Pascual Martinez Flores, s/k/a, etc. v. Harrisonburg Rockingham Social Services District ( 2018 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Decker, Malveaux and Senior Judge Annunziata
    UNPUBLISHED
    AMBROSIA de JESUS MARTINEZ, S/K/A
    AMBROSIA MARTINEZ de JESUS
    v.     Record No. 0090-18-3
    HARRISONBURG ROCKINGHAM
    SOCIAL SERVICES DISTRICT
    PASCUAL MARTINEZ FLORES, S/K/A
    PASCUAL MARTINEZ-FLORES
    v.     Record No. 0097-18-3
    HARRISONBURG ROCKINGHAM
    SOCIAL SERVICES DISTRICT
    PASCUAL MARTINEZ FLORES, S/K/A
    PASCUAL MARTINEZ-FLORES
    MEMORANDUM OPINION*
    v.     Record No. 0578-18-3                                         PER CURIAM
    OCTOBER 16, 2018
    HARRISONBURG ROCKINGHAM
    SOCIAL SERVICES DISTRICT
    PASCUAL MARTINEZ FLORES, S/K/A
    PASCUAL MARTINEZ-FLORES
    v.     Record No. 0579-18-3
    HARRISONBURG ROCKINGHAM
    SOCIAL SERVICES DISTRICT
    PASCUAL MARTINEZ FLORES, S/K/A
    PASCUAL MARTINEZ-FLORES
    v.     Record No. 0580-18-3
    HARRISONBURG ROCKINGHAM
    SOCIAL SERVICES DISTRICT
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKINGHAM COUNTY
    Bruce D. Albertson, Judge
    (Tania L. Perez Rodriguez; John Elledge & Associates, on brief), for
    appellant Ambrosia de Jesus Martinez, s/k/a Ambrosia Martinez de
    Jesus. Appellant submitting on brief.
    (Roland M. L. Santos, on brief), for appellant Pascual Martinez
    Flores, s/k/a Pascual Martinez-Flores. Appellant submitting on
    brief.
    (Kim Van Horn Gutterman, Assistant County Attorney; Sherwin
    John Jacobs, Guardian ad litem for the minor children, on briefs), for
    appellee. Appellee and Guardian ad litem submitting on briefs.
    Ambrosia de Jesus Martinez, s/k/a Ambrosia Martinez de Jesus, (mother) and Pascual
    Martinez Flores, s/k/a Pascual Martinez-Flores, (father) are appealing the orders terminating
    their parental rights and approving the foster care goal of adoption. Mother argues that the
    circuit court erred in finding that the Harrisonburg Rockingham Social Services District (the
    Department) “presented clear and convincing evidence that terminating mother’s parental rights
    was appropriate and in [the children’s] best interest pursuant to Va. Code Ann. § 16.1-283.”
    Father argues that the circuit court erred in finding that he “did not remedy substantially the
    conditions which led to the removal of the children under Va. Code Ann. § 16.1-283(C) when
    the evidence revealed that [father and mother] completed most of the tasks assigned to them
    pursuant to the foster care plan.” Upon reviewing the record and briefs of the parties, we conclude
    that the circuit court did not err. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the circuit court.
    BACKGROUND
    “On appeal, ‘we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most
    favorable to the prevailing party below, in this case the Department.’” Farrell v. Warren Cty.
    Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    59 Va. App. 375
    , 386, 
    719 S.E.2d 329
    , 334 (2012) (quoting Jenkins v.
    Winchester Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    12 Va. App. 1178
    , 1180, 
    409 S.E.2d 16
    , 18 (1991)).
    -2-
    Mother and father are the biological parents to E. and A., who are the subject of this appeal,
    as well as K. and C.1 Mother and father are from Oaxaca, Mexico. Their primary language is an
    indigenous dialect, Triqui; however, they also can communicate in Spanish.
    From April 2010 until January 2016, the Department and neighboring Shenandoah County
    Department of Social Services (Shenandoah County DSS) received a total of seventeen complaints
    regarding the parents and the children.2 The complaints included allegations of physical abuse,
    inadequate shelter, lack of food, hygiene problems, lack of supervision, bizarre discipline, and
    medical neglect. The physical abuse and bizarre discipline complaints concerned E. and involved
    incidents in which E. had bruises, scratches, and a black eye.3 One of the complaints, in June 2011,
    resulted in father pleading guilty to assault and battery against E. Over the years, the Department
    had entered into safety plans with the family, and father had agreed not to use corporal punishment.
