State Ex Rel. Pilling v. Lance

464 P.2d 395, 23 Utah 2d 407, 1970 Utah LEXIS 700
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1970
Docket11181
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 464 P.2d 395 (State Ex Rel. Pilling v. Lance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Pilling v. Lance, 464 P.2d 395, 23 Utah 2d 407, 1970 Utah LEXIS 700 (Utah 1970).

Opinion

CALLISTER, Justice.

Donna Lance appeals from a judgment of the Juvenile Court, wherein she was deprived of the guardianship of her three-daughters, Inez, Donna, and RaNona Pill-ing, who were placed with their father, and' was permanently deprived of all parental rights to her son, Cody Earl Peterson, whose guardianship was vested in the State- *409 Department of Public Welfare for placement in a suitable adoptive home.

The court terminated appellant’s parental rights on the ground set forth in Section .55-10-109(a), U.C.A., 1953, as amended 1965, namely, that Donna Lance was unfit ■or incompetent by reason of conduct or ■condition seriously detrimental to the children. The court found that appellant had failed over the past two years to provide a .stable home for the children and to provide ■dental care for Inez and Donna after being advised of the need for such care.

The court supported its conclusion with the following findin'gs: Donna Lance has moved nine times and has left the children with relatives, and said action has resulted in interference with adequate educational, social, and psychological adjustment of the children; during the 1966-67 school year Donna and Inez were enrolled in three •different schools; the school social worker •described Donna as the most frightened, •disturbed, unhappy child she has ever met; that Inez has the same symptoms but not as severe in her disturbance; these symptoms may be attributed to two reasons : (a) lack of stability caused by frequent moves, change of schools, and the necessity of meeting new people, (b) lack of learning ability (I. Q.) on the part of the children. The court recited the dates of three marriages of Mrs. Lance between September 7, 1964, and April 1, 1966; on December 2, 1966, she married Myron Lance, who was shortly thereafter (December 22, 1966) arrested and convicted of murder. The court stated ás a finding of fact that Mrs. Lance was found guilty of attempting to bring an instrument into the prison to facilitate her husband’s escape and was sentenced to the Utah State Prison for six months to three years in December of 1967; the mother was presently at the prison.

The court further found that Wayne Peterson, father of Cody Earl Peterson, had refused to provide any child support and had thus demonstrated his incapacity to care for the child; that he had, therefore, deserted and abandoned the child; that Clarence Pilling, the father of the three Pilling girls, was capable of providing a suitable and adequate home for his children; that Cody Earl Peterson was in need of a secure, stable home environment and had been subjected to tremendous insecurity and poor care because of his mother’s incompetence and therefore Wayne Peterson and Donna Lance should be deprived of all parental rights and the child placed for adoption.

Deprivation of the .parents’ custody of their children is a drastic remedy which should be resorted to only in extreme cases and when it is manifest that the home itself cannot or will not correct the evils which exist. The cutting of family ties is a step of utmost gravity and is undesirable *410 both socially and economically and should be avoided unless that is the only alternative to be found consistent with the best interests of the children. There is a presumption that it is generally for the best interest and welfare of children to be reared under the care of their natural parents. 1 Under this presumption the burden of persuading the trier of the fact is always on the person who claims that it will be for the best interests of the child to be reared by someone other than the natural parents of such child. 2 To support a decision to deprive the parent of its child the court must first be convinced of such fact by a preponderance of the evidence. 3

In Section 55-10-32, U.C.A., 1953, the predecessor statute to Section 55-10-109, the legislature specified certain factual situations (such as conviction of a felony) that would constitute grounds to deprive a parent of the custody of his child, regardless of the effect of such facts upon the child. The legislature has, in a sense, narrowed the grounds in Section 109 to those situations where the acts of the parents (although unspecified) have a seriously detrimental effect on the child.

Appellant asserts that the findings and conclusions of the Juvenile Court are insufficient as a matter of law to support the judgment. With this contention, we-must agree, for there is insufficient evidence in the record to indicate the effect of the acts of Mrs. Lance on her children..

There were two witnesses who testified as to the unfitness and/or incompetency of Mrs. Lance: Miss Brown, a caseworker-for the Department of Welfare, and Mrs. McKay, a Salt Lake City School social' worker. Neither lady had ever contacted' Mrs. Lance personally nor observed her-home and care of the children.

Mrs. McKay never contacted Inez personally but merely discussed her with her teachers. She did not recommend any psychological testing of Inez, since she did. not feel it was necessary. She described' the girls as not being physically deprived in-dress or cleanliness and admitted that their attendance records did not indicate an unusual amount of absences.

Mrs. McKay saw Donna twice weekly from February until the close of the school year. Donna was referred to her because-she was a nonreader, repeating the first grade, in a new experimental classroom,, wherein ninety children were grouped together with three teachers. According to-Mrs. McKay, Donna’s emotional problems-were manifested in tears, withdrawal, lack of communication, and ability to learn.. *411 Mrs. McKay stated that usually she consulted with the parents of a disturbed •child she was treating, but since Mrs. Lance was a “welfare mother,” she notified Mrs. Pearce, the caseworker. Mrs. McKay •stated that her treatment brought tremendous improvement in Donna.

Mrs. McKay testified that the changing >of residences was a contributing factor to the children’s emotional problems; how•ever, Donna’s limited intelligence was also -a strong contributing factor in her emotional makeup. Since Inez had a higher I. Q., her emotional problems were not as •severe as Donna’s.

There is nothing in the record to indicate 'the qualifications of Mrs. McKay to diagnose and treat an emotionally disturbed ■child, since the court foreclosed inquiry by counsel and stated that she was qualified.

Miss Brown had Mrs. Lance assigned to her welfare caseload during the month of June, 1967, the time when Mr. Pilling took summer custody of the three girls in accordance with a divorce decree. Miss Brown did not contact Mrs. Lance during June but assumed that Cody Peterson was residing with his mother. During July, Miss Brown visited the home of Mrs. Gamble, the mother of Mrs. Lance, where Cody was residing; she proffered' no testimony of .any unfavorable circumstances in the Gamble home.

Miss Brown had in her case records a report from the University Medical Center, dated August 30, 1966, which stated that Inez and Donna needed dental care, x-rays, and restoration. She doesn’t know if Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
464 P.2d 395, 23 Utah 2d 407, 1970 Utah LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pilling-v-lance-utah-1970.