In re A.W. , 231 Ill. 2d 241 ( 2008 )


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  •                  Docket Nos. 105849, 105952 cons.
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT
    OF
    THE STATE OF ILLINOIS
    In re A.W., Jr., et al., Minors (The People of the State of Illinois,
    Appellant, v. P.W., Appellee)–In re A.W., Jr., et al., Minors (The
    People of the State of Illinois, Appellant, v. A.W., Sr., Appellee).
    Opinion filed October 17, 2008.
    JUSTICE KARMEIER delivered the judgment of the court, with
    opinion.
    Chief Justice Fitzgerald and Justices Freeman, Thomas, Kilbride,
    Garman, and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    On March 28, 2006, the State filed separate petitions, which were
    consolidated for hearing, asking that A.W., Jr., and A.W. be
    adjudicated neglected minors. The parents of the children are A.W.,
    Sr. (father), and P.W. (mother). The petitions alleged that the minors’
    environment was injurious to their welfare, and paragraph A of the
    petitions listed eight incidents of erratic and/or violent conduct on the
    part of father as the basis for this allegation. The circuit court of
    Peoria County adjudicated the children neglected minors and later
    entered a dispositional order declaring them wards of the court and
    awarding guardianship to the Department of Children and Family
    Services (DCFS) with right to place. The dispositional order found
    mother “fit” and father “unfit” but stated that the children could not
    be returned to mother because she was still residing with father.
    Father and mother filed separate appeals. The appellate court in
    mother’s appeal held that the trial court’s finding of neglect was
    against the manifest weight of the evidence and it, therefore, reversed
    the adjudicatory order and vacated the dispositional order. No.
    3–06–0830 (2007) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23).
    The appellate court in father’s appeal took judicial notice of its
    decision in mother’s appeal and reversed the judgment of the circuit
    court. No. 3–06–0859 (2007) (unpublished summary order under
    Supreme Court Rule 23(c)). We granted the State’s petition for leave
    to appeal in both cases and consolidated them for our review. 
    210 Ill. 2d
    R. 315. For the reasons that follow, the judgments of the appellate
    court are reversed and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
    BACKGROUND
    The circuit court conducted the adjudicatory hearing on
    September 8 and 29 of 2006. A.W., Jr., was 13 years old and A.W.
    was 8 years old at the time. All of the incidents in the record took
    place in the City of Peoria. The State presented 10 witnesses,
    including 5 city police officers. Father and mother were each asked
    in open court by their respective counsel if they wished to testify, and
    each declined.
    Police officer Fred Ball, who was retired at the time of the
    hearing, testified that he was called to the home of father and mother
    on May 30, 1995. When he arrived he spoke to mother, who had a
    minor laceration on her hand and several contusions on her face, legs
    and arms. She said that father had gone to her place of employment
    and told her that she was needed at home because her brother had
    been injured. After they got home, father took her into the back
    bedroom and began beating her and accusing her of being with
    another man. Mother told the officer that father had broken a large
    picture containing glass over her head, hit her with his fist, and struck
    her hand with a knife, causing the laceration. A.W., Jr., who was 15
    months old at the time, was on the bed. The officer found broken
    glass all over the bed, but father and the baby were not there when he
    -2-
    arrived. Mother said father took the baby and left. She ran to a
    neighbor’s house and called the police.
    The State introduced a copy of the medical report from the
    hospital that treated mother on the night father assaulted her. Mother
    told the hospital staff that father had struck her in the head and face
    with his fist, kicked her multiple times, hit her in the head with a
    glass picture frame which broke, struck her in the head once with a
    brass table leg, and threatened to kill her with a knife, although he did
    not stab her.
    Jittaun Woods, father’s half-sister, testified that over the past year
    and a half prior to May 9, 2005, father started displaying a lot of
    anger and seemed confused at times. She said that he was having
    financial difficulties, that the family would help each other out
    financially whenever necessary, and that she and some family
    members had helped father financially. She testified that his recent
    behavior was uncharacteristic and that previously he had been a
    loving and supportive brother.
