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

1 P.3d 500, 167 Or. App. 446, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 822
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 24, 2000
Docket96-276J and 96-275J CA A107034
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 P.3d 500 (State Ex Rel. State Office for Services to Children & Families v. Stillman) 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. Stillman, 1 P.3d 500, 167 Or. App. 446, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 822 (Or. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

[449]*449KISTLER, J.

Father appeals from a judgment terminating his parental rights to his two children. We reverse.

Before 1990, father had been convicted twice on drug charges. He enrolled in a drug treatment program and met mother, who was also enrolled in the program. The couple’s daughter was born in June 1991. Sometime after their daughter was born, mother started drinking and father began using methamphetamine again. When mother learned that she was pregnant with their second child, she entered a second treatment program. Father, however, continued his drug use. The couple’s son was born in February 1993.

The State Office of Services to Children and Families (SCF) first contacted mother and father in August 1993 as the result of a referral.1 When the SCF caseworker went to the family’s home to investigate, mother appeared to be under the influence of intoxicants and the children were unsupervised. Father was not home, but he met with the caseworker the next day at her office. At that time, father would not recognize that mother had a substance abuse problem that interfered with her ability to care for the children, nor would he accept the services offered by SCF. Father told the caseworker that he would monitor the problem and that if the children were at risk, he would not go to work. SCF took no further action at that time.

Despite father’s assurances that he would monitor the problem, on at least one occasion he left the children in mother’s care even though he believed mother had been drinking. Father also took no action after other family members told him that mother had been driving under the influence with the children in the car and that she had left the baby in a crib all day after passing out from drinking. At one point, father obtained a restraining order against mother, but they reunited approximately a month after the restraining order was issued.

Despite his drug use, father maintained regular employment with a construction company until 1995. After [450]*450leaving his work, father began manufacturing and selling methamphetamine. In May 1996, police officers raided the family’s home. They found methamphetamine in a bedroom. The officers also found equipment and chemicals used to manufacture methamphetamine in the garage. One of the officers testified that the methamphetamine in the bedroom was accessible to the children and that the methamphetamine lab presented a health hazard to the occupants of the home. There was evidence at trial that the daughter had seen one part of the methamphetamine manufacturing process.

In November 1996, SCF filed petitions to terminate both mother and father’s parental rights. The termination hearing was postponed, however, because “[m]other appealed] to have made significant progress and further assessment [was] necessary.” At the same time that SCF was deciding whether to proceed with the termination of mother and father’s parental rights, both parents were facing criminal charges as a result of the discovery of the methamphetamine laboratory in their home. According to father, he agreed to plead guilty in return both for a lesser sentence and a promise that the charges against mother would be dropped. Mother agreed that it was his goal to keep her out of jail so that she would be available to care for the children. Pursuant to the plea bargain, father was convicted in federal court in April 1997 for possessing a precursor chemical used to manufacture methamphetamine and for the intent to manufacture methamphetamine.

In September 1997, SCF developed a plan to return the children to mother. By January 1998, mother was making progress in treatment, and it appeared that she could be a resource for the children. At SCF’s request, the court dismissed the petitions to terminate both mother and father’s parental rights. By March 1998, however, SCF received reports that mother was again using drugs. Mother tested positive for, and admitted using, methamphetamine. As a result, in August 1998, SCF filed a second round of petitions to terminate mother and father’s parental rights. In response to those petitions, mother executed a stipulated judgment [451]*451terminating her parental rights.2 Accordingly, the evidence at trial focused solely on father.

The evidence showed that, after the May 1996 raid of his home but before being incarcerated in federal prison in October 1997, father enrolled in a program with the Lane County Addiction Counseling and Education Services (ACES). Initially, father stated that he had enrolled in the ACES program to avoid spending more time in prison. One of father’s counselors in the ACES program testified that, although father’s initial motivation — to avoid a long prison sentence — was external, father later became more internally motivated. In early 1997 father tested positive for drugs while enrolled in the program. Notwithstanding that single relapse, father successfully completed the ACES program.

One of his counselors wrote that father had come to her and asked for more help, apparently after the relapse. She explained: “That was the needed boost that he required. He has done an excellent job in his treatment since that time in May of 1997. He has a thorough grasp of what is needed in order for him to continue a recovery lifestyle. My prognosis for him and his future is quite positive.” She also stated that father “was the most successful client [she had] ever worked with. He’s a counselor’s dream. It’s my estimate that he will be helping inmates with recovery when he’s in prison.”

On cross-examination, SCF’s attorney questioned whether father was simply focused on his own needs. The counselor answered, “It was always my impression that [father] cared deeply about his children and his family and that he was interested in changing and improving his own life situation with the hope that he could and would have a healthy family.” When SCF’s attorney pressed the point again, the counselor replied:

“Well, I can’t speak to what might have been going on in [father’s] head, only to my impressions. And my impression was that, he wanted his children, he grieved over being separated from his children, he frequently talked about his [452]*452children and his sense of obligation as a parent and as a father and the kind of father that he wanted to be for his children, and being separated from them was difficult. And it’s — I guess it’s my impression that if he had any genuine ability to make the situation anything different, that he would want to be with his children, living with his children, raising his children.”

In addition to completing the ACES program, father voluntarily took and completed a parenting class through the Relief Nursery before reporting to prison. In that class, his “attendance and participation throughout the months this class was conducted w[ere] excellent. He demonstrated a sincere commitment to learning from the material being shared [and] was supportive of other group member’s experience[.]”

While in federal prison, father completed a required 40-hour drug class. Also, with the help of volunteers who visited the prison, father worked to initiate and develop a 12-step narcotics or alcoholics anonymous program in prison. At the time of the termination hearing, in addition to the 12-step program, father was participating in a 500-hour program for substance abuse. While incarcerated, father chose to quit smoking even though smoking is permitted in federal prison.

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Bluebook (online)
1 P.3d 500, 167 Or. App. 446, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-office-for-services-to-children-families-v-stillman-orctapp-2000.