In the Interest of M.G. and T.G., Minor Children, S.H., Mother ( 2015 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 15-0141
    Filed July 9, 2015
    IN THE INTEREST OF M.G. AND T.G.,
    Minor Children,
    S.H., Mother,
    Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Joseph W. Seidlin,
    Judge.
    The mother of children adjudicated in need of assistance appeals from a
    permanency review order placing two of her children in the legal custody of their
    father. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Marshall W. Orsini of Carr & Wright, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant
    mother.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Bruce Kempkes, Assistant Attorney
    General, John Sarcone, County Attorney, and Kailyn Heston, Assistant County
    Attorney, for appellee State.
    Erin Mayfield of the Youth Law Center, Des Moines, attorney and guardian
    ad litem for minor children.
    Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Doyle, JJ.
    2
    DOYLE, J.
    S.H. is the mother of three children who were removed from her care after
    her paramour assaulted one of her children with a belt. Ultimately, after the
    receipt of services, the Iowa Department of Human Services (Department) and
    the children’s guardian ad litem recommended the mother’s parental rights be
    terminated. At the close of the permanency review hearing, the juvenile court
    stated:
    This is a difficult case. Child abuse is a serious matter. And
    it is difficult to determine when a parent has made the change
    necessary to make sure that the child abuse doesn’t happen again.
    There’s no cookie-cutter way. And that’s what I think this case is all
    about and why we’ve gotten to this point here today.
    But given the totality of all the information I have in front of
    me here, I find that both [the mother and her paramour] recognize
    the seriousness of what took place, that both of them understand
    that it is child abuse to discipline a child in the manner in which [one
    of the children] was disciplined, and that it cannot happen again to
    any of these kids.
    But to recommend termination of parental rights based on
    disagreements over the level of accountability taken in this case
    does not meet the burden of proof.
    Following the hearing, the juvenile court entered its order finding it was in
    the youngest child’s best interests to be returned to the mother’s care within sixty
    days, but her other two children should be placed in the legal custody of their
    father, J.G. The mother appeals that placement, asserting (1) the State failed to
    prove she was offered or received services to correct the circumstance that led to
    the adjudication, and (2) the juvenile court erred in placing her two other children
    in the legal custody of their father. Upon our de novo review of the record, we
    agree with the mother that the court erred in placing the children in the legal
    3
    custody of the father and find the issue to be dispositive. We therefore reverse
    and remand the case to the juvenile court for further proceedings.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    S.H. is the mother of M.G., born in 2006, T.G., born in 2007, and A.W.,
    born in 2010.1 J.G.2 is the father of M.G. and T.G., and during the summer
    months, he and the mother shared physical care of their children. During the
    school year, M.G. and T.G. were in the mother’s physical care with visitation with
    their father on Wednesdays and every other weekend.
    V.W. is the father of A.W. At the time the Department became involved
    with the family, he was the mother’s paramour and lived with the mother and her
    children.3 The paramour has a past conviction for child endangerment and a
    finding of physical abuse by the Department arising out of an incident in 2004.
    In July 2013, it was reported T.G. was assaulted with a belt, resulting in
    bruises on his thighs.       The accounts of the incident given by the children
    identified the paramour as the perpetrator of the abuse. However, the mother
    and the paramour gave a different account, asserting she assaulted the child not
    the paramour.      The children were then removed from the mother and the
    paramour’s care. Under the supervision of the Department, the juvenile court
    placed A.W. in the temporary legal custody of a family friend and M.G. and T.G.
    in the temporary legal custody of their father.
    1
    The mother also has two older children, O.H., born in 1997, and D.H., born in
    1998, who have a different father. D.H. is in her father’s legal custody. These children
    are not at issue in this appeal.
    2
    For ease of discussion, we will refer to J.G. as “the father,” though we recognize
    he is not father of all of the mother’s children.
    3
    For ease of discussion, we will refer to V.W. as “the paramour,” though the
    mother and V.W. are no longer together.
