Kayn C. v. Dcs, K.C. ( 2022 )


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  •                      NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    KAYN C., Appellant,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SAFETY, K.C., Appellees.
    No. 1 CA-JV 21-0338
    FILED 4-28-2022
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. JD533842
    The Honorable Jeffrey Rueter, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix
    By Emily M. Stokes
    Counsel for Appellee
    Maricopa County Public Advocate, Mesa
    By Suzanne W. Sanchez
    Counsel for Appellant
    KAYN C. v. DCS, K.C.
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Peter B. Swann delivered the decision of the court, in which Presiding
    Judge Cynthia J. Bailey and Judge D. Steven Williams joined.
    S W A N N, Judge:
    ¶1             This is an appeal from an order establishing a permanent
    guardianship of a dependent child under A.R.S. § 8-871. We affirm because
    sufficient evidence supports the order.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2            K.C. was born in 2013 to Juanita D. (“Mother”) and Kayn C.
    (“Father”). The record is silent regarding K.C.’s earliest years. But
    throughout 2018 and 2019, she lived exclusively with Mother and her
    maternal grandmother (“Grandmother”), with Grandmother helping to
    raise K.C. because Mother was ill. Father did not act as a caregiver to K.C.
    during this time.
    ¶3            K.C. began living with Father at some point after Mother died
    in December 2019. In October 2020, Father sent K.C. to Grandmother’s
    house for a weekend. At the end of the weekend, Father told Grandmother
    that the police were looking for him. He asked Grandmother to keep K.C.
    but not enroll her in school or take her to any medical providers until he
    reached out.
    ¶4            Father was arrested the next day. He was charged for
    multiple domestic-violence crimes against his wife based on allegations
    that during K.C.’s weekend with Grandmother, Father locked his wife in a
    room, urinated on her, and obstructed her breathing. In December 2020, he
    pled guilty to one count of aggravated assault, as well as one count of
    aggravated DUI arising from a December 2017 incident. He was sentenced
    to prison terms scheduled to end in April 2022.
    ¶5          Meanwhile, K.C. continued to reside with Grandmother.
    Grandmother sought appointment as K.C.’s legal guardian, but Father
    refused. Grandmother nonetheless obtained medical care for K.C. in
    November 2020 and enrolled her in school in December. She also instituted
    a dependency action in December, and the Department of Child Safety
    (“DCS”) became involved. Grandmother reported to a social worker that
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    KAYN C. v. DCS, K.C.
    Decision of the Court
    though K.C. grieved the loss of Mother, she did not ask for Father. K.C.
    told the social worker that she had not been emotionally, physically, or
    sexually abused, but had witnessed Father arguing with his wife. She
    stated that Father yelled and screamed at his wife, and once pulled her hair.
    ¶6           In January 2021, DCS substituted as the petitioner in the
    dependency action and obtained legal custody of K.C., with Grandmother
    retaining physical custody. Father pled no contest to DCS’s allegations that
    he was unable to parent due to incarceration and had neglected K.C. by not
    giving Grandmother legal authority to care for her. Accordingly, at the
    beginning of April, the superior court found K.C. dependent as to Father.
    Later that month, DCS moved that Grandmother be appointed as K.C.’s
    permanent guardian. Father objected.
    ¶7            Meanwhile, in February, Father had written to DCS asking for
    visits with K.C., and the ongoing case manager asked K.C. about visiting
    Father. K.C. adamantly refused, stating that she did not care about Father
    and that it was good he was in prison because he deserved to be there.
    ¶8              The case manager eventually contacted Father’s corrections
    officer in mid-May and was able to arrange for video visits. According to
    the case manager (though not documented in the available evidence), the
    first visit was set for May but K.C. refused to participate. K.C. then refused
    to participate in a visit in early June. K.C. explained afterwards to the case
    manager that she “just didn’t want to do it.” She added that Father was
    “sometimes . . . mean,” that he would “yell[ ] and get[ ] angry” at her, and
    that she would “get in trouble” and he would “take[ ] [her] phone away.”
    She did not answer when the case manager asked her if Father had ever
    hurt her or another in her presence.
