STATE EX REL DEPT. OF HUMAN SER. v. Simmons

125 P.3d 66, 203 Or. App. 279
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 14, 2005
Docket4769J A124081
StatusPublished

This text of 125 P.3d 66 (STATE EX REL DEPT. OF HUMAN SER. v. Simmons) 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 DEPT. OF HUMAN SER. v. Simmons, 125 P.3d 66, 203 Or. App. 279 (Or. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

125 P.3d 66 (2005)
203 Or. App. 279

In the Matter of Ashley Jean Woodman, a Minor Child.
STATE ex rel DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES, Respondent,
v.
Dana Jo SIMMONS, Appellant.

No. 4769J; A124081.

Court of Appeals of Oregon.

Submitted on Remand April 27, 2005.
Decided December 14, 2005.

*67 Wes Williams and Anne Morrison, for appellant.

Hardy Myers, Attorney General, Mary H. Williams, Solicitor General, and Anna M. Joyce, Assistant Attorney General, for respondent.

Before HASELTON, Presiding Judge, and LINDER and ORTEGA, Judges.

ORTEGA, J.

The trial court terminated mother's parental rights to child based on mother's history of drug use, her mental illness, and her failure to effect a lasting adjustment of circumstances detrimental to child. On de novo review, we affirmed without a written opinion. State ex rel Dept. of Human Services v. Simmons, 196 Or.App. 787, 106 P.3d 699 (2004). Mother petitioned for review, and the Supreme Court vacated our decision and remanded for us to reconsider this case in light of State ex rel SOSCF v. Stillman, 333 Or. 135, 36 P.3d 490 (2001), and State ex rel Dept. of Human Services v. Smith, 338 Or. 58, 106 P.3d 627 (2005). State ex rel Dept. of Human Services v. Simmons, 338 Or. 374, 110 P.3d 113 (2005). On remand, mother maintains that none of her problems *68 are seriously detrimental to child and that the number of witnesses who appeared on her behalf and the strength of their testimony prevent the state's evidence from being clear and convincing, as required to support termination. We disagree. Because mother's evidence lacks sufficient credibility and persuasiveness to overcome the ample and convincing evidence that mother's past conduct and her mental illness and addiction are seriously detrimental to child, we affirm the trial court's termination of mother's parental rights.

A lengthy rendition of mother's and child's history is necessary to give context to our conclusions regarding the need for termination. Mother was 38 years old at the time of trial. She has had serious medical problems, including a lupus-like disorder, for most of her life, and has been on pain medications for many years. Child was born at the end of mother's decade-long abusive relationship with child's father, and mother left father while child was still an infant.[1] Mother and child lived in a number of different places, either alone (with paid in-home assistants) or with relatives who helped provide care for mother and child. Mother has not worked during child's lifetime but instead receives disability benefits. During the time that child lived with mother, mother was rarely without a caregiver who would help her with daily activities such as laundry, cooking, cleaning, and caring for child. Mother sometimes hired outside caregivers and sometimes paid her family members to perform these tasks for her.

Mother's abuse of drugs mainly involved Oxycontin, a controlled, prescription-only pain medication. To understand mother's history of substance abuse, it is helpful to understand the ways that Oxycontin can be abused. Because of its potential for abuse, a doctor can prescribe only one month's supply of Oxycontin at a time. It is intended to be taken orally and, if used properly, has a "time-release" effect, which provides pain reduction over time. If it is crushed, chewed, dissolved, or melted, it loses its time-release feature and gives to the user an almost immediate euphoric feeling, while also relieving pain. If used in large doses, it can result in heart failure.

Oxycontin is widely available on the streets. It can also be illegally obtained over the Internet and is available in quantities larger than the one-month doses that doctors are allowed to prescribe. Although a similar drug can be administered through a skin patch, preventing some of the methods of abuse, even the patch can be abused. A person can dissolve the patch, concentrate the liquid, and inject it, or even cut the patch into pieces and put it under the tongue.

There is no way to know, from physical exams or common laboratory tests, whether a person is abusing Oxycontin. The only outward signs of Oxycontin abuse are narcotic-seeking behaviors, such as filling prescriptions too early, continually "losing" prescriptions, or going to multiple doctors or pharmacies for the same prescription. Oxycontin is an opiate and, when abused, its side effects typically include drowsiness. The kind of urinalysis that will detect the presence of Oxycontin is not done by all screening laboratories.

With that understanding of Oxycontin abuse, we turn to the events that led to the termination of mother's parental rights. By way of overview, child was born in 1995, the year that mother turned 30. Child was placed in foster care at age six in June 2001, and, for the next 14 months, DHS provided services to mother and child with the goal of reunification. At that point, DHS decided to proceed toward termination; trial was held in October 2003, and judgment was entered in January 2004.

It is helpful to divide the relevant history into three time periods: (1) the drug abuse and domestic violence that led to child's removal in June 2001; (2) mother's evidently continuing drug abuse and drug-seeking behaviors up until her hospitalization in February 2002; and (3) the improvements in mother's behavior following that hospitalization and her mixed successes in treatment.

We begin by addressing the events that led to child's removal and its aftermath. *69 Mother lived with her older sister, Barton, in Everett, Washington, during most of the first five years of child's life and, while there, began seeing Dr. Stoller in 1999. Stoller prescribed multiple drugs for mother, including Oxycontin. In July 2000, when Barton became unable to assist mother and child, they moved to Baker City, Oregon, to live with mother's younger sister, Dahlem. Initially, mother did not establish a new primary care doctor in Oregon, but rather continued to obtain her pain medications from Stoller in Everett, even though she was not having routine office visits with him.

Mother's drug use and her volatile relationship with Dahlem spiraled out of control shortly after the move, prompting the Department of Human Services (DHS) to become involved. Dahlem was functioning as a paid caregiver for mother, preparing three meals a day, dispensing mother's medications, doing the laundry, keeping the home clean, and caring for child. The month after mother's move to Oregon, during an intake assessment with New Directions Northwest, an outpatient drug treatment provider, mother admitted that she had been abusing Oxycontin by injecting it and was seeking treatment at Dahlem's request.[2] The following month, a caller reported to DHS that mother was having verbally abusive exchanges with Dahlem and that child had seen mother "shooting herself" in the bedroom.

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Related

STATE EX REL. DEPT. OF HUMAN SERVICES v. Simmons
110 P.3d 113 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2005)
State ex rel. Department of Human Services v. Smith
106 P.3d 627 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2005)
State ex rel. Department of Human Services v. Simmons
125 P.3d 66 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
125 P.3d 66, 203 Or. App. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dept-of-human-ser-v-simmons-orctapp-2005.