    On May 9, 2005, father was acting irrationally and was swearing
    at his brother over the telephone. When Jittuan learned of this, she
    called ERS to go to father’s house to ensure that everyone in father’s
    house was safe. (The record does not contain any information about
    ERS.) Later that evening she and her husband went to father’s house
    because of her concern about his behavior. Father was on the porch
    and his children A.W., Jr., and A.W. were standing in the doorway.
    Father said to Jittaun that he was very angry that she had called ERS
    earlier that day and he punched her in the forehead. Jittaun was dazed,
    and she went to the emergency room, after the police were called.
    Father admitted to the responding police officer, Earl Jackson, that he
    had punched Jittaun. Officer Jackson testified he could not recall
    seeing any children around. Father was arrested and spent several
    days in jail. When he was released from jail, he apologized to Jittaun
    and said he was under a lot of stress.
    Father’s brother Jeremy testified that he received two telephone
    calls and a voice mail from father on May 10, 2005, while Jeremy
    was in a meeting at work. In the voice message father said that
    Jeremy needed to act more like his brother, that he did not appreciate
    the way Jeremy was treating him, and that he was going to beat him
    up if Jeremy did not lend him the money he had promised. Jeremy
    -3-
    testified that he felt he was in danger and that as siblings they fought
    but in their adult life he had never threatened him in any way.
    Police officer Chad McCollum testified that on January 11, 2006,
    he pulled over a vehicle driven by father because he was not wearing
    his seat belt. While the officer was placing his police vehicle in park,
    father left his vehicle and began walking toward the officer in an
    aggressive manner with his hands outstretched. Father said, “I knew
    you were going to stop me. Just take me to jail.” The officer told
    father to get back into his car, but father continued forward. The
    officer repeated the instruction two more times before he arrested and
    handcuffed father for obstructing police. Father was loud and
    argumentative, and he stated he was wearing his seat belt. The officer
    asked him his name and father said he knew his rights and he did not
    have to talk to him. Father then told the officer that he “was a crooked
    cop” who “was being played by the system.” Father continued to be
    upset until he was placed in the transport wagon.
    David Obergfeld, the principal of Von Steuben Middle School,
    testified that A.W., Jr., attended the school between December 12,
    2005, and March 8, 2006. On February 13, 2006, the acting assistant
    principal was going to A.W., Jr.’s home room and observed A.W., Jr.,
    standing by the pencil sharpener with a pencil at his penis making
    gyrations behind the teacher who had her back to him. The acting
    assistant principal took A.W., Jr., to the office. A.W., Jr., admitted
    what he had done and said he was trying to impress some other boys
    in the classroom. The principal gave A.W., Jr., a three-day suspension
    for showing disrespect to a teacher.
    The principal then called the family on the telephone and talked
    to mother. He described A.W., Jr.’s disrespect to a teacher in detail
    and told her that A.W., Jr., was suspended for three days. The
    principal testified that mother was very calm and very nice, that she
    appreciated the telephone call, and that someone would come over
    and pick up A.W., Jr. Later that day father came to the school with a
    police officer. The principal was surprised by the presence of the
    police officer, who told the principal that father was afraid to come
    to the school and thought there were going to be some problems.
    The principal, the acting assistant principal, father, A.W., Jr., and
    the police officer all went into the assistant principal’s office. The
    principal told father of A.W., Jr.’s disrespect to a teacher by holding
    -4-
    a pencil near his penis and making gyrating motions while the teacher
    was standing with her back to him and that A.W., Jr., was suspended
    for three days, and handed father the suspension form. Father asked
    A.W., Jr., if the story was correct and A.W., Jr., said that he was just
    doing some kind of dancing. Father crumpled up the form, threw it
    across the room, and said, “This is bullshit.” The principal then said,
    “We don’t talk that way. This meeting is over. It’s disrespectful
    behavior. I’m asking you to leave.” Father continued to argue and the
    principal asked the police officer, “Would you please escort him
    out?” Father argued with the police officer and asked for the officer’s
    badge number before finally leaving. This incident resulted in father
    receiving a letter from the school’s attorney barring father from the
    school grounds unless he had the principal’s permission.
