Tyrone L. Wheless v. Commonwealth Catholic Charities

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 6, 2007
Docket2939062
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tyrone L. Wheless v. Commonwealth Catholic Charities (Tyrone L. Wheless v. Commonwealth Catholic Charities) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Tyrone L. Wheless v. Commonwealth Catholic Charities, (Va. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Clements, Haley and Beales Argued at Richmond, Virginia

TYRONE L. WHELESS MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY v. Record No. 2939-06-2 JUDGE JAMES W. HALEY, JR. NOVEMBER 6, 2007 COMMONWEALTH CATHOLIC CHARITIES

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY Daniel T. Balfour, Judge

Janet E. Brown (Janet E. Brown, P.C., on brief), for appellant.

Christopher M. Malone; Jeffrey L. Galston, Guardian ad litem for the minor child (Thompson McMullan, on brief), for appellee.

Tyrone L. Wheless (“appellant”) appeals the termination of his parental rights. He

maintains the trial court: (1) erred in considering a foster care plan because that plan was not

filed prior to or contemporaneous with a petition seeking approval of an entrustment agreement

and termination of his parental rights, and because that plan was deficient in form and substance;

and (2) erred in concluding the evidence sufficed to justify termination. We find the first

assignment of error defaulted, and affirm the decision of the trial court as to the second.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

Cassandra Humphrey, unmarried, gave birth to a child here designated B.B.H. on

September 30, 2005. On October 3, 2005, Humphrey executed an “Entrustment Agreement for

Permanent Surrender of Child” placing B.B.H. with Commonwealth Catholic Charities (“CCC”).

The agreement stated that CCC has “the right to place such child for adoption.” In conjunction

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. with the agreement, Humphrey executed an affidavit naming appellant the father. Upon

receiving by certified mail a copy of the entrustment agreement from CCC, appellant denied he

was the father, but requested a DNA test to see “if it’s mine.” At the time of this response,

appellant was in the penitentiary, having been convicted of felony shoplifting on March 5, 2005.

Upon release from the hospital, when he was 3 days old, B.B.H. was placed with a licensed

foster care family. Subsequent DNA testing revealed that appellant was the father of B.B.H.

On November 2, 2005, CCC filed a petition in the Juvenile and Domestic Relations

District Court of Henrico County (“JDR court”), pursuant to Code § 63.2-1222, seeking orders

“terminating the residual parental rights of Tyrone Wheless, accepting the Entrustment

Agreement and terminating the residual parental rights of Cassandra Humphrey, and granting

full custody of [B.B.H.] to Commonwealth Catholic Charities, with leave to place such child for

adoption.” 1 The JDR court appointed separate counsel for B.B.H. and appellant. On March 20,

2006, a foster care plan with the goal of adoption, dated that day, was filed during a short hearing

in JDR court. No objection was made as to the introduction of the March 20 plan. The matter

was continued for a hearing on the merits, which was held on May 11, 2006. Appellant was

present, having been transported from Dillwyn Correctional Center where he was then confined.

The proceedings were conducted pursuant to Code § 16.1-277.01(D), which provides in

part that “if the petition seeks approval of a permanent entrustment agreement which provides for

the termination of all parental rights . . . the court shall make a finding, based upon clear and

convincing evidence, whether termination . . . is in the best interest of the child.”

By order entered May 24, 2006, the JDR court found by “clear and convincing evidence

that Tyrone Leon Wheless is withholding his consent to adoption contrary to the best interest of

the child as set forth in Va. Code § 63.2-1205.” The court then ordered: (1) “no further consent

1 The JDR court further found appellant to be the biological father of B.B.H.

-2- to adoption shall be required from Tyrone Leon Wheless”; (2) CCC “shall have custody of

[B.B.H.] with leave to place such child for adoption”; and (3) “the Entrustment Agreement is

accepted and all rights of Cassandra L. Humphrey to [B.B.H.] . . . are also hereby terminated.”

Appellant noted his appeal on the sole issue of the termination of his parental rights.

That appeal was heard on August 18 and September 8, 2006. The evidence in circuit court may

be summarized as follows.

Tammy Curtis Hudson, adoption counselor for CCC, related the circumstances

surrounding execution of the entrustment agreement and advised B.B.H. was in temporary foster

care prior to the May 11, 2006 JDR court hearing. On June 16, 2006, B.B.H. had been placed

with his prospective adoptive family. A foster care plan dated August 10, 2006, with the goal of

permanent placement and adoption, was offered into evidence as CCC’s Exhibit 1. The

following exchange occurred: “THE COURT: Any objection?” Counsel for Wheless: “No.”

Don E. Wilhelm, a licensed clinical social worker, qualified as an expert, testified that

B.B.H. had bonded with his foster family, that it was “absolutely in his best interest to remain

with this family,” and that it would be detrimental to B.B.H. to remove him.

Cassandra Humphrey, B.B.H.’s mother, reaffirmed her desire that her child be placed for

adoption and supported the termination of appellant’s residual parental rights. She testified that

she began living with appellant in November 2004 at his mother’s home in a public housing

project. There she witnessed fighting between appellant’s mother, Sally Wilson, and her

boyfriend, with both often intoxicated. Appellant was “smoking crack” most of the time, until he

was incarcerated in March 2005. He had broken a “beer bottle over her head” and kicked and

punched her as she lay on the ground. On another occasion, with knowledge she was pregnant,

he shoved her head against a wall and struck her in the face. These assaults usually occurred

-3- when Humphrey objected to his using her car without her permission. He threatened to kill her

and her daughter. 2 She concluded: “I’m in fear for my life when he gets released.”

Appellant was transported from Dillwyn Correctional Center for the hearings, from

which it was anticipated he would be released on September 27, 2006. He testified: (1) he had

been convicted of assault against women four times, though he could only remember the name of

one victim; (2) he began using crack in 1998, after he had been shot that year, and used it since

then when not incarcerated; (3) as a result of the shooting he has been unemployed since 1998,

and receives $384 per month from Social Security disability benefits; (4) after serving six

months in jail for an earlier petit larceny conviction in Hanover County, and despite attending

substance abuse counseling thereafter, he continued using crack; (5) when he runs out of pain

medication, he uses heroin in addition to crack; (6) since 1993 he has been selling crack “on and

off” to “any and everybody”; (7) though he has never had a driver’s license, he would take

Cassandra Humphrey’s car and “pawn” it to drug dealers for their use in their sales operations, in

exchange for crack; (8) he takes Paxil and other anti-psychotic drugs because he “used to hear

voices” and these drugs “prevent [him] from hearing them”; and (9) he planned on living with

his mother upon release, though he was unaware he could not live in public housing as a result of

the felony conviction for which he was presently incarcerated. Appellant also testified as to his

love for and relationship with his eighteen-year-old son, Tyquan. However, Tyquan had never

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