State Ex Rel Department of Human Services v. D. T. C.

219 P.3d 610, 231 Or. App. 544, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1681
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 28, 2009
Docket040190J, A140588 (Control) 040191J, A140591 040192J, A140593
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 219 P.3d 610 (State Ex Rel Department of Human Services v. D. T. C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel Department of Human Services v. D. T. C., 219 P.3d 610, 231 Or. App. 544, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1681 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*547 SCHUMAN, J.

Father appeals a judgment of the juvenile court taking jurisdiction over his three children. He argues that the state failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that any of the children’s “condition or circumstances are such as to endanger [their] welfare,” the statutory basis for jurisdiction alleged in the state’s dependency petition. ORS 419B.100(l)(c); ORS 419B.809. On de novo review, ORS 419A.200(6)(b), we agree with father that the juvenile court erred in extending jurisdiction. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

Father and mother have four children together, three of whom — DC, JC, and KMY — are the subject of this appeal. At the time of the hearing, DC was 12 years old, KMY was 11, and JC was 8. Father and mother ended their relationship sometime around 2000, and mother is not involved in this appeal. At the time of the hearing, father had been involved for approximately seven years with his current partner, Tabitha, with whom he lives and has a child, J. J was five years old at the time of the hearing and had never been removed from their care.

Father first came to the attention of the Department of Human Services (DHS) when his and mother’s children were removed from mother’s care in 2005. DHS placed the children with father in late 2006 or early 2007, despite concerns about father’s alcohol use and disciplinary methods. Four months later, however, DHS removed the children from father’s care; the record indicates that the reason for removal was father’s alcohol use, but there are no further details or information about how that use affected the children. The court assumed jurisdiction over the children in June 2007 and ordered father to participate in a substance abuse assessment and any recommended follow-up treatment, and to complete parenting classes.

Father participated in a substance abuse assessment with Vicky Cooper of OnTrack, Inc., a comprehensive counseling service agency, on May 31, 2007. Cooper diagnosed father with “Alcohol Dependence Provisional,” level one. She recommended that father attend three two-hour “Intensive Outpatient Group” treatment sessions at OnTrack *548 on weekday afternoons; attend monthly one-on-one counseling sessions at OnTrack; attend weekly Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meetings in the community, verifying his attendance at those meetings with signed slips; and undergo random urinalyses (UAs), for a minimum of 16 weeks. Cooper testified later at the dependency hearing that random UAs were the only way to verify that a person had remained sober and that verification of AA meeting attendance was necessary because, with “drug and alcohol [treatment,] it’s all about documentation and paperwork. If it’s not on paper it didn’t happen, usually.” She also explained the difference between treatment and AA:

“[TJreatment is good for information and having a look at the denial and * * * [to] get the education on alcoholism as a disease * * * [and] what it does to the family systems and what it does to you physically, psychologically. And then AA is a place to learn how to live life now without the alcohol.”

Father refused to give a UA at the end of his May 31 assessment, stating that his ride was waiting for him and that he did not have time. In her evaluation, Cooper stated that father presented as “guarded,” “grandiose,” and as a “victim”; that he possessed poor judgment and poor insight into his disease; that he did not recognize that he had a problem and thus saw no reason to change; and that his risk of relapse was “severe.”

One week later, in June 2007, the children told a DHS caseworker that father “ha[d] been drinking heavily to the point where he passes out on the couch on a regular basis and is upset and angry, yells a lot[,] and is not able to parent them.” The children also stated that father “acts out” when he is drinking, which frightens them. The caseworker concluded that the children had been “injured emotionally by the things [father] does and says to them.”

After attending his first appointment at OnTrack, father never returned and was discharged for noncompliance. According to father, he chose not to participate because he had previously completed an OnTrack treatment program in 2004 after being convicted of driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII) and felt that he would not receive any benefit from attending again; because the treatment was too *549 expensive (despite Cooper’s assurance that he would not be denied on account of his inability to pay); because he could not get the time off from work (despite his testimony that he was self-employed); and because DHS had lied to him about placing the children with him and had instead decided to place them again with mother.

On July 26, 2007, DHS caseworker Lindorf held a family decision meeting with father, Tabitha, mother, and the children’s grandmother. At that time, the children were again transitioning into mother’s home. During the meeting, father declined supervised visits with the children, stating that he planned to “just wait DHS out.” According to Lindorf, father was “agitated,” “on edge,” “non-cooperative,” and “ended up leaving half way through the meeting.”

Lindorf held another meeting in November with mother, father, and Tabitha in an “attempt to bring [father] into the process” and to “engage him * * * in[ ] any kind of * * * treatment.” Because it was clear to Lindorf that father was not willing to complete a treatment program, she suggested, as a “last ditch effort,” that he attend AA meetings, verifying his attendance at those meetings, “as a gesture that he was trying to comply and work with [her] at all” and so that he could resume visits with the children. At that time, father told Lindorf that he had “been sober for several months, but [that he] didn’t have a specific sober date.”

That same month, father’s oldest daughter, who is not involved in this proceeding, reported to DHS that father had been drinking alcohol on Halloween night. She told DHS that father had grabbed her arm and raised his voice to prevent her from going to a Halloween party of which he did not approve and that he had been “mean and forceful,” which, she later testified, typified his behavior when drunk. She also later testified that she had seen father drink a beer that night, that his eyes had been red, that she had smelled alcohol on his breath when he grabbed her, and that, when father drinks, he is generally “edgier,” “meaner,” and more controlling than usual.

Father successfully completed parenting classes in December 2007. In her “Closing Report,” the instructor stated that, although father was “belligerent at first,” he was *550 eventually able to enjoy the course and to employ successfully some of the techniques he had learned. She noted that father and Tabitha would sometimes bring J with them to class, commenting that

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Bluebook (online)
219 P.3d 610, 231 Or. App. 544, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-department-of-human-services-v-d-t-c-orctapp-2009.