    John Gingery, the paternal grandfather of the children, testified
    that on March 11, 2006, A.W., Jr., and A.W. arrived at his house.
    A.W., Jr., told grandfather that father received a telephone call, came
    outside, and told the children to leave. Grandfather’s house is about
    three miles from the parents’ house. A.W., Jr., said that they had been
    walking around for three hours with only one coat, which they would
    switch off wearing. Grandfather then telephoned Jittaun Woods. They
    agreed to meet at father’s house to find out what was going on with
    the children. The children stayed at grandfather’s house with
    grandfather’s wife.
    When grandfather arrived at father’s house, Woods was there with
    her husband, and father and mother were in their car. Grandfather and
    father had not had any contact with each other for over a year. During
    that year, father had threatened to kill grandfather and had said to
    grandfather that he was the reason that father’s head was so “f___ed
    up.” Father said on this occasion “I see the bitches run together” and
    approached grandfather in a fighting stance with his fists balled up.
    Grandfather grabbed father, but Woods and her husband intervened.
    Officer Aaron Watkins testified that on March 11, 2006, he
    responded to a call from father’s house. When the officer arrived,
    father initially expressed frustration with the amount of time it had
    taken the police to arrive. Grandfather was at the parents’ house when
    the officer arrived and the children were still at grandfather’s house.
    Father told the officer his children had left the house and they had
    been gone for quite some time. He said the children had gotten into
    -5-
    trouble at a friend’s house, and father let them know they were going
    to be reprimanded when they got home. Father was carrying in
    groceries when he told them to get into the house to receive their
    punishment, and they ran off. The officer testified that he went to
    grandfather’s house, got the children and then brought them to their
    parents’ home.
    The officer further testified that A.W., Jr., wanted to go live with
    his grandfather and father had no problem with that. The officer then
    checked with grandfather, who was still outside of the house, and
    grandfather agreed. They also agreed to talk with a case worker the
    next day or somebody else to help them out with the situation. A.W.,
    Jr., then went with grandfather and A.W. stayed with her parents.
    Two days later, on March 13, 2006, Raelyn Galassi, a child
    protection investigator for DCFS, testified that she went to
    grandfather’s home and spoke to A.W., Jr. When she asked if he
    wanted to go home, he said that he did not want to go home because
    there was a lot of chaos there and his father was mad and yelled all
    the time. He also said that his mother and father fought and his
    mother would leave home sometimes. A.W., Jr., stated that things had
    not always been that way, but only for the last year or a little over.
    When asked, he said that he was not attending school anymore and
    that he was not being home schooled.
    Later that same day, Galassi spoke to father and mother at their
    home. When she asked why A.W., Jr., was not in school, father stated
    that A.W., Jr., was being picked on in school. He said that he went to
    the school and was trying to deal with school personnel on what the
    problem was and he was told that he was banned from the school. He
    also said that they were working on getting him back to school.
    Mother said that there had been disciplinary problems in schools with
    A.W., Jr., since kindergarten, that they were currently home schooling
    him, and that they were willing to try to get him back into school.
    Both father and mother agreed at this time to participate in services
    offered by DCFS to get A.W., Jr., back into school.
    The next day, on March 14, Galassi left father and mother a
    message that A.W., Jr., would be coming back home that day. That
    same day, police officer David Slater was sent to grandfather’s house
    at about 2:30 in the afternoon after father had called the police. Slater
    testified that father was in a vehicle waiting nearby when he arrived.
