T.D.K. v. L.A.W. and T.M.

78 So. 3d 1006, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 222, 2011 WL 3633550
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedAugust 19, 2011
Docket2100551
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 78 So. 3d 1006 (T.D.K. v. L.A.W. and T.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.D.K. v. L.A.W. and T.M., 78 So. 3d 1006, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 222, 2011 WL 3633550 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

T.D.K. (“the mother”) appeals from the judgment terminating her parental rights to two of her children, A.B.M. and T.O.M. (“the children”).1 The judgment awarded legal custody of the children to their father, T.M. (“the father”), and L.A.W., the former wife of the children’s paternal uncle. L.A.W. was awarded physical custody of the children, subject to visitation by the father.

The record indicates the following. The mother was 28 years old at the time of the trial. She and the father have never been married to each other. A.B.M., the older of the children at issue in this case, was born in September 2002. The mother was still in high school when she became pregnant with A.B.M.; however, she said that she dropped out of school because of difficulties she had during her pregnancy. T.O.M. was born in May 2004.

The Calhoun County Department of Human Resources (“DHR”) first became involved with the mother when, in October 2006, T.O.M. received burns over his body when he was scalded by water heating on a stove. The mother testified that they were living at a friend’s house when the accident occurred. She said that she and the friend were cooking and had turned their backs “for just a moment” when someone knocked at the door. While their backs were turned, she said, one of the children in the house pulled a pot of hot water off the stove. The record indicates [1008]*1008that DHR took no action against the mother at that time.

In April 2007, DHR investigated a report that the mother’s boyfriend, G.H., was physically abusing the children. Charles Parker, the DHR investigator, testified that he learned that G.H. would sometimes make the children take off their clothes before beating them with a belt so hard that the beating would cause bruising. G.H. would also place the children in the clothes dryer to punish them. On at least one occasion, G.H. turned on the clothes dryer after placing T.O.M. inside. When Parker examined the children, he saw multiple bruises on A.B.M.’s inner thigh. T.O.M. had bruising on his chest and marks around one of his nipples that Parker said were consistent with bite marks.

There was evidence indicating that G.H. had physically abused the mother as well. The children had witnessed that abuse on occasion. The mother initially denied knowing anything about G.H.’s conduct toward the children. However, she eventually told Parker that she was aware that G.H. was beating the children and putting them in the clothes dryer but that she could not do anything to stop him. The mother said that G.H. would beat the children because, she said, he had told her she did not hit them hard enough.

Parker testified that, as a result of his initial interviews, the mother entered into a safety plan to remove the children from the mother and G.H.’s home. In April 2007, the children were placed with the father, who lives in Gadsden. Although Parker advised the mother that DHR could help her find shelter away from G.H., the mother chose to stay with him. The mother was also advised that she had to leave G.H. before the children would be allowed to live with her again. Parker said that he opened the mother’s case for ongoing services and said that the mother would have been assigned a social worker to follow through with her; however, he said, the mother told him she was moving to Gadsden, in Etowah County. Parker intended for the mother’s case to be transferred to the Etowah County DHR; however, no action appears to have been taken by that agency, and DHR’s involvement with the mother ended in 2007.

G.H. was convicted of child abuse in connection with his treatment of the children and sentenced to one year in jail. The mother did move to Gadsden, but she admitted that she never lived in one place very long. L.A.W. testified that the mother made few attempts to visit or call the children once they went to live with the father, and subsequently, other family members. When G.H. was released from jail, the mother moved back to Calhoun County and lived in an apartment next door to G.H.’s mother.

Several witnesses testified regarding an incident that occurred in November 2009, after G.H. had been released from jail. The mother was visiting her sister’s house, and the children were also there. The mother was speaking with G.H. on the telephone and handed the telephone to A.B.M. for her to speak with him as well. A.B.M. refused, and the mother began to “whip” her with a belt. When A.B.M. would not stop crying, the mother put her in a closet.

Africa Bell, a therapist at the CED Mental Health Center, testified that both children had told her during their therapy sessions that they did not want to live with the mother or even to see the mother. A.B.M. told Bell that the incident in which T.O.M. was scalded in 2006 had not been an accident and that the mother had purposefully scalded him.

During her testimony, the mother acknowledged that she had been in jail on [1009]*1009several occasions, that she did not have a job, that she had no income, that she had no vehicle and no valid driver’s license, and that she did not have a stable place to live. She admitted that, at that time, she was unable to care for the children. Other than the gifts she sometimes gave to the children, there is no evidence indicating that the mother provided financial support for the children after they were removed from her custody.

The children began living with their paternal grandmother in the summer of 2007. A little more than a year later, in October 2008, they began living with L.A.W. In 2009, the mother said, she signed “temporary guardianship papers” for the children while they were living with L.A.W. Afterward, the mother was arrested for failing to pay traffic fines and sentenced to serve time in jail beginning in November 2009. In March 2010, she was released from jail and called L.A.W. to arrange a visit with the children. The mother testified that L.A.W. refused her request because, the mother said, L.A.W. believed that she was seeing G.H. again.

L.A.W. then contacted the mother and asked her to sign a second set of “temporary guardianship papers” because the other set was no longer valid and she needed the papers to enroll the children in school and for other purposes. At about that time, the mother testified, she discovered that DHR had closed her ease and that she still had legal custody of the children. L.A.W. testified that she learned that the mother planned to remove the children from her home and to give' custody of them to the mother’s sister.2 The dispute between L.A.W. and the mother escalated until, on June 11, 2010, the father and L.A.W. filed petitions seeking the termination of the mother’s parental rights to the children and also seeking joint custody of the children. That same day, they filed a “motion for ex parte temporary custody” of the children. The juvenile court granted the motion the day it was filed.

On February 17, 2011, the juvenile court held a hearing on the petitions to terminate the mother’s parental rights and for joint custody. On March 1, 2011, the juvenile court entered its judgment terminating the mother’s parental rights. The juvenile court found that, since the children had gone to live with the father in April 2007, the mother had had nearly four years to adjust her circumstances to meet the needs of the children. The juvenile court also noted that the children had lived with L.A.W. for two and a half years and were entitled to the opportunity to have a permanent home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 So. 3d 1006, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 222, 2011 WL 3633550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tdk-v-law-and-tm-alacivapp-2011.