Vg v. Madison County Dept. of Human Res.

989 So. 2d 550, 2008 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 47, 2008 WL 273927
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 1, 2008
Docket2060945
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 989 So. 2d 550 (Vg v. Madison County Dept. of Human Res.) 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
Vg v. Madison County Dept. of Human Res., 989 So. 2d 550, 2008 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 47, 2008 WL 273927 (Ala. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

V.G. ("the mother") appeals a judgment finding Dy.G. ("the child"), a female, dependent and awarding custody of the child to D.G., the child's cousin. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with instructions.

On January 16, 2007, the Madison County Department of Human Resources ("DHR") petitioned the juvenile court, seeking, among other things, a judgment adjudicating the child, born on June 15, 1993, dependent and awarding physical and legal custody of the child to D.G.

The juvenile court held an ore tenus proceeding on DHR's petition on April 12, 2007. At the conclusion of the proceeding, the juvenile court rendered an oral judgment adjudicating the child dependent. On July 5, 2007, the juvenile court entered a written judgment in conformance with its oral judgment. In its written judgment, the juvenile court awarded D.G. custody of the child, subject to the visitation rights of the mother, which, the court ordered, were to be exercised solely at the discretion of D.G. The mother then timely appealed. *Page 552

The following is a recitation of the pertinent evidence. The mother has three children, namely, the child, Dom.G. ("the son"), and W.G. ("the daughter"). The son is an adult; the daughter was 17 years old at the time of the proceeding in this matter.

The evidence established that DHR had previously been involved with the mother regarding her two older children beginning in 1991. Jamia Shelby, the DHR caseworker for the child since August 2005, testified that the events giving rise to the present action began in 2004 when DHR received a report alleging that the son had injured the mother's husband, E.B. ("the stepfather"), while engaging in a physical altercation with him. Shelby also testified that, sometime thereafter, the daughter had stabbed the stepfather during an altercation with the mother and the stepfather.

Shelby testified that, throughout the child's life, the mother had been involved in relationships in which domestic violence had occurred. According to Shelby, the child told her that she had witnessed the mother and the stepfather commit acts of domestic violence against each other and that she had been unable to sleep because of the domestic violence that had been occurring between the mother and the stepfather. Shelby also stated that the child had informed her that the mother had asked for the son's and the daughter's assistance when the mother and the stepfather would engage in physical altercations.

DHR devised a safety plan requesting that the mother leave the stepfather because the children had become involved in altercations between the mother and the stepfather. The mother complied with that request. However, Shelby testified that the mother violated the safety plan when the mother visited the stepfather with the child over a weekend. The mother denied that she and the child had stayed with the stepfather over a weekend, but she admitted that the child had visited the stepfather. The mother testified that the child had informed her that Shelby had given the child permission to visit the stepfather. The mother testified that she had separated from the stepfather in December 2005. The mother also stated that she plans to seek a divorce.

After the mother and her children left the stepfather, the mother and the children began residing with the mother's aunt. Shelby testified that DHR then requested that the mother leave the aunt's residence after the mother and the child had engaged in a physical altercation in early 2006. The mother denied that she and the child had had a physical altercation. However, she testified that she had corporally punished the child because the child had not informed her of the child's whereabouts over the course of a weekend.

DHR first placed the child with another relative before placing the child with D.G. in December 2006. D.G.'s daughter and granddaughter, who are 12 years old and 8 months old, respectively, reside with D.G. in a three-bedroom house in Athens. DHR conducted a home study of D.G.'s residence and issued a favorable report. The child has resided with D.G. since that time. D.G. testified that the child had been progressing academically during the time the child has been in his care.

Shelby testified that since 2004 DHR had offered the mother various services, such as domestic-violence and anger-management counseling, budgeting counseling, and housing assistance. Regarding counseling, Shelby testified the mother had attended counseling for a few weeks upon DHR's prompting but had failed to continue attending shortly thereafter. The mother testified that she was unable to *Page 553 attend counseling because it conflicted with her work schedule and because she had had a hysterectomy. However, she later admitted that she had failed to attend counseling sessions because she had not been "getting [anything] out of it." She also testified that she had informed officials at DHR that she would seek counseling from her own counselor. Nevertheless, the mother admitted that she was not attending counseling at the time of the proceeding in this matter. Shelby testified that DHR also had offered the stepfather counseling; the stepfather did not desire to participate. Furthermore, Shelby testified that budgeting service providers had met with the mother for several weeks but that the mother had failed to continue to meet with those providers.

Additionally, Shelby testified that DHR had secured housing for the mother on two occasions. She stated that the mother had been evicted from one residence and had vacated the other. However, the mother testified that DHR had only assisted her in obtaining housing once, and she denied that she had been evicted from that residence. The mother testified that she had left that residence because she believed that stairs in that residence posed a safety hazard to her grandchild, who resides with her, and because the residence was "nasty." Shelby testified that the residence that DHR had assisted the mother in obtaining was in fair condition. She also testified that the mother had informed her that she had vacated that residence because she could not afford the rent and that she was planning to stay at her aunt's residence while the aunt was out of town.

The mother admitted that from December 2005 to January 2007 she had resided in three to four different places. At the time of the proceeding in this matter, the mother, who lives in Huntsville, had been living in a three-bedroom residence with the daughter and the daughter's child since January 2007. The mother testified that she was not in arrears regarding her rental payments. The daughter testified that they have an abundant supply of groceries. The evidence also established that the mother was employed, working two jobs at the time of the proceeding.

The evidence established that DHR had made travel arrangements to transport the child from Athens to Huntsville for supervised visitations with the mother. Shelby testified that the mother visits the child when DHR transports the child. D.G. testified that he had offered to transport the mother from Huntsville to Athens to visit with the child at his home, but the mother had not accepted his offer. D.G. testified that the mother had visited the child at D.G.'s residence on Christmas day 2006 and once in January 2007. The mother stated that, although she drives the son's or the daughter's cars on occasion, she does not visit the child more often because it is too far to drive or because the child had been unavailable for visits due to her extracurricular activities.

The evidence established that the mother had been receiving approximately $570 in monthly child support from the child's father. The evidence further established that that child support was solely attributed to the child.

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Related

K.E. v. Marshall County Department of Human Resources
125 So. 3d 722 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2013)
L.M. v. Shelby County Department of Human Resources
86 So. 3d 377 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
989 So. 2d 550, 2008 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 47, 2008 WL 273927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vg-v-madison-county-dept-of-human-res-alacivapp-2008.