    4
    The children were later adjudicated to be children in need of assistance
    (CINA), and numerous services were offered to the mother and the paramour for
    reunification with the children. At the time of the permanency hearing held in
    June 2014, the Department recommended that the mother and the paramour be
    given a six-month extension to establish permanency for A.W. and that the
    mother and father be granted concurrent jurisdiction to pursue modification
    proceedings in district court regarding custody of M.G. and T.G. Following the
    hearing, the court entered its permanency order finding:
    The children will be able to return to the mother within six
    months if the following specific factors, conditions and/or expected
    behavioral changes are made, eliminating the need for the
    children’s removal from the home: [The mother] shall: follow all
    recommendations set forth in the updated permanency plan . . . ;
    consistently exercise all visitation and interactions with her children,
    progressing toward the goal of their being placed in her home;
    participate in the children’s therapy as requested and
    recommended by the children’s therapist(s); demonstrate progress,
    insight and accountability into the issues that resulted in the
    removal of her children, and how to prevent such behaviors from
    reoccurring.
    Additionally, the court determined “that the primary permanency goal for the
    children remain[ed] reunification with their mother under a six-month extension
    pursuant to Iowa Code section 232.104(2)(b) [(2013)].” The court also granted
    concurrent jurisdiction to the mother and father to pursue modification
    proceedings in district court.
    Prior to the permanency review hearing scheduled for December 2014,
    the Department provided its report to the court recommending the court direct the
    State to file a petition for termination of the mother’s parental rights to M.G., T.G.,
    and A.W. The Department’s case worker noted the paramour had pled guilty to
    5
    child endangerment concerning the belt-assault incident and the mother to
    providing a false report to the police regarding the incident. The case worker
    was concerned that it took more than a year for the matter to be resolved and the
    mother and paramour to own up to what had really happened in the incident, but
    she also noted the mother’s therapist had explained the mother took
    accountability for the paramour because it was a third strike for him. The case
    worker noted the mother’s semi-supervised visits were scaled back to fully-
    supervised visits after the worker listened to calls made between the mother and
    the paramour while the paramour was in jail, explaining it “was clear that [the
    mother] was physically disciplining [A.W.] during [her] visits” because A.W. said
    on one of the calls “momma whooped me” and on other calls the mother told
    A.W. “she was going to ‘whoop her.’”4 The case worker remarked in the report
    that this was “very concerning to the Department due to the reason these
    children were removed: physical abuse.” Other concerns noted were that the
    mother had not engaged with M.G. and T.G.’s therapy as directed, had said
    negative things to the children about their father, and had continued to have
    “highly manipulative behaviors throughout the life of the case,” such as not
    directly informing assisted housing authorities that the children were not in her
    care. The case worker concluded the Department could not safely return the
    children to their mother’s care at that time “due to [the mother’s] unresolved
    parenting issues, lack of progress, continued lying, manipulating, criminal
    thinking, and lack to taking accountability in [M.G. and T.G.’s] therapy sessions.”
    4
    The mother explained she used the word “whooping” to refer to spanking the
    children with her hand on “their butt.”
    6
    A permanency review hearing commenced in December 2014 and
    concluded in January 2015. After hearing all of the evidence, the court at the
    conclusion of the hearing stated on the record that, in regard to A.W., it was
    changing the permanency goal to return the child to the mother, explaining:
    It’s not going to happen today, . . . because we need a transition
    time. But I expect that transition to take place over the next sixty
    days. . . .
    . . . Obviously, based on my ruling with [A.W.],           [The
    mother’s] contact with the child needs to progress rather quickly so
    that this child can be put in her care within the next sixty days.
    Regarding M.G. and T.G., the court stated it was changing their permanency
    plan to “a transfer of custody” from the mother to the father, noting the father
    already had “custody of these children and [would continue] to pending his
    getting a district court order that addresses custody and visitation of parenting
    time with the mother.” As to visitation between the mother and M.G. and T.G.,
    the court stated it saw “absolutely no reason why that visitation cannot be, frankly
    unsupervised,” explaining:
    Let’s treat this case for what it is. [The mother and the
    paramour] are in therapy. I think that therapy shall continue. It
    needs to continue. But [their] relationships with their children need
    to be addressed in custody orders in district court, and we need to
    get out of their lives.
