In re: S.G., A.G. ( 2019 )


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  •              IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA18-1147
    Filed: 19 November 2019
    Lincoln County, Nos. 17 JA 72-74
    IN THE MATTER OF: S.G., A.G., and F.C.
    Appeal by Respondents from order entered 28 June 2018 by Judge Ali B.
    Paksoy and order entered 27 July 2018 by Judge Jeannette R. Reeves in District
    Court, Lincoln County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 3 October 2019.
    Lauren Vaughan for Petitioner-Appellee Lincoln County Department of Social
    Services.
    J. Thomas Diepenbrock for Respondent-Appellant Father.
    Parent Defender Wendy C. Sotolongo, by Deputy Parent Defender Annick
    Lenoir-Peek, for Respondent-Appellant Mother.
    Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, by Michael J. Crook and Joshua J.
    Morales, for Guardian ad Litem.
    McGEE, Chief Judge.
    Respondents appeal from an order adjudicating the minor child F.C. to be an
    abused, neglected, and dependent juvenile and the minor children S.G. and A.G. to
    be neglected and dependent juveniles. Respondents also appeal from a disposition
    and permanency planning order requiring them to engage in services and
    establishing visitation. We affirm the adjudication order, affirm in part and vacate
    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    in part the disposition/permanency planning order, and remand for entry of an
    appropriate visitation order.
    I. Background
    Respondent-Mother is the mother of all three children. She is in a relationship
    with Respondent-Father, who is the father of S.G. and A.G. F.C.’s father is deceased.
    On 18 July 2017, the Lincoln County Department of Social Services (“DSS”) received
    a report alleging that three-year-old F.C. was seen with a black eye that resulted from
    Respondent-Father pushing him down and hitting him. A social worker went to
    Respondents’ home to investigate, but Respondents appeared to be intentionally
    evading the social worker, until the social worker called law enforcement, and
    Respondents finally opened their door. Respondents both denied to the social worker
    that Respondent-Father hit F.C., instead claiming that F.C. had been running
    through the house with the dog when he tripped and hit his head on a coffee table.
    The social worker informed Respondent-Father that he would have to leave the
    residence while the matter was being investigated. The social worker stayed at the
    home until Respondent-Father left.
    The next day, another social worker informed Respondent-Mother that
    Respondent-Father could not have contact with F.C. until F.C. was given a forensic
    interview. F.C. was seen by Dr. Melissa Will (“Dr. Will”), who found “a red patterned
    bruise covering [F.C.’s right] forehead (pattern of rectangle with 3 vertic[al] lines
    within it), also unpatterned bruise lateral to this; also bruise of his upper eyelid[.]”
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    It was Dr. Will’s opinion that the unusual pattern of the bruise was inconsistent with
    Respondent-Mother’s explanation that F.C. hit his head on a coffee table.
    DSS decided that Respondent-Father could not have any contact with the
    children.   “Respondent-Mother was asked to take all three children and keep []
    Respondent-Father away from them.         [] Respondent-Mother wanted to be with
    [Respondent-Father] and preferred that [Respondent-Father] come home and the
    three children go somewhere else. [] Respondent-Mother would not agree to keep the
    children away from [Respondent-Father].” The children were placed with a paternal
    relative, who later became unable to care for them.
    On 24 July 2017, DSS filed petitions alleging that F.C. was an abused,
    neglected, and dependent juvenile; and alleging that S.G. and A.G. were neglected
    and dependent juveniles. DSS obtained nonsecure custody of the children the same
    day. The trial court held an adjudicatory hearing on 20 February and 15 April 2018,
    after which the trial court entered a 28 June 2018 order adjudicating F.C. to be
    abused and all three children to be neglected and dependent.
    The trial court conducted a disposition and permanency planning hearing on
    17 July 2018. The trial court’s 27 July 2018 order established a visitation plan of
    “one visit each month” with Respondents’ respective children.       Contact between
    Respondent-Father and F.C. was to be based on the recommendations of F.C.’s
    therapist. The trial court also ordered Respondents to submit to substance abuse and
    mental health assessments and follow all recommendations, participate in parenting
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    classes and demonstrate skills learned during visits, obtain and maintain safe and
    stable housing, and submit to random drug screens. Respondents appeal.
    II. Adjudication
    Respondent-Father argues that the trial court erred by adjudicating F.C. as an
    abused juvenile.1        Both Respondents argue that the trial court erroneously
    adjudicated S.G. and A.G. as neglected juveniles. We address each argument in turn.