    ¶9            Approximately a week after K.C. refused the June visit, Father
    moved the court to order visitation, arguing that he had not seen or talked
    to K.C. since October 2020 and opining that K.C. refused visits because she
    felt pressured to choose between Father and Grandmother. He asked that
    video visits be provided in a neutral setting away from Grandmother, and
    that K.C. be permitted to choose whether to participate in the visits once at
    the neutral setting. He stated that he had previously proposed this scheme
    as well as therapeutic visits to DCS without success.
    ¶10           DCS responded that “[w]hen the case aide has reached out to
    the child about setting up a visit, she refuses and informs the case aide she
    does not want a visit,” and DCS was aware of no evidence implying
    interference by Grandmother. DCS stated that though it did not oppose
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    KAYN C. v. DCS, K.C.
    Decision of the Court
    visitation in a neutral setting, it could not “force the child in the vehicle to
    . . . go to that neutral setting” if the child refused the visit, and “the parties
    are trying to follow the child’s wishes in regards to visitation, and not force
    the child to do anything she does not want.” DCS finally stated that it no
    longer offered therapeutic visitation and a similar service, called clinically
    supervised parenting time, was unavailable because it only takes place in
    the community or a therapist’s office and is only for cases involving
    substantiated or alleged severe abuse, alienation, or similar conduct.
    ¶11            In late June, the court directed Father to file a pleading
    regarding visitation and indicated that it would rule on the pleading.
    Father filed a new motion for visitation at the beginning of September. In
    response to the new motion, DCS stated that K.C. was now in therapy, that
    the therapist had decided it was not in K.C.’s interests to force her to talk
    about Father in therapy, and that though DCS would set up visits “[w]hen
    the child makes it know[n] she is open to exploring other options for a
    relationship with her Father and/or visits with him, . . . until that time,
    DCS will not force this child to go through with visits she is not wanting.”
    Soon after DCS filed the response, Father withdrew his motion, stating that
    “[a]t this time, Father does not want to pursue the matter of visits with his
    Child while he is incarcerated.”
    ¶12          DCS had encouraged Father to take classes while imprisoned,
    and he did so. He completed at least thirty-three courses between
    December 2020 and August 2021. When questioned about Father’s
    coursework, the case manager testified, “We noted that father was doing
    what he could in that situation, and that those kind of—that desire to
    change doesn’t go unnoticed.”
    ¶13           DCS had also encouraged Father to send letters or pictures to
    K.C., and he started doing so in February 2021. But the case manager
    refused to pass on Father’s first letter to K.C. because he, in the case
    manager’s words, made inappropriate promises and threatened that he
    knew where Grandmother lived and would find K.C. there. DCS thereafter
    provided Father with guidelines for appropriate communications, and he
    sent multiple letters and coloring pages. Starting in March, the case
    manager brought the letters and coloring pages to her monthly meetings
    with K.C. At two of the meetings K.C. declined the case manager’s offer to
    read Father’s communications to her, and at every meeting she refused to
    write or draw something for Father, once going so far as to pretend that she
    did not know how to write. When K.C. began therapy in June to address
    her grief regarding Mother’s death and her ongoing relationship with
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    KAYN C. v. DCS, K.C.
    Decision of the Court
    Father, the case manager began forwarding Father’s letters and pictures to
    the therapist to be reviewed with K.C. when therapeutically appropriate.
    ¶14           At intake for the therapy, K.C. stated Father used to yell at her
    and her siblings and that she was afraid of him. She disclosed that she felt
    overwhelmed with thoughts about Father and wanted no contact with him.
    Grandmother separately informed the therapist that K.C. was afraid of
    Father and did not want to talk about him or visit him.
    ¶15           The therapist decided not to share Father’s letters and
    coloring pages with K.C. until K.C. felt ready to talk about Father. Once
    therapy began, K.C. did not receive any of his missives except for one time
    in September, when a DCS worker mistakenly handed a letter directly to
    her. The therapist further decided not to force K.C. to talk about Father,
    explaining to DCS in June that “push[ing] her to talk about him . . . can
    cause more trauma than helping out,” and reiterating in July that “she will
    not force [K.C.] to talk about dad.”
