State ex rel. Department of Human Services v. Williams

94 P.3d 131, 194 Or. App. 57, 2004 Ore. App. LEXIS 811
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 8, 2004
DocketJ96-0666; A118383
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 94 P.3d 131 (State ex rel. Department of Human Services v. Williams) 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. Williams, 94 P.3d 131, 194 Or. App. 57, 2004 Ore. App. LEXIS 811 (Or. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

DEITS, C. J.

Mother appeals from a judgment terminating her parental rights to M, one of her two children. At the termination hearing, the state alleged that, because of her mental illness, mother is unfit to care for M. We review de novo, ORS 419A.200(5), to determine whether clear and convincing evidence in the record supports the termination of mother’s rights. We affirm.

Mother was born in 1962. She began abusing alcohol at age 11 and drank heavily throughout most of her twenties. In 1990, mother gave birth to a daughter, T. Mother stopped drinking when she learned that she was pregnant with T. She resumed drinking sometime after T was born, but did not drink as heavily. The relationship between mother and T’s father had ended before T was born, so mother cared for T as a single parent. In 1994, mother sought public financial assistance. As a condition of receiving assistance, she was required to undergo a psychological evaluation. Dr. McVay conducted the required evaluation and diagnosed mother with schizotypal personality disorder. Mother began regular psychotherapy sessions with McVay, attending between one and four sessions each month.

In 1995, mother contacted the Department of Human Services (DHS),1 seeking help in dealing with behavioral problems that T was having. T was diagnosed with oppositional-defiant disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Mother and T began regular counseling and other programs to work on T’s behavior. T has been enrolled in special education classes for emotionally disturbed children at least part time since beginning school and has taken various medications to help control her behavior. At trial, several witnesses testified that T would be a very difficult child for any parent to handle.

In 1995, mother began a relationship with Moon. On July 8,1996, she gave birth to Moon’s child, M, the subject of this proceeding. Mother did not drink alcohol during her [60]*60pregnancy with M and, with the exception of a single relapse in September 1996, she apparently has remained sober since that time. While mother was in the hospital following M’s birth, nurses observed two instances in which Moon disciplined T in a manner that caused the nurses to be concerned about abuse. Representatives of the hospital notified DHS, which conducted an investigation. The agency discovered that Moon had been convicted in 1987 of manslaughter in connection with the drowning death of his infant son, after Moon had left him in a bathtub unsupervised. As a result of this discovery, DHS became concerned about whether mother would be able to protect her children from potential neglect or abuse by Moon. In November 1996, DHS obtained a court order that prohibited mother from allowing Moon to have contact with either T or M.

Mother reacted to this information by minimizing Moon’s involvement in the death of his child, blaming his then wife for allowing Moon to bathe the child. Mother stated that “a baby is the woman’s responsibility, period.” In addition, she minimized Moon’s treatment of T at the hospital, which the nurses had reported as being physically abusive, as just being “stern.” On at least one occasion after the issuance of the court order prohibiting mother from allowing Moon to have contact with the children, she allowed him to enter her apartment while the children were there. DHS learned that she had violated the court order and concluded that she could not keep M safe. Initially, DHS did not plan to remove T from mother’s custody. However, mother stated that she wanted the children to stay together. Consequently, on January 23, 1997, the agency assumed custody of both children, who were placed in foster care. M was six months old at the time and has been in the care of foster parents since that time. After five weeks, mother was permitted to begin supervised visitation with the children at DHS offices.

Mother and DHS then entered into a service agreement that required mother to receive alcohol treatment, complete parent training classes, forgo contact with Moon, and undergo another psychological evaluation. Even though she had stopped drinking on her own, mother participated in a [61]*61substance abuse treatment program, began to attend Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meetings, and obtained an AA sponsor. She also attended eight weekly sessions of parent training at Evergreen Counseling Services.

In April 1997, Dr. Basham conducted the psychological evaluation required in the service agreement. He testified that he was asked to evaluate mother’s psychological functioning with particular emphasis on how her mental condition affected her ability to care for her children. He was provided with a treatment summary from McVay that identified mother’s diagnosis and the treatment that she had been receiving. McVay evidently noted that “there was a decline in psychological symptoms over [the] time” of mother’s work with her, but Basham stated in his own report that “more recent reports indicate that [mother] has had continuing difficulties,” including alcohol dependence. Basham began his evaluation with a clinical interview. In his report, he noted that mother was

“irritable at the start of the evaluation, but this mood soon dissipated. She thereafter proved to be an energetic, socially engaged, but somewhat distressed and teary individual, who was fully cooperative with the evaluation. Most of her distress surrounded the issue of separation from her children. She did not appear defensive or prone to minimize problems during the interview and readily accepted the fact of being alcoholic. [Mother] showed an unsophisticated understanding of the system and also gave the impression of being rather gullible regarding other people. There was nothing bizarre or delusional in her thinking during the interview, although some of her comments were ‘strange’ and difficult to understand.”

Although mother told Basham that her relationship with Moon was “100-percent over,” Basham noted that she “expressed quite a bit of sympathy for him and felt that he had been unfairly labeled a child murderer by [DHS] * * *. [S]he did not hold [Moon] accountable for being irresponsible or negligent in allowing his baby to drown * * Basham observed that mother did not seem to understand that Moon posed any risk of harm to her children. He also stated that mother was “notably less defensive regarding her own problems, and readily acknowledged that she was alcoholic and [62]*62that she has had some significant mental health problems in the past.” Mother also complained to Basham that DHS was treating her badly. For example, she claimed that the agency disrupted her visits with her children by coming into the room to ask her questions. When Basham asked mother about T’s behavioral problems, mother stated that T had many allergies, including cigarette smoke, monosodium glutamate, and chemicals in tap water. Mother said that she believed that those allergies were at least partly responsible for T’s problems. However, the record lacks any other evidence that T had problems with allergies. Apparently, during the time that she stayed with the foster family, she did not have allergies. Basham observed that mother’s focus on allergies as the cause of T’s behavioral problems was “unusual” and raised questions about mother’s ability to understand T’s behavioral difficulties.

Basham’s evaluation also included several psychological and intellectual functioning tests.

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Related

State ex rel. Department of Human Services v. Squiers
126 P.3d 758 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2006)
STATE EX REL. DHS v. Williams
94 P.3d 131 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
94 P.3d 131, 194 Or. App. 57, 2004 Ore. App. LEXIS 811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-department-of-human-services-v-williams-orctapp-2004.