    -6-
    Father told the officer that his son was in the house and he wanted the
    officer to get his son out. The officer had never met father and the
    officer knew nothing of the situation. When father telephoned the
    police, he asked for help to get his son and hung up. The officer asked
    for information concerning the problem and father replied, “I don’t
    have to tell you anything. Just go get my f___ing son out of the
    house.” He repeated this statement several times. Father was irate and
    the officer tried to calm him down several times, but he remained
    loud and agitated. After father said, “f___ you and the other police”
    to the officer, he threw his cell phone toward grandfather’s garage.
    The phone hit the concrete driveway and shattered. The officer then
    knocked on the door of the house, talked to grandfather, and learned
    that A.W., Jr., was not there. Father had been standing on the
    sidewalk and he then left.
    Three days later, on March 17, 2006, Galassi went to the family
    home and she saw father and A.W., Jr., outside. She asked how things
    were going. Father was angry and he stated that he did not want
    DCFS in his business and that he wanted her off his property. She
    tried to tell him that she was just following up with what they talked
    about on March 14. He told her to get off his property and go get
    some counseling herself.
    Five days later, on March 22, there was a family meeting at DCFS
    at father’s request. Galassi was present along with her supervisor and
    a “TDM facilitator,” mother, father and his half-sisters, Jittuan and
    Mia, and grandfather. (The record does not contain any information
    about TDM.) The parents had the right to have the facilitator exclude
    grandfather and father’s half-sisters, but they were not excluded.
    Galassi and her supervisor started the meeting with the concerns they
    had with the family. Father got very upset and volatile and started
    arguing and yelling, mostly at grandfather. Grandfather became upset
    as well, and Galassi and her supervisor tried to break up the meeting.
    The police were called and father and mother left.
    On April 3, 2006, Galassi and her supervisor went to the family
    home. Galassi knocked on the door and it appeared someone was
    inside locking the door. The supervisor put a card in the door and the
    two left. The next day, Galassi referred the family to Family First.
    Galassi also went to the family home on a daily basis during the
    middle of April, but she could not contact the family.
    -7-
    Galassi testified that DCFS decided that neglect petitions should
    be filed as a means of getting the court to order the parents to
    cooperate with DCFS. When the parents failed to appear for the
    initial hearing, warrants were issued for the children to be placed in
    protective custody. On April 27, 2006, Galassi picked up the children
    and took them into protective custody. A.W., Jr., told Galassi that he
    had seen her coming to their residence on other occasions, but he had
    been instructed not to answer the door.
    At the conclusion of the adjudicatory hearing on September 29,
    2006, the circuit court stated that it would announce its decision the
    next week, but that it was making certain factual findings now. The
    court went through each allegation and found that the State had
    proved all eight of the allegations contained in paragraph A of the
    petitions. The court also found that the State had proved the
    allegation made in paragraph B of the petitions, that DCFS had
    offered father services, including counseling, but father had refused
    to cooperate or begin services. The court did explain at some length
    that the parents did not have any obligation to cooperate with DCFS
    at that time.
    In its concluding statements, the court said: “The question is,
    taking into account everything that I find having been proven by
    preponderance of the evidence, does that show the existence of an
    injurious environment? And, obviously, under the principle of
    injurious environment, you’re not required to wait for the injury to
    occur before the court steps in and says, wait a minute, we’ve got to
    protect these children.”
    On October 6, 2006, the court announced its finding and entered
    an adjudicatory order finding that the children were neglected based
    upon an injurious environment. The finding was based on the series
    of incidents contained in the record showing that father had engaged
    in unusual displays of aggression and hostile, irrational behavior,
    some of which were in the children’s presence.
    The dispositional hearing was held on November 8, 2006.
    Catholic Charities caseworker Tonya Welch, who was assigned to
    this family pursuant to contract with DCFS, testified at the hearing
    and the court considered her report on each child. The caseworker
    testified that father and mother refused to cooperate with her and
    accept the services offered. Father and mother both refused
    -8-
    supervised visitation with the children. The circuit court enter a
    dispositional order finding mother “fit” and father “unfit” but stated
    that the children could not be returned to mother because she was still
    residing with father. The order declared the children wards of the
    court and awarded guardianship to DCFS with right to place.