    But we’re not going to get out of their lives until, (a), that’s
    done and, (b), we’ve had some time for transition and we’ve had
    some time for these parents to continue to engage in individual
    therapy and the mother to continue to engage in therapy with the
    children’s current therapist, the two older ones.
    ....
    So I want to have a review hearing in sixty days. I’ve
    already granted concurrent jurisdiction with regard to the [G.]
    children . . . so that [the mother and father] can initiate some kind of
    custody order in district court.
    7
    Thereafter, the court entered its permanency review order finding that
    M.G. and T.G. could not be returned to the mother’s care at that time “due to still
    unresolved issues between the mother and children related to the physical abuse
    that happened to [T.G.] in the mother’s home and the continued effect that has
    had upon both children.” However, the court found A.W.’s return to the mother’s
    care was in that child’s best interests. The court ordered A.W. be placed with the
    mother within sixty days and that M.G. and T.G. be placed in their father’s legal
    custody under the Department’s supervision pursuant to Iowa Code section
    232.104(2)(d)(2).
    The mother now appeals the court’s placement of M.G. and T.G. in their
    father’s legal custody, arguing that the State failed to prove it provided to her
    reasonable services for reunification and that the juvenile court erred in placing
    M.G. and T.G. in their father’s legal custody.        Because we find the latter
    argument dispositive, we do not address her former contention.
    II. Scope and Standards of Review.
    We review permanency orders de novo, sorting through both the facts and
    law and adjudicating rights anew on the issues properly presented on appeal. In
    re A.T., 
    799 N.W.2d 148
    , 150-51 (Iowa Ct. App. 2011). We give weight to the
    factual findings of the juvenile court, but are not bound by them. 
    Id.
    III. Discussion.
    The parent-child relationship is constitutionally protected. See Quilloin v.
    Walcott, 
    434 U.S. 246
    , 255, (1978); Wisconsin v. Yoder, 
    406 U.S. 205
    , 233
    (1972); State v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    828 N.W.2d 607
    , 615 (Iowa 2013); In re K.L.C.,
    
    372 N.W.2d 223
    , 226 (Iowa 1985). Notwithstanding:
    8
    The protection of children is one of the most well-established
    duties and public policies of the State of Iowa. The State has a
    duty to assure that every child within its borders receives proper
    care and treatment, and must intercede when parents fail to provide
    it. Both [the] DHS and the juvenile court have the important
    function of protecting children who are in need of assistance.
    In re A.M., 
    856 N.W.2d 365
    , 376 (Iowa 2014) (alterations, internal citations, and
    quotation marks omitted).
    In light of these competing interests, the legislature has directed chapter
    232 be “liberally construed to the end that each child under the jurisdiction of the
    court . . . receive, preferably in the child’s own home, the care, guidance and
    control that will best serve the child’s welfare and the best interest of the state.”
    
    Iowa Code § 232.1
     (emphasis added); see also A.M., 856 N.W.2d at 373. Thus,
    “[w]e afford a rebuttable presumption that the best interest of a child is served
    when custody is with the natural parents,” In re N.M., 
    491 N.W.2d 153
    , 156 (Iowa
    1992), and “[w]henever possible the court should permit the child to remain at
    home.” 
    Iowa Code § 232.102
    (5)(a). Consequently, while “[i]t is the duty of the
    juvenile court when necessary to intervene and remove a child from the care and
    custody of parents, either temporarily or permanently,” the court must first
    determine
    that “continuation of the child in the child’s home would be contrary
    to the welfare of the child, and [it] shall identify the reasonable
    efforts that have been made.” [Iowa Code] § 232.102(5)(b); see
    also [Iowa Code] § 232.102(10)(a) (defining “reasonable efforts”).
