State Ex Rel. Paul B. v. Hill

496 S.E.2d 198, 201 W. Va. 248, 1997 W. Va. LEXIS 221
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1997
Docket24438
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 496 S.E.2d 198 (State Ex Rel. Paul B. v. Hill) 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. Paul B. v. Hill, 496 S.E.2d 198, 201 W. Va. 248, 1997 W. Va. LEXIS 221 (W. Va. 1997).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice:

In this original proceeding for a writ of prohibition, the petitioners, Paul and Chris B., 1 request this Court to prohibit the respondent judge, the Honorable George W. Hill, Jr., Judge of the Circuit Court of Wood County, from enforcing his August 20, 1997, order. In that order, Judge Hill concluded that the respondents, Pete and Cynthia L. S., 2 should receive the legal and physical custody of the respondent children, Natasha Colette B., Anatoli Josef B., Alevhnia Marie B., and Olya Tess B., pending further investigation by the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources. The circuit .court deemed further inquiry appropriate given the S family’s prior allegations that the B family had abandoned their four adoptive children by placing them in respite care with the S family and by making arrangements to re-place the children through the Texas adoption agency through which they had adopted them. We issued a rule to show cause. We now grant as moulded the writ of prohibition.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The facts underlying this proceeding began in approximately May, 1997. At that time, Paul and Chris B., having earlier decided to adopt four children from Russia, traveled to that country to meet their soon-to-be adoptive children and to finalize the adoption arrangements. 3 Throughout the adoption process, the B family had worked with the Gladney Center, an international adoption agency located in Fort Worth, Texas, and Gladney representatives had assured them that the Russian children would have no substantial emotional problems. 4 On May *251 15,1997, the Bs’ adoption of the four siblings, Natasha Colette, Anatoli Josef, Alevhnia Marie, and Olya Tess, 5 was finalized in Russia. After retrieving the children from the orphanage in which they had been residing, the Bs and their four Russian children resided temporarily in Russia, first with a Russian host family and, later, in a youth hostel, to permit the new family unit to become acquainted with one another before returning to the United States. The Bs claim that once the adoption had been finalized, the orphanage informed them that Natasha had exhibited some anti-social behavior and had had occasional outbursts. While residing in Russia, the Bs experienced difficulty interacting with the children, and the children would not obey them.

Upon their return to Parkersburg, West Virginia, the Bs and their four Russian children were reunited with the Bs’ other children. 6 The Bs claim that, from the beginning, the relationship between the four Russian siblings and the Bs’ other children was strained, at best. In this regard, the Bs indicate that the Russian children acted violently towards themselves, each other, and the other B children, would not obey, and could not be disciplined. After meeting with a family counselor in early July, 1997, the B family learned that the Russian siblings likely suffered from “attachment displacement disorder,” an emotional disturbance frequently diagnosed in children who have been adopted from orphanages in foreign countries. The counselor also opined that the Russian children may or may not ever completely recover from this disorder and that the B family had little hope of establishing a cohesive family that would include these four siblings.

At this juncture, the Bs concluded that the Gladney Center had misrepresented the emotional and mental condition of the Russian children. 7 Determining that they could not continue to jeopardize their family stability and the safety of their other children, 8 the Bs pursued the option of relinquishing their parental rights to the Russian siblings and re-placing them with the Gladney Center for a second adoption. The arrangements with the Gladney Center apparently have contemplated that, unlike the B family situated in Parkersburg, West Virginia, Gladney, in Texas, can secure the appropriate treatment for children with such severe attachment displacement disorder. These preparations also contemplate the continuation of the sibship unit by placing all four children in the same adoptive home.

Toward the end of July, 1997, Mr. B was scheduled to take an out-of-town weekend trip. Based in large part upon Mrs. Bs’ inability to control their newly adopted children and fearing for her own safety and that of her remaining children, the Bs sought temporary respite care 9 for their Russian children during Mr. Bs’ absence. The B family, having contacted Burlington United Methodist Family Services, Inc., was advised *252 to contact the Ss to see if they could provide such care. Mr. and Mrs. S, who have provided respite care to numerous children, 10 agreed to temporarily house the Bs’ four Russian children from Thursday, July 17, 1997, to Sunday, July 20,1997. 11

On July 17, 1997, the B family delivered their four Russian children to the S household. 12 The S family indicates that, while the children exhibited some emotional disturbance, they were not violent or in any other way disobedient during their stay. On the following Sunday, July 20,1997, the B family requested the S family to extend the respite care, to which the Ss agreed. The next day, Mrs. S contacted the Gladney Center and inquired whether she and her husband could adopt these children. Gladney, in turn, contacted the B family who strongly opposed the proposal, particularly because they were purchasing a house in the same subdivision where the S family lives and feared the consequences of living in such close proximity to these children. In addition, the B s disapproved permanent adoptive placement of the children in the Parkersburg, West Virginia, area because this region is not equipped with services to meet the needs of children with attachment displacement disorder. 13

On Wednesday, July 23,1997, the B family traveled to the S household to pick up their four children, as the Bs

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Bluebook (online)
496 S.E.2d 198, 201 W. Va. 248, 1997 W. Va. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-paul-b-v-hill-wva-1997.