    A. Standard of Review
    When reviewing an adjudication of abuse, neglect, or dependency, this Court
    determines whether the trial court’s findings of fact are supported by clear and
    convincing evidence and whether the trial court’s legal conclusions are supported by
    its findings of fact. See In re C.M. & M.H.M., 
    198 N.C. App. 53
    , 59, 
    678 S.E.2d 794
    ,
    798 (2009). Findings of fact which are “supported by clear and convincing competent
    evidence are deemed conclusive [on appeal], even where some evidence supports
    contrary findings.” 
    Id. (quotation marks
    and citation omitted). The trial court’s
    conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. In re J.S.L., 
    177 N.C. App. 151
    , 154, 
    628 S.E.2d 387
    , 389 (2006) (citation omitted).
    B. Abuse
    1  Respondent-Mother does not challenge the trial court’s abuse adjudication. Neither
    Respondent challenges the court’s adjudication of F.C. as neglected or its adjudication of all three
    children as dependent.
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    The trial court concluded that F.C. was abused under N.C.G.S. § 7B-101(1)(a)
    and (b) (2017). These subsections define an abused juvenile, in relevant part, as one
    whose parent:
    a.    Inflicts or allows to be inflicted upon the juvenile a
    serious physical injury by other than accidental means;
    b.    Creates or allows to be created a substantial risk of
    serious physical injury to the juvenile by other than
    accidental means[.]
    
    Id. Respondent-Father first
    contends that neither the evidence nor the trial
    court’s findings support its conclusion that F.C. suffered a “serious physical injury.”
    He argues that F.C. did not suffer the type of “significant physical injuries” that
    provided support for the abuse adjudications upheld by this Court in cases such as In
    re Hayden, 
    96 N.C. App. 77
    , 83, 
    384 S.E.2d 558
    , 562 (1989) (child “suffered multiple
    burns over a wide portion of her body”) and In re T.H.T., 
    185 N.C. App. 337
    , 345-46,
    
    648 S.E.2d 519
    , 525 (2007) (child suffered skull fracture), aff’d as modified, 
    362 N.C. 446
    , 
    665 S.E.2d 54
    (2008).
    However, the cases cited by Respondent-Father did not establish a minimum
    threshold for a serious injury. As this Court has explained, “the nature of an injury
    is dependent upon the facts of each case[.]” In re L.T.R. & J.M.R., 
    181 N.C. App. 376
    ,
    383, 
    639 S.E.2d 122
    , 126 (2007). Using this standard, we previously upheld an abuse
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    adjudication when a three-year-old child suffered “a dark, six-inch bruise, which
    lasted well over one week, on his right thigh.” 
    Id. at 382,
    639 S.E.2d at 126.
    In this case, the trial court made a number of findings about three-year-old
    F.C.’s injury. He “had a significant bruise on his forehead, above his eye” when a DSS
    social worker observed him on the night of 18 July 2017. Then, during a medical
    examination the following day, F.C. was found to have “bruising on his right forehead
    with an unusual pattern[.] It was a red patterned bruise covering his right forehead,
    the pattern of a rectangle with three vertical lines within it. There was also a
    patterned bruise lateral to this, in addition to a bruise on his upper eyelid.” A 21 July
    2017 examination “revealed bruising to the right eyelid and on [F.C.’s] forehead was
    a knot, raised, with a very distinct patterned bruise.” Finally, the trial court found
    that “[t]he bruise was visible at least four days after the incident.” These findings
    were sufficient to support the trial court’s conclusion that F.C. suffered a serious
    injury.
    Respondent-Father next contends that neither the evidence nor the trial
    court’s findings support the conclusion that F.C.’s injury or risk of injury occurred
    through non-accidental means. He argues that “cases involving an adjudication of
    physical abuse typically include medical opinions . . . that the injuries were inflicted
    by non-accidental means” and that such opinions were absent here.
    Respondent-Father cites three cases to support his contention: In re L.Z.A., 
    249 N.C. App. 628
    , 
    792 S.E.2d 160
    (2016); C.M., 
    198 N.C. App. 53
    , 
    678 S.E.2d 794
    ; and
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    T.H.T., 
    185 N.C. App. 337
    , 
    648 S.E.2d 519
    . While he is correct that each of these
    cases, in upholding abuse adjudications, noted there was medical testimony that the
    child suffered a non-accidental injury, these cases do not hold that similar medical
    testimony is a requirement. In this case, no medical expert explicitly testified that
    F.C.’s injuries occurred through non-accidental means, but there was ample medical
    evidence from which the trial court could determine that F.C.’s injuries were not
    caused by accident. Dr. Will testified that Respondent-Mother’s claim that F.C.’s
    injury resulted from falling and hitting his head on the coffee table was inconsistent
    with the nature of the injuries. Moreover, a forensic nurse examiner testified that
    F.C.’s bruising was “definitely consistent with having been hit with a belt buckle[,]”
    rather than consistent with F.C.’s head hitting a wall, a table, or the floor. When
    presented photographs of the table during the adjudication hearing, the nurse
    testified, “I don’t see anything on that table that would intimate to me that that
    pattern would have shown up from being hit.”
