State Ex Rel. Gjl

791 So. 2d 80, 2001 WL 744474
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 29, 2001
Docket2000-CJ-3278
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 791 So. 2d 80 (State Ex Rel. Gjl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Gjl, 791 So. 2d 80, 2001 WL 744474 (La. 2001).

Opinion

791 So.2d 80 (2001)

STATE of Louisiana in the Interest of G.J.L. and M.M.L.

No. 2000-CJ-3278.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

June 29, 2001.

*82 Leah A. Beard, Counsel for Applicant.

Greta M. Marion, L. Kimberly Morrow, Garett R. Duplechain, Opelousas, Counsel for Respondent.

TRAYLOR, J.[*]

In this proceeding to involuntarily terminate parental rights, we granted a writ of certiorari to determine whether the court of appeal correctly affirmed the trial court's decision not to terminate parental rights and the trial court's finding that to leave the children in their respective foster homes for the time being is in their best interest.

FACTS and PROCEDURAL HISTORY

C.R.B. and R.D.L. are the mother and father of G.J.L., an eleven-year-old boy, and M.M.L., an eight-year-old girl. The children's mother, C.R.B., suffers from a bi-polar disorder and mild mental retardation. Their father, R.D.L., is physically infirm due to a serious heart condition. The State of Louisiana, Department of Social Services, filed a petition to terminate parental rights because the children had been in foster care continuously since 1998 and there was little hope of them ever returning to either of their parent's permanent custody.

G.J.L. and M.M.L. were seven and four, respectively, when they first entered the custody of the State in April 1997. The children were removed from their mother's custody, after the State investigated and validated allegations of sexual abuse of M.M.L. by C.R.B.'s boyfriend and failure to protect on the part of C.R.B. In April 1998, the children were returned to their mother for a 30-day trial placement, which was extended for two additional 30 and 60 day periods. C.R.B., who had since married, regained custody of her son and daughter from the State on August 6, 1998, and was placed under six additional months of supervision. However, on August 21, 1998, the children were again removed from C.R.B.'s custody on the grounds of neglect, due to C.R.B.'s failure to provide adequate food, stable housing, *83 and safe supervision. The father, R.D.L., was unwilling or unable to provide care for the children during any of this time, allegedly because of his heart condition. The children were adjudicated to be in need of care on September 23, 1998, and were subsequently placed in separate foster homes.

The State established case plans to work with the parents towards reunification. R.D.L.'s case plan provided that he maintain contact with the State, advise of any changes in his address or medical status, visit with the children, and work towards having a suitable home for his children to be returned to him. R.D.L. visited regularly with the children for a six-month period in 1999. However, after the visits were changed from a restaurant in Church Point, where R.D.L. lived, to the OCS office in Opelousas, R.D.L. gradually began seeing the children less and less and finally stopped altogether.[1] He has not seen them in over a year. He has never attended a family team conference or a court hearing.

C.R.B.'s case plan required that she acknowledge the abuse to the children and why they were placed in the State's care, that she provide a suitable home and safe environment for the children, that she not associate with the perpetrator of sexual abuse upon her daughter, that she keep all appointments, including those for mental health, that she take her prescribed medication, and that she attend all court hearings and family team conferences. However, C.R.B. failed to establish stable housing, did not attend mental health appointments, did not take her medication properly, continued to associate with known sexual perpetrators, and continued to have serious difficulty managing money. Yet, C.R.B. visits regularly with her children and has attended nearly all court hearings.

The undisputed medical testimony at trial was that C.R.B. has a bi-polar disorder and is mildly mentally retarded with a cognitive dysfunction. Both experts in psychology testified that, in their opinion, C.R.B. could never be the children's primary care-giver because of her mental health condition, but that she could possibly serve as a secondary care-giver. None of the parties argue that reunification of the children with C.R.B. or R.D.L. is likely. However, the parties do not dispute that C.R.B. loves her children and that much of why C.R.B. is unable to properly care for them is through no fault of her own, but is due to her mental disability.

The trial court further found that the evidence indicated that the children love their mother. G.J.L. expressed concern for his mother's welfare and a desire to visit and maintain a relationship with his father as well. While M.M.L. appeared to be less attached to both her parents and her brother and appeared to have no real desire to continue a relationship with her father, she still exhibited concern for her mother's well-being. Additionally, the trial court found that both children are fairly content and well-adjusted in their respective foster homes. In fact, G.J.L.'s foster mother would like to adopt him, although she is not interested in adopting both children. M.M.L.'s foster parents do not wish to adopt her; however, other persons in the community have expressed an interest in adopting M.M.L., although the State has no specific plans for her adoption as of yet.

Taking all of these factual findings into consideration, the trial court concluded *84 that it was in the children's best interest to maintain the status quo for the present time. Thus, the trial court denied the State's petition to terminate parental rights, finding that the parents should not be punished simply because of their respective mental and physical handicaps and that they should be allowed to try and be secondary care-givers to their children. Additionally, the trial court concluded that there was no evidence in the record that future adoption of the children would be in their best interest, and that, as they were happy and content in their foster homes and able to maintain "some semblance of family input in their lives," it was not in their best interests to uproot them again for an uncertain future adoption. Finally, the trial court noted that if C.R.B. and R.D.L. "knowingly and willingly falter" in their roles as secondary care-givers, "this matter can be addressed again and parental rights terminated."

On review, the court of appeal found that the trial judge grappled with the question of whether the children are better off with no parents and the chance to be adopted or with parents who love them but cannot care for them and concluded that the trial judge was "earnestly sincere" in his belief that the children's best interest is not served by the termination of parental rights. The court of appeal pointed to what it considered the "underlying ambivalence" of the family welfare professionals who testified at the hearing and determined that the State had not met its burden of clear and convincing proof that parental rights should be terminated. La. Ch.Code art. 1035. However, both courts recognized that, most likely, neither C.R.B. or R.D.L. will ever be the primary care-giver for these children.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

In Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 753, 102 S.Ct.

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Related

State ex rel. K.P. v. L.P.
877 So. 2d 1190 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
791 So. 2d 80, 2001 WL 744474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-gjl-la-2001.