    The appellate court in mother’s appeal described four incidents
    where the children were not present during father’s outbursts. The
    court found that those four incidents did not show any nexus between
    father’s anger and harm to the well-being of the children, and it held
    the circuit court erred in considering those incidents.
    The appellate court held that the trial court’s finding of neglect
    was against the manifest weight of the evidence and it, therefore,
    reversed the adjudicatory order and vacated the dispositional order.
    One justice dissented and stated he would affirm the circuit court.
    The appellate court, in father’s appeal, took judicial notice of its
    decision in mother’s appeal and reversed the judgment of the circuit
    court. We granted the State’s petition for leave to appeal in both cases
    and consolidated them for our review. Mother filed a brief and
    presented oral argument in the consolidated appeal, but father did not
    file a brief and, consequently, he did not present oral argument.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The parties agree that the issues raised in this appeal are: (1)
    whether the circuit court erred in allowing and considering evidence
    of erratic, threatening and angry behavior by father that took place
    outside the presence of the children; and (2) whether the circuit
    court’s decision that the children were neglected based upon an
    injurious environment is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
    The parties correctly agree that the standard of review for the first
    issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion in admitting and
    considering evidence of father’s behavior that occurred outside the
    presence of the children. See In re Kenneth D., 
    364 Ill. App. 3d 797
    ,
    803 (2006). The admission of evidence by the circuit court will not
    be reversed absent an abuse of its discretion. See In re Kenneth J.,
    
    352 Ill. App. 3d 967
    , 980 (2004). Finally, the parties correctly agree
    that the manifest weight of the evidence is the standard to be used in
    reviewing the circuit court’s determination that the children were
    -9-
    neglected based upon an injurious environment. In re D.S., 
    217 Ill. 2d 306
    , 322 (2005). A finding is against the manifest weight of the
    evidence only if the opposite result is clearly evident. In re 
    D.S., 217 Ill. 2d at 322
    ; In re Faith B., 
    216 Ill. 2d 1
    , 13-14 (2005).
    ANALYSIS
    The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (Act) sets forth the procedures
    and criteria to be used in deciding whether a minor should be
    removed from his parents’ custody and made a ward of the court. 705
    ILCS 405/1–1 et seq. (West 2004); In re Arthur H., 
    212 Ill. 2d 441
    ,
    462 (2004). Section 2–3(1)(b) of the Act provides that a neglected
    minor includes “any minor under 18 years of age whose environment
    is injurious to his or her welfare.” 705 ILCS 405/2–3(1)(b) (West
    2004). The term “injurious environment” is a broad and amorphous
    concept that cannot be defined specifically, but it includes the breach
    of a parent’s duty to ensure a safe and nurturing shelter for the
    children. In re Arthur 
    H., 212 Ill. 2d at 463
    . Cases involving
    allegations of neglect are sui generis, and they must be decided on the
    basis of their unique circumstances. In re N.B., 
    191 Ill. 2d 338
    , 346
    (2000). This principle underscores the “ ‘fact-driven nature of neglect
    and injurious environment rulings.’ ” In re Arthur 
    H., 212 Ill. 2d at 463
    , quoting In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 346
    .
    The appellate court, in mother’s appeal, stated, “In cases where
    parental anger has been the basis for a finding of an injurious
    environment, the State is required to prove a nexus between the
    parental anger and harm to the well-being of the minors.” In support
    of this statement the court cited In re N.B., 
    191 Ill. 2d 338
    , and In re
    J.P., 
    331 Ill. App. 3d 220
    (2002). After describing four of the
    incidents of father’s behavior where the children were not present, the
    court concluded, “[t]aken individually and in relation to the rest of the
    State’s evidence, these incidents do not show any nexus between the
    father’s anger and harm to the well-being of the minors.” The court
    held that the circuit court erred in considering those four incidents of
    father’s behavior that occurred outside the presence of the children.