    These determinations, required by law, are essential to the juvenile
    court’s role as the arbiter of both temporary and permanent custody
    for children in need of assistance.
    A.M., 856 N.W.2d at 376.
    Following a permanency hearing, a juvenile court has four options:
    9
    a. Enter an order pursuant to section 232.102 to return the
    child to the child’s home.
    b. Enter an order pursuant to section 232.102 to continue
    placement of the child for an additional six months at which time the
    court shall hold a hearing to consider modification of its
    permanency order. An order entered under this paragraph shall
    enumerate the specific factors, conditions, or expected behavioral
    changes which comprise the basis for the determination that the
    need for removal of the child from the child’s home will no longer
    exist at the end of the additional six-month period.
    c. Direct the county attorney or the attorney for the child to
    institute proceedings to terminate the parent-child relationship.
    d. Enter an order . . . to . . .
    ....
    (2) [t]ransfer sole custody of the child from one parent to
    another parent.
    
    Iowa Code § 232.104
    (2). However, prior to entering a permanency order under
    section 232.104(2)(d), the State must establish by convincing evidence that the
    children cannot be returned to their home, among other things.                 
    Id.
    § 232.104(3)(c).
    Here, the juvenile court ordered A.W. be returned to the mother’s care
    within sixty days, a hybrid of the options found in 232.104(2)(a) and (b).
    However, it went with the option found in 232.104(2)(d)(2) in regards to M.G. and
    T.G. without explaining why A.W. could be returned to the mother’s care in sixty
    days but not the other two children.
    There is no question the mother initially failed to be honest regarding who
    struck T.G.    However, the mother has since pled guilty to providing false
    information to law enforcement officials—that she perpetrated the abuse—and
    admitted it was the paramour that struck T.G.        Though the Department is
    concerned with her using the word “whooping” with the children as a prelude to a
    possible punishment, there was no evidence that she physically abused her
    10
    children. Moreover, parents in Iowa have the right to use corporal punishment as
    a means of correcting their children’s misbehavior, circumscribed by the
    requirements of moderation and reasonableness with the aim of modifying the
    behavior of the child rather than satisfying the passions of an enraged parent.
    See State v. Arnold, 
    543 N.W.2d 600
    , 603 (Iowa 1996). There is no evidence the
    mother’s punishment ever exceeded these boundaries.
    The Department noted the mother’s “failure” to participate in all three
    children’s therapy sessions; yet, the juvenile court found A.W., the youngest
    child, should be transitioned into placement with the mother within sixty days,
    while finding the other two children should be placed in their father’s custody.
    Moreover, the evidence presented at the hearing was that although the mother in
    2013 had had one bad therapy session with the children, she had since re-
    engaged in therapy with the children. Additionally, the court found M.G. and T.G.
    could have unsupervised visitation with the mother; clearly it did not find the
    children were in danger in her care. Actually, it appears the court did not have
    any concerns regarding the mother’s parenting, concluding at the close of the
    permanency review hearing:
    Have [the mother and the paramour’s] progress [from the
    date of the prior permanency hearing] to this point been perfect?
    No. Should their parental rights be terminated? Absolutely not.
    This came from a serious event that took place not two years
    ago. Just because it was in 2013 doesn’t make it two years ago.
    Eighteen months ago would be a more accurate description.
    All the indications are is that [the paramour], his discipline of
    children who are not his own got out of hand, that it got out of hand,
    I believe, more than once; that the event that occurred in June
    2013, leaving bruises, was a serious matter and resulted in serious
    consequences eventually.
    ....
    11
    We get into the issue of whether the mother eventually took
    accountability. She did. We get into parsing terms of taking
    accountability. And we examine this accountability session that she
    had with her children [in December of 2013], which she
    acknowledges didn’t go particularly well, but I sure would like to
    have heard from the therapist with regard to that as well.
    Both [the mother and the paramour] are participating in
    individual therapy.       Both . . . have consistently exercised their
    visitations with the children. [The mother] has attempted to
    participate in therapy with her children.
