State, in Interest of Sm

709 So. 2d 927, 1998 WL 97739
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 1998
Docket97-CA-1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 709 So. 2d 927 (State, in Interest of Sm) 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 Sm, 709 So. 2d 927, 1998 WL 97739 (La. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

709 So.2d 927 (1998)

STATE of Louisiana in the Interest of S.M., et al.

No. 97-CA-1896.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

March 4, 1998.
Writ Granted May 15, 1998.

*928 Anne Derbes Keller, Law Offices of Adams, Johnston & Oreck, New Orleans, for S.M., K.M. and J.M., Appellants.

Clarence Richardson, Orleans Indigent Defender Program, New Orleans, for Appellee, Nyress M.

F. Clayton Latimer, Department of Social Services, Bureau of General Counsel, New Orleans, for State.

Before PLOTKIN, LANDRIEU and MURRAY, JJ.

MURRAY, Judge.

In this appeal, brought on behalf of three minor children, we are asked to review the juvenile court's judgment that the permanence plan for these children is reunification with their mother, N.M. (hereafter referred to as "Mother"). We affirm.

Mother, who was 22 at the time the Permanent Planning Judgment was entered, lost her mother at age three. Until she was removed by Child Protection at age nine, she lived with her maternal grandmother, who she alleges beat her daily. She then lived with her paternal grandmother, R.D. (hereafter referred to as "Grandmother"), until she was twelve. At that time she began running away from home. At some point she was referred to New Orleans Adolescent Hospital. When she was released to Grandmother's care, she again ran away and did not return. She became pregnant with her first child at age sixteen, and gave birth to Keonte[1] in California on July 16, 1991. This child's father's whereabouts are unknown. Mother returned to New Orleans when Keonte was approximately six months old. Grandmother eventually took Keonte into her home, but would not allow mother to live with her. Mother became pregnant with her second son when she was seventeen, and gave birth to Shawn on November 2, 1992. Shawn's father has refused to acknowledge him to anyone except Mother. L. H., with whom Mother lived during her pregnancy, believed he was Shawn's father. Shawn lived with L.H.'s mother (hereafter referred to as "Ms. Edna"), whom he knows as his grandmother. Mother became pregnant once again when she was eighteen. She gave birth to a daughter, Jasmine, on June 13, 1994.

During her pregnancy with Jasmine, Mother began living with J.J. At J.J.'s insistence, Mother brought Keonte and Shawn to live with them. On January 10, 1996, Mother *929 called 911 because Shawn was not breathing. He was taken to Medical Center of Louisiana, where he was revived and stabilized; he remained in the hospital until January 24. Medical personnel noted that Shawn had lacerations, abrasions and contusions of the head, face, chest and pelvis as well as burns and healed burns in the genital area.

Detective Riles of the Child Abuse Section of the Emergency Services Bureau was notified of a possible incident of cruelty to a juvenile. He spoke to Mother, who agreed to make a statement. She told Detective Riles that she found Shawn standing in the bathtub when she arrived home earlier that day. When she questioned J.J. about bruises she found on Shawn, he told that her that the child had fallen. Later that evening J.J. called her to the bathroom and told her that Shawn was having an asthma attack. When Mother saw that Shawn was not breathing she attempted to perform CPR, and then called 911.

Mother stated that J.J. had been physically abusing her and Shawn since March of 1995. She described J.J.'s making Shawn sleep in the bathtub, and hitting him with his hands and, on one occasion, a bowl of food. She also related an incident in which Shawn had been burned with hot water. She stated that she did not tell anyone about the abuse because J.J. threatened to "take care of her" if she told, and she was afraid. Mother stated that she had seen J.J. punch Shawn in the chest and back earlier on the evening of the 10th. She denied that J.J. abused her other two children.

Detective Riles also questioned Keonte, who, along with Jasmine and Mother, had been brought to the Child Abuse Office. Keonte stated that J.J. hit him, and had put hot water on both him and Shawn. He told the detective that he had seen J.J. hit Shawn with his hand and his mother's shoe, and tie Shawn's hands. Physical examination revealed that Keonte had bruises on his chest and behind his right ear as well as old scars from belt marks on his buttocks. Jasmine had a bump on her forehead.

Mother was placed under arrest and charged with three counts of cruelty to a juvenile. She pled guilty and was sentenced to five years with the Department of Corrections on each count, to run concurrently. The sentence was suspended, and Mother was placed on five years active probation. As special conditions of probation, Mother was to serve twelve months, earn her G.E.D., and get training through the regional vocational technical school.[2]

A verbal instanter order placing the three children in the custody of the State of Louisiana was issued on January 11, 1996. On January 16, 1996, a judgment placing the children in the provisional protective custody of the State was entered. The State petitioned to have Keonte, Shawn and Jasmine adjudicated children in need of care. This petition was heard on May 15, 1996. It was stipulated that the children were abused/neglected children in need of care, and the court ordered that they be taken into protective custody. Care, custody and control of the children was given to the Office of Community Services (OCS). Shawn was to remain in the foster home where he was placed upon his discharge from the hospital; Keonte and Jasmine were to remain with Grandmother.[3]

A case plan goal for reunifying the children with their mother was developed by OCS. Following a review hearing on November 14, 1996, a judgment was entered continuing the children in the legal and physical custody of OCS and in their placements, finding that those placements were the least restrictive and in the children's best interest. The judgment provided for Mother's weekly supervised visitation with the children, and liberal sibling visitation. In addition, the court ordered that Mother participate in parenting classes and a "Battered Women's" program, submit to a psychological evaluation, submit to treatment as indicated and *930 fully participate in counselling and treatment consistently, obtain stable housing and maintain contact with OCS. A judgment entered on January 30, 1997, following a second review hearing, noted that Mother had been complying with the case plan and the court's orders, and continued the children in the custody of OCS and their placements. The judgment also set the matter for a Permanency Planning Hearing on July 31, 1997.

On that date the court heard testimony from Zelda Sereal of OCS and Mother. The court also reviewed the CASA report and the OCS report, with attachments. It then entered the Permanency Planning Judgment that is the subject of this appeal. That judgment continued the children in the custody of OCS and in their placements, and approved the OCS Permanency Plan, which was reunification. However, the court did not order that these children be returned to Mother immediately. Instead it concluded that reunification should be gradual and incremental, beginning with Jasmine, the youngest child. The court ordered that Mother continue to take those steps necessary to enable her to care for her children; she was to submit to psychotherapy, participate in family therapy with her children, and obtain stable housing, all to the court's satisfaction.

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Related

State ex rel. SNW v. Mitchell
788 So. 2d 1271 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2001)
State ex rel. S.M.
733 So. 2d 159 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1999)
State, in Interest of Sm
719 So. 2d 445 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1998)

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709 So. 2d 927, 1998 WL 97739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-in-interest-of-sm-lactapp-1998.