., A PERSON UNDER THE AGE OF 18:

SHEBOYGAN COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,

PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,

V.

J.L.,

RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Sheboygan County: KENT R. HOFFMANN, Judge. Affirmed. No. 2023AP1884

¶1 GROGAN, J.1 J.L. appeals from an order terminating his parental rights to his daughter, Grace.2 J.L. asserts there was insufficient evidence from which the circuit court could conclude that termination was in Grace’s best interests and that the court therefore erroneously exercised its discretion in the disposition phase of these proceedings when it found that termination was in Grace’s best interests. This court affirms.

I. BACKGROUND

¶2 Grace was born in December 2018 to A.P. and J.L., who were not married. Grace and A.P. tested positive for methamphetamines at Grace’s birth, which led to an investigation as to whether Grace could go home with her parents. Grace’s maternal grandmother initially took Grace into her home as part of Grace’s protective placement plan. However, the Sheboygan County Department of Health and Human Services (Department) took temporary physical custody of Grace after approximately one month and placed her with a great aunt (Evelyn) and the aunt’s spouse (Oliver) instead.3 The Department thereafter filed a petition alleging Grace was a child in need of protection or services (CHIPS), and in September 2019, the circuit court found Grace to be in need of protection or services and set conditions to be met before Grace could be returned home.

1 This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(e) (2021-22). All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise noted. 2 Grace is a pseudonym used for purposes of confidentiality. See WIS. STAT. § 809.81(8). 3 Evelyn and Oliver are also pseudonyms.

2 No. 2023AP1884

¶3 J.L. did not satisfy the conditions for Grace’s return. Although he had supervised visits with Grace approximately once a week, he sometimes did not attend, arrived late, or showed up unexpectedly. As a result of these inconsistencies—as well as J.L.’s failure to maintain contact with Janna Harrington, the assigned social worker, and failure to keep scheduled appointments with the Department—Harrington suspended J.L.’s visits with Grace in August 2021. Harrington informed J.L. that he needed to meet with her in order to resume visits, which never occurred. Consequently, in June 2022, the Department filed a petition seeking to terminate J.L.’s parental rights.4

¶4 Although J.L. initially contested the petition, he ultimately stipulated that grounds existed to terminate his parental rights. His challenge to the petition came only at the April 2023 dispositional hearing, where he argued it was not in Grace’s best interests to terminate his parental rights.

¶5 Only two witnesses testified at the dispositional hearing: (1) Harrington; and (2) J.L. At the hearing, J.L. argued he had a substantial relationship with Grace and testified about his contacts with her, the presents he sent her, and stated that he loved her. He also told the court he would do anything to get her back, including remaining sober. J.L. admitted that when the supervised visits were suspended in August 2021, he had no further contact with Grace but insisted it was because Harrington had told him he could not contact Grace or her foster parents. Harrington’s testimony contradicted this.

4 The petition also sought to terminate A.P.’s parental rights. This appeal, however, concerns only J.L.

3 No. 2023AP1884

¶6 Harrington testified that J.L. stopped showing up for supervised visits for a number of reasons, and when he did come, he brought Grace sugary foods—despite being told not to because it gave Grace stomachaches. Harrington placed the visits on hold in August 2021 because J.L. was: (1) not honoring the visitation schedule; (2) showing up when not expected; (3) not giving proper notice for his visits; and (4) not having “meaningful interaction” with Grace when he did visit. Harrington also had concerns about J.L.’s noncooperation with her in regard to developing a “family interaction plan[.]” Harrington further testified that, at times, she could not find J.L., he failed to respond to her efforts to reach him, and she had concerns about illegal drug use.

¶7 Harrington met with J.L. in 2022 when he was incarcerated. At that meeting, Harrington shared the rules J.L. needed to follow to resume visitation with Grace, and J.L. signed a stipulation as “to what needed to be taken care of for him to resume seeing [Grace].” Visitation never resumed.

¶8 When asked about the substantial relationship factor (e.g., whether Grace had a substantial relationship with J.L.), Harrington testified she did not think it would be harmful to sever Grace’s relationship with him. When asked why she had that opinion, Harrington said:

I have that opinion because over the course of supervising this case and managing [Grace’s] case they have not -- they have not, um, been in a role to make good decisions for her, to provide for her educational needs, her protection needs. They struggle to take care of themselves. Um, there has been over the course of the years struggles with criminal charges and incarcerations. They don’t ask about [Grace], um, how she’s doing, what she likes to eat, what she likes to do, how her health is. They like to see her, but other than that there is not much more as far as [J.L.] and [A.P.] being in a protective parental role over [Grace]. I’ve seen [J.L.] many times at the Sheboygan County Detention Center and not once has he asked me how [Grace] is doing.

4 No. 2023AP1884

He hasn’t written me, he doesn’t write [Grace]. I’m aware he called a couple days ago to speak to [Grace], but that’s it. In the four years he’s never called once to [the home where Grace is living] to check on her, to see how she’s doing, to see what he could do to help out to parent her.

¶9 Harrington also testified that Grace never lived with J.L. during the four years of her life and that she “shared with [J.L. that] he could write [Grace] and he never did that.” When asked about whether she was clear with J.L. about the conditions he needed to meet to get Grace back—that he needed to get clean and sober and take parenting classes—Harrington explained that she either could not find J.L. or “he was irate, irritable, difficult, very difficult, resistive.” When Harrington offered free services to assist J.L. in meeting these conditions, he refused them. At the conclusion of the hearing, the circuit court found that it was in Grace’s best interests to terminate J.L.’s parental rights. J.L. appeals.

II. DISCUSSION

¶10 J.L. raises a single issue in his appeal, namely, that the circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion when it found that it was in Grace’s best interests to terminate his parental rights because, he says, he had a substantial relationship with Grace, and the circuit court should have placed more weight on that factor.

¶11 J.L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Sheboygan County DH & HS v. J. L., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheboygan-county-dh-hs-v-j-l-wisctapp-2024.