    Based on the unobjected-to testimony of the two medical professionals above,
    the trial court found that F.C.’s bruise “was consistent with having been hit with a
    belt buckle” and “was not consistent with the child’s head hitting a table, a wall, or
    the floor.” This finding, coupled with the findings about the severity of F.C.’s injury,
    fully supported the trial court’s determination that “Respondents have inflicted or
    allowed to be inflicted on [F.C.] a serious physical injury by other than accidental
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    means.” Thus, the trial court appropriately adjudicated F.C. as an abused juvenile.
    Respondent-Father’s arguments are overruled.
    C. Neglect
    The Juvenile Code defines a neglected juvenile, in relevant part, as one
    Who does not receive proper care, supervision, or discipline
    from the juvenile’s parent, guardian, custodian, or
    caretaker; . . . or who lives in an environment injurious to
    the juvenile’s welfare[.] In determining whether a juvenile
    is a neglected juvenile, it is relevant whether that juvenile
    . . . lives in a home where another juvenile has been
    subjected to abuse or neglect by an adult who regularly
    lives in the home.
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-101(15) (2017).2 “Since the statutory definition of a neglected child
    includes living with a person who neglected [or abused] other children[,]” “the trial
    judge has discretion in determining the weight to be given” to evidence of another
    child’s abuse or neglect in determining whether a child is neglected. In re P.M., 
    169 N.C. App. 423
    , 427, 
    610 S.E.2d 403
    , 406 (2005) (quotation marks and citation
    omitted).
    “In order to adjudicate a child to be neglected, the failure to provide proper
    care, supervision, or discipline must result in some type of physical, mental, or
    emotional impairment or a substantial risk of such impairment.” In re C.M., 183 N.C.
    App. 207, 210, 
    644 S.E.2d 588
    , 592 (2007) (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
    2This definition has been amended, in a manner not relevant to this case, by legislation that
    became effective after the entry of the trial court’s order. See 2018 N.C. Sess. 68 § 8.1(b).
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    Respondents contend that there was no evidence that S.G. or A.G. suffered any
    impairment or substantial risk of impairment, and that their neglect adjudication
    was based solely on the fact they lived with F.C.
    However, in addition to the findings relevant to its conclusion that F.C. was an
    abused juvenile, the trial court made additional findings of fact supporting its
    determination that S.G. and A.G. were neglected juveniles:
    27. After the CAC interview with the minor child, [F.C.],
    which was on July 20, 2017, [DSS] determined that []
    Respondent[-]Father could not be around the children. []
    Respondent[-]Mother was asked to take all three children
    and keep [] Respondent[-]Father away from them. []
    Respondent[-]Mother wanted to be with [Respondent-
    Father] and preferred that [Respondent-]Father come
    home and the three children go somewhere else. []
    Respondent[-]Mother would not agree to keep the children
    away from [Respondent-]Father.
    ....
    40.   After the CAC interview on July 20, 2017, []
    Respondent[-]Mother did not believe what the child
    reported. []Respondent[-]Mother believed [] Respondent[-
    ]Father’s story over the child’s and wanted [] Respondent[-
    ]Father back in the home. [] Respondent[-]Mother did not
    believe she could protect the children from [] Respondent[-
    ]Father. There were no other placement options found and
    [] Respondent[-]Mother would rather have the children
    leave and [] Respondent[-]Father come home.
    ....
    44.    Respondent[s] have continued          to   deny   any
    responsibility for the injuries to [F.C.].
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    45. That the failure to acknowledge responsibility, . . .
    [Respondent-Mother’s] inability to protect the children,
    [Respondents’] avoidance of DSS workers, and the other
    facts of this case lead to the conclusion that there is a risk
    of future harm to the children.
    46. That the juveniles, [S.G.] and [A.G.], have lived in a
    home where another juvenile, their older brother [F.C.],
    had been subjected to abuse and neglect by adults who
    regularly live in the home.
    Based on these findings, the trial court concluded that the children “have not received
    proper care, supervision or discipline from [Respondents] and they have lived in an
    environment injurious to [their] welfare.”
