State ex rel. C.P.

202 So. 3d 601, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1907
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 2016
DocketNo. 51,234-JAC
StatusPublished

This text of 202 So. 3d 601 (State ex rel. C.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. C.P., 202 So. 3d 601, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1907 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

CP, a minor child adjudicated in need of care, appeals judgments that denied a motion by the State of Louisiana Department of Children and Family Services (“DCFS”) to change CP’s case plan from reunification with the mother, AP, to adoption, and awarded AP weekly, supervised overnight visits with CP. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual Background

CP was born on July 12, 2014. His mother, 32-year-old AP, and father, CH, were not married. CP and AP officially resided with AP’s mother, Rhonda, and Rhonda’s boyfriend, Roger, in Stonewall, but actually stayed there only a few nights a week. Because AP did not have reliable transportation, and needed to get to her job in Shreveport, she usually stayed with friends in town, leaving CP in their care while she was at work.

On the morning of March 23, 2015, AP picked up CP from one such friend’s house, brought him back to Stonewall, started to change his diaper and, according to AP, suddenly discovered the child had been whipped or beaten on his back. Although the skin was not broken, virtually every square inch of the baby’s back was red or purple with circular and linear bruises; there were also smaller injuries to his arm and nose. AP rushed him to Willis-Knighton South. Questioned by police, AP insisted that she did not inflict the bruises, and had no idea how they occurred; the child, she said, was fine when she dropped him off the night before. Officers questioned all the women with whom AP had left the child that weekend, but all denied hurting him and insisted he was fine when they saw him last. No charges were brought against any of CP’s babysitters.

DCFS filed an affidavit in support of an instanter order on March 24; CP has been in state custody ever since. AP was arrested for cruelty to juveniles on April 29 and taken to jail that day. On May 21, at an evidentiary hearing, AP stipulated that CP was in need of care, without admitting the allegations. On June 26, at a dispositional hearing, the juvenile court found CP continued to be in need of care and the goal was reunification with AP. The minutes recite that the case plan goal of reunification was “granted.”

In the criminal matter, AP never admitted that she injured the child or disclosed which of her friends might have done it. On August 31, she pled nolo contendere and received seven months. Although AP was in jail, the juvenile court held a case review hearing on September 17, finding that CP was still in need of care and that the goal was still reunification. The court also set the matter for a “Permanen[603]*603cy/Case Review Hearing” on March 3, 2016.

In February 2016, DCFS notified the court that it was changing the goal from reunification to adoption. Although it conceded that AP had no prior offenses other than the incident with CP, and that she tested negative for controlled dangerous substances, DCFS alleged that AP had attended only six of 16 anger management classes with Williams Counseling Services. The matter proceeded to a hearing that took place over three days, March 3, March 17 and May 16, 2016, before a different judge of the juvenile court.

Evidence at the Permanency Hearing

At the March 3 hearing, Veronica Williams, a foster care worker for DCFS, testified that the agency changed its goal from reunification to adoption because of the severity of the child’s injuries and because AP was “in denial” about what happened. The court asked Ms. Williams why, knowing the extent of the injuries since March 2015 and knowing of AP’s nolo plea since April, DCFS had consented to reunification in July, but suddenly changed its goal to adoption in February 2016? Ms. Williams conceded she was not “on the ease” in its early phases and could not really explain the sudden change in goal.

AP testified that she had been sexually abused by her maternal grandfather when she was four, and had received counseling for it. She still could not explain what happened to CP on March 23; she pled nolo not' because she was guilty, but to get out of jail sooner. She admitted missing a lot of counseling sessions, but only because she was in jail at the time; since her release, she had attended regularly and found the sessions helpful. She also said she got a job at Goodwill in Shreveport, and still needed to stay with friends in town because of transportation issues, but she would no longer leave CP with the same friends as before.

At the March 17 hearing, AP’s mother, Rhonda, and Rhonda’s boyfriend, Roger, testified that they had never seen AP harm the child or even display any violent tendencies, but she had made “poor choices.” They were willing to keep and babysit CP while AP was working. Roger gruffly denied that he was unwilling to keep the child on account of its race (AP is white and CH is black). AP reiterated that she did nothing to harm her child. CP’s foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eppers, were present in court and conferred with the judge but did not speak on the record.

At the May 16 hearing, AP provided, in great detail, a minute account of everything she did in the two days before she discovered CP’s injuries, consistently denying that she had whipped the child. She admitted she had grown frustrated with the process, was at the end of her rope, and was perhaps not always cordial with DCFS workers. She introduced certificates of completion showing that she successfully completed the 16-week programs in anger management and “active parenting today” with. Williams Counseling Services. DCFS did not call the counselor, Anthony Williams, to testify, but offered a letter from him stating that she completed all classes and voicing “some doubt that she is capable of providing a safe and nurturing environment for her child.” The letter also cited the extent of the injuries, the “denial of responsibility” and a possible diagnosis of PTSD “which may have a detrimental impact on her parenting skills.”

At the close of the hearing, the court orally ruled that the goal would remain reunification. The court also ordered overnight weekend visits from 6 pm Friday to 3 pm Sunday. DCFS and counsel for CP sought writs; the court, suspended the overnight visits until June 3 “to provide addi[604]*604tional transition time.” A panel of this court granted the writ on July 7 and ordered the juvenile court to forward the record within three days.

Motion to Modify and Terminate Overnight Visits

Meanwhile, on June 22 counsel for CP filed an emergency motion to modify the disposition and terminate overnight visits. This alleged that PC suffers from reactive airway disease, and on the two overnight visits that had occurred thus far, people were smoking in the child’s presence and ashtrays full of cigarette butts were present throughout the house. It also alleged that on the second visit, a Court Appointed Special Advocates (“CASA”) volunteer came to do a welfare check, knocked on Roger’s front door, and nobody answered.

The court held a hearing on the emergency motion on June 28. Henry Sandifer, the CASA volunteer, testified that when he came to Roger and Rhonda’s house on June 18, he knocked on the door and got no answer. He added, however, that after he left, got in his vehicle and made a phone call to his supervisor, he came back, met with the family and performed his welfare check. He said there was a strong and offensive reek of cigarette smoke wafting from the house, but he saw nobody smoking in CP’s presence; later, he testified he never actually entered the house.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 So. 3d 601, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cp-lactapp-2016.