State Ex Rel. JT v. J.M.

56 So. 3d 1009, 2010 WL 5177689
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 2010
Docket46,090-JAC
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 56 So. 3d 1009 (State Ex Rel. JT v. J.M.) 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. JT v. J.M., 56 So. 3d 1009, 2010 WL 5177689 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

STEWART, J.

12J.M., the biological father of J.T., appeals a judgment terminating his parental rights. Finding no merit to his assignments of error, we affirm.

FACTS

J.T., a girl born January 10, 2008, was placed in the custody of the Department of Social Services (“the department”) pursuant to an Instanter Removal Order dated May 28, 2007. The child was removed from the custody of her mother after the department investigated a report that the mother tested positive for cocaine and marijuana. Both the mother and J.T. tested positive for marijuana at the time of J.T.’s birth, and the department had provided services to the mother for substance abuse since February 1, 2008.

| ¾At the time of J.T.’s removal from parental custody, the mother was living in a trailer with J.T.’s biological father, J.M., and some of his friends. Though J.M. told the department that he wanted J.T. to stay with him, J.M. had a history with the department. His history included a valid report of physical abuse of a child, N.H., in March 2007; a valid report of death/neglect of the same child in July 2007, when he wandered away from his home and was *1011 killed on a highway; a valid report of dependency due to substance abuse which resulted in his daughter, M.H., being placed in foster care; and at the same time as the previous matter, a valid report involving lack of adequate supervision which resulted in the death of a four-month old baby.

J.T. was adjudicated a child in need of care and placed in a foster home. Though no father was listed on J.T.’s birth certificate, a DNA test positively identified J.M. as her biological father. J.M. attended the initial Family Team Conference on June 27, 2008, when a case plan with the goal of reunification was developed. The case plan identified drug abuse and the failure to provide a safe home as the barriers to J.M.’s reunification with J.T. The case plan goals required J.M. to recognize these barriers, acknowledge his substance abuse problems, maintain stable emotional health and well-being, and cooperate with the | department in working toward a permanent plan for J.T. To achieve these goals, J.M. was required to complete a substance abuse assessment and submit to random drug screens, remain alcohol and drug free, submit to a psychological evaluation, attend parenting classes, abstain from all criminal activity, support J.T. in her foster care placement and help contribute to the cost of J.T.’s care, bring age-appropriate activities to interact with her on family visits, keep the department informed of his whereabouts, and provide the names of relatives for possible placement in the event of no reunification between J.T. and either parent.

The record shows little to no attempt by J.M. to comply with his ease plan and achieve the goal of reunification. On December 12, 2008, the district court signed an order approving the hearing officer’s proposed case review judgment, which concluded that J.M. was not complying with the case plan and recommended that the new case plan goal of reunification/adoption for J.T. be approved. The goal of reunification/adoption was approved by judgment dated June 11, 2009, rendered in open court following the permanency hearing. J.M. did not appeal.

IfiOn August 7, 2009, the district court rendered an order approving the voluntary surrender of parental rights by J.T.’s mother. Thereafter, the trial court approved the permanent case plan goal of adoption for J.T. in a case review judgment rendered November 2, 2009, and a permanency judgment rendered in open court on April 26, 2010. No appeal was taken by J.M. from either judgment.

The petition for termination of J.M.’s parental rights was filed on May 5, 2010. The alleged grounds for termination included abandonment due to J.M.’s failure to provide significant support and maintain significant contact with J.T. for a period of six months, lack of substantial compliance with the case plan, and inability to care for a child due to incarceration along with failure to provide a reasonable plan of care other than foster care. La. Ch. C. art. 1015(4), (5), and (6).

Only Cammie Bargainer, J.T.’s foster care worker, testified at the termination hearing. In addressing J.M.’s failure to achieve his case plan goals, Bargainer related that J.M. did not submit to a substance abuse assessment that was scheduled for July 8, 2008. Though he took one random drug test, which was negative, he did not respond to further notices from the department. J.M. did not keep the department advised of his whereabouts. He had been in jail three months before Bargainer [(¡found out about his imprisonment from his wife, D.H. Bargainer also testified that prior to going to jail on September 30, 2008, J.M. attended only two out of 16 scheduled weekly visits with J.T. While in *1012 jail, he did not contact the department about J.T. Even upon his release in November 2009, he did not visit J.T. Though he met with Bargainer about his other child in foster care, he did not ask about J.T. He provided no gifts or money for J.T.

With regard to whether J.M. provided the department with a plan of care other than foster care, Bargainer testified that J.M. gave her the name of his brother as a possible placement for J.T. However, the placement was not suitable because J.M. and D.H. were living with him at the time. While in jail, J.M. identified only D.H. as a potential placement. Because D.H. and J.M. had a child together and that child was in foster care, placement with D.H. was unsuitable.

The department introduced the various judgments pertaining to J.T.’s removal from parental custody, child in need of care adjudication, case reviews, and permanency hearings, along with the approved case plans. Evidence also included certified bills of information and minutes establishing the following criminal history for J.M.:

1. A bill of information filed May 16, 2007, charging J.M. and D.H. |7with a violation of La. R.S. 14:93, cruelty to a juvenile, to which J.M. entered a guilty plea on February 26, 2008, and received a suspended sentence of two years at hard labor and was placed on two years’ active probation.
2. A bill of information filed January 29, 2008, charging J.M. with a violation of La. R.S. 40:967(C), possession of a Schedule II drug, to which J.M. entered a guilty plea on June 24, 2008, and received a sentence of four years at hard labor on September 30, 2008. His conviction and sentence were affirmed on appeal.
3. A bill - of information filed January 20, 2010, charging J.M. with a violation of La. R.S. 14:35.3, domestic abuse battery of D.H., to which J.M. entered a guilty plea to the reduced charge of simple battery on April 14, 2010, and received a suspended sentence of 6 months in jail with one year of active supervised probation.

Based on his arrest for domestic abuse battery, J.M.’s probation officer filed a motion to revoke probation stemming from J.M.’s conviction for cruelty to a juvenile. On June 15, 2010, the district court revoked J.M.’s probation and ordered him to serve the original sentence consecutive to any other sentence. Bargainer testified that J.M. was now serving six years in prison due to his probation revocation.

J.M. offered no evidence at the termination hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
56 So. 3d 1009, 2010 WL 5177689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jt-v-jm-lactapp-2010.