    The trial court’s findings above were supported by competent evidence3 and
    show that, contrary to Respondents’ arguments, the trial court’s conclusion that S.G.
    and A.G. were neglected juveniles was not supported solely by its finding that they
    lived in a home where F.C. was abused and neglected. Rather, the trial court also
    considered that Respondent-Father had not been allowed to have contact with the
    children and, therefore, could not provide care and that Respondent-Mother chose to
    be with Respondent-Father rather than to provide housing, care, and love to the
    children.    Furthermore, even after medical professionals provided unobjected-to
    opinion testimony that F.C.’s injuries could not have occurred in the way Respondents
    3Respondents challenge findings and portions of findings not quoted above. Since the quoted
    findings were sufficient to support the court’s neglect adjudication, we do not address these challenges.
    See In re T.M., 
    180 N.C. App. 539
    , 547, 
    638 S.E.2d 236
    , 240 (2006) (“When, however, ample other
    findings of fact support an adjudication . . ., erroneous findings unnecessary to the determination do
    not constitute reversible error.”).
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    described, Respondents still refused to take any responsibility for F.C.’s injuries.
    After the incident where F.C. was abused, Respondent-Mother would not care for the
    children if it meant she could not be with Respondent-Father. Considered together,
    these factors support the trial court’s determination that there was a risk of future
    harm to the children if they remained in Respondents’ care. Accordingly, the trial
    court did not err by concluding S.G. and A.G. were neglected juveniles.
    III. Disposition
    Respondents contend that the trial court erred in ordering them to engage in
    services that were not necessary to remedy the conditions that led or contributed to
    the adjudications. Specifically, Respondents contest the trial court’s authority to
    order them to: (1) complete a substance abuse assessment and follow all
    recommendations; (2) complete a mental health assessment and follow all
    recommendations; (3) obtain and maintain safe and stable housing; and (4) submit to
    random drug screens.
    The North Carolina General Statutes permit the trial court
    at its discretion to
    determine whether the best interests of the juvenile
    require that the parent . . . undergo psychiatric,
    psychological, or other treatment or counseling directed
    toward remediating or remedying behaviors or
    conditions that led to or contributed to the juvenile’s
    adjudication or to the court’s decision to remove custody
    of the juvenile from the parent. . . . If the court finds
    that the best interests of the juvenile require the parent
    . . . [to] undergo treatment, it may order that individual
    to comply with a plan of treatment[.]
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    In re A.S.& M.J.W., 
    181 N.C. App. 706
    , 712, 
    640 S.E.2d 817
    , 821 (2007) (quoting
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-904(c) (2005)). N.C.G.S. § 7B-904 also allows the trial court to order a
    parent to “take appropriate steps” in order to achieve reunification. N.C.G.S. § 7B-
    904(d1)(3) (2017). “For a court to properly exercise the authority permitted by this
    provision, there must be a nexus between the step ordered by the court and a
    condition that is found or alleged to have led to or contributed to the adjudication.”
    In re T.N.G., 
    244 N.C. App. 398
    , 408, 
    781 S.E.2d 93
    , 101 (2015) (citation omitted); In
    re B.O.A., __ N.C. __, __, 
    831 S.E.2d 305
    , 314-15 (2019). However, the trial court is
    not limited to ordering services which directly address the reasons for the children’s
    removal from a parent’s custody. It may also order services which could aid “in both
    understanding and resolving the possible underlying causes” of the actions that
    contributed to the trial court’s removal decision. In re A.R., 
    227 N.C. App. 518
    , 522,
    
    742 S.E.2d 629
    , 632-33 (2013). Further:
    [N.C.G.S.] § 7B-901 provides that the “dispositional
    hearing may be informal and the court may consider
    written reports or other evidence concerning the needs of
    the juvenile[.] The court may consider any evidence,
    including hearsay evidence as defined in G.S. 8C–1, Rule
    801[.]” “We review a dispositional order only for abuse of
    discretion. ‘An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial
    court’s ruling is so arbitrary that it could not have been the
    result of a reasoned decision.’”
    
    T.N.G., 244 N.C. App. at 408
    , 781 S.E.2d at 100 (citations omitted).
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    In this case, the children were removed primarily as a result of F.C.’s non-
    accidental injuries, Respondents’ refusal to accept responsibility therefore, and
    Respondent-Mother’s refusal to care for the children if it meant that Respondent-
    Father could not remain in the home with her. DSS also alleged in the juvenile
    petitions that it received reports from several sources that Respondents “were using
    unidentified illegal substances.” Based on the allegations in the petition and the facts
    found in the adjudication order, the trial court acted within its discretion by requiring
    Respondents to receive and comply with mental health and substance abuse
    evaluations and submit to drug screens. These directives would, at minimum, assist
    the trial court, DSS, and Respondents in understanding whether substance abuse or
    mental health issues were underlying causes for F.C.’s abuse and the children’s
    neglect. See 
    A.R., 227 N.C. App. at 522
    –23, 742 S.E.2d at 632–33 (concluding that
    mental health assessments, substance abuse evaluations, and drug screens would
    assist “in both understanding and resolving the possible underlying causes of
    respondents’ domestic violence issues”).      Thus, the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in setting these requirements, as they are “reasonably related to aiding
    [R]espondents in remedying the conditions which led to the children’s removal[.]” 
