State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Walen

775 P.2d 884, 97 Or. App. 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 14, 1989
Docket87-327; CA A46712
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 775 P.2d 884 (State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Walen) 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. Walen, 775 P.2d 884, 97 Or. App. 151 (Or. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

DEITS, J.

Mother challenges a juvenile court order committing her child to the legal custody of Children’s Services Division (CSD). She contends that the court erred in finding jurisdiction, in awarding custody to CSD and in refusing to allow mother’s witnesses to testify at the dispositional hearing.

The child in this case was born in May, 1987, in a ditch along a highway between Eugene and Cougar Hot Springs. When paramedics arrived at the scene, they found mother and child in the back of a van, wrapped in a sheet. Mother did not want the assistance of the paramedics and would not allow them to examine the baby, even though she believed that the child was three months premature. She told them that she wanted to take the child to the hot springs and to bathe there with him, because she was “a kindred spirit with whales and porpoises,” and she and her child needed to be in the water. The paramedics tried to talk her out of taking the baby to the hot springs, expressing concern that the water was not chlorinated and could cause infections in mother and baby, and that the hot water would not be healthy for such a young baby. Mother was determined to go to the hot springs and became increasingly agitated.

The paramedics decided that they could not leave mother, who seemed irrational and incapable of good judgment, and her newborn baby stranded on the rural roadside and tried to get her to come with them. When she resisted, they took the baby from her, cut the umbilical cord and restrained her. Mother and baby were taken to Sacred Heart General Hospital emergency room. At the hospital, both doctors who examined mother concluded that she was mentally disturbed. Dr. Johnson, who saw her in the emergency room, believed that she was schizophrenic. Dr. Friedrich, who conducted a mental examination of mother, agreed that she was either schizophrenic or suffering from manic depression. Friedrich concluded that her judgment was impaired, that she was delusional and that she was unable to care for herself or her child. He was afraid that she would “do something bizarre to herself.” The baby was taken from her and mother was hospitalized for four days and then released to friends.

On August 4, 1987, a hearing was held, pursuant to ORS 419.500, to determine if the juvenile court should assume [154]*154jurisdiction of the child. At that hearing, Dr. Freedman, a psychologist, testified concerning mother’s mental condition. He first saw mother in November, 1986, six months before the birth of her child. She apparently went to see him at the urging of friends to obtain a psychiatric evaluation in order to qualify for Social Security benefits. He concluded, at that time, that mother was either suffering from a bipolar disorder or a schizophrenic disorder and that it was fairly severe. Freedman testified that persons with schizophrenic disorders experience reality differently from others and may not recognize a dangerous situation. He stated that, although bipolar disorders are usually cyclical in nature, with periods where the person is seriously ill and others where the person is able to cope, mother apparently had been ill for many years with no periods of remission. He concluded that she urgently needed treatment. However, she was unwilling to obtain treatment. Mother did receive SSI disability benefits because of her mental illness.

Freedman next saw mother when CSD sent her to him for an evaluation after the birth of her child. He attempted to conduct a more in-depth evaluation, but mother was unable to cope with the testing involved and it had to be discontinued. Instead, he questioned mother about her life and her plans for her child. However, she was unable to focus on any subject without wandering off into unrelated topics. Freedman continued to believe that she suffered from a serious mental disorder and that she needed treatment. He believed that mother had difficulty with impulse control, suffered from delusions of grandeur and had no insight into her impact on her surroundings. He concluded that she was not capable of caring for a small child, and he recommended that she should not be permitted to visit the child unless accompanied by another adult.

Testimony was also received at the jurisdictional hearing from one of the paramedics involved in the birth, two friends of mother and mother.1 Apparently, mother has been [155]*155unable to hold a job for many years because of her mental illness. She has been supported by friends and, recently, has lived on Social Security benefits. She had not had a permanent residence for many years. Instead, she has lived with friends or, as she was doing when her baby was born, in the back of a van. Just before the jurisdictional hearing, she obtained an apartment, purchased items for the care of the [156]*156baby and began therapy with a psychologist. According to all the witnesses, mother was clean and healthy, despite her unusual manner of dress.

On August 26, 1987, the trial court found that it had jurisdiction over the child and continued the matter for disposition. After the court found jurisdiction, CSD implemented a parenting program and scheduled regular visitation with the child, one visit a week in the CSD office that focused on parent training and one a week in mother’s home. The visits went very poorly. Mother was either unwilling or unable to follow instructions concerning parenting. The child apparently was upset at the visits and remained upset for days after them, crying and refusing to eat.

On November 10, 1987, a dispositional hearing was held. At that time, the trial court refused to hear testimony from three witnesses subpenaed by mother. The court did allow mother’s attorney to make a statement, summarizing the testimony that the witnesses would have given. Generally, they would have testified about their observations of how mother interacted with the child during the weekly visits: that she would feed and change him, play with him and bring toys. The court concluded that the child should be in custody of CSD and recommended that the child be placed in foster care.

1. Mother assigns as error the trial court’s determination that it had jurisdiction over the child. A juvenile court may take jurisdiction when the child is “dependent for care and support on a public * * * agency that needs the services of the court in planning for the best interest of the [child].” ORS 419.476(l)(d). Proof of facts supporting jurisdiction must be established by a preponderance of the evidence. ORS 419.500(1). The petition by the state alleged that the child was dependent for care and support on a public child care agency, CSD, because his mother was emotionally unstable and unable to parent him adequately and the father’s circumstances and whereabouts were currently unknown. All of the mental health experts who examined mother concluded that she has a severe mental disorder. The evidence of her behavior supports their conclusion. On de novo review, we find that mother was unable to parent the child adequately at the time of the hearing and that the child was dependent on CSD for [157]*157care and support. The court correctly found the child to be within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
775 P.2d 884, 97 Or. App. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-juvenile-department-v-walen-orctapp-1989.