State Ex Rel. Juvenile Department v. Johnson

997 P.2d 231, 165 Or. App. 147, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 26, 2000
Docket9612-83654; CA A105769
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 997 P.2d 231 (State Ex Rel. Juvenile Department v. Johnson) 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. Johnson, 997 P.2d 231, 165 Or. App. 147, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 113 (Or. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*149 EDMONDS, P. J.

Mother, Amy Johnson, and father, Kurt Johnson, appeal the termination of their parental rights to their six children. We review de novo, ORS 419A.200(5), and reverse.

We begin with a recitation of the facts as we find them to have occurred. On December 26,1996, the Office for Services to Children and Families (SCF) received a referral from a hospital after mother and her newborn child tested positive for marijuana and amphetamine. Mother had delivered the child at home one day before but complications resulted in both being taken to the hospital. On December 27, an SCF caseworker came to the parents’ house to take mother to a preliminary court hearing regarding the newborn. While there, the caseworker found the condition of the home to be unsafe and unsanitary for the remaining five children because of exposed carpet tacks and other sharp edges in the house, extreme clutter and a filthy kitchen. In addition, the children had head lice, were inadequately clothed for cold weather and suffered from inadequate dental care. The parents explained that the electricity had been out for a few days before because of a wind storm, that they were remodeling and that the clutter was due, in part, to their Christmas celebration and a lack of closet space in their older-style home. The other children were taken into custody by SCF as a result of the caseworker’s observation.

At the hearing later that day, the trial court granted SCF temporary custody of all six children. The trial court found probable cause to believe that the children’s condition and circumstances were such as to endanger their welfare due to mother and the newborn’s positive tests for amphetamines and marijuana and the extreme clutter in the house. The newborn was placed in a medical foster home where she has remained. Mother helped arrange for the other five children, ages one through eight years old, to be placed together in a relative’s home, and they have continued to remain together in foster care up to the date of trial in early February 1999.

During 1997, father, to a lesser degree, and mother made some efforts to comply with SCF’s requirements for *150 reunification with their children. On January 7, SCF’s drug and alcohol specialist met with both parents and referred them to a drug treatment program, but neither immediately began treatment. On January 24, 1997, SCF filed an amended petition alleging that the children were within the jurisdiction of the trial court based on the parents’ dependency on controlled substances that impaired their ability to parent the children, a pattern of verbal domestic disputes between the parents that resulted in the children expressing fear of their parents and exposure of the children to unsafe hazardous living conditions. 1 As of February 7, mother had made only half of the scheduled visits with the newborn, and father had visited only once.

In March 1997, mother admitted the allegations in the petition and began outpatient drug treatment that continued through July 1997. In April, mother agreed with an SCF service plan to follow through with a recommended drug and alcohol treatment program, to complete parenting classes after she became stabilized in treatment, to attend counseling with father after both stabilized in treatment, to attend scheduled visits with children, and to clean the home. In June, father admitted to SCF to having verbal domestic disputes with mother, to having a history of substance abuse for which he had not completed treatment and to exposing the children to unsafe conditions in the home. He agreed to a service plan similar to mother’s. In August, the parents’ supervised visits with the children began to increase. Also, mother began an inpatient drug treatment program that lasted until January 1998. Both parents agreed with an SCF service plan to obtain psychological evaluations. In September, mother received a comprehensive psychological evaluation from Dr. Basham.

During 1998, the parents’ compliance with their service plans gradually increased. In January, father began outpatient drug treatment that included a mental health component, and mother entered a second residential drug *151 treatment program. Both successfully completed their programs. Random urinalysis screening showed no relapses into drug usage, and mother continued to attend weekly support meetings after returning home in August.

In addition, both parents separately completed a 20-week parenting class between February and June, attending 19 out of 20 classes and achieving most of the goals established for the program. In April, mother’s parenting counselor observed both parents in a visit with the youngest child and also with three of the other children. She testified at trial that, at that point, the results of the parents’ attempts to apply parenting techniques that they had learned in the classes were mixed. She also testified that mother displayed affection for the children and attempted to place limits on their behavior by restricting the number of their toys and that father interacted playfully with the children. However, she also testified that although mother appropriately placed one of the children in a “time out,” mother had failed to get the child to stay there. Also, father, for a short time, became so focused on completing a puzzle that he did not pay attention to the children and called one child a “jerk” when she accidently stepped on the puzzle.

Father’s parenting consultant testified at trial that she had observed the parents interacting with the newborn, then over a year old, once near the beginning and then again towards the end of their parenting programs. In regard to mother, she testified:

“I observed a lot of positive interaction. There was a lot of positive reinforcement saying, you know, once you did something well, ‘good job,’ and that kind of thing. She really followed the child’s clues and knew * * * what she needed.
«* * * * *
“* * * And she was able at times to tell the father what she thought the child needed.”

As to father, she testified that she saw “real change with his ability to interact with [the child] in a more positive way[,]” that he followed the child’s cues and that she saw the parents working together during the visit.

*152 Father and mother maintained a regular visitation schedule with the children that required over an hour of travel each way at times because the supervised visits all took place outside of the family home. Between April and July, the parents participated in therapeutic visits every week or every other week with the three oldest children. Dr. Torres-Saenz, a clinical psychologist who was working with the children, observed the visits, and he testified that he never saw the parents do anything inappropriate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 P.2d 231, 165 Or. App. 147, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-juvenile-department-v-johnson-orctapp-2000.