State Ex Rel. Lcb

805 So. 2d 159, 2002 La. LEXIS 16, 2002 WL 48093
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 2002
Docket2001-CJ-2441
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 805 So. 2d 159 (State Ex Rel. Lcb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Lcb, 805 So. 2d 159, 2002 La. LEXIS 16, 2002 WL 48093 (La. 2002).

Opinion

805 So.2d 159 (2002)

STATE in the Interest of L.C.B.

No. 2001-CJ-2441.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

January 15, 2002.

Sherry P. Crain, Baton Rouge, Counsel for Applicant.

*160 Stephen A. Dixon, Robert E. Dille, Baton Rouge, Donald S. Wingerter, Baton Rouge, Lieu T. Vo, Counsel for Respondent.

KIMBALL, Justice.[*]

We granted certiorari to determine whether the juvenile court erred in ordering that a child adjudicated in need of care and placed in the custody of the Department of Social Services be moved from a noncertified placement approved by the Department to a certified foster home. For the following reasons, we conclude that the court was without authority to order the child's movement to a certified foster home and therefore reverse the court's order and remand the case to the juvenile court for further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The minor child, L.C.B., was placed in the legal custody of the State of Louisiana, Department of Social Services, Office of Community Services ("OCS" or "the Department") by an oral instanter order issued by the Juvenile Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge on August 21, 1999. On August 23, 1999, OCS filed a Verified Complaint/Affidavit in Support of an Instanter Order and the court, considering the verified complaint, found that L.C.B. was in need of care, that preventive services had been offered to no avail, that there was a substantial immediate danger which precluded preventive services as an alternative to removal, and that it was necessary that L.C.B. be taken into custody for his protection. Therefore, the court ordered that L.C.B. be placed in the custody of OCS pursuant to La. Ch.C. art. 619.[1] On August 24, 1999, the court held a continued custody hearing in which it was ordered that L.C.B. remain in the custody of OCS pending further orders of the court. Since August 21, 1999, L.C.B. has remained in the legal custody of OCS.

On October 4, 1999, the District Attorney filed a petition seeking to have L.C.B. *161 declared in need of care due to the abuse and neglect of his mother. Subsequently, on March 21, 2000, a hearing was held wherein L.C.B. was adjudicated a child in need of care.

Beginning September 14, 1999, OCS formulated, and the court approved, a series of case plans in which the permanent goal for L.C.B.'s family was reunification. During that time, L.C.B. was placed in the certified foster home of Mr. and Mrs. D. Reports prepared by OCS for various hearings during that time indicate that L.C.B. was hospitalized on different occasions for psychiatric and behavioral problems.

On August 3, 2000, a review hearing pursuant to La. Ch.C. arts. 692 and 702 was held and the case plan approved by the court changed the permanent plan to adoption. Specifically, the juvenile court found that inadequate progress had been made toward alleviating the causes necessitating L.C.B.'s placement in foster care and that reunification was impossible at that time. Therefore, the court rendered judgment decreeing that the plan for permanent placement of L.C.B. was adoption. At this time, L.C.B. was still placed in the certified foster home of Mr. and Mrs. D.

A case plan dated January 10, 2001 indicated for the first time that L.C.B.'s father was Mr. C. and that Mr. C. desired custody of L.C.B.[2] Additionally, the plan stated that OCS began exploring relative placement with transfer of custody to a relative. The plan recited that Mr. C. visited with L.C.B. beginning in November, 2000, and that a home study "confirmed suitable housing and care" for L.C.B. The home study was conducted on the home of Ms. W., L.C.B.'s paternal grandmother with whom Mr. C. lived. Finally, the case plan reported that on January 10, 2001, L.C.B. would begin a thirty-day trial placement with his father and paternal grandmother.[3]

Following a review hearing on May 3, 2001, the juvenile court made a factual finding that OCS had not made reasonable efforts to achieve the permanent plan of adoption and refused to approve the January 10, 2001 case plan as to L.C.B. on the grounds that the plan did not take into account the permanent plan of adoption which had previously been ordered for L.C.B. The court reiterated that adoption was in L.C.B.'s best interest.

On June 27, 2001, L.C.B.'s CASA volunteer wrote a letter to the juvenile court requesting a status conference to address the following issue relating to L.C.B.:

At the May 3, 2001 692/702 Hearing, "ADOPTION" was made the permanent plan for L.C.[B]. L.C.[B.] is currently in the custody of Mr. [C]. OCS informed my CASA supervisor that the New Orleans OCS office would not certify Mr. [C.] as a placement for L.C.[B]. Also, due to Mr. [C's] work schedule, living arrangements, and lack of transportation, L.C.[B.] has not received any academic assistance since April 2001. All parties in this case agree that one of the primary issues in L.C.[B.'s] behavior problems is the fact that he is two years behind academically. This is primarily due to the instability in L.C.[B.]'s life. Also, L.C.[B.] has not visited with his siblings, except at court, in five (5) months. I am requesting that L.C.[B.] be moved from the non-certified home of [Mr. C.] to the certified home of Mr. & *162 Mrs. [D]. This would give L.C.[B.] the opportunity to be with his siblings and be enrolled in an academic program to better prepare him for school this fall. For L.C.[B.] not to receive any academic services for the entire summer is a great disservice to this child.

The status conference requested by this letter was held August 2, 2001, at which time L.C.B. was still placed in Mr. C.'s home. The court stated that it called the status conference because no proceedings for the certification for adoption of L.C.B. had taken place in three months. The court was particularly concerned that school was about to start and wanted L.C.B. established in his placement prior to the beginning of the school year. The court asked OCS to explain why, three months after it had set a permanent plan of adoption, L.C.B. was still placed in a home that was not certified as a foster or adoptive placement. OCS responded that it was working towards achieving the adoption of L.C.B. by attempting to determine whether Mr. C. could qualify as an adoptive parent in light of his desire to adopt L.C.B. and that it had decided that L.C.B. would remain with Mr. C. until the agency could determine whether Mr. C. might qualify as an adoptive parent for L.C.B. OCS reported that a decision on this matter, which appeared to hinge on whether Mr. C. could obtain a waiver of his criminal record, was expected by August 30, 2001. After hearing arguments, the juvenile court found that OCS had failed to make reasonable efforts to achieve the permanent plan of adoption and ordered that L.C.B. be moved within five days to a certified foster home.

OCS filed a notice of intent to seek supervisory writs to the first circuit and the juvenile court signed an order setting a return date for the filing of the writ application. The juvenile court also denied the State's request that it stay its judgment pending final resolution of the application for supervisory writs. The court of appeal denied OCS's request for an emergency stay and denied supervisory writs. In denying writs, the court of appeal noted OCS had made no showing that the juvenile court clearly abused its discretion in ordering that L.C.B. be moved from a noncertified home to a certified foster home "when it did not order [OCS] to move the child to a particular placement setting."

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Bluebook (online)
805 So. 2d 159, 2002 La. LEXIS 16, 2002 WL 48093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lcb-la-2002.