State in Interest of a Minor

446 So. 2d 1385, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 8116
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 1984
Docket83-944
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 446 So. 2d 1385 (State in Interest of a Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State in Interest of a Minor, 446 So. 2d 1385, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 8116 (La. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

446 So.2d 1385 (1984)

STATE of Louisiana In the Interest of A MINOR.[1]

No. 83-944.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 7, 1984.
Rehearing Denied April 3, 1984.

*1386 F. Clay Tillman, Jr., Leesville, for defendant-appellant-appellee.

Richard Lynn Ducote, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee-appellant.

James R. Mitchell, Leesville, for minor.

Before CUTRER, LABORDE and KNOLL, JJ.

CUTRER, Judge.

This is an appeal from a trial court judgment in a juvenile proceeding which terminated the parental rights of the appellant-mother as to her eight-year-old daughter. The State originally petitioned for termination of the parental rights of both the child's father and mother; however, prior to trial, the father voluntarily surrendered his rights under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 9:401-402. The mother appeals, alleging that the State failed to meet the proof requirements of the statute relative to the termination of parental rights.

The Louisiana Department of Health and Human Resources (Department), which had maintained custody of the minor from five years prior to trial and with whom custody presently rests, appeals that portion of the trial court judgment which casts it with the attorney's fees ($300.00) awarded to the attorney appointed by the court to represent the minor. We affirm the termination order, but we reverse the judgment assessing the Department with the attorney's fees.

FACTS

The child in question was born in Korea on July 10, 1975; her mother is Korean and her father is an American, who was stationed as a soldier in Korea. The family subsequently resided at an Army post in Louisiana. In September 1977, the local Welfare Department was informed that witnesses had seen the mother physically abuse her then-two-year-old daughter. According to one of those witnesses, the incident occurred at a restaurant and began when the mother, with her closed fist, struck the child forcefully on the arm. The child began crying and, shortly thereafter, the witness saw the child "go flying past the window, and land on the cement on the stomach."

The young girl was taken to the Army hospital for examination, where it was decided that her parents would be allowed to take the child home, but they were to receive family service counseling on a weekly basis. The examining physician opined that the problem consisted "of the mother not being able to handle some of the frustrations of living with a two-year-old child." *1387 In June 1978, the Department[2] received a report that the child (still two years of age) was seen with bruises, welt marks and scratches on her face.

The child was again taken to the Army hospital where a physical examination revealed the following: a bruise over the left cheek, multiple areas of scratches, a deeper abrasion over the left side of the back, multiple contusions and abrasions over the lower extremities, multiple linear scarring over the buttocks and small circular scars, resembling cigarette burns, on the torso and left eyebrow. The diagnosis of the examining physician was "Battered Child Syndrome." Pursuant to these findings, a judicial hearing was held and, on July 7, 1978, custody of the child was transferred to the Department.

The Department retained custody of the child during the five years prior to trial. The young girl spent most of that time in foster homes. Attempts were made by the Department to reunite the mother and daughter, but, because of the child's increasing emotional problems and the mother's failure to satisfactorily comply with the Department's plan for reunion, a petition was filed in April 1983, seeking to terminate the parental rights of both father and mother.

The degree of involvement between the father and the Department is not clearly revealed by the trial record, but he apparently was often in trouble, spending some time in jail. However, before the trial in September 1983, the father surrendered his parental rights in an act executed in Illinois, and this appeal, therefore, addresses the termination of only the mother's rights.

THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL AUTHORITY

The State petitioned for the termination of the mother's rights under the authority of LSA-R.S. 13:1601(D), which sets forth the elements necessary for termination thusly:

"D. (1) The child has been in the custody of a child welfare department or other person, pursuant to a judicial order, for a period of at least one year.
(2) The child was removed from the custody of the parents by judicial order due to the parent's abuse or neglect of the child.
(3) The parent is unfit to retain parental control and there is no reasonable expectation of reformation on the part of the parent or parents.
(4) The child is an abused or neglected child, the Department of Health and Human Resources has made every reasonable effort under the circumstances to reunite the child with his parents, and the department recommends that it would not be in the best interest of the child to be reunited with his parents."

These elements "must be proven by clear and convincing evidence," [R.S. 13:1603(A)], and it must be proven "that the best interest of the child dictates termination of parental rights." R.S. 13:1602(D). The trial court held that the requisite burden of proof was met. We agree.

As we address each element we find that the Department has fully met its burden of proof.

(1) The child has been in the custody of a child welfare department or other person, pursuant to a judicial order, for a period of at least one year.

The record clearly reflects that a judicial order was rendered on July 7, 1978, placing the two-year-old child in the custody of the Department. Custody has continuously remained in the Department for over five years.

(2) The child was removed from the custody of the parents by judicial order due to the parent's abuse or neglect of the child.

The evidence is clear that the 1978 custody order resulted from the two occurrences *1388 in September 1977, and June 1978. At least one person saw the infant in 1977, when she was struck forcefully by her mother's fist and apparently thrown to the cement in anger outside a restaurant. At that time the only action taken by the Department included a physical examination of the child and counseling services for the mother and father. The examining physician in his report stated that the problems were caused by maternal deficiencies, which were to be treated.

In 1978, a doctor's examination revealed that the child had suffered bruises, scratches, abrasions, contusions, and scarring, some of which indicated the inflictions of cigarette burns. When the social worker examined the child, she had been left unattended in the guest house where she had been staying with her parents. When the mother returned and was confronted with her daughter's injuries, she said that she had struck the child with a brush.

The psychologist who examined both the mother and daughter between 1979 and 1982, testified that the child told others that her mother had burned her with cigarettes. The mother also admitted that she pulled her daughter's hair excessively and that she was sorry for that. The Army physician who examined the child prior to the 1978 custody hearing and transfer diagnosed her as being "battered."

The trial judge found as a matter of fact that the child's custody had been transferred due to physical abuse.

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Bluebook (online)
446 So. 2d 1385, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 8116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-in-interest-of-a-minor-lactapp-1984.