State ex rel. J.R. v. Louisiana Department of Community Services

704 So. 2d 866, 97 La.App. 3 Cir. 791, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 2833, 1997 WL 757992
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 1997
DocketNo. 97-791
StatusPublished

This text of 704 So. 2d 866 (State ex rel. J.R. v. Louisiana Department of Community Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. J.R. v. Louisiana Department of Community Services, 704 So. 2d 866, 97 La.App. 3 Cir. 791, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 2833, 1997 WL 757992 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

hTHIBODEAUX, Judge.

J.R., a minor child, and his mother, L.R., were declared to be a family in need of services by a juvenile court judge on September 13,1996. The judgment was modified on April 18, 1997 pursuant to a Motion to Modify Judgment of Disposition filed by the district attorney’s office, and J.R. was declared to be a child in need of care and placed into the custody of the State of Louisiana, Office of ^Community Services (OCS). The OCS appeals the modification of this judgment, alleging that the juvenile court could not adjudicate J.R. as a child in need of care by modifying the unrelated judgment. Moreover, it asserted that the due process rights of J.R. and L.R. were violated.

We find that the trial judge improperly modified a judgment of a family in need of services disposition into a child in need of care disposition and, consequently, improperly transferred custody of J.R. to the Office of Community Services. We, therefore, reverse.

I.

ISSUES

The issues pertinent to our resolution of this matter are:

1. whether a judgment of disposition of a family in need of services can be modified by motion into a disposition of a child in need of care; and
2. whether a juvenile’s physical custody can be transferred from a parent to a state agency without holding a contradictory hearing and without the parent and the juvenile being represented by counsel.

II.

FACTS

On September 9,1996, the State of Louisiana, through the Calcasieu Parish District Attorney’s Office, instituted proceedings in the interest of thirteen year old J.R, asserting that J.R. and his mother, L.R., were a [868]*868family in need of services. The petition alleged, as a requisite ground for establishing that the family was in need of services, that J.R. was habitually truant or had willfully and repeatedly violated school rules. See La.Ch.Code art. 730(1). This matter was brought before the trial court because J.R. was in violation of the Informal Family Services Plan Agreement 13that he and his mother had entered into on July 25,1996, in place of court intervention for an alleged assault and battery upon his mother and grandmother. It described problems associated with the child as “ungovernability, attempted suicide, school problems, [and] emotional behavior disorders.”

Dwight Moncrief of the Office of Probation orally advised the judge of factors which, in his opinion, explained J.R.’s misbehavior and troubles. He described J.R. as a diabetic, with an enlarged heart, serious circulatory problems, and an ulcerated stomach. He further stated that J.R. had Bell’s Palsy and had been diagnosed as being severely depressed. Consequently, J.R. made two serious attempts at suicide and suffered from an identity crisis which resulted in him getting involved in trouble many times.

The probation officer added that J.R.’s mother was also diabetic and suffered the loss of a leg the previous year. In addition, she had also been diagnosed as being clinically depressed and had been hospitalized numerous times since her surgery. J.R.’s father is incarcerated in a Texas prison as a result of a murder conviction, and according to J.R.’s probation officer, J.R.’s only other family actor is his maternal grandmother. Unfortunately, she no longer lives with J.R. and his mother because of physical and verbal confrontations with J.R. She now lives with her son.

The child and his mother were said to have been living at the time of the hearing in an isolated part of the parish and without transportation. The officer stated that the family depends on others for transportation and are in such a location that emergency services cannot readily see to their needs.

A recommendation to adjudicate the juvenile and his mother as a family in need of services so that they could be placed on official judicial supervision was ^accepted by the court. A judgment of disposition was rendered that day in which J.R. was declared a truant, L.R. was allowed to maintain parental custody, and J.R. was placed on probation under the supervision of the Calcasieu Probation Office with specific conditions for a period of time not to exceed his eighteenth birthday. The judge orally ordered that the Office of Community Services seek placement for long term treatment and care of J.R. The Office of Community Services was named in the petition as a party of interest, but there was no representative present at the hearing.

On April 18, 1997, the district attorney’s office filed a Motion to Modify the Judgment of Disposition. The hearing was scheduled and held on that day in the presence of J.R., his mother, grandmother, and a cousin. The motion stated that J.R. had not been placed in a group home setting as the court had previously ordered. It was asserted that the Calcasieu Parish Juvenile Office was currently aware of a vacancy at the Methodist Group Home in New Orleans, but had been advised that a placement of a juvenile pursuant to a delinquency proceeding could not be made, and that placement could only be taken from the State of Louisiana, Office of Community Services. Consequently, the motion at issue prayed for a hearing to be held for consideration of a modification of the previous judgment of disposition in which J.R. and his mother were declared to be a family in need of services. The purpose of the modification was to have J.R. declared as a child in need of care and thereafter, to have him placed in the physical custody of the Office of Community Services so that he could be placed at the Methodist Home.

The attorney for the OCS orally objected to the motion. He stated that there had never been an adjudication of J.R. as a child in need of care, and that the OCS could not take custody of a child nor place the child unless there had been such an adjudication. OCS asserted that the current proceedings were inappropriate for an ^adjudication of J.R. as a child in need of care because the correct procedure required the filing of a [869]*869petition and that a full contradictory hearing be held.

J.R.’s probation officer, Dwight Moncrief, informed the court of the history of the ease and of J.R.’s current situation. He stated that the child was currently living with his mother at Harbor House, a home for disabled adults. J.R.’s mother had spent approximately one month or more in the hospital over the last three or four months suffering from heart problems, and was unable to care for herself any longer. He essentially stated that J.R. had been left without adequate supervision and care, and that it was uncertain how long the present living situation would last. Mr. Moncrief further stated that placement of J.R. in a group home setting had been recommended as a result of evaluations by numerous doctors, and because Methodist Home had advised that it could only reserve the bed for one day, immediate action was necessary.

OCS contradicted these statements by alleging that it was aware of two beds currently available at the Methodist Home earmarked for placements from the Office of Youth Development. It was, therefore, unnecessary for the court to place the child through the Office of Community Services. The assistant district attorney argued that he was unaware of such a situation and continued to urge the modification of the judgment of disposition.

The judge granted the motion to modify the previous disposition, declared J.R. to be a child in need of care, and placed J.R.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
704 So. 2d 866, 97 La.App. 3 Cir. 791, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 2833, 1997 WL 757992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jr-v-louisiana-department-of-community-services-lactapp-1997.