State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. J. L. M.

184 P.3d 1203, 220 Or. App. 93, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 645
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 14, 2008
Docket9302806193; 103249; A136466
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 184 P.3d 1203 (State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. J. L. M.) 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. J. L. M., 184 P.3d 1203, 220 Or. App. 93, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 645 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

ORTEGA, J.

Father appeals a judgment terminating his parental rights to his now eight-year-old son. Mother’s parental rights were terminated before the trial, and, accordingly, mother is not a party to this case. We review de novo, giving considerable weight to the juvenile court’s assessment of the credibility of father and the various witnesses. ORS 419A.200(6); State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Geist, 310 Or 176, 194, 796 P2d 1193 (1990). As discussed in greater detail below, father had minimal contact with child over the years since child’s removal at age two and did not engage in services for the first two years after removal, until father’s illegal drug use and other criminal behavior resulted in his incarceration for the better part of three years. Although he did engage in some services while in prison, father’s absence from a significant portion of child’s fife and — in light of his history of drug use, criminal behavior, problems managing his anger, and general instability — his failure to engage meaningfully in services during most of the time that child has been out of his care, particularly on his release from prison, constitutes conduct that renders him unfit and causes serious detriment to child. For those reasons, and because father’s conduct and testimony demonstrate that he cannot provide minimally adequate care to child, who has significant special needs, we affirm.

The events pertinent to our analysis occurred over many years. We begin with a brief overview. Father has a history of drug abuse dating back to his teenage years. His relationship with mother, which began in 1993, was marked by domestic violence and by at least some neglect of child’s older siblings. Child was bom in 2000, and he and his siblings were removed from the parents’ home in 2002, at a time when father was using methamphetamine and the family home was unsanitary and unsafe. Mother engaged in services, and child was returned to her from 2003 until 2005, when child was hospitalized for serious behavioral problems. For two years after child’s removal, father failed to engage in services or to complete drug treatment and had minimal contact with child. Ultimately, he committed a series of crimes that resulted in his incarceration between 2004 and 2006. He [96]*96did not have any direct contact with child for more than four years before trial.

While in prison, father successfully completed a drug treatment program. After his release from prison, however, he failed to engage in recommended aftercare, failed to participate in a parenting class, and lied to his parole officer about whether he was doing aftercare and urinalysis tests (UAs). He was only intermittently employed and failed to maintain contact with service providers. Trial occurred six months after father’s release from prison and five years after child was first taken into custody by the Department of Human Services (DHS). The juvenile court found that father was unfit and terminated his parental rights.

We turn to a more detailed examination of the facts. Because father characterizes his drug use and criminal conduct as a brief interlude in an otherwise law-abiding life and relies on that characterization in support of his contention that he has addressed his only impediment to safe parenting, we begin with his life before child’s birth. We then consider events after child’s birth and father’s conduct during the many years that child has been out of his care, before and after father’s incarceration, and finally discuss child’s condition and needs.

Father was born in 1968. He started drinking in his early teens and started using cocaine frequently around age 15. His drug use during his teenage years also included marijuana, LSD, and hallucinogenic mushrooms. He began having legal troubles in his late teens and early 20s. At ages 18 and 20, he drove while intoxicated, resulting eventually in convictions for driving while under the influence of intoxicants (DUII). The year after the second such incident, he was convicted of two counts of negotiating a bad check. According to father, around that time he did residential treatment because there were warrants for his arrest and police “couldn’t come and arrest me at the treatment center because of confidentiality. So I checked into the treatment center, and [my father] took care of some of my legal situations.” Father testified that he learned from the program and that, for four months after it, he saw a psychologist, who concluded that “there was nothing that he could do for me, that I was fine.”

[97]*97Father committed another DUII at age 22, resulting in a conviction in 1991. He participated in another drug and alcohol treatment program in order to regain his driving privileges. Father testified that he also was “irresponsible on making court dates” when he was in his late teens and early 20s but became more responsible such that “there’s very few failure to appears in the last 10,15 years.”

Father and mother met in the summer of 1993 and soon started living together. At that time father was, by his own description, “a partially functioning drug addict and alcoholic” who “worked and functioned and made a good salary and owned [a] home.” Mother was not using drugs at all.

At times, child’s older siblings — mother’s son, Z, born in 1992, and mother’s and father’s daughter, N, bom in 1994 — did not receive proper care. In 1995, when police investigated an injury to Z that occurred while he was with a babysitter, they found that the family home was extremely dirty and was characterized by safety hazards for the two young children. Police called the child abuse hotline but did not remove Z and N because mother’s parents offered to take care of them. Two years later, father’s mother, Black, reported to police that she had observed patches of missing hair on N’s head and that N’s shoulder had been dislocated. Father testified in the current proceeding that he could not remember whether he had then admitted to dislocating N’s shoulder but minimized the significance of any injury, remembering vaguely that N’s shoulder is “almost like a double jointed elbow that snaps out of place, and it just went right back into place.”

Sometime in the late 1990s, not long before child’s birth, father began frequent use of methamphetamine. He admits that he used about $50 worth of methamphetamine daily by 2000 and 2001. He attributes his methamphetamine use, in part, to his dysfunctional relationship with mother and to her unwillingness to do any housework, indicating that, because mother “had a really bad depression, laziness problem, * * * somewhere along the way I made a wrong decision, but I tried to get her motivated by getting her to use some drugs, too.” After equipment worth $80,000 was stolen [98]*98from his business in 2001, father “gave up”; his drug problem worsened, and he started a downward spiral.

Child was born, prematurely, in March 2000, with a diagnosis of fetal alcohol syndrome and suspected prenatal drug exposure.

Eight months later, father obtained a restraining order against mother. At trial, he testified that he and mother verbally abused each other, but that there were only three incidents of physical violence between them, with mother being the aggressor in two of those incidents. He thought that the children might be sensitized to confrontations between adults as a result of the arguments. After father obtained a restraining order, mother moved out for about a month.

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

Related

Department of Human Services v. M. L. M.
388 P.3d 1226 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)
Department of Human Services v. S. J. M.
388 P.3d 417 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)
Department of Human Services v. T. S.
340 P.3d 142 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2014)
Department of Human Services v. S. W.
340 P.3d 675 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2014)
State Ex Rel. Dhs v. Als
209 P.3d 817 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2009)
State ex rel. Department of Human Services v. A. L. S.
209 P.3d 817 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2009)
State Ex Rel. Dhs v. Dfw
201 P.3d 226 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2009)
State ex rel. Department of Human Services v. D. F. W.
201 P.3d 226 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2009)
State Ex Rel. Juv Dept. v. Jlm
184 P.3d 1203 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 P.3d 1203, 220 Or. App. 93, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-juvenile-department-v-j-l-m-orctapp-2008.