T.J. v. Winston County Department of Human Resources

233 So. 3d 361
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMarch 24, 2017
Docket2150977
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 233 So. 3d 361 (T.J. v. Winston County Department of Human Resources) 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.J. v. Winston County Department of Human Resources, 233 So. 3d 361 (Ala. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

MOORE, Judge.

T.J., Jr. (“the- father”), and J.J. (“the mother”) appeal from a judgment entered by the Winston Juvenile Court (“the juvenile court”) terminating their parental rights to H.D.J. (“the child”).

Procedural History

On October 13, 2015, the Winston County Department of Human Resources (“DHR”) filed a petition alleging that the child was dependent. That same day, the juvenile court entered an order permitting DHR to immediately take the child into its custody. That order contained a notation indicating that an oral pickup order had been issued on October 7, 2015. Also, on October 13, 2015, the juvenile court held a shelter-care hearing, and, on October 16, 2015, a shelter-care order was entered maintaining the child in DHR’s custody. After an adjudicatory hearing, the juvenile court entered an order on January 25, 2016, declaring the child dependent, determining that reasonable efforts by DHR to reunite the child and the parents were not required, and maintaining custody of the child with DHR. After a permanency hearing, the juvenile court entered an order on March 23,. 2016, providing that the permanency plan for the child was adoption with no identified resource.

On June 1, 2016, DHR filed a petition requesting that the juvenile court terminate the mother’s and the father’s parental rights to the child. The mother and the father, through the same counsel, filed an answer to the petition on June 16, 2016. After a trial, the juvenile court entered a judgment on August 23, 2016, terminating the mother’s and the father’s parental rights to the child. On September 1, 2016, the mother and the father filed a joint postjudgment motion, and, on September 6, 2016, the mother and the father filed their notice of appeal. The notice of appeal was held in abeyance pending the denial, by operation of law, of their postjudgment motion on September 15, 2016. See Rule 1(A) & (B), Ala. R. Juv. P.; Rule 69.1, Ala. R. Civ. P.; and Rule 4(a)(5), Ala. R. App. P.

Facts

Tyler Kilgore, a child-abuse-and-neglect investigator for DHR, testified that DHR had received reports that the parents had been homeless but that they were, at the time DHR took custody of the child, living with the father’s parents; he testified that the reports also indicated that the father was using drugs. He testified that DHR took the child into its custody in October 2015. According to Kilgore, both the mother and the father submitted to drug tests. The mother tested positive only-for drugs for which she had a prescription, but the father tested positive for methamphetamine and amphetamines. Kilgore testified that the father had claimed that he had not used drugs but had simply been in the home of someone who had’ been smoking those drugs.

Martha Haynes, a foster-care worker for DHR, testified that DHR had sought to implement services for the mother and the father through “FOCUS,” but, she said, FOCUS employees, who had worked with the parents before, had refused to work with them again. She testified that she was not aware of any extensive parenting program similar to the FOCUS program but that the parents had completed a less extensive parenting class.

Haynes testified that DHR had ordered both the mother and the father to submit to a psychological evaluation. A psychological evaluation was also done on the child. The reports from those evaluations were entered into evidence. The reports indicat[364]*364ed that the mother and the father had requested that an older child “be placed in foster care [in 2010] due to his purported disruptive behaviors” and that then- parental rights to that child had been terminated in 2012 due to the mental instability of the mother and the father. The mother had previously had her parental rights terminated to two other children in 2005 and 2006.

According to the father’s psychological report, the father admitted that the parents had engaged in domestic violence. The psychologist noted that the father’s full-scale IQ score is 67 and that that score “meets part of the requirements for a diagnosis of mild mental retardation.” According to the psychologist, the father reported that he had used methamphetamine weekly for two years before ceasing use of the drug in 2013. The father also acknowledged having recently used the drug, but, he claimed, it had been “only once” in 2015.

Haynes testified that the psychologist had recommended that the father participate in random drug screening, individual counseling, marital counseling, and “Celebrate Recovery.” Haynes testified that the father had been referred to the Northwest Alabama Mental Health Center to address his drug usage and anger-management problems. She testified that domestic violence between the mother and the father had been an ongoing issue. She testified that the mother and the father had not participated in marital counseling.

The mother’s psychological report indicated that the mother had experienced suicidal thoughts her entire life and that she suffers from bipolar disorder. The psychologist noted that her full-scale IQ score is 80, which, he said, is “within the Low Average Range of intelligence.” The report also noted that the mother had reported that the father had had an affair and had moved in with his paramour, with whom, she claimed, he had used drugs. The mother also reported that she had subsequently reunited with the father but that she had moved in with the father and his paramour for some time. The psychologist reported that the mother’s “Child Abuse Potential Inventory” results suggest that the mother “shares personal and interpersonal characteristics of known physical child abusers.”

Haynes testified that the parents complain that the child is hyper, does not “mind,” and will not sit still. Before this case was instituted, the parents had taken the child to Children’s Hospital of Birmingham to be evaluated for attention-deficit/hyperaetivity disorder (“ADHD”). Haynes testified that the physician who had evaluated the child at Children’s Hospital explained to her that the problem was not the child’s behavior but, instead, was with the parents’ parenting. The psychological report on the child indicated that he does not have ADHD.

Haynes testified that she does not believe that the mother and the father can care for the child without supervision. She testified that they both have difficulty understanding what the child should be doing at each age. Haynes testified that the parents often fight in front of the child at visitations; that, on a few occasions, the father had fallen asleep during visitations; that the mother and the father are loud; that the mother and the father often overreact to situations, which, she said, has an effect on the child; that the mother and the father had yelled at the child and had threatened to spank the child; that the mother had spanked the child for accidentally hitting her with a ball; that the mother and the father had engaged in inappropriate conversations with the child; and that the mother and the father had sometimes ended their visits early without a reason. Haynes testified that the child in[365]*365teracts more with the mother than with the father and that the child often gets upset with the father or avoids physical affection with him and states that the father is mean. She testified that the mother and the father would make the child feel guilty for not showing the father affection and that, after one such occasion, the child had hidden under the table and had said he felt sick.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 So. 3d 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tj-v-winston-county-department-of-human-resources-alacivapp-2017.