Wooten v. State

2013 OK CIV APP 19, 297 P.3d 405
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 21, 2012
DocketNo. 110,529
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 OK CIV APP 19 (Wooten v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wooten v. State, 2013 OK CIV APP 19, 297 P.3d 405 (Okla. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

WM. C. HETHERINGTON, JR., Judge.

T1 Candice Wooten appeals the termination of her guardianship of LW.H., AL.H., and J.R.H. (the Wards) following the filing of separate motions for such termination by the Wards and the State of Oklahoma. The judgment of the trial court terminating C.W.'s guardianship of the Wards due to an abuse of her fiduciary duties and her continued failure to perform her duties as a guardian, and because it was no longer proper that they remain under guardianship is AFFIRMED.

FACTS

T2 Candice Wooten (C.W.), the children's maternal grandmother, and Roger Wooten (R.W.), their maternal grandfather, (collectively, Guardians) petitioned to assume guardianship of the Wards on July 9, 2008, and their petition was granted. On July 9, 2008, Guardians also filed a plan for the care and treatment of the Wards. Under that plan, Guardians state they will provide or obtain food, clothing, shelter, schooling, and doctor visits for the Wards. The trial court appointed the Public Defender of Oklahoma County as Guardian Ad Litem for the Wards in a July 21, 2008 Order.

T3 Thereafter, the file contains a Petition filed by the Oklahoma County District Attorney on June 5, 2009, in Case No. JD-2009-271, alleging the Wards were deprived children, alleging several grounds for adjudication as to their parents and that as to Guardians, the Wards lacked proper care, their home was unclean and unsafe, their home was not a fit one due to neglect, and there was substance abuse including the misuse of prescription drugs in the home. The June 5, 2009 Petition also alleges RW. is physically unable to provide the children with proper care. In a June 22, 2009 Pretrial Journal Entry, temporary custody of the Wards was continued with the Oklahoma Department of Human Services (DHS) and R.W. was stricken from the Petition by the State. On that same date, a drug test for C.W. was positive for benzodiazepine, marijuana and opiates.

T4 On August 24, 2009, the trial court entered an Adjudication Order finding the failure to appear that day by both the Wards' parents and C.W. constituted consent to adjudication of the Wards as deprived children. DHS's temporary custody was ordered con[407]*407tinued, and DHS was ordered to prepare an individualized service plan (ISP) for the children. The trial court also entered a finding that continuation of reasonable efforts to reunite the Wards with their family was unnee-essary pursuant to 10 0.8.Supp.2009 § 7003-4.6 (renumbered as 10A O.8.Supp.2009 § 1-4-809, amended eff. June 8, 2012).

1 5 The order granting guardianship of the Wards does not appear in the designated appellate record. However, in a December 20, 2010 Motion to remove their guardians and for termination of guardianship pursuant to 80 0.8.2001 § 4-801 filed by the Wards in the guardianship proceedings, ie, Case No. PG-2008-0417, they allege Guardians' petition for guardianship was granted "on or about January 29, 2008 [sic]." 1

1 6 In their December 20, 2010 Motion, the Wards claim DHS had filed a second amended petition on November 16, 2010, in Case No. JD-2009-271 seeking an adjudication of them as deprived children, termination of parental rights, and to make them wards of the Court rather than of Guardians.2 According to the Wards' December 20, 2010 Motion, further review in the guardianship proceedings (Case No. PG-2008-417) were not conducted because of this filing. They ask that, for purposes of judicial economy and their benefit, the determination of their motion to terminate the guardianship be transferred to the judge conducting the proceedings to terminate parental rights. On February 24, 2011, that transfer was approved, and the motion was transferred from Case No. PG-2008-417 to Case No. JD-2009-271. The record contains no other explanation for the serialization of the proceedings and the long delays before determination of the Wards' December 20, 2010 Motion in early 2012. c

T7 In a request filed on February 28, 2011, the Wards' mother consented to a voluntary termination of her parental rights. Their Father consented to termination of his parental rights in a request filed on March 1, 2011. The trial court approved each request on their respective consent dates.

T8 On November 29, 2011, an assistant district attorney, on behalf of the State, filed a Third Amended Petition seeking termination of the Wards' guardianship by C.W. and RW. The Petition alleges, inter alig, that the Wards were adjudicated deprived and they were removed from the Guardians for neglect which included maintaining a home which was unclean and unsafe, C.W. has had an ISP and the opportunity to correct conditions but has failed to do so, DHS will not approve the home for placement, and "there is no longer a purpose to the guardianship and the guardianship should be terminated." The State's petition 'argues Guardians "should have been removed" at the time the Wards were adjudicated as deprived and requests termination of the guardianship of C.W. and RW. under 30 ©.9$.2001 § 4-801 for their "continued failure to perform" their duties, as to C.W. because "it is no longer proper that the children should be under guardianship," and as to R.W. due to his "incapacity to perform his duties."

T9 Hearings on the issue of termination of guardianship were conducted on July 1, 2011, February 14, 2012, and February 15, 2012. At the hearing the trial court clarified that the sole and limited issue before it was the termination of guardianship under § 4-801, not issues relating to C.W. with respect to the adjudication of the Wards as deprived. Citing his health, RW. stipulated he was willing to have guardianship terminated as to himself. The following facts, statements, and claims are those testified to at the hearings.

T 10 C.W., the first witness, acknowledged that her guardianship was a temporary one. She admitted to having difficulty providing for the Wards when they were in her home and that led her to apply for food stamps and [408]*408other assistance. Her home and two others adjacent to it had been purchased by her own parents. The home received water via a connection to a well near one of the other houses. Recently, her daughter, who resided at the adjacent house, turned off Guardians' water connection. There was no city water supply, so she hauled water to her home in barrels and had made arrangements for another well to be drilled.

11 According to C.W., for the preceding two to three years she had prescriptions for opiates Hydrocodone (10 mg. three times a day) and Oxycodone (30 mg. twice a day) and for the benzodiazepine Xanax (1 mg. per day). During the period she was being tested for drugs, she tested positive three times for amphetamine, for which she did not have a prescription. She had pleaded no contest to one charge of child neglect, and the two remaining charges were dropped.

[12 C.W. admitted the police found marijuana at her home and some paraphernalia in the drawer of a table in her living room. She claimed she had lied when she told police it was hers and that it really belonged to a young man who had resided in a downstairs garage area which had been converted into a bedroom. 'The young man previously had helped them out financially. He had since had moved outs3 C.W.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Special Indemnity Fund v. Washburn
1986 OK 46 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1986)
Luker v. Masterson
1925 OK 218 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)
Ex Parte Fortune
1936 OK 46 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Bart v. Hamby
2007 OK CIV APP 75 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2007)
In re T.R.W.
1985 OK 99 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1985)
In the Matter of the Guardianship of M.R.S.
1998 OK 38 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1998)
Whan v. Smith
285 P. 589 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2013 OK CIV APP 19, 297 P.3d 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooten-v-state-oklacivapp-2012.