    Id. at 522,
    742 S.E.2d at 632.
    Respondents further argue that the trial court erred in ordering them to
    “obtain and maintain safe and stable housing[,]” because this condition was not
    related to the issues resulting in the children’s removal.          Respondent-Mother
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    Opinion of the Court
    contends “there were no findings of fact addressing the lack of safe and stable
    housing[,]” and that ‘[t]he entire adjudication was premised on F.C.’s injury, and not
    on the status of the house as unsuitable.” Relying on N.C.G.S. § 7B-904, Respondent-
    Father also contends that because the adjudication order did not include findings that
    that the children’s housing was a factor in the adjudications of abuse, neglect, and
    dependency, the trial court was without authority to order Respondents to obtain and
    maintain safe and stable housing.
    It is true that this Court has held the trial court erred in ordering conditions
    concerning a respondent-parent’s housing when “the petitions did not allege and the
    district court did not find as fact that [housing] issues led to the juveniles’ removal
    from [the respondent’s] custody or formed the basis for their adjudications.” In re
    H.H., 
    237 N.C. App. 431
    , 440, 
    767 S.E.2d 347
    , 353 (2014); see also In re W.V., 
    204 N.C. App. 290
    , 297, 
    693 S.E.2d 383
    , 388 (2010) (vacating the portion of the
    dispositional order requiring the parent to obtain and maintain stable employment
    where “[n]othing in the record suggests that respondent’s employment situation, or
    lack thereof, led to or contributed to the juvenile’s adjudication”). However, in 2019,
    our Supreme Court in B.O.A. overruled this Court’s narrow application of N.C.G.S. §
    7B-904.4
    4 Although this Court did not consider N.C.G.S. § 7B-904 in B.O.A., our Supreme Court
    construed it, along with N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(2), in order to reach its holding.
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    In B.O.A., review of the record reveals that the infant child was alleged to have
    been a neglected juvenile, based upon an allegation that she “‘live[d] in an
    environment injurious to the juvenile’s welfare.’” B.O.A., __ N.C. at __, 831 S.E.2d
    at 307. The petition was based on allegations that the child’s father “choked” the
    child’s mother while the child was present during an altercation at their home. Law
    enforcement “found [the child] to have a bruise on her right forearm going to her . . .
    hand” that a doctor testified “was unlikely to have come from the child’s bouncy seat”
    as maintained by the mother. The mother had also been “charged for assault on a
    juvenile in June 2015” for allegedly throwing a shoe and injuring the eye of the child’s
    three-year-old sibling.   The adjudication order included findings supporting the
    allegations of domestic abuse of the mother by the father, the child having likely been
    injured by one of her parents, and the opinion of a nurse familiar with the histories
    of both the child and the mother that the “juvenile’s safety [wa]s at risk.” The trial
    court found the child was “living in an injurious environment with [the parents] and
    [was] a neglected juvenile as defined by law.” The disposition order was entered with
    the adjudication order, and the mother was ordered to follow an Out of Home Service
    Agreement that required her, inter alia, to: obtain mental health assessments and
    follow recommendations; attend certain domestic violence and sexual abuse group
    meetings; take certain medications; submit to random drug screens; and “obtain and
    maintain stable income for at least 3 consecutive months.”
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    On appeal, our Supreme Court stated: “The ultimate issue before us in this
    case revolves around the manner in which the reference to ‘those conditions that led
    to the removal of the juvenile’ contained in N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(2) should be
    construed.” B.O.A., __ N.C. at __, 831 S.E.2d at 311. The mother argued that
    “domestic violence and the bruise” were the sole conditions that “caused” the child’s
    removal, and that when DSS filed the petition, it “did not know whether [the child]
    was at risk because [the mother] had medication management issues[,]” whether the
    mother had “any mental health issues” affecting the child’s welfare, or whether the
    mother had insufficient “parenting skills.” The mother noted that the trial court “did
    not find that domestic violence was caused by substance abuse, mental health issues,
    parenting skills, or medication management.”         The mother further argued that
    conditions that she continue participating in “‘a Sexual Abuse Survivors group[,]’” not
    talk with the child about the case or “adult issues,” and “maintain stable income[,]”
    “were not removal conditions” and, therefore, could not be considered as bases to
    terminate her parental rights pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(2).