    The safety plans were written in “very simple Spanish,” so the parents could understand. The
    Department offered information to the family about the food pantry, English classes, and the PEAS
    parenting class. The family received services for C., including a home health care nurse and a
    hospice nurse. However, the home health aide stopped coming to the house after father had locked
    her inside in January 2013, and the parents later stopped allowing the hospice nurse into the house.
    The Shenandoah County DSS offered services to E., such as counseling, medication management,
    case management, therapeutic day treatment, and mentoring. The parents declined parenting
    1
    K. is the oldest child and lives with her grandmother in Mexico. C. was born with
    Niemann-Pick disease, Type C, and died, at the age of three, in 2014.
    2
    In 2010, the family lived in Rockingham County, and by the time of the February 9,
    2012 complaint, they had moved to Shenandoah County. They moved back to Rockingham
    County sometime between December 16, 2013 and July 28, 2015, when the Department received
    the next complaint.
    3
    The hygiene and medical neglect complaints concerned C.
    -3-
    education classes, and the Department was “unclear” as to what services the Shenandoah County
    DSS offered to the parents to address the physical abuse issues.
    On January 7, 2016, the Department received the seventeenth complaint, which alleged that
    E. was being physical abused. E. reported that “a big fat guy recently moved in” and that E. had to
    sleep on the floor. E. stated that “he was sleeping and the big fat guy came and ripped the blanket
    off of him and hit him with a belt on his legs and near his groin area.” E. said that his mother
    became angry, told him to get in the shower, and hit him repeatedly with a shoe. Next, E. said that
    the “big fat guy turned the water all the way up and put him in the shower with his clothes on,” and
    mother was angry at E. for using all of the hot water. On January 14, 2016, E. refused to speak with
    the social worker because he was worried that his parents would be angry if he talked with her. On
    February 17, 2016, the social worker met with mother and father, and father reported that A. was
    good and listened, unlike E. Father reported that E. was “not right in the head,” and father did not
    know “what to do because he [could not] hit him [E.] anymore because the agency had indicated he
    could not.” On February 18, 2016, father told the principal at E.’s school that E. was a liar and not
    to call social services every time E. says something. On March 15, 2016, the Department filed a
    petition for an emergency removal of E. and A. At the time of the removal, E. was ten years old,
    and A. was three years old.
    On March 15, 2016, the Harrisonburg Rockingham Juvenile and Domestic Relations
    District Court (the JDR court) entered emergency removal orders for E. and A. The JDR court
    adjudicated that E. and A. were abused or neglected and entered dispositional orders on August 10,
    2016. The parties stipulated to the facts for the abuse and neglect and how the children came into
    foster care.
    Initially, E. and A. were placed in the same foster home, but in order to better address his
    behavioral and emotional needs, the Department moved E. to Childhelp, a residential treatment
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    center, on April 19, 2016. In February 2017, E. was discharged from Childhelp and placed in a
    different foster home.
    While the children were in foster care, the Department required mother and father to “accept
    their role in the removal of the children and acknowledge the need for increasing their parental
    capacity.” Mother and father also had to maintain stable housing and employment. Mother and
    father needed to “demonstrate the ability to provide a home that is safe, stable, and free from
    physical abuse” and show that they understood age-appropriate disciplinary techniques. The
    Department offered weekly supervised visitation and referred mother and father to individual
    counseling, parenting classes, and a parent mentor.
    The parents attended the parenting classes, which were taught in Spanish. Father
    participated in individual counseling. His counselor reported that father asked questions and was
    engaged, but father did not believe that he needed therapy. Although mother and father initially
    went to counseling, they stopped going in early 2017. A Spanish-speaking parent mentor was
    assigned to work with mother and father from August 2016 through May 2017. The parents
    consistently met with the parent mentor and discussed cultural differences and appropriate parenting
    in the United States versus Mexico. The parent mentor also accompanied them to their visits with
    A. and discussed appropriate behavior.
    Beginning with the removal and continuing throughout the case, the parents denied abusing
    E. or A. and believed that the children were removed because of E. and his behaviors. Mother and
    father stated that E. lied about the abuse and that E. was a “bad child.” The only time that mother
    and father admitted that one of them abused A. or E. was when father was arrested for assault and
    battery against E.
