W.M. and W.D.

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 2, 2021
Docket20-1319
StatusPublished

This text of W.M. and W.D. (W.M. and W.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W.M. and W.D., (iowa 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 20–1319

Submitted January 20, 2021—Filed April 2, 2021

IN THE INTEREST OF W.M. and W.D., Minor Children,

S.C., Mother, STATE OF IOWA, and W.B., Father,

Appellants.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Jackson County, Phillip J.

Tabor, District Associate Judge.

The State appeals denial of its petition to terminate a mother’s

parental rights. The mother appeals appointment of a guardian for the

children. One father appeals termination of his parental rights.

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.

Oxley, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which Christensen,

C.J., and Appel, Waterman, and Mansfield, JJ., joined. McDermott, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part in which

McDonald, J., joined.

Stuart G. Hoover of Alliance Law Firm, PC, Dubuque, for appellant

mother.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Mary A. Triick, Assistant

Attorney General, and Sara Davenport, County Attorney, for appellant

State. Joshua J. Reicks of Schoenthaler, Bartelt, Kahler & Reicks,

Maquoketa, for appellant father. 2

OXLEY, Justice.

In this case, the juvenile court terminated the parental rights of both

of the fathers of two children but denied the State’s petition to terminate

the mother’s parental rights. Instead, the court entered a permanency

order appointing the paternal grandmother of one of the boys as the

guardian for both. Mom appeals the permanency order, asking us to

reverse the appointment of the grandmother as guardian and directing the

State to continue reunification efforts. The State also appeals the

termination order, arguing Mom’s parental rights should have been terminated. Thus, neither the State nor Mom supports the juvenile court’s

resolution of the case with respect to Mom.

One father has also appealed termination of his rights, but his notice

of appeal was untimely filed. We therefore must first determine whether

he is entitled to a delayed appeal before addressing the merits of the

father’s termination.

I. Factual Background and Proceedings.

Mom has struggled with addiction to methamphetamine. She has

sought treatment, but she has relapsed many times over. The two children

involved in this case are W.M. and W.D., who have different fathers. At

the start of this case, W.M. was seven and W.D. was three. W.M. was

involved in a prior child-in-need-of-assistance (CINA) proceeding where he

was removed from Mom’s care but ultimately returned to her custody.

W.M.’s father has not appealed the termination of his parental rights.

W.D’s father appealed, but the notice of appeal was filed two days late. We

will refer to W.D.’s father as “Dad.”

This case was brought to the department of human service (DHS)’s attention in August 2018 when Mom’s paramour (neither of the children’s

fathers) abused Mom in front of her sons. There were also concerns about 3

Mom’s use of illegal substances, particularly methamphetamine. Mom

was living with her paramour and the children in Maquoketa, and,

following the assault and DHS intervention, she became homeless. She

stayed with family and friends during this time period. She found housing

at the Theresa House in Dubuque, but she was asked to leave the shelter

house due to concerns about substance abuse.

DHS placed the children in the custody of their respective paternal

grandparents, and Mom moved from town to town. After her mother

helped her get a hotel room, Mom left behind drug paraphernalia in the room. A caseworker found shelter housing for Mom, and Mom entered a

residential substance abuse treatment program at High Tower on

September 21, 2018.

Once in inpatient treatment, Mom did well. She worked toward

sobriety, and it appeared she was dedicated to remaining clean. She had

visitations with the children where workers helped her learn parenting

skills, particularly follow-through on discipline. W.M. exhibited many

behavioral problems throughout the visits, and his paternal grandmother

reported his behavioral problems increased directly in correlation to visits

with Mom. Notably, W.M. has lived with his paternal grandparents on and

off since he was three years old, long before DHS became involved in this

proceeding. He had issues with bedwetting that his grandparents

attributed to his past living situation. The bedwetting improved when

W.M. was living with his grandparents, but it increased or resumed when

W.M. saw or spoke to Mom. W.D. exhibited some behavioral problems,

primarily centered on hyperactivity and not listening. However, he did not

exhibit the same concerns directly tied to seeing Mom as W.M. DHS returned W.D. to Mom’s care at High Tower after W.D. tested

positive for methamphetamine while in his paternal grandparents’ care. 4

Mom had a negative hair test for substances in the same time period. W.M.

continued to have visits with Mom but often acted out throughout those

visits.

While Mom stayed in the highly-structured High Tower setting, she

continued to do well in her personal life and with respect to the children,

although there was concern that she contacted the abusive ex-paramour

despite a no-contact order. DHS worked with her and emphasized the

importance of respecting the no-contact order. W.M. was placed back in

her care on January 24, 2019, while Mom continued to participate in inpatient care.

Around February 12, Mom used marijuana outside the presence of

the children. She reported this to her caseworker promptly and looked

into modifying her medications, which she believed were not working.

Mom found a job, but her hours interfered with seeing the children, so she

quit.

Mom successfully completed the substance abuse programing at

High Tower in April. Unfortunately, shortly thereafter, she relapsed and

the children were again removed from her care. W.M. returned to the care

of his paternal grandparents, and W.D. was placed in foster care.

Throughout the summer of 2019, Mom had visitation with the

children at the maternal grandmother’s house, where Mom was living.

Mom provided a negative sweat patch for several illegal substances in

August, and she reengaged with services and again worked toward

bettering herself and getting her children back. In September, Mom was

permitted overnight visits with W.D. and extended visits with W.M.

However, in October, Mom started avoiding her caseworkers. On October 10, the worker met with Mom, and she admitted to yet another

relapse with methamphetamine and marijuana. The worker asked Mom 5

to undergo drug testing throughout October, November, and December,

which she repeatedly failed to do. When Mom finally provided a sample

on December 23, she tested positive for amphetamines,

methamphetamine, and THC. The caseworkers urged Mom to return to

inpatient treatment; the maternal grandmother gave Mom an ultimatum

to either seek treatment or move out. In response, Mom requested visits

no longer take place at her mother’s house. Mom continued to have

semisupervised visits overseen by her mother on weekends.

In January 2020, W.M.’s paternal grandmother reported that W.M.’s therapist had recommended he stop seeing Mom. W.M. increasingly began

refusing to go to visits, sometimes agreeing to go after being convinced by

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