    The appellate court cited no authority for this holding and we have
    found none.
    -10-
    To the contrary is the case of In re J.P., 
    331 Ill. App. 3d 220
    (2002). There the appellate court affirmed the circuit court’s
    determination that the children, J.P. and T.P., were neglected based
    upon an injurious environment. In re 
    J.P., 331 Ill. App. 3d at 222
    .
    The court stated: “[T]he evidence of respondents’ loss of temper was
    not confined to a single, isolated instance. Rather, the evidence
    indicated a pattern of behavior by respondents, consisting of extreme
    displays of aggression and hostility, some of these displays occurring
    in the presence of their children.” (Emphasis added.) In re 
    J.P., 331 Ill. App. 3d at 236
    .
    The State contends that there are many parental actions outside of
    the presence of the children that create an injurious environment,
    examples of which are drug use, alcohol use and untreated mental-
    health problems. See, e.g., In re A.R., 
    359 Ill. App. 3d 1071
    (2005);
    In re J.W., 
    289 Ill. App. 3d 613
    (1997). It argues that the appellate
    court’s decision in this case could require circuit courts to disregard
    highly probative evidence relating to a parent’s behavior on the basis
    that the children were not present when the incidents took place. This
    would be contrary to the legislative intent of the Act, which is to
    further the safety and best interests of children. 705 ILCS 405/1–2
    (West 2004); In re Arthur 
    H., 212 Ill. 2d at 467
    . Mother
    acknowledges that drug use, alcohol use and untreated mental-health
    issues regularly form the basis for a finding of anticipatory neglect or
    a de facto injurious environment, but she contends that there is no
    doubt they will continue to form the basis of neglect findings should
    the appellate court opinion be affirmed.
    “Under the Act, the rules of evidence in the nature of civil
    proceedings are applicable to the adjudicatory hearing. 705 ILCS
    405/2–18(1) (West 2004). Whether evidence is admissible is within
    the discretion of the circuit court, and its ruling will not be reversed
    absent an abuse of that discretion. In re Kenneth J., 
    352 Ill. App. 3d 967
    , 980, 
    817 N.E.2d 940
    , 950 (2004). All evidence must be relevant
    to be admissible. Kenneth 
    J., 352 Ill. App. 3d at 980
    , 817 N.E.2d at
    950. Evidence is relevant if it tends to prove a fact in controversy or
    render a matter in issue more or less probable. Kenneth J., 352 Ill.
    App. 3d at 
    980, 817 N.E.2d at 950
    .” In re Kenneth D., 
    364 Ill. App. 3d
    797, 803 (2006). We hold that in cases in which parental anger is
    the basis for a finding of an injurious environment, evidence of
    -11-
    parental anger and hostility in the presence, as well as outside the
    presence, of the children is admissible if it is relevant, and the
    determination of its relevancy is within the sound discretion of the
    circuit court. See In re J.P., 
    331 Ill. App. 3d 220
    .
    We next consider whether the trial court abused its discretion in
    admitting evidence of father’s behavior outside the presence of the
    children as establishing a pattern of hostility and anger on the part of
    father that was injurious to the children’s welfare. Father’s pattern of
    erratic behavior included a total of eight incidents, four of which were
    outside the presence of the children. Two of the eight incidents
    involved physical violence, others involved threats of violence, and
    several involved erratic, aggressive and angry behavior. Recipients of
    these outbursts included father’s wife, brother, half-sister and father,
    the school principal, DCFS workers and several police officers.
    Under the facts and circumstances of this case, we hold that the
    circuit court did not abuse its discretion in admitting and considering
    the incidents of father’s angry behavior that occurred outside the
    presence of the children. See In re 
    J.P., 331 Ill. App. 3d at 236
    .