    Neither parent showed an understanding of mental illness. Father told the social worker that
    E. should not be taking any medication, and father told E. to stop taking his medication because it
    -5-
    made him “more crazy.” Father also asked the social worker to give E. a blood test, so that they can
    determine how to “fix” his brain. Father told a Childhelp therapist that E. needed “more intensive
    treatment or alteration to his brain.” Mother and father told E. that “the only thing [he] can do to
    improve himself is pray.” Mother and father denied that E.’s behavior could be related to abuse he
    sustained.
    On March 7, 2017, the Department filed petitions to terminate mother and father’s parental
    rights to E. and A. On April 19, 2017, the JDR court terminated mother and father’s parental rights
    and approved the goals of adoption; mother and father appealed the JDR court’s rulings to the
    circuit court.
    On January 11, 2018, the parties appeared before the circuit court. At the beginning of the
    trial, mother and father stated that they did not contest the facts as to how the children came into
    foster care, and the Department stipulated that the parents complied with the majority of the
    services. The Department explained that the main issue was whether mother and father learned
    from the services provided and applied that knowledge appropriately. Mother and father argued that
    they did not understand everything that was asked of them because services were provided in
    Spanish, which was not their primary language.
    The Department proffered that E. has been in the same foster home since late February
    2017, and it is a potential adoptive placement. The Department presented evidence that A. has been
    in the same foster home since he entered foster care in March 2016. The foster father testified that
    initially both A. and E. were placed together in the home. The foster father said that E. was “very
    difficult[,] . . . very angry, defiant, moody, . . . [and] dangerous.” Due to concerns about their
    safety, the foster parents informed the Department that they were not equipped to handle E. and his
    needs, so the Department removed E. from their home. When A. first arrived, he did not speak
    English and used “foul language.” Now, however, A. speaks and understands English. The foster
    -6-
    father testified that A. was thriving and was “kind of a regular kid now.” The foster father indicated
    that he and his wife would like to adopt A.
    Since A. entered foster care, he has seen a psychologist, Dr. Ronda Weber. Dr. Weber is
    fluent in Spanish, and initially, she tried to speak with A. in Spanish. However, A. was upset that
    she tried talking with him in Spanish, so they spoke English. Dr. Weber testified that initially A.
    was “hyper vigilant at a level that would not be typical for a child his age.” Dr. Weber diagnosed A.
    with post-traumatic stress disorder. A. had a preoccupation with food and being fed, and he
    displayed fearfulness and had nightmares. Dr. Weber testified that in the past year and a half, A.
    has become “less hyper vigilant” and is not as fearful, especially when he stopped visiting with
    mother and father. Dr. Weber commented that A. did not want to see mother and father and did not
    express any loss or grief concerning them. Dr. Weber even noted that A. showed more bonding
    behavior with his foster mother after living with her for four months than he ever showed toward
    mother. Dr. Weber opined that contact between A. and mother and father would cause A. to
    “regress in his improvement” and “be very confused and feel more insecure about his current
    situation.”
    The social worker testified about some of the visits between mother, father, A., and E. On
    January 24, 2017, the parents were visiting with A. and playing a game. The social worker noticed
    that A. spoke with her and the parent mentor, but not mother and father “until the last minute.” The
    social worker stated that the parent mentor spoke in Spanish, but A. responded in English. In late
    February 2017, E. started visiting with A., mother, and father at the Department’s office. A. and E.
    mainly spoke in English, but occasionally spoke in Spanish. The social worker testified about a
    visit on March 21, 2017, when E. had to leave early, and A. then stopped responding to mother and
    father. The social worker commented that A. acted differently during the visitations than at his
    -7-
    foster home because when A. was in the foster home, he talked non-stop and was very playful and
    sociable.
    After the JDR court hearing on April 19, 2017, the Department spoke with mother and
    father and instructed them not to speak with the children about the court matters. On May 23, 2017,
    mother and father visited with E. and A., and due to the parents’ actions during the visit, this was the
    last visit between the parents and the children. The social worker testified that while mother, father,
    E., and A. were eating, mother told E. that “he wasn’t going to get to eat food like this anymore
    because he wasn’t Mexican anymore and he was American now.” Mother showed him a
    photograph of C. and told E. that “this was the baby who died and now it’s like you’re dying too.”
