State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. S. W.

218 P.3d 558, 231 Or. App. 311, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1516
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 7, 2009
Docket2007804041; Petition Number 105253; A141009
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 218 P.3d 558 (State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. S. W.) 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. S. W., 218 P.3d 558, 231 Or. App. 311, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1516 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

ORTEGA, J.

Mother appeals from a judgment terminating her parental rights to her older child, J.1 We review the record de novo, ORS 419A.200(6)(b),2 and affirm.

Mother, who has been diagnosed with a personality disorder, concedes that she was not a fit parent at the time of the termination hearing, which took place about 21 months after J was removed from her care. She contends, however, that the juvenile court erred in ordering termination because the Department of Human Services (DHS) — by failing to provide individual mental health therapy and, more specifically, dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) — failed to make reasonable efforts to enable J’s return to her care. She also contends that, because she could complete DBT within a year, J could be returned to her within a reasonable time and that termination is not in J’s best interests.3 For the reasons set forth below, we reject those contentions.

We begin with a recitation of the facts, with a view toward DHS’s efforts to enable J’s return to mother’s care. J was born in March 2006. DHS became involved with the family a year later, after receiving a report that mother was using controlled substances and that there was domestic violence in the home. According to mother’s trial testimony, she was using alcohol, as well as Vicodin and other medications that had not been prescribed to her. She and father were engaging in mutual domestic violence — yelling, hitting, kicking, and throwing things. Mother downplayed the effect of this violence on J, commenting that “he just slept through it.”

Because DHS continued to receive reports of domestic violence and drug and alcohol use and mother refused to [314]*314cooperate with an assessment, J was removed from mother and father in mid-March 2007 and placed in foster care. At the time of the removal, he had a black eye, for which mother had no explanation. A few weeks later, J was placed with his paternal grandparents, where he remained at the time of the termination hearing. Mother did not appear at the May hearing at which the juvenile court took jurisdiction. The following month, however, mother and DHS entered into an agreement requiring her to participate in parenting classes, treatment for drug and alcohol abuse, an anger management program, and a psychological evaluation, as well as to obtain safe and suitable housing, maintain regular visitation and regular contact with DHS, comply with the mutual restraining orders between mother and father, and sign releases of information.

Since that time, mother has never failed to engage in a service that DHS has asked of her and has never requested a service that DHS has failed to provide. Mother completed a 15-month anger management program and participated in a parenting program for about six months. She also participated in a program of drug and alcohol treatment before shifting to a group with a focus on safety from domestic violence, which she attended for several months.

Mother apparently derived very limited benefits from those services, however. Her caseworker, Wagner, thought that mother did not understand, despite repeated explanations, that DHS expected to see participation in services result in changes and improved understanding. Wagner worked extensively with mother’s attorney’s assistant “to figure out what it is that we could do to help [mother], because we couldn’t figure out exactly what it was that was really kind of hindering her progress, and unfortunately there wasn’t anything else that we could do.”

Soon after mother began participating in services, providers reported concerns about her erratic behavior and questioned her ability to benefit from services.4 The [315]*315providers’ reports were consistent with Wagner’s own observations. At first, Wagner believed that mother’s behavior could primarily be attributable to substance abuse, so “we were kind of waiting for some of the behavior to subside, and it didn’t. And so we really kind of I think determined that it was primarily related to mental health.”5

In October, seven months after J was taken into care, mother underwent a psychological evaluation by Dr. Basham. As pertinent here, Basham diagnosed a personality disorder not otherwise specified, with narcissistic and borderline features, as well as intermittent explosive disorder6 and a rule-out diagnosis of substance abuse. He [316]*316explained that personality disorders are “long-lived, persistent, difficult-to-treat problems, and they’re also pervasive. They’re not simply one narrow area of functioning, but are part of the whole broad picture of the individual’s functioning.” The specific dysfunctional traits related to a personality disorder may be measured by psychological tests, but the tests alone cannot diagnose a personality disorder.

Basham explained that, in the diagnostic process, he looks first at a client’s history to identify problems in functioning. Mother’s family history is painfully chaotic.7 After examining a client’s history, in order to determine which particular disorder or mixture of disorders is the appropriate diagnosis, Basham looks at assessment tests and patterns of behavior. In mother’s case, he saw a high score on grandiosity, which is a good measurement of narcissistic personality traits; he also considered mother’s history of anger management issues, which can be a reflection of both borderline and narcissistic personality traits.

[317]*317Mother’s case was “not the clearest case” as far as determining the nature of her personality disorder. Borderline traits appeared in her history of anger, her inability to regulate emotions, her weak boundaries in relationships (that is, confusing her own needs and desires with other people’s needs and desires), and her poor choices in relationships. Narcissistic traits included mother’s tendency to overestimate her abilities and to disregard the opinions and advice of others and her difficulty with empathy and with recognizing others’ perspectives. Those traits appeared “in deflecting normative social influences and being determined to follow her own wants and desires regardless of what others think” and in anger problems, “where she becomes outraged over having to accommodate the * * * demands, wants, or needs of others.”

Mother had no significant intellectual deficits, though Basham noted that others had reported her erratic behavior and that some of her comments during the evaluation were strange. Although no tests confirmed recent drug abuse by mother, Basham wrote in his report that “[d]rug abuse would be one reason for her unusual demeanor and problems with comprehension in her parenting class a couple of months ago. However, her narcissistic personality traits leave her prone to behave in an unconventional manner * ‡ ‡ ”

In his written evaluation, Basham expressed the view that individualized parenting training would probably benefit mother, that her anger management program was a good resource for her and the service most likely to improve her functioning, and that she should continue with drug treatment and regular UAs. He noted that mother was “not reporting or showing interest in mental health treatment for other personal problems.”

Mother’s strange behaviors continued after the evaluation.

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

Related

Department of Human Services v. D. L. H.
284 P.3d 1233 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2012)
State Ex Rel. Juv. Dept. v. Sw
218 P.3d 558 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 P.3d 558, 231 Or. App. 311, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-juvenile-department-v-s-w-orctapp-2009.