Termination of the Parent-Child Relationship of J.K.C. v. Fountain County Department of Public Welfare

470 N.E.2d 88, 1984 Ind. App. LEXIS 3014
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 1984
Docket1-1283A407
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 470 N.E.2d 88 (Termination of the Parent-Child Relationship of J.K.C. v. Fountain County Department of Public Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Termination of the Parent-Child Relationship of J.K.C. v. Fountain County Department of Public Welfare, 470 N.E.2d 88, 1984 Ind. App. LEXIS 3014 (Ind. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

NEAL, Presiding Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Respondent-appellant, Mary Carpenter Howard (Mary), appeals from a judgment of the Fountain Cireuit Court terminating her parental rights as the natural mother of two minor children, S.C. and J.C.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

The Fountain County Department of Public Welfare (DPW) filed a petition alleging S.C. and J.C. to be children in need of services on June 7, 1982. An initial hearing was conducted on June 18, at which time counsel was appointed to represent Mary and a fact finding hearing was scheduled for July 22. Mary did not personally appear at the July 22 hearing and S.C. and J.C. were adjudged to be children in need of services and made wards of the DPW. Mary, her husband Sam Howard (Sam), S.C. and J.C. were living in Kentucky at this time. S.C. and J.C. were turned over to authorities in Kentucky and thereafter transported to Indiana where they resided in Fountain County with Millie and Casey Roarks, their appointed foster parents.

On August 12, 1982 Mary requested the trial court to reconsider its wardship order. A hearing was scheduled for October 19. Mary contacted the DPW by telephone from her home in Kentucky on October 19 but did not appear at the hearing. The trial court denied Mary's request to reconsider its wardship order, reaffirming its July 22 decision.

In April of 19883, the Kentucky Department of Social Services made a home visit to the trailer where Mary and Sam were living. The DPW conducted a case review of the situation of S.C. and J.C. on February 28, 1988. Notice of this administrative review and a case plan was mailed to Mary in Kentucky, however, she never received it because she had moved.

On May 24, 1983 the DPW filed a petition to terminate Mary's parental rights as to S.C. and J.C. 1 Another case review was planned for August 26 and notice was mailed to Mary at her new address in Dan-ville, Illinois. Following the birth of their child in the summer of 1983, Mary and Sam had moved back to the Fountain County area. Although Mary did not attend the case review, she visited the DPW office the afternoon of August 26.

In September of 1983, Mary and Sam rented a large house in Danville which they shared with their child, Mary's mother, Sam's sister, her boyfriend and five children. A representative of the DPW visited this home on September 26 and reported that it was inadequate to house two addi *91 tional persons. On September 29, 1983 a hearing was conducted and the trial court terminated Mary's parental rights as to S.C. and J.C.

ISSUES

Mary presents three issues for our review:

I. Was there clear and convincing evidence to support the trial court's finding and judgment terminating the parent-child relationship of Mary to S.C. and J.C. that there was a reasonable probability that the conditions that resulted in their removal from her custody would not be remedied?

Was there clear and convincing evidence to support the trial court's finding and decree that the termination of the parental rights of Mary was in the best interest of S.C. and J.C.?

Did the DPW prove by clear and convincing evidence a satisfactory plan for the care and treatment of S.C. and J.0.7

DISCUSSION AND DECISION

Mary's arguments follow the requirements of IND.CODE 831-6-5-4 for involuntarily terminating one's parental rights. The DPW must present clear and convincing evidence to support the elements of IND.CODE 81-6-5-4. Ellis v. Knox County Department of Public Welfare, (1982) Ind.App., 433 N.E.2d 847. In determining whether the trial court's decision to terminate Mary's parental rights regarding S.C. and J.C. was supported by clear and convincing evidence, we may not reweigh the evidence or judge the eredibility of the witnesses; we may only consider that evidence most favorable to the judgment. Matter of Lozier, (1983) Ind.App., 453 N.E.2d 345.

The evidence shows that S.C. and J.C. were wards of the DPW from August 1979 through July 1981. Eleven months after they were returned to Mary, S.C. and J.C. again became wards of the DPW and have remained such to date. J.C., who was born in February of 1979, has spent the vast majority of his life in a foster home. S.C. is one and a half years older than J.C.

Mary has been married to Sam for four years, during which time they have lived as transients. During the eleven months that S.C. and J.C. spent with Mary and Sam, beginning in August of 1981, the four of them resided in two rooms of an elderly woman's home. Upon her death they moved into a friend's overcrowded house. Mary and Sam slept in their car while the two children shared a bed with several other people. Sam had previously worked at a garden center but that job had terminated.

After the four moved to Kentucky and S.C. and J.C. had been removed from Mary's custody, she requested that the DPW authorize Kentucky officials to inspect her home. The Kentucky Depart ment of Social Services agent visited the Howards in April of 1988. She found Mary and Sam living gratuitously in a small mobile home owned by Sam's brother-in-law. There was no running water in the trailer, Sam and Mary got their drinking water in town and used rain water to wash themselves and their clothes. There was one double bed but Mary stated another could be put in the living room if that room's furniture was removed. Mary was pregnant at that time and due to deliver in July of 1983. The Howards had no current income, although Sam had earlier worked on a local tobacco farm, and they received a small amount of food stamps. The agent concluded, "the Howards can barely subsist themselves, and I see no possible way that they could provide adequate care for [S.C. and J.C.]. Their prospects for doing so in the future also seem almost non-existent". Mary stated she and Sam later moved into a larger trailer which the Kentucky agent approved of; however, no report of this visit is found in the record.

Following the birth of Sam and Mary's son in the summer of 1988, they moved to Danville, Illinois where the three of them lived with Sam's sister, her boyfriend and *92 five children. The next month Mary informed the DPW that she and Sam had rented a two-story house where they lived with their son, Mary's mother, Sam's sister, her boyfriend and five children.

The DPW agent testified as to the condition of the house stating:

""Mary showed us the house. It was not clean. It was-the kitchen, the table had food and water and things strung all over the table. She took us upstairs, up a dark stairway that was litftlered with trash and things that didn't look like it had been swept for some time. She showed us a bed where she and Sam slept. She showed us another bed where some of the other people who were staying there slept and there was a bed downstairs that she said was for her mother."

Upon their move to Danville, Mary spent a short period of time in the Shelter Care Facility following a fight with Sam when he hit her.

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Bluebook (online)
470 N.E.2d 88, 1984 Ind. App. LEXIS 3014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/termination-of-the-parent-child-relationship-of-jkc-v-fountain-county-indctapp-1984.