    Our Supreme Court disagreed, relying in part on N.C.G.S. § 7B-904:
    According to N.C.G.S. § 7B-904(d1)(3), a trial judge has the
    authority to require the parent of a juvenile who has been
    adjudicated to be abused, neglected, or dependent to “[t]ake
    appropriate steps to remedy conditions in the home that
    led to or contributed to the juvenile’s adjudication or to the
    court’s decision to remove custody of the juvenile from the
    parent, guardian, custodian, or caretaker.”              After
    examining N.C.G.S. § 7B-904(d1)(3), we believe that the
    General Assembly clearly contemplated that, in the event
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    Opinion of the Court
    that a juvenile is found to have been abused, neglected, or
    dependent, the trial judge has the authority to order a
    parent to take any step needed to remediate the conditions
    that “led to or contributed to” either the juvenile’s
    adjudication or the decision to divest the parent of custody.
    Put another way, the trial judge in an abuse, neglect, or
    dependency proceeding has the authority to order a parent
    to take any step reasonably required to alleviate any
    condition that directly or indirectly contributed to causing
    the juvenile’s removal from the parental home. In addition,
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-904(d1)(3) authorizes the trial judge, as he
    or she gains a better understanding of the relevant family
    dynamic, to modify and update a parent’s case plan in
    subsequent review proceedings conducted pursuant to
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-906.1. Thus, the relevant statutory
    provisions appear to contemplate an ongoing examination
    of the circumstances that surrounded the juvenile’s
    removal from the home and the steps that need to be taken
    in order to remediate both the direct and the indirect
    underlying causes of the juvenile’s removal from the
    parental home[.]
    B.O.A., __ N.C. at __, 831 S.E.2d at 311–12 (emphasis added). The Court further
    concluded:
    [N]othing in the relevant statutory language suggests that
    the only “conditions of removal” that are relevant to a
    determination of whether a particular parent’s parental
    rights in a particular child are subject to termination
    pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(2) are limited to those
    which are explicitly set out in a petition seeking the entry
    of a nonsecure custody order or a determination that a
    particular child is an abused, neglected, or dependent
    juvenile. Instead, the relevant statutory language appears
    to us to be subject to a number of potentially possible
    interpretations in addition to that adopted by the Court of
    Appeals. For example, the relevant statutory language can
    easily be read to encompass all of the conditions that led to
    the child’s removal from the parental home, including both
    those inherent in the events immediately surrounding the
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    child’s removal from the home and any additional
    underlying factors that contributed to the difficulties that
    resulted in the child’s removal. A careful examination of
    the relevant statutory language in the context of other
    related statutory provisions suggests that a more
    expansive reading of the reference to “those conditions that
    led to the removal of the juvenile” contained in N.C.G.S. §
    7B-1111(a)(2) is the appropriate one.
    B.O.A., __ N.C. at __, 831 S.E.2d at 311.
    Although B.O.A. was an appeal from a termination order, we find its analysis
    of N.C.G.S. § 7B-904 binding, and can conceive of no reason why the trial court’s
    imposition of conditions for reunification would be “limited to those [conditions] which
    are explicitly set out in a petition seeking the entry of a nonsecure custody order or
    [as findings of fact in] a determination that a particular child is an abused, neglected,
    or dependent juvenile[,]” when the trial court is free to impose any conditions it
    believes are relevant to addressing the issues that led to a child’s removal—at any
    time and based upon new or existing evidence—so long as it does not abuse its
    discretion. B.O.A., __ N.C. at __, 831 S.E.2d at 311.
    We believe cases such as H.H., 
    237 N.C. App. 431
    , 
    767 S.E.2d 347
    and W.V.,
    
    204 N.C. App. 290
    , 
    693 S.E.2d 383
    , relied upon by Respondents, which hold “the court
    lacked authority to order [the respondent-]mother to maintain stable housing and
    employment” when “the petitions did not allege and the district court did not find as
    fact [in its adjudication order] that these issues led to the juveniles’ removal from [the
    respondent-]mother’s custody or formed the basis for their adjudications[,]” H.H., 237
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    N.C. App. at 
    440, 767 S.E.2d at 353
    , are in conflict with B.O.A. To the extent that
    H.H., W.V., and other opinions of this Court are in conflict with the analysis and
    holdings in B.O.A., they have been overruled. Id. at __, 831 S.E.2d at 312 (rejecting
    the reasoning of the Court of Appeals “that the trial court was not entitled to consider
    certain of the ‘conditions’ addressed in respondent-mother’s court-approved case plan
    because ‘DSS failed to allege any of these conditions in either the nonsecure custody
    order or neglect petition to put [r]espondent on notice of these conditions’”).