    We get into the typical communication issues that occur
    between parents and the Department. We get into the typical
    situations where we have one side saying attempts were made to
    communicate and the other saying either I don’t know or
    disagreeing. We have visitations which had progressed to semi-
    supervised and then were retracted.
    ....
    With regard to [the mother], her visits were pulled back to
    where she now has one visit a week fully supervised because she
    may have had [A.W.] in her care on a day or two or three or four or
    five that she was not supposed to.
    I, frankly, don’t understand that. We’ve got a custodian who
    would certainly be able to address that issue.
    We’ve got another situation where [the mother] was seen at
    the mall with the child. And, again, I’m not seeing that any harm
    came from that, and I find her discussion of it credible.
    These children, obviously, have a close bond with their
    mother. . . . We have, in the case of the [G.] children, a father who
    has been able to care for these children.
    We have [the mother and father] who have already been
    through a custody determination in district court. This court has
    granted concurrent jurisdiction for that to be modified, and it
    certainly can be. But I’m seeing no reason why [the mother’s]
    parental rights to these children need to be terminated.
    As for [A.W.], again, [the mother], though she wanted to take
    the blame for abusing one of her children, didn’t abuse the child.
    And we want to terminate her parental rights because of her failure
    to appropriately take accountability for her actions. That alone is
    not a ground to terminate someone’s parental rights, and that’s
    really what we’ve been left with here.
    [The mother and the paramour], from all I can gather from
    the evidence that’s been presented, don’t present any substance
    abuse issues, don’t present any domestic violence issues.
    Upon our de novo review of the record, we whole-heartedly agree with the
    juvenile court’s sentiments. The record shows the children are closely bonded
    12
    with the mother. M.G. and T.G. have asked to go home—with their mother,
    where they have resided until the Department became involved with the family.
    Although the juvenile court noted custody of M.G. and T.G. had previously
    been fixed, it opted to transfer that custody to the father in the CINA proceedings.
    We agree with the mother that under the circumstances of the case and findings
    of the juvenile court, that transfer was not warranted. This is not to say that a
    modification cannot take place in district court, should that court determine under
    the appropriate modification considerations it is necessary, though we take no
    position one way or another. Moreover, M.G. and T.G. can certainly continue in
    their father’s temporary legal custody until they can be transitioned into the
    mother’s care. However, we agree with the mother the court erred in placing
    M.G. and T.G. in the father’s legal custody, given that the court found A.W. could
    be returned to the mother’s care within sixty days.               See 
    Iowa Code § 232.104
    (3)(c).
    The State points to Iowa Code section 232.104(2)(6) as a justification for
    keeping M.G. and T.G. from the mother’s care. That section provides:
    Subsequent to the entry of a permanency order pursuant to this
    section, the child shall not be returned to the care, custody, or
    control of the child’s parent or parents, over a formal objection filed
    by the child’s attorney or guardian ad litem, unless the court finds
    by a preponderance of the evidence, that returning the child to such
    custody would be in the best interest of the child.
    
    Id.
     § 232.104(6) (emphasis added); see also In re of A.S.T., 
    508 N.W.2d 735
    ,
    737 (Iowa Ct. App. 1993) (discussing same subsection, then numbered
    232.105(5)). The juvenile court did not make any express findings as to M.G.
    and T.G.’s best interests other than termination of the mother’s parental rights
    13
    was not in their best interests. Nevertheless, upon our de novo review, we may
    make the determination concerning best interests. See A.S.T., 
    508 N.W.2d at 737
    .
    Here, there is no reason M.G. and T.G. cannot be returned to their
    mother’s care within sixty days like A.W. We find it is in their best interests to
    return to her care.
    IV. Conclusion.
    Because we conclude the juvenile court erred in placing M.G. and T.G. in
    the father’s legal custody under the unique facts and circumstances of this case
    and find this issue to be dispositive, we remand the case to the juvenile court for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not address the mother’s
    failure-to-provide-reasonable-services argument, nor do we retain jurisdiction.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.