State Ex Rel. Juvenile Department v. Brown

27 P.3d 502, 175 Or. App. 1, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 902
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 27, 2001
Docket3381T, 3383T, 3384T, 3385T, 3386T A105752 (Control), A107994
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 P.3d 502 (State Ex Rel. Juvenile Department v. Brown) 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. Juvenile Department v. Brown, 27 P.3d 502, 175 Or. App. 1, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 902 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*4 EDMONDS, P. J.

This is an appeal of two orders arising out of a juvenile court proceeding that resulted in placements in permanent foster care for mother and father’s five children. ORS 419B.449, ORS 419B.476. The first order, entered in February 1999, ordered that the “children will not be returned to either parent. Order for [State Office for Services to Children and Families (SCF)] to do special recruitment for adoptive resources for children.” Mother appeals from that order. The second order is in the form of a judgment. It resulted from a hearing held in August 1999 and was entered in September 1999 and re-entered in November 1999. In it, the court stated that, “The parents are not a placement resource for the children,” and ordered a permanent foster care placement for each child. Both mother and father appeal from that order. The parties’ appeals have been consolidated for the purposes of this opinion. We dismiss mother’s appeal from the February 1999 order and otherwise affirm.

In May 1994, appellants’ five children were removed from appellants’ home. The petition alleged that appellants have “a serious substance abuse problem which is longstanding,” and that “the parents, as a result of their substance abuse, are unable to provide the care, guidance, and protection necessary for the wellbeing of the children.” The court granted legal custody of the children to 8CF, and they were p 1 aced in foster care, some with a relative and some with foster families. Mother initially entered into treatment for her substance abuse but by November 1994 had relapsed. By October 1995, the court was considering permanent placements for the children. Eventually, all of the children were moved to non relative foster care placements.

By March 1996, neither parent had made enough progress in treatment for their addictions to allow the children to return home. However, by October 1996, both parents had completed drug treatment and were employed. SCF decided to begin reintegrating the children into the parents’ home during November and December 1996. Unfortunately, both parents relapsed into drug abuse before the children could be returned to them.

*5 By May 1997, both parents were again involved in drug treatment. Throughout the remainder of 1997 and early 1998, SCF’s plan for the children continued to be their reunification with their parents. In October 1998, SCF again determined that the children could begin to return to the parents’ home, one child at a time, and arranged with the parents for the return of the oldest daughter on the day before Thanksgiving. Immediately before that occurred, father became intoxicated while all of the children were in appellants’ home for a visit. He passed out, and then later got into an argument with the oldest son. There is evidence in the record that mother may have encouraged the children not to tell anyone about father’s conduct. There is also evidence that mother reported the incident to her attorney and said that she was willing to live separately from father to facilitate the return of the children to her care.

On December 18,1998, the court held a review hearing. Because of the above events, SCF had decided to cancel the return of the oldest daughter to the family home and not to pursue any further plans for the return of the other children. However, SCF was uncertain whether it could find adoptive placements for the children and whether adoption was in the children’s best interests because of their ages and their attachment to their parents. The court gave SCF 45 days to devise a permanent plan for the children. The court made a written finding, as it had in most of its former orders, that ‘all reasonable efforts have been made to prevent or eliminate the need for removal of the children] from the home and it is in the child[ren]’s best interests that they be placed outside the home.” It then ordered a change in the direction of the case to “permanent planning for the children.” Visitation was allowed to continue, and the court set a review hearing for February 1999.

At the February 26 hearing, the court heard testimony from mother and father about their circumstances, from the children’s caseworker, and from a court-appointed special advocate for the children. It also received written reports about the children. It then stated orally that despite the family’s desire to reunify, the case had continued for too long without providing the children any certainty as to their *6 futures, and ruled that “we’re moving to a permanent planning approach rather than reunification approach.” The court’s written order (the February order) provides, “Children will not be returned to either parent. Order for SCF to do special recruitment for adoptive resources for children.” The order contained a box that the court could have checked to make a “reasonable efforts” finding, but the box was left blank. Mother timely appeals from that order, and she argues that the failure of the court to include such a finding renders the order a nullity.

On August 17, 1999, the parties again appeared before the court for a hearing. The parties presented extensive testimony through witnesses and made their arguments for and against placing the children in permanent foster care or adoptive homes. Mother and father continued to urge that the children should eventually be returned to them, while acknowledging that neither of them was presently ready to assume parenting responsibility for them. The court made oral findings that the parents had been given “more than a reasonable opportunity to remedy their defects as parents” and that “SCF has provided reasonable efforts.” It then took the matter under advisement. In a letter opinion dated August 26,1999, the court concluded that the children would not be returned to their parents, that the extended family member proposed by the parents as a placement option would not be further considered, and that the placements found by SCF would be continued. An order (the September order) reflecting the court’s rulings was entered in September and re-entered in November. The September order incorporated the court’s oral findings of fact and conclusions of law at the August hearing and those findings contained in the opinion letter. Both mother and father appeal from that order.

Preliminarily, the state argues that, because the December 1998 order had already ordered SCF to “change [the] direction of the case—change to permanent planning for the children,” the February order is not appealable. The state says that the order

“merely continued the status quo established by the juvenile court in its December 18, 1998 order, which ordered a *7 change in the permanent plan from reunification to permanent placement outside the parental home.”

Mother counters that the order changed the status of the case, because the December order to shift to “permanent planning” did not necessarily mean that the children would never be returned to her, but the February order that “children are not to be returned to parents” did have that effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 P.3d 502, 175 Or. App. 1, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-juvenile-department-v-brown-orctapp-2001.