    Both mother and father told E. that “they were suffering because of [E.].” E. cried. The social
    worker asked mother and father to “stop talking about that” and to enjoy the time that they had with
    the children. Father started to argue with the social worker, and mother continued to tell E. that he
    was going to “have another mom and said that she was going to have to sell all of his things.” The
    social worker again asked them to stop, and father told her that they could say whatever they wanted
    to their children. The social worker asked both parents to leave the visitation room, and reminded
    them that they were not to discuss the court actions and foster care with E. and A. When father
    started to argue with her, the social worker told them that they could continue to discuss it, but that
    they would lose what visitation time they had left. Mother and father went back into the visitation
    room.
    Dr. Weber also witnessed the visitation on May 23, 2017, and corroborated the social
    worker’s account of what had transpired. Dr. Weber testified that once mother and father left the
    room, E. stopped crying and started playing with A. Dr. Weber said that the children talked and
    played as if nothing had happened.
    -8-
    The Department also presented evidence about its monthly meetings with mother and father,
    beginning in February 2017. Mother and father continued to believe that the children were placed
    in foster care because of the “one time that [father] had abused [E.] and all of the lies that had
    happened after that.” Mother and father repeatedly said that E. had to change because he was “a
    liar” and “crazy.” At no point did the parents show any understanding of how their actions affected
    the children. Instead, the parents focused on how having the children in foster care affected them.
    For example, mother said that it was difficult not having E. at home because she relied on him to
    communicate in English with other people.
    Father admitted to speaking with the social worker prior to the May 23, 2017 visit about
    what to say and not say to the children. However, father testified that he did not understand
    everything that the social worker told him because he did not speak Spanish well. Father explained
    that he was “playing” when he told E. that he was no longer going to live with them and no longer
    eat Mexican food. He said that he did not intend to make E. cry.
    Mother testified that she started learning Spanish in Mexico and continued to learn Spanish
    once she came to the United States; however, her primary language is Triqui. Mother explained that
    she did not understand all of the words in the Spanish-speaking parenting classes. Mother,
    however, admitted that she spoke to E. and A. in Spanish, not Triqui.
    After hearing the evidence and arguments, the circuit court issued its ruling and entered
    orders terminating mother and father’s parental rights and approving the goal of adoption. These
    appeals followed.
    ANALYSIS
    “On review, ‘[a] trial court is presumed to have thoroughly weighed all the evidence,
    considered the statutory requirements, and made its determination based on the child’s best
    interests.’” Castillo v. Loudoun Cty. Dep’t of Family Servs., 
    68 Va. App. 547
    , 558, 811 S.E.2d
    -9-
    835, 840-41 (2018) (quoting Logan v. Fairfax Cty. Dep’t of Human Dev., 
    13 Va. App. 123
    , 128,
    
    409 S.E.2d 460
    , 463 (1991)). “Where, as here, the court hears the evidence ore tenus, its finding
    is entitled to great weight and will not be disturbed on appeal unless plainly wrong or without
    evidence to support it.” Fauquier Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Ridgeway, 
    59 Va. App. 185
    , 190,
    
    717 S.E.2d 811
    , 814 (2011) (quoting Martin v. Pittsylvania Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    3 Va. App. 15
    , 20, 
    348 S.E.2d 13
    , 16 (1986)).
    Both mother and father argue that the evidence was insufficient to support a termination of
    their parental rights. Mother contends that she complied with the Department’s requirements and
    that “her failure to adequately express that she had internalized the services to [the Department’s]
    satisfaction was due to a language barrier.” Likewise, father asserts that he completed most of the
    Department’s requirements, but the fact that the parents speak Triqui “greatly handicaps their ability
    to progress in the counseling that the parents were provided, primarily because their Spanish is
    limited and most of the counseling was in Spanish.”
    The circuit court made a factual finding that “there is not a language issue when it came to
    the parents’ performance with the services provided.” The circuit court held that mother and father
    “were able to converse with various service providers” and noted that “they would respond
    appropriately and on topic which shows their understanding.” The circuit court further found that
    there was “no evidence of a cultural issue that [was] raised by the father.”
    “We give ‘great deference’ to the trial court’s factual findings and view the facts in the light
    most favorable to the prevailing party below.” Andrews v. Creacey, 
    56 Va. App. 606
    , 619, 
    696 S.E.2d 218
    , 224 (2010) (quoting Blackson v. Blackson, 
    40 Va. App. 507
    , 517, 
    579 S.E.2d 704
    , 709
    (2003)). “On appeal, we will not reverse findings of fact ‘unless plainly wrong.’” Budnick v.