    ¶16            The case worker testified that “[w]henever [she] had asked
    how progress was going with [K.C.] and discussing the relationship with
    her father, . . . [the therapist] would discuss that—that it was always
    difficult to get [K.C.] to talk about. She would typically kind of shut down
    and change the subject.” The therapist reported raising the issue of Father
    with K.C. two times. First, at the initial session in June, she “talk[ed] to
    [K.C.] about how she is the one that is going to have to bring up her father
    if she wants to talk about him,” and that this exchange “caused [K.C.] to get
    a little upset.” Then, in September, the therapist asked K.C. about an
    incident when she became upset about a sibling referring to her by her full
    name. K.C. explained that she did not like her surname but would not
    elaborate, though according to Grandmother, K.C. dislikes the name
    because she shares it with Father. The therapist then told K.C. that she had
    letters from Father, and K.C. responded that she “still did not want to talk
    [to] or see him.” In October, the therapist reported that because K.C. was
    doing well with respect to dealing with the loss of Mother, the therapist was
    looking at “possibly closing out. This is due to her not wanting to talk about
    her dad and I will not cause more trauma by making her discuss this.”
    ¶17          The permanent guardianship motion went to trial in late
    October. After considering the evidence set forth above, the superior court
    granted the motion and dismissed the dependency. Grandmother was
    given sole legal and physical custody of K.C., including sole discretion
    regarding visitation with Father. Father appeals.
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    KAYN C. v. DCS, K.C.
    Decision of the Court
    DISCUSSION
    ¶18            The superior court may establish a permanent guardianship
    for a child if the movant provides clear and convincing evidence that the
    permanent guardianship is in the child’s best interests and certain
    conditions are met. A.R.S. §§ 8-871(A), -872(G); Ariz. R.P. Juv. Ct. (“Rule”)
    63(A), (C). Only one of those conditions is at issue here: whether DCS
    “made reasonable efforts to reunite the parent and child and further efforts
    would be unproductive.” See A.R.S. § 8-871(A)(3). We must accept the
    superior court’s findings unless they are unsupported by reasonable
    evidence, and we must affirm the court’s order unless it is clearly
    erroneous. Jennifer B. v. Ariz. Dep’t of Econ. Sec., 
    189 Ariz. 553
    , 555 (App.
    1997). “In proceedings for permanent guardianship, the court shall give
    primary consideration to the physical, mental and emotional needs and
    safety of the child.” A.R.S. § 8-871(C); see also Rule 63(D)(3).
    ¶19           DCS need not provide services that would be futile, or
    provide every conceivable service. Cf. Mary Ellen C. v. Ariz. Dep’t of Econ.
    Sec., 
    193 Ariz. 185
    , 192, ¶ 34 (App. 1999) (examining what constitutes
    sufficient rehabilitative efforts in severance cases); In re Maricopa Cnty. Juv.
    Action No. JS-501904, 
    180 Ariz. 348
    , 353 (App. 1994) (same). But the fact of
    a parent’s short-term incarceration does not lessen the state’s obligation to
    make diligent efforts to preserve the family. See Jessie D. v. Dep’t of Child
    Safety, 
    251 Ariz. 574
    , 581–82, ¶¶ 17–21 (2021).
    ¶20            In the severance context, our supreme court recently held that
    when severance is sought based on the duration of a parent’s prison
    sentence, if the parent “requests reunification services, such as visitation,
    and providing the services will not endanger the child, DCS must make
    reasonable efforts to provide these services.” 
    Id. at 582, ¶ 21
    . Similarly, we
    have held that visitation is a “particularly crucial” reunification service, that
    visitation is generally presumed to be in a child’s best interests even when
    a parent is incarcerated, and that the parent “should be denied the right of
    visitation only under extraordinary circumstances.” Michael M. v. Ariz.
    Dep’t of Econ. Sec., 
    202 Ariz. 198
    , 200, ¶¶ 8–9 (App. 2002). Typically, the
    denial of visitation must have “a specific evidentiary basis.” 
    Id. at 201, ¶ 12
    .