    The appellate court also found that the circuit court may have
    erroneously considered evidence against father that DCFS offered
    services to father, which he refused, as alleged in paragraph B of the
    petition. Although the circuit court found father had refused such
    services, it explained that father was under no obligation to
    participate with DCFS at that time. We have read the record carefully
    and do not find that the circuit court improperly considered that
    evidence against father.
    The appellate court also held that the State failed to prove the
    allegation of the petitions with regard to the March 11, 2006,
    incident, and the circuit court should not have weighed that allegation
    in its decision. The allegation, in part, was that the children “were not
    allowed back into the family home by the father and/or ran from
    home due to the problems with the father.” Grandfather testified that
    A.W., Jr., told him that the children were outside and father told them
    to leave. Officer Watkins testified that father told him that the
    children were outside, father told them to get into the house to receive
    their punishment, and they ran off. The circuit court in discussing this
    allegation stated: “The State has proved that one of those two things
    happened. *** I don’t really think that either one of those was shown
    -12-
    by a preponderance of the evidence, but that’s the only evidence I
    have. So that wasn’t either/or. The preponderance of the evidence
    showed that one of those two things happened, either the father
    excluded them from the home or they ran for fear of punishment.”
    We find that whether the children “were told to leave” or whether
    they “ran off when they were told to go into house,” the circuit court
    properly considered the testimony of grandfather and Officer Watkins
    as to the events of March 11, 2006.
    We turn next to the issue of whether the decision of the circuit
    court was against the manifest weight of the evidence. After the
    appellate court found the circuit court erroneously considered
    testimony of any of father’s erratic, threatening and angry behavior
    that occurred outside the presence of the children, the appellate court
    stated that it had only three incidents that occurred in front of one or
    both of the children to consider. The first was the incident on
    February 13, 2006, when father became angry and swore in front of
    A.W., Jr., after father learned A.W., Jr., was going to be suspended
    from school. The appellate court, while not condoning father’s
    actions, stated it failed to see how A.W., Jr.’s well-being was
    threatened by father’s outburst. The second incident was on May
    30,1995, when father beat mother in front of A.W., Jr., who was then
    15 months old. The appellate court acknowledged that this conduct
    was serious, but it found that the circuit court correctly noted that this
    incident was so remote in time that it should carry very little weight.
    The third incident occurred on May 9, 2005, when father punched his
    half-sister in the forehead in the presence of the children. While the
    appellate court found the act egregious, it failed to see how this
    isolated incident was indicative of a threat to the well-being of the
    children.
    The appellate court, in conclusion, stated: “Accordingly, we hold
    that the State failed to establish the requisite nexus between the
    father’s anger and harm to the minors’ well-being, and that the circuit
    court’s neglect finding was against the manifest weight of the
    evidence.” The appellate court relied primarily on N.B.
    N.B involved two minor children, N.B. and C.R., who were found
    neglected under the Act because they were subjected to an
    environment injurious to their welfare, and at a later hearing they
    were made wards of the court. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 340
    . The
    -13-
    finding of neglect was based on two incidents of uncontrolled temper
    by the mother that occurred at a county health department facility.
    The appellate court affirmed the circuit court and we reversed the
    appellate court. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 340
    .
    The first incident occurred on April 7, 1997, when the mother
    became enraged when she was informed that the coupons she wished
    to redeem for milk for her children could only be redeemed for
    powdered milk and were not redeemable for liquid milk. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 341
    . During the angry outburst she screamed at an
    employee, threw the milk coupons, a jacket and a diaper bag onto a
    chair and then extended her arms when she picked up her baby
    carrier, causing it to hit a wall. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 341
    . N.B. and
    C.R. were present during their mother’s angry outburst. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 347
    .
    The second incident occurred about a week later on April 15,
    1997, when mother went to the same health facility. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 348
    . She was to undergo an examination by a doctor, but she
    refused to enter the examination room until a camera in the room was
    covered. Mother alternated between anger and crying during this
    encounter, which lasted about 15 minutes. N.B. was present with her
    mother during this second incident. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 348
    .
