STATE EX REL. KUTIL v. Blake

679 S.E.2d 310, 223 W. Va. 711, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 51
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 2009
Docket34618
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 679 S.E.2d 310 (STATE EX REL. KUTIL v. Blake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE EX REL. KUTIL v. Blake, 679 S.E.2d 310, 223 W. Va. 711, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 51 (W. Va. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

By means of this original jurisdiction action, Kathryn Kutil and Cheryl Hess (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Petitioners”) seek a writ of prohibition to bar enforcement of the November 21, 2008, order 1 of the Circuit Court of Fayette County. Petitioners specifically are seeking to prevent the female infant, Baby Girl C. (hereinafter “B.G.C.”), 2 from being removed from their foster home. B.G.C. was placed in Petitioners’ home as a foster child by the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (hereinafter “DHHR”) 3 shortly after the child’s birth. Petitioners are a same sex couple whose home had been approved by DHHR for both foster care and adoption. The removal of the infant was ordered at the conclusion of an abuse and neglect permanency hearing at which the lower court accepted the recommendation that B.G.C.’s case be transferred to the adoption unit of DHHR. In its removal order, the lower court directed that B.G.C. be moved from her temporary foster home and placed in a household interested in adoption that is a “traditional family” having a mother and a father rather than a household headed by a same sex couple or single person. In consideration of the arguments of the parties, 4 copies of court documents supplied with the briefs as exhibits and applicable legal authorities, we grant the relief requested.

I. Factual and Procedural Background 5

When B.G.C. was born on December 8, 2007, she tested positive for the presence of cocaine and oxycodone in her bloodstream. On this basis, while B.G.C. was still in the hospital DHHR instituted abuse and neglect proceedings against the biological mother, 6 and was granted custody of B.G.C. on December 13, 2007. At the same time, the *715 court appointed a guardian ad litem (hereinafter “GAL”) for B.G.C. Upon discharge of the infant from the hospital on December 24, 2007, DHHR placed B.G.C. directly into Petitioners’ home, which had been approved previously by DHHR for both foster parenting and adoption and was then serving as a foster home for several other children. 7

A motion to remove B.G.C. from the foster home was filed by the infant’s GAL on January 24, 2008. 8 In support of his motion, the GAL maintained that removal was necessary even though the home appears “to be comfortable and physically safe for the infant respondent ... [he nonetheless believed] that the best interest of the child is not to be raised, short term or long term, in a homosexual environment and that the same is detrimental to the child’s overall welfare and well-being.” DHHR and the foster parents filed responses objecting to the motion. The motion was entertained at a January 31, 2008, hearing at which the lower court granted intervenor status to Petitioners. The February 25, 2008, order issued as a result of this healing reflects that the court determined “not [to] interfere with the current foster care placement at this time” and reserved ruling on the removal motion as well as the GAL’s request for full hearing on the motion.

The child’s biological mother was granted two improvement periods, however, she failed in her efforts to become a fit parent. The biological mother’s parental rights were terminated at a dispositional hearing held on October 8, 2008, which termination is memorialized in a November 5, 2008, order. Shortly following the termination, a multidisciplinary treatment team (hereinafter “MDT”) met to discuss B.G.C.’s future. A “MDT/Status Report” dated October 28, 2008, containing the results of this meeting was submitted to the court. The report reflected that the MDT endorsed the transfer of B.G.C.’s case to DHHR’s regional adoption unit and recommended that B.G.C. remain in Petitioners’ home during the adoption process. The MDT report also related that the team had been informed by the adoption unit supervisor that “there would be no reason for the Adoption Unit to move ... [B.G.C.] due to family members and siblings being previously ruled out [9] .... [and that] the Adoption Unit would be reluctant to ‘uproot’ a child from the only home she knows.” The only member of the MDT who objected to the recommendation was the GAL. Following the release of the MDT report, DHHR issued a permanency plan on October 31, 2008, indicating the department’s position that adoption was in the best interest of B.G.C.

The permanency plan also noted that Petitioners had expressed the desire to adopt B.G.C. followed by a list of reasons why the home would be appropriate for adoption.

A permanency hearing in the abuse and neglect case was held on November 6, 2008, at which the GAL renewed his motion for removal of B.G.C. from a “homosexual home.” The lower court set forth its findings from the initial permanency hearing in a November 12, 2008 order. The order begins with a summary of the positions of the parties and then states the observations and findings of the lower court, including the following:

29. It also appears to the Court that the fairness showed by the Court by allowing the child to remain with the foster parents pending resolution of the case is now being used to support the argument that, since the child is developing bonds with the intervenors, the child should not be removed from the intervenors’ care, and that adoption by the intervenors should be reeom *716 mended without purs[ue]ing adoptive parents which could provide a more traditional home setting.
Hs X H: * * X
31. The Court FINDS that children need both mother and father and that avenues to such a result should at the least be explored by the DHHR. The Court FINDS that untraditional family settings should not be the first and only route taken by the DHHR when searching for a permanent/adoptive placement for a child.

The November 12 order also includes the following conclusions of law:

4. The Court CONCLUDES that Circuit Courts are not required to accept the Permanency Plan of the DHHR and may either accept, reject or modify said recommendation depending on whether or not the Court finds it to be in the best interests of the child at issue.
5. The Court CONCLUDES that the polar star in all matters involving children is what is in the best interest of the child.
* * * * * *
7.The Court CONCLUDES that the standards and guidelines in the Rules applicable for permanency placement review hearings are also applicable and should be considered during the initial permanency plan hearings. Pursuant to these standards and guidelines imposed upon the Courts, the Court must consider, among other things, the appropriateness of the current placement of the child and whether it is the most family-like setting. See Rule J>l(a)(6).

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Related

In Re: The Child of Daniel M. v. Virginia M.
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725 S.E.2d 182 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
679 S.E.2d 310, 223 W. Va. 711, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kutil-v-blake-wva-2009.