State Ex Rel. State Office for Services to Children & Families v. Blum

28 P.3d 1231, 175 Or. App. 447, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1063
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 25, 2001
Docket97116J, 98028J; Petition 97116J03, 98028J03; A108388
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 P.3d 1231 (State Ex Rel. State Office for Services to Children & Families v. Blum) 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. State Office for Services to Children & Families v. Blum, 28 P.3d 1231, 175 Or. App. 447, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1063 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*449 DEITS, C. J.

Father appeals from a judgment terminating his parental rights to his two daughters, S and C. We review de novo, ORS 419A.200(5), to determine whether clear and convincing evidence in the record supports the termination of father’s rights. We affirm.

Father is a veteran of the Vietnam War, honorably discharged in 1970, who suffers from Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). He admits to past use of controlled substances, including heroin, while he was serving in Vietnam, the frequent use of “speed” after returning to the United States, and ten years of alcohol abuse thereafter. He was convicted on drug charges and imprisoned for two years in Missouri in 1989. Within a year of the birth of his first child in 1997, he was arrested twice for assault and once for possession of a controlled substance. He has been hospitalized at veterans’ hospitals and received treatment related to his PTSD that involved the use of psychotropic drugs; the extent of that treatment is unknown. Father is not presently employed; he receives a veteran’s pension for a non-service-related disability.

Father and the children’s mother, Laurinda Shackel-ford, who are not married, began their relationship in 1994. 1 Shackelford has a history of alcohol abuse, is emotionally and mentally unstable and has engaged in violent behavior. During their relationship, Shackelford has attempted numerous drug treatment programs with limited success. The record indicates that there have been some physical altercations between Shackelford and father. Shackelford testified that, in the past, father has hit her. In one violent incident, father gave her a black eye; in another, he “kind of pounded [her] face into the floor.” In December 1997, police took Shackel-ford and father into custody following an assault in which Shackelford had an open wound on her head. Apparently, Shackelford also has assaulted father. Father stated that, on many occasions, he has had to protect himself from Shackel-ford.

*450 On February 17, 1997, Shackelford gave birth to a daughter, S, at Sacred Heart Hospital in Eugene. S is father’s first child. Because Shackelford had admitted to occasional marijuana use, Dr. Joehnk, S’s pediatrician, performed a drug screen on the infant that proved negative. Joehnk apparently reported to the State Office for Services to Children and Families (SCF) that the child had been drug screened. On learning of the report to SCF, Shackelford, whose parental rights to an older child, A, had been terminated two weeks earlier, became very upset and, ultimately, struck Joehnk in the face. Father, who was with Shackelford at the hospital, attempted to calm and restrain her. Later, father spoke with Joehnk and pleaded with him to understand Shackelford’s emotional background and not to “take to heart what had just transpired.”

One or two days later, SCF caseworkers visited Shackelford and father at the hospital and expressed concerns for the safety of S because of Shackelford’s inability to care for her older child, A. Among other things, Shackelford was unable to supervise A, had abused alcohol, and had been unable to protect A from a man who was a danger to him. Additionally, Shackelford had tested positive for THC (marijuana) during her pregnancy with S. SCF also was concerned because “[t]he child’s father fails to recognize the risk of harm [Shackelford] presents to the child.” Three days after her birth, SCF removed S from Shackelford and father’s custody.

Shortly after SCF took custody of S, Fellez, an SCF caseworker, prepared a service agreement that prescribed, among other things, that SCF would allow Shackelford and father to visit S a minimum of three times each week. Neither father nor Shackelford would sign the service agreement. In late May of that year, Fellez met with Shackelford and father to discuss services that they and S might need. When Fellez expressed concern about domestic violence, father responded that he did not have any problems and that “that was a one-time thing.” Father did not appear to have any concerns about Shackelford’s ability to care for S. Father also made it apparent that he and Shackelford did not want anything from SCF, except to have “SCF outta my life and out of our lives.” At this meeting, Fellez asked father to sign a release that would allow SCF toreidew his veteran’s records *451 for the purpose of assessing his mental and emotional condition, and to determine the services that he might require to allow him to function as a parent. Father denied Fellez’s request, stating, “I don’t feel like my military records should be anybody’s business but mine.” According to Fellez, the meeting, which began on a positive note, continued to deteriorate until Shackelford and father “both stormed out.”

Although he never signed the SCF service agreement, father visited S often from February to August of 1997. Of the 31 visits that one SCF worker supervised, father missed only three scheduled visits. On each occasion that he missed a visit, he appears to have given both notice and an explanation for his failure to attend the scheduled visits. The SCF worker who observed father during these visits testified that he appeared very caring and loving.

While father’s interactions with S were generally good, his interactions with Shackelford during those visits were not. Shackelford and father would often fight. During one of the visits, the two engaged in an escalating fight over how best to care for S. At other times, arguments among Shackelford, father, and SCF staff created problems. During one visit, the couple fought because Shackelford wanted to show her “clean UA” report to Fellez, but father did not want her “to give SCF more ammo” to use against them. One SCF worker stated that there were “a couple of times where it would get loud or [where she] felt out of control” and had “to call supervisors or caseworkers.” On one occasion, Shackel-ford attempted to hit one of the caseworkers. In August 1997, at a hearing to determine whether visits should continue, Shackelford “threw something at the judge.” At that time, SCF asked the juvenile court to suspend Shackelford and father’s visits based on the altercations between Shackelford and father, and those with the SCF staff. The court granted SCF’s request and father has not seen his daughter, S, since those visitations were suspended.

On December 27,1997, Shackelford gave birth to her and father’s second daughter, C. Although Shackelford had been under the care of an obstetrician during her pregnancy, *452 the birth took place at home without the presence of any professional medical personnel. Shortly after the birth, a midwife visited the parents and suggested that Shackelford take C to a doctor “because [the child] was new.” Shackelford testified that she would have taken C to a doctor immediately but “I was just not willing to [let SCF] take her at that moment * * * [b]ut on my own, yes I would have taken her to the doctor if I had not had that fear of [SCF] taking her.” Two weeks later, an SCF caseworker, Sierzega, accompanied by police officers, went to the parents’ apartment to place C in protective custody.

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Bluebook (online)
28 P.3d 1231, 175 Or. App. 447, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-office-for-services-to-children-families-v-blum-orctapp-2001.