In the Interest of P.K., Minor Child ( 2019 )


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  •                       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 19-0887
    Filed August 7, 2019
    IN THE INTEREST OF P.K.,
    Minor Child,
    J.K., Father,
    Appellant,
    J.T., Mother,
    Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Clayton County, Linnea M.N. Nicol,
    District Associate Judge.
    A mother and father separately appeal the termination of their parental
    rights to their five-year-old daughter. AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.
    Cory R. Gonzales of Law Office of Cory R. Gonzales PLLC, Strawberry
    Point, for appellant father.
    John J. Sullivan of Sullivan Law Office, P.C., Oelwein, for appellant mother.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Meredith L. Lamberti, Assistant
    Attorney General, for appellee State.
    Mary Beth A. Fleming, Dubuque, attorney and guardian ad litem for minor
    child.
    Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Mullins and May, JJ.
    2
    TABOR, Presiding Judge.
    Jennifer and John separately appeal the termination of their parental rights
    to five-year-old P.K. They contend the State did not offer clear and convincing
    evidence of the statutory grounds for termination; termination is not in P.K.’s best
    interests; and termination would be detrimental to P.K. because of the parent-child
    bond. After an independent review of the record,1 we affirm.
    I.     Facts and Prior Proceedings
    John assaulted Jennifer in the presence of their children, P.K., and her
    younger sister, A.K.      The Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS) also
    received reports the parents were using methamphetamine while caring for the
    children. In a child-abuse assessment, the DHS determined both parents were
    responsible for a failure to properly supervise the children and for the presence of
    illegal drugs when A.K.’s hair sample tested positive for methamphetamine.
    During the assessment, Jennifer admitted using methamphetamine “once in a
    while” and within thirty days of the assault. Afterward, Jennifer denied both that
    she ever used drugs and that she ever admitted to using drugs. For his part, John
    has a long history of abusing drugs, especially methamphetamine. The DHS
    removed the children and placed them in the same foster home, where they have
    remained throughout these proceedings.
    1
    Our review is de novo. In re M.W., 
    876 N.W.2d 212
    , 219 (Iowa 2016). We are not bound
    by the juvenile court’s factual findings, but we give them weight, especially when witness
    credibility is critical to the outcome. 
    Id.
     Proof must be clear and convincing, meaning
    there are no “serious or substantial doubts as to the correctness [of] conclusions of law
    drawn from the evidence.” In re D.W., 
    791 N.W.2d 703
    , 706 (Iowa 2010).
    3
    The juvenile court adjudicated then three-year-old P.K. and five-month-old
    A.K. as children in need of assistance (CINA). The adjudication rested on the
    parents’ failure to exercise a reasonable degree of supervision and because the
    parents’ drug abuse resulted in the children not receiving adequate care. See 
    Iowa Code § 232.2
    (6)(c)(2), (n) (2017).    The case permanency plan required both
    parents to (1) obtain substance-abuse evaluations and follow treatment
    recommendations; (2) obtain mental-health evaluations and follow treatment
    recommendations; (3) submit to random drug testing; and (4) attend Family Safety,
    Risk, and Permanency (FSRP) sessions focusing on parenting skills, budgeting,
    and relapse prevention.
    From the outset, Jennifer had trouble cooperating with the DHS and service
    providers. She was routinely combative, hostile, and verbally abusive to the FSRP
    worker assigned to her case. She lashed out both in person and over phone,
    email, and text, including while in the presence of the children. At times she was
    aggressive and threatening. For instance, during one visitation, the FSRP worker
    called law enforcement because Jennifer was yelling swear words and threatening
    to kill herself—in front of the children. Visitation remained fully supervised, and
    Jennifer missed or was late to many interactions, especially toward the end of the
    case.
    As part of the recommended services, Jennifer attended a joint mental-
    health and substance-abuse evaluation.        The therapist diagnosed her with
    adjustment disorder with anxiety and depressed mood and recommended
    individual mental-health counselling. But the therapist found Jennifer had no drug
    or alcohol-abuse problem, thus offering no recommendations for substance-abuse
    4
    treatment. The DHS caseworker testified Jennifer did not report her history of drug
    abuse to the therapist.