    In this case, DSS included in the “Other Significant Information” section of its
    12 July 2018 “Model Court Report for Permanency Planning Hearings” that
    Respondents had provided DSS with a P.O. Box, but
    refuse[d] to disclose their physical address to [DSS]. They
    had previously provided an address on Sigmon Street.
    [Respondent-Father] reported they had issues with the
    rent and left that residence, to return to their former
    address on Sunnyhill Road. Child support attempted to
    serve [Respondents] at both locations, and were informed
    they do not reside at either location.
    DSS recommended that both Respondents “obtain/maintain safe and stable housing
    suitable for the children.” In the report, DSS “ask[ed] the [trial] court to order
    [Respondents] to disclose the address where they reside today[,]” and “any time they
    change residences.” In the 27 July 2018 disposition order, the trial court considered
    DSS’s report, and found as fact that Respondents had reported having issues with
    housing, had provided a false address to DSS, and had “refuse[d] to disclose their
    physical address to [DSS].” The trial court then ordered “[t]hat [Respondents] shall
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    provide [DSS] with their address[,]” and that they both “[o]btain and maintain safe
    and stable housing.”
    We hold, considering Respondents were actively attempting to keep their place
    of residence hidden from DSS, and appeared to have moved multiple times in a
    relatively short time period, that the trial court’s order requiring Respondents to
    obtain and maintain safe and stable housing, and keep DSS informed of any changes
    in housing, was a reasonable requirement and did not constitute an abuse of
    discretion. See 
    A.R., 227 N.C. App. at 522
    , 742 S.E.2d at 633 (“[p]roviding copies of
    deeds or leases, of employment or income, and notifying [DSS] of any changes in
    circumstances is also a reasonable requirement upon respondents as it is a manner
    in which both [DSS] can stay in contact with respondents and ensure that they are
    making progress toward having their children returned home”).
    [P]arental compliance with a judicially adopted case plan
    is relevant in determining whether grounds for
    termination exist pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B–1111(a)(2)
    even when there is no direct and immediate relationship
    between the conditions addressed in the case plan and the
    circumstances that led to the initial governmental
    intervention into the family’s life, as long as the objectives
    sought to be achieved by the case plan provision in question
    address issues that contributed to causing the problematic
    circumstances that led to the juvenile’s removal from the
    parental home. The adoption of a contrary approach would
    amount to turning a blind eye to the practical reality that
    a child’s removal from the parental home is rarely the
    result of a single, specific incident and is, instead, typically
    caused by the confluence of multiple factors, some of which
    are immediately apparent and some of which only become
    apparent in light of further investigation.
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    B.O.A., __ N.C. at __, 831 S.E.2d at 313–14. If the trial court can rely on such a case
    plan as the basis for terminating parental rights pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B–1111, the
    trial court can surely adopt such a case plan, one with “no direct and immediate
    relationship between the conditions addressed in the case plan and the circumstances
    that led to the initial governmental intervention into the family’s life,” 
    id., pursuant to
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-904(d1)(3), in its disposition order. “We do not, of course, wish to be
    understood as holding that a trial judge’s authority to adopt a case plan pursuant to
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-904(d1)(3) is unlimited[.]” Id. at __, 831 S.E.2d at 314.
    IV. Visitation
    Finally, Respondents contend that the trial court erred in failing to set an
    appropriate visitation schedule. “This Court reviews the trial court’s dispositional
    orders of visitation for an abuse of discretion.” 
    C.M., 183 N.C. App. at 215
    , 644 S.E.2d
    at 595. “A ruling committed to a trial court’s discretion is to be accorded great
    deference and will be upset only upon a showing that it was so arbitrary that it could
    not have been the result of a reasoned decision.” 
    A.R., 227 N.C. App. at 520-21
    , 742
    S.E.2d at 632 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    In the present case, the trial court’s dispositional and permanency planning
    order provided “[t]hat the parents shall have one visit each month supervised at
    [DSS] with their respective children. Contact between [Respondent-Father] and
    [F.C.] shall be recommended by [F.C.’s] therapist.” Respondent-Father contends that,
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    in the latter provision, the trial court erroneously delegated its judicial function of
    setting visitation between Respondent-Father and F.C. by giving that power to F.C.’s
    therapist. In support of his argument, Respondent-Father cites to decisions by this
    Court recognizing that the “‘judicial function [of awarding visitation] may [not] be . .