    Katherine Dello, an employee of Metropolitan Family Services as
    a clinical social worker, saw the mother at least once a week for
    approximately six months, beginning in December 1995. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 349
    . Dello saw C.R. with his mother at least every other
    week. (This was prior to N.B.’s birth.) She testified that the child
    always appeared to be well taken care of and properly clothed. She
    observed the mother get frustrated with C.R., but the frustration was
    consistent with any parent’s reactions to a three-year-old. Dello never
    saw her strike or abuse the boy in any way. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 349
    .
    After analyzing the evidence, this court concluded: “In sum, the
    circuit court’s ruling turned on two incidents in which respondent
    displayed anger at persons not her children, and in which there was
    no proof of actual harm to her children. When coupled with Dello’s
    testimony, which indicated acceptable parenting by respondent, we
    find no evidence to suggest that respondent breached her duty to
    provide a ‘safe and nurturing shelter.’ ” In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 351
    ,
    -14-
    quoting In re M.K., 
    271 Ill. App. 3d 820
    , 826 (1995). We then held,
    on the record before us, that the finding of neglect was against the
    manifest weight of the evidence. In re 
    N.B., 191 Ill. 2d at 353-54
    .
    The State argues that the situation in the case before us is more
    like that in J.P. than in N.B. In J.P. the father contended that the
    evidence of the parents’ statements to caseworkers and hospital
    personnel did not support a finding of neglect based on an injurious
    environment. In re 
    J.P., 331 Ill. App. 3d at 235
    . Two caseworkers
    testified regarding the parents’ hostile behavior toward DCFS,
    including death threats by the father against the two workers. In re
    
    J.P., 331 Ill. App. 3d at 236
    . Hospital records showed father
    threatened hospital staff, attempted to remove T.P. from the hospital
    against medical advice, and refused to allow T.P. to be transferred to
    a different hospital for treatment. In re 
    J.P., 331 Ill. App. 3d at 236
    .
    The appellate court found that the trial court’s finding of neglect was
    not against the manifest weight of the evidence. In re J.P., 331 Ill.
    App. 3d at 236.
    Here, as we have noted earlier, there was testimony of eight
    separate angry outbursts by father, two involving physical violence,
    others involving threats of violence, and several involving erratic,
    aggressive and angry behavior. Recipients of these outbursts included
    father’s wife, brother, half-sister and father, the school principal,
    DCFS workers and several police officers. In many of the incidents,
    the city police became involved in calming the situations. There was
    also evidence of father’s behavior in the home. Raelyn Galassi, the
    child protection investigator for DCFS, testified that she went to
    grandfather’s home and spoke to A.W., Jr., on March 13, 2006. When
    she asked if he wanted to go home, he said that he did not want to go
    home because there was a lot of chaos there and his father was mad
    and yelled all the time. He also said that his mother and father fought
    and his mother would leave home sometimes. A.W., Jr., stated that
    things had not always been that way, but only for the last year or a
    little over.
    The appellate court, on the other hand, only considered the three
    incidents it found had occurred in the presence of the children in
    finding that the judgment of the circuit court was against the manifest
    weight of the evidence. As we noted earlier, the admission of
    -15-
    evidence by the circuit court concerning eight incidents was not an
    abuse of discretion.
    An adjudication of neglect is to be reviewed based on the totality
    of the evidence. See In re 
    J.P., 331 Ill. App. 3d at 230
    . Considering
    the totality of the evidence, we find that the order of the circuit court
    adjudicating the neglect of A.W., Jr., and A.W. based on an injurious
    environment is not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgments of the appellate court in
    No. 105849 and No. 105952 are reversed and the judgment of the
    circuit court is affirmed.
    Appellate court judgments reversed;
    circuit court judgment affirmed.
    -16-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 105849 & 105952 cons. Rel

Citation Numbers: 231 Ill. 2d 241

Filed Date: 10/17/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023