STATE EX REL. DHS v. Smith

106 P.3d 627, 338 Or. 58
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 2005
DocketS51293
StatusPublished

This text of 106 P.3d 627 (STATE EX REL. DHS v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE EX REL. DHS v. Smith, 106 P.3d 627, 338 Or. 58 (Or. 2005).

Opinion

106 P.3d 627 (2005)
338 Or. 58

In the Matter of Robert James Jon Smith, a Minor Child.
STATE ex rel. DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES, Respondent on Review,
v.
Diana Marie SMITH, Petitioner on Review.
In the Matter of Jon Bow Robert Michael Lea Smith, a Minor Child.
State ex rel. Department of Human Services, Respondent on Review,
v.
Diana Marie Smith, Petitioner on Review.

(CC 01J0049, 02J0938; CA A119798, A121395; SC S51293, S51339).

Supreme Court of Oregon, En Banc.

Argued and Submitted November 3, 2004.
Decided February 17, 2005.

Maryhelen Sherrett, Portland, argued the cause and filed the petitions for petitioner on review.

Laura S. Anderson, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, argued the cause for respondent on review.

*629 GILLETTE, J.

These two parental rights termination cases, which we have consolidated for opinion, test the bounds of a state agency's authority to exact a parent's compliance with various conditions in order to secure the return of her child. In the present cases, we hold that the agency exceeded those bounds.

The trial court terminated mother's parental rights to her first son, whom the state had removed from mother's care at birth. The court's order recited the statutory criteria for termination upon a finding of unfitness, but it did not elaborate. In a brief, per curiam opinion, the Court of Appeals, sitting en banc, affirmed that ruling. State ex rel. Dept. of Human Services v. Smith, 190 Or.App. 570, 79 P.3d 374 (2003) (Smith I). Three judges dissented in that case on the ground that, in their view, the facts of the case did not meet the standard necessary to justify termination of mother's parental rights to the child. Id. at 571, 79 P.3d 374 (Schuman, J., joined by Landau and Armstrong, JJ., dissenting). Less than six months after terminating mother's parental rights to her first son, the trial court terminated mother's parental rights to her second son, whom the state also had removed from mother's care at birth. The Court of Appeals affirmed that ruling in a per curiam opinion that cited its earlier decision with respect to the first son. State ex rel. Dept. of Human Services v. Smith, 191 Or.App. 137, 80 P.3d 522 (2003) (Smith II). Two judges *630 concurred, stating that, in their view, the state had failed to establish the requirements for termination by clear and convincing evidence, but that they were constrained by the court's decision in the earlier case. Id. at 138, 80 P.3d 522 (Landau, J., joined by Armstrong, J., concurring). We allowed review in both cases. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the decisions of the Court of Appeals.

In reviewing a decision of the Court of Appeals in a parental rights termination case, this court may review the decision de novo, or it may limit its review to issues of law. ORS 19.415(4); See State ex rel. SOSCF v. Stillman, 333 Or. 135, 138, 36 P.3d 490 (2001) (explaining rule). Because neither the trial court nor the Court of Appeals made findings of fact in the first of these cases, and because the outcome in the second case largely depended on the trial court's ruling in the first, we elect to view the record de novo. We find the facts relied on in this opinion based on our de novo review of the record.

At the time of the events leading up to the first parental rights termination hearing, mother was a 28-year old woman with an IQ of about 80, which put her in the "low average" range. She was a high school graduate, and she had earned As and Bs in school. Mother had held various jobs since graduating from high school, including working for a janitorial service, providing childcare for several other families, and helping her mother manage a nearby apartment complex. She usually earned between $800 to $1,200 per month.

Neither mother nor anyone in her parents' household used drugs or alcohol or, apparently, ever had been convicted of any crime. No one in the household ever had committed domestic abuse or assaulted anyone in the family.

Until the Department of Human Services (DHS) became involved in her case, mother lived in an apartment in her parents' house. The family was extremely close-knit. Mother's parents had been married for more than 32 years. Mother never had lived on her own, and her two adult brothers lived in a camper in the backyard. The entire family ate dinner together every night, and mother frequently cooked the family meal. Mother relied heavily on her family for support and social interaction.

Mother first learned that she was pregnant with her first child in November 2000, when, accompanied by her mother, she went to a hospital complaining of stomach distension. She was seven months pregnant at the time. Both women vehemently challenged the doctor's diagnosis of pregnancy because, they said, mother had continued to menstruate monthly and mother did not believe that, strictly speaking, she ever had had sexual intercourse.[1] They went so far as to seek a second opinion, which confirmed the diagnosis. Eventually, on January 22, 2001, mother, again accompanied by her own mother, went to Salem Hospital to deliver her child. She initially denied to the nurses that she was pregnant and continued to insist that she was a virgin. Then, she claimed that she must have become pregnant by taking a bath or a shower in the same bath or shower in which either her 14-year-old foster brother or other men that her parents had permitted to shower at their house earlier had masturbated.[2] She also initially gave hospital personnel her mother's name as her own, asserted that the child was her mother's and not hers, and asserted that the baby was her brother and not her son. Those outlandish claims led hospital workers to suspect that mother might be mentally ill. They called the Department of Human Services (DHS).

A DHS supervisor, Hunter, visited mother in the hospital shortly after her son was *631 born. Hunter insisted on speaking to mother outside the presence of her family members or her pastor. During that conversation, mother repeated and elaborated on the conception by masturbation story, this time implicating only the two men who had showered at her parents' house on the day she supposedly conceived. In addition, mother told Hunter, untruthfully, that she had tried to obtain prenatal care after learning of the pregnancy, but had been denied care by six different doctors. Mother also told Hunter that she was going to name the child Jon Allen Ruston, after a family friend (not the father of the child). Hunter knew that Ruston was a convicted sex offender who lived in mother's neighborhood. Mother denied having known that Ruston was a sex offender, although she knew that he was not allowed in the house unless her father was present.[3]

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State ex rel. Department of Human Services v. Smith
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Bluebook (online)
106 P.3d 627, 338 Or. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dhs-v-smith-or-2005.