    Even so, DHS and FSRP workers often noted signs of ongoing drug use:
    Jennifer attended visitations with sores on her face and arms, appeared
    disheveled, and was emotionally unstable. Once, she fell asleep. The court
    repeatedly ordered Jennifer to obtain another substance-abuse evaluation, but
    Jennifer never did so. Jennifer also refused to participate in drug testing. In
    October 2017, March 2018, and December 2018, she attended tests she
    scheduled for herself, and each one was negative for drugs. But, over twenty-one
    months and forty-four randomly scheduled tests, she appeared for only four. Three
    of those four times, she refused to give a hair sample. On the fourth appearance,
    she reported the sweat patch applied to detect drug use fell off before a result
    could be obtained.
    On top of her failure to address her substance abuse, Jennifer never
    completed the recommended mental-health counselling. The juvenile court also
    ordered her to seek help with anger management, but she did not. Although the
    court ordered Jennifer to participate in FSRP “skill-based” sessions along with
    visitation, she attended only thirteen of fifty-seven offered sessions.
    Like Jennifer, John participated in the FSRP “skill-based” sessions only
    sporadically, but he appeared receptive when he did attend. John was more
    cooperative than Jennifer with the DHS and FSRP workers.                  He acted
    appropriately during their interactions. But he also refused to engage in regular
    drug testing. Out of twenty-eight offered tests, John attended only one, where his
    sweat patch tested positive for methamphetamine. John did not complete ordered
    5
    substance-abuse treatment.           He has been in and out of jail during these
    proceedings. In November 2018, John was arrested on federal firearms charges
    and placed in the Linn County jail, where he remained through the termination
    hearings. Jail policy prohibited visitation with children under sixteen. John testified
    he had been sober since his arrest.
    In October 2018, the juvenile court terminated both Jennifer’s and John’s
    parental rights to their younger child, A.K. After this development, Jennifer’s
    commitment to visiting her older daughter deteriorated. Jennifer missed more than
    half of the offered visits.2 John was incarcerated and denied visits in the jail.
    Two months later, the State petitioned to terminate parental rights to P.K.
    At the hearing, the FSRP worker testified that while P.K. retains a bond with both
    Jennifer and John, the child has been harmed by Jennifer’s inappropriate
    comments and erratic behavior. The worker highlighted P.K.’s loving relationship
    with her foster parents, to whom she turns for comfort and support. The record
    showed P.K. was thriving in their home, alongside her younger sister.
    The juvenile court terminated Jennifer and John’s parental rights under Iowa
    Code section 232.116(1)(e), (f), and (g). The court specifically found Jennifer was
    not credible, explaining, when Jennifer is angry, “she cannot be reasoned with, nor
    can she answer questions thoughtfully”; her “denials are complete and without
    2
    In November 2018, the juvenile court dismissed a petition to terminate parental rights
    under Iowa Code section 232.116(1), paragraph (e) (2018), for failure to maintain
    meaningful and significant contact. The court found the State failed to show the parents
    had made no reasonable effort to resume care of P.K.: “While the parents’ efforts have
    not been sufficient to remedy the fear of adjudicatory harm if the children were returned to
    their care, the parents have made some efforts to regain the custody of [P.K.]”
    6
    exception”; and her complaints were pulled “out of thin air despite overwhelming
    evidence to the contrary.”
    Jennifer and John each filed petitions on appeal.
    II.    Statutory Grounds
    When the juvenile court terminates parental rights on more than one
    ground, “we need only find termination appropriate under one of these sections to
    affirm.” In re J.B.L., 
    844 N.W.2d 703
    , 704 (Iowa Ct. App. 2014). We focus on
    section 232.116(1)(f). That paragraph requires proof of four elements: (1) the child
    must be at least four years old; (2) the child must have been adjudicated in need
    of assistance; (3) the child must have been removed from the home for at least
    twelve of the last eighteen months, or for the last twelve consecutive months with
    any period at home being less than thirty days; and (4) the child cannot be returned
    to the home as provided in section 232.102 at the present time. John contends he
    has alleviated the danger of harm, so he can resume care of P.K., but he also
    acknowledges he is currently incarcerated.3 Jennifer likewise contends P.K. can
    be returned to her care.