    For example, in In re Maricopa Cnty. Juv. Action No. JD-5312, we affirmed the
    termination of a mother’s visits based on evidence that the visits caused the
    children to experience hyperactivity, destructivity, defiance, sleep issues,
    night terrors, diarrhea, clinginess, and irritability. 
    178 Ariz. 372
    , 376 (App.
    1994). And in Jessie D., our supreme court found reasonable DCS’s decision
    to not allow the children to speak with or view letters from their
    incarcerated father because a psychologist determined that the father had
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    KAYN C. v. DCS, K.C.
    Decision of the Court
    sent letters and engaged in phone calls that were substantively
    inappropriate and caused the children to exhibit “undesirable behaviors.”
    251 Ariz. at 582, ¶ 24.
    ¶21            We must first address DCS’s contention that Father waived
    his objection to DCS’s failure to provide visitation. Father requested
    visitation in February and sought judicial intervention in June, but he did
    not thereafter file a pleading as directed. His next filing was a September
    motion, which he withdrew soon thereafter. But though Father’s visitation
    requests were intermittent and imperfect, it is clear on this record that he
    sought visitation on several occasions. It is also clear that Father
    consistently sought to maintain a relationship with K.C. through letters as
    directed by DCS. He also complied with the directive to take classes in
    prison. In view of Father’s multiple requests for visitation, and his full
    engagement in all services DCS required, we conclude that the
    reasonableness of DCS’s efforts is properly before us. Cf., e.g., Shawanee S.
    v. Ariz. Dep’t of Econ. Sec., 
    234 Ariz. 174
    , 179, ¶ 16 (App. 2014) (holding that
    “a parent who does not object” to the services provided is precluded from
    challenging a severance order’s reasonable-efforts finding).
    ¶22           Several months lapsed between when Father first requested
    visitation and DCS first provided it. The case manager explained, however,
    that “[t]here was difficulty getting into contact with” the appropriate
    corrections officer. DCS thereafter set up two visits. And then, after K.C.
    refused to participate in those visits, DCS appropriately sought therapy for
    K.C. designed in part to facilitate visitation by addressing her relationship
    with Father.
    ¶23            The therapist vigorously and successfully pursued the issue
    of Mother’s death with K.C., but left it to K.C. to raise the issue of Father
    and kept his written communications from her. The therapist’s approach
    limited the reunification value of the therapy and Father’s missives. But on
    this record, we cannot say that the superior court erred by accepting the
    therapy as forensically sufficient. First, though the therapist was presented
    with a client who disclaimed abuse, the record suggests good cause for
    K.C.’s reticence regarding Father: he had failed to care for her for a period
    of years, she was afraid of him, he yelled at her and others, and she saw him
    pull his assault victim’s hair. Second, the therapist did bring up Father at
    least occasionally but, as with the case manager, K.C. refused to discuss
    him. The documentary evidence shows that the therapist told K.C. at the
    first session that she would need to be the one to bring up Father and K.C.
    got upset, and that several months later she told K.C. that Father had sent
    her letters and K.C. responded that she did not want to talk to or see him.
    7
    KAYN C. v. DCS, K.C.
    Decision of the Court
    Further, the case manager testified that “whenever” she asked the therapist
    about K.C.’s progress, the therapist would report that it was “always”
    difficult to get K.C. to discuss Father.
    ¶24            Based on the specific facts of this case and the primacy of the
    child’s best interests, we cannot say that the superior court clearly erred by
    accepting the therapy as a sufficient reunification service. Nor can we say
    that the court clearly erred by concluding that DCS’s reunification efforts
    were reasonable and further efforts would be unproductive.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶25             We affirm the order granting Grandmother permanent
    guardianship of K.C. We note that though Father has lost custody of K.C.,
    his parental rights have not been terminated. A.R.S. § 8-872(H); see also
    Jennifer B., 
    189 Ariz. at 556
    . The superior court retains jurisdiction and may
    order further proceedings in accordance with K.C.’s best interests. A.R.S.
    § 8-872(J). Additionally, the guardianship may be revoked if Father proves
    a change in circumstances by clear and convincing evidence and revocation
    is in K.C.’s best interests. A.R.S. § 8-873(C).
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    8