    . delegated by the court to the custodian of the child.’” In re J.D.R., 
    239 N.C. App. 63
    ,
    75, 
    768 S.E.2d 172
    , 180 (2015) (quoting In re Stancil, 
    10 N.C. App. 545
    , 552, 
    179 S.E.2d 844
    , 849 (1971)); see also In re C.S.L.B., __ N.C. App. __, 
    803 S.E.2d 429
    , 
    2017 WL 3027615
    (2017).5 However, in those cited decisions, this Court determined the
    trial court erred by establishing baseline visitation plans that could be modified at
    the discretion of the children’s guardian. By contrast, the trial court in this case
    awarded no visitation with F.C. Nor was any visitation required. N.C.G.S. § 7B-
    905.1 only requires the setting of a visitation plan between a child and his or her
    “parent, guardian, or custodian[.]”         N.C.G.S. § 7B-905.1(a) (2017).          Respondent-
    Father had none of those relationships with F.C. Thus, the trial court was not
    required, by statute or by decision of this Court, to provide for any visitation between
    Respondent-Father and F.C., and it did not err when it declined to award any
    visitation.
    While the trial court denied Respondent-Father scheduled visitation with F.C.,
    it did allow “contact” between Respondent-Father and F.C. if recommended by F.C.’s
    5This case was published by order of this Court on 31 July 2017. However, it appears only in
    unpublished table format in the Southeastern Reporter.
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    therapist.   This decision was supported by the trial court’s finding that F.C.’s
    therapist noted F.C. was exhibiting significant signs of trauma after the initiation of
    supervised visitation with Respondent-Father, which resulted in the cessation of
    visitation. Respondent-Father fails to show the trial court abused its discretion in
    setting this condition for contact between Respondent-Father and F.C.
    Respondent-Mother contends that the trial court abused its discretion by only
    allowing her to visit with her children once per month. She claims such infrequent
    visitation frustrates efforts toward the permanent plan of reunification with the
    children. Similarly, Respondent-Father contends that, as to his visits with A.G. and
    S.G., this Court must remand for a new visitation plan because the trial court “failed
    to justify why such limited contact with the parents was appropriate.”
    Neither Respondent cites to any legal authority that would support their
    contentions that ordering visitation to occur only once per month constitutes an abuse
    of discretion. Our case law reflects that this frequency of visitation is not unique.
    See, e.g., In re N.B., 
    240 N.C. App. 353
    , 364, 
    771 S.E.2d 562
    , 569 (2015) (trial court
    awarded “at least one visitation session per month for a minimum of one hour”); In
    re J.H., 
    244 N.C. App. 255
    , 277, 
    780 S.E.2d 228
    , 243 (2015) (trial court awarded
    “monthly visitation”). Furthermore, in making their contentions, Respondents do not
    challenge the trial court’s finding that
    [s]ince th[e] date [of the 20 February 2018 adjudicatory
    hearing], [Respondents] have attended visitation the
    following dates: 3/7/18, 3/29/18, 4/11/18, and 4/25/18.
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    [Respondents] have missed the following visits: 2/21/18,
    2/28/18, 3/14/18, 3/21/18, 3/28/18, 4/4/18, 4/18/18, 5/2/18,
    5/9/18, 5/16/18, 5/23/18, 5/30/18. Several of these visits
    were no call/no show. On 5/30/18 [DSS] sent notice to
    [Respondents] stating that they must schedule a meeting
    with [DSS] prior to any further visits being scheduled.
    This notice was sent due to the amount of no call/no show
    visits. [Respondents] have not attempted to schedule a
    meeting with [DSS] and have not visited with the children
    since 4/25/18.
    In light of the frequent missed visits by Respondents and the fact that many of the
    missed visits were not cancelled ahead of time, the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in determining that it was in the children’s best interests to only have visits
    with Respondents once per month.
    Both Respondents also contend that the trial court abused its discretion in
    failing to set a minimum time period for the length of their monthly visitations. DSS
    and the GAL concede this point, and we agree.             While the trial court’s order
    establishing monthly visitation sets a minimum frequency of visits, the order does
    not establish the length of these visits, as required by N.C.G.S. § 7B-905.1(c). See In
    re 
    J.H., 244 N.C. App. at 277
    , 780 S.E.2d at 243 (directing the trial court to comply
    with the requirements of N.C.G.S. § 7B-905.1 on remand where “[t]he order fails to
    establish the duration of respondent-mother’s monthly visitation”). We vacate this
    part of the 27 July 2018 order and remand. On remand, the trial court shall comply
    with N.C.G.S. § 7B-905.1(c) by setting a minimum duration of Respondents’
    visitation.
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    IN RE: S.G., A.G., & F.C.
    Opinion of the Court
    V. Conclusion
    We affirm the trial court’s adjudication order. We vacate and remand part of
    the disposition order for entry of an appropriate order of visitation. We affirm the
    remainder of the trial court’s dispositional order.
    AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART AND REMANDED.
    Judges MURPHY and COLLINS concur.
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