    The record disproves the parents’ contentions. The DHS caseworker gave
    both parents what she called “refrigerator lists” to help them understand the case
    expectations and work toward reunification with P.K. The lists were fairly short
    with clear goals for the parents. Yet Jennifer and John showed little progress. For
    3
    John contends he will be released in six months; but he cannot resume custody of P.K.
    at the present time, even if he had complied with the other case requirements. See D.W.,
    791 N.W.2d at 707 (interpreting statutory language “at the present time” to mean the time
    of the termination hearing).
    7
    instance, neither parent completed the required substance-abuse treatment or
    demonstrated their sobriety sufficiently to erase the concerns of the CINA
    proceedings.
    Especially worrisome was the parents’ refusal to participate in random drug
    testing. Their recalcitrance undermines their claims they can resume custody now.
    The parents routinely made excuses for missing tests—claiming service providers
    did not notify them or offer transportation assistance. Their excuses did not
    withstand scrutiny. Jennifer did submit three clean drug tests, but she scheduled
    them at her convenience. We are more persuaded by the dozens of tests she
    skipped, combined with the social worker’s observations of her conduct and
    physical condition during visitations. Even when Jennifer appeared for testing, she
    did not submit samples. When John did provide one sample, it tested positive for
    methamphetamine.
    Domestic violence first brought this family to DHS attention, but it was the
    parents’ admission of drug use and the presence of methamphetamine in A.K.’s
    system that animated the continuing need for removal. The parents’ failure to
    embrace services that would address issues of substance abuse and mental
    health left P.K.’s future in a precarious position. At the time of the termination
    order, P.K. had been out of her parents’ care for nearly two years.
    We agree with the juvenile court’s conclusion neither John nor Jennifer can
    resume care of P.K. at the present time. The State met the statutory grounds for
    termination for both parents.
    8
    III.   Best Interests
    Next, Jennifer and John argue it is not in P.K.’s best interests to terminate
    their rights.   In making the best-interests determination, we give primary
    consideration to the child’s safety, the best placement for furthering her long-term
    nurturing and growth, as well as her physical, mental, and emotional condition and
    needs. 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (2); In re P.L., 
    778 N.W.2d 33
    , 37 (Iowa 2010). That
    consideration may include a child’s integration into her foster family and whether
    the foster family is willing to adopt. See 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (2)(b). Safety and
    the need for a permanent home mark the “defining elements in a child’s best
    interest.” In re J.E., 
    723 N.W.2d 793
    , 802 (Iowa 2006) (Cady, J., concurring
    specially).
    Waiting to see if John and Jennifer can become stable, drug-free parents is
    not in P.K.’s best interests. As the juvenile court found, John was unavailable and
    “refused to participate in random drug testing and services designed to return the
    child to his care.” Likewise, Jennifer was “unwilling to work through the case plan.”
    P.K. has been with the same foster parents for nearly two years. She is thriving in
    their care and looks to them for the stability her parents could not provide. The
    record shows by clear and convincing evidence that termination serves her best
    interests.
    IV.    Closeness of Parent-Child Relationship
    Jennifer and John also allege termination would be detrimental to P.K.
    because of the closeness of the parent-child relationship.         See 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (3)(c). The evidence shows P.K. does share a bond with Jennifer and
    John and enjoys visitation. But the record does not suggest their relationship is so
    9
    close that termination would be detrimental to P.K. During the nearly two years
    outside of her parents’ care, she has developed a strong bond with her foster
    parents. See D.W., 791 N.W.2d at 709. Section 232.116(3)(c) does not stand in
    the way of termination.4 We affirm the juvenile court order.
    AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.
    4
    Jennifer and John mention they should have been given additional time to work toward
    reunification. This passing comment does not preserve the request for our review, even
    if we assume they raised the point in the juvenile court. See Soo Line R.R. Co. v. Iowa
    Dep’t of Transp., 
    521 N.W.2d 685
    , 691 (Iowa 1994) (finding random mention of an issue
    without elaboration or supportive authority could not merit the court’s consideration).
    Jennifer and John also complain about communication difficulties and conflicts with DHS
    and FSRP workers; Jennifer complains these difficulties “inhibited [her] ability to more fully
    take advantage of the service provided to her.” She contends the DHS “should have
    changed out providers as this conflict directly interfered with Jennifer’s ability to
    demonstrate a willingness to cooperate with services.” Again, assuming Jennifer made
    such requests in the juvenile court, they are too underdeveloped to review on appeal.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-0887

Filed Date: 8/7/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021