    Budnick, 
    42 Va. App. 823
    , 834, 
    595 S.E.2d 50
    , 55 (2004) (quoting Gilman v. Gilman, 
    32 Va. App. 104
    , 115, 
    526 S.E.2d 763
    , 768-69 (2000)).
    - 10 -
    Contrary to the parents’ arguments, the evidence supports the circuit court’s finding that
    language was not a barrier for mother and father. The Department provided the parents with
    Spanish-speaking social workers and a Spanish-speaking parent mentor. The Department referred
    them to a Spanish parenting class. The parents did not inform the social workers that they did not
    understand, and in fact, conversed in Spanish with the Department and the children.
    Furthermore, the circuit court did not err in terminating mother and father’s parental rights
    and finding that termination of parental rights was in the children’s best interests. The circuit court
    terminated mother and father’s parental rights pursuant to Code § 16.1-283(C)(2), which states that
    a court may terminate parental rights if:
    The parent or parents, without good cause, have been unwilling or
    unable within a reasonable period of time not to exceed 12 months
    from the date the child was placed in foster care to remedy
    substantially the conditions which led to or required continuation
    of the child’s foster care placement, notwithstanding the
    reasonable and appropriate efforts of social, medical, mental health
    or other rehabilitative agencies to such end.
    “[S]ubsection C termination decisions hinge not so much on the magnitude of the
    problem that created the original danger to the child, but on the demonstrated failure of the
    parent to make reasonable changes.” Toms v. Hanover Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    46 Va. App. 257
    ,
    271, 
    616 S.E.2d 765
    , 772 (2005). “Considerably more ‘retrospective in nature,’ subsection C
    requires the court to determine whether the parent has been unwilling or unable to remedy the
    problems during the period in which he has been offered rehabilitation services.” 
    Id. (quoting City
    of Newport News Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Winslow, 
    40 Va. App. 556
    , 562-63, 
    580 S.E.2d 463
    , 466 (2003)).
    Although mother and father complied with most of the Department’s requirements, they did
    not apply what they had been taught or show an understanding of how their actions affected the
    children. The circuit court held, “When it comes to the issue of good cause in the termination,
    - 11 -
    again, there is no evidence that cultural or language issues rose to that level of good cause, nor as to
    the parents’ behavior.” Despite all of the services, including the parenting classes and the parent
    mentor, mother and father never comprehended their role in the placement of the children in foster
    care. In February 2017, mother told the social worker that the children were in foster care because
    “of the one time that [father] had abused [E.] and all of the lies that had happened after that.”
    Mother and father repeatedly focused on how the placement of the children had affected them, as
    opposed to how their actions affected the children. At the last visitation in May 2017, mother and
    father told the children that they were no longer Mexican and would not eat Mexican food because
    they had new families. Mother told E. that it was like he was dying and that she was going to sell
    all of his clothes and toys. Mother and father testified that they did not realize that their statements
    would upset E. Therefore, in spite of all of the services provided to the parents over the years,
    mother and father had not determined how to apply what they learned to interacting with their
    children.
    At the time of the circuit court hearing, E. and A. had been in foster care for almost two
    years. The Department presented evidence that A. was doing well in foster care and in an adoptive
    placement. E. initially had displayed behavioral issues, but after receiving treatment at Childhelp,
    he was doing well in a foster home, which was a possible adoptive placement. “It is clearly not in
    the best interests of a child to spend a lengthy period of time waiting to find out when, or even if,
    a parent will be capable of resuming his [or her] responsibilities.” Tackett v. Arlington Cty.
    Dep’t of Human Servs., 
    62 Va. App. 296
    , 322, 
    746 S.E.2d 509
    , 522 (2013) (quoting Kaywood v.
    Halifax Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    10 Va. App. 535
    , 540, 
    394 S.E.2d 492
    , 495 (1990)).
    The evidence supports the circuit court’s finding that the parents had been “unwilling or
    unable within a reasonable period of time not to exceed twelve months from the date the [children
    were] placed in foster care to remedy substantially the conditions which led to or required
    - 12 -
    continuation of the child[ren]’s foster care placement.” The circuit court did not err in terminating
    mother and father’s parental rights pursuant to Code § 16.1-283(C)(2) and approving the goal of
    adoption for E. and A.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the circuit court’s ruling is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
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