State Ex Rel. Department of Human Services v. Rodgers

129 P.3d 243, 204 Or. App. 198, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 8, 2006
Docket02-00180JV; A126377
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 129 P.3d 243 (State Ex Rel. Department of Human Services v. Rodgers) 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. Rodgers, 129 P.3d 243, 204 Or. App. 198, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 145 (Or. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*200 ORTEGA, J.

Father’s parental rights were terminated based on unfitness, ORS 419B.504, and neglect, ORS 419B.506, because of his failure to engage in counseling after his infant daughter suffered a serious and unexplained injury while in his care. Mother relinquished her parental rights and is not a party to this appeal. Father challenges the termination, and the Department of Human Services (DHS) cross-assigns error to the juvenile court’s finding that the state failed to prove that father was unfit because of abuse of alcohol or controlled substances. We review de novo, ORS 419A.200(6)(b), giving considerable weight to the juvenile court’s findings regarding credibility, and affirm the termination of father’s parental rights based on unfitness, though for reasons slightly different from those relied on by the juvenile court. We agree with the juvenile court that there was insufficient evidence of abuse of alcohol or controlled substances to support a finding of unfitness, although issues relating to father’s alcohol use figure into our determination that father is unfit.

Rather than try to arrange all of the detailed factual information chronologically, we begin with a brief chronological overview of the case and then examine in detail clusters of facts — events preceding child’s being taken into DHS custody, the services that were offered to father, issues surrounding father’s visits with child (including the effect of father’s failure to submit to urinalysis), and father’s failure to participate in counseling.

Father’s parental rights were terminated when child was about two and a half years old. Child was born in February 2002 and was taken into DHS custody the following April, when she was about 10 weeks old. When child was bom, mother was 15 and father 16. The juvenile court took jurisdiction over child and mother at a hearing in June 2002. Because of delays attributable to father’s changes in counsel, however, the court did not take jurisdiction over father until January 2003, nine months after child was taken into DHS custody, and father declined to sign any service agreements or, for the most part, to participate in services until after the *201 court took jurisdiction over him. Initially, services were offered to father and mother with the goal of reuniting the family, but DHS ultimately concluded that they were not making adequate progress. In late July 2003, DHS changed the plan from reunification to adoption. The petition to terminate father’s parental rights was filed in late October 2003. Mother relinquished her parental rights in February 2004. The hearing on the termination of father’s parental rights was held in July and August 2004. The juvenile court terminated father’s rights in October 2004.

With that general timeline in mind, we turn to a more detailed examination of the facts, beginning with events that took place before child was placed in DHS custody. When child was born, father and mother faced significant challenges. Mother had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and she stopped taking her medication for a period around the time of child’s birth. Father had received about a sixth-grade education from home-schooling. In May 2000, when he was 14, father was referred to the county juvenile department for being a minor in possession of alcohol. Father was under the supervision of the juvenile department for three months beginning in August 2000 and then again from October 2001 (about four months before child’s birth) until about September 2003. By that time, father had been on probation for unauthorized use of a vehicle, driving while suspended, two incidents of minor in possession of alcohol (a third incident was not adjudicated), and third-degree theft; he also had been in a diversion program for driving under the influence of intoxicants.

In March 2002, about a month after child’s birth, an incident of domestic violence occurred between father and mother in child’s presence. At the time, father and mother gave opposing accounts of the incident; we know little about mother’s version, except for some brief testimony at the jurisdictional hearing, in which she indicated that father was holding her chin and “trying to get [her] to listen.” Father testified that mother became upset because he was going to work and that he decided to remove child from the home because mother was upset and “screaming.” He reportedly told mother that he was leaving and taking child, and, after he picked up child, mother hit him in the face. He testified,

*202 “So I walked out the door and [mother] was threatening to kill herself, and I didn’t want her to kill herself and then, then say I did it, and I left, you know. And I was nervous, I didn’t know what to do, so I went over to KMart and I called the police and I told them that she was threatening to kill herself.”

The police officer who responded to the call separated father and mother by removing father from the scene and leaving child with mother. The officer did not arrest either parent but testified later that, at least under current policies, arresting someone “would have been * * * an option * * He stated that no case was filed because neither party wanted to pursue charges. The police officer also contacted DHS about doing a welfare check on parents. DHS presented father and mother with a safety plan that required mother to take her medications and parents not to have additional incidents of domestic violence. DHS also offered services, which father declined.

A little over a month later, in late April, father took child to the hospital with a transverse fracture in her right femur. At the hospital, father provided inconsistent stories about how the injury occurred. He initially told DHS caseworker Fenner and police officer Piazzini, a child abuse investigator, that he had been sitting and feeding child when she arched her back, slid off his legs, and landed on the floor. Fenner left the room where she and Piazzini were interviewing father to talk with another DHS caseworker, who told Fenner that mother had just given a different account of events. Fenner pulled Piazzini into the hall to tell him about the different stories. When they returned to the room, Fenner heard father on the phone saying, “What did they ask you?” Fenner suspected that father was speaking to mother; indeed, Piazzini testified that father admitted at the time that he had been on the phone with mother. However, father later testified that he had tried to reach mother by phone but no one was home.

After Fenner and Piazzini returned to the interview room, father gave them a new account of child’s injury; he stated that, while he was holding child in one arm, he reached into a closet to get some books for mother and child fell out of his arms onto the floor without hitting anything on the way down. After Piazzini expressed skepticism about *203

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Bluebook (online)
129 P.3d 243, 204 Or. App. 198, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-department-of-human-services-v-rodgers-orctapp-2006.