In re J.Y., Juvenile ( 2016 )


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  • Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.
    ENTRY ORDER
    SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2016-114
    AUGUST TERM, 2016
    In re J.Y., Juvenile                                  }    APPEALED FROM:
    }
    }    Superior Court, Windham Unit,
    }    Family Division
    }
    }    DOCKET NO. 5-1-14 Wmjv
    Trial Judge: Karen R. Carroll
    In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:
    Father appeals the superior court’s order terminating his parental rights with respect to his
    son, J.Y. We affirm.
    The record and the superior court’s unchallenged findings reveal the following facts. J.Y.
    was born in May 2010. In January 2014, the State filed a request for an emergency care order,
    alleging that J.Y. was a child in need of care or supervision (CHINS) due to his mother’s inability
    to care for him and the noncustodial father’s indifference to that fact. The superior court issued
    an emergency care order the same day the petition was filed, and J.Y. was taken into state custody.
    J.Y. was adjudicated CHINS following an April 2014 hearing. The court found that mother’s
    serious and debilitating abuse of alcohol had put her children* at risk for months, and that father
    had not taken any steps to protect J.Y. and had refused, in accordance with his philosophy, to
    contact authorities to ensure that J.Y and his brother were safe. The Department for Children and
    Families (DCF) filed a case plan that identified a history of domestic violence between mother and
    father and required father to: (1) participate in, complete, and follow recommendations of a
    substance-abuse evaluation; (2) participate in and benefit from a batterer’s program; (3) participate
    in a parent-education program; (4) attend all scheduled visits with J.Y.; (5) attend all shared
    parenting meetings; (6) maintain employment and adequate housing; and (7) sign releases enabling
    DCF to communicate with service providers.
    DCF’s May 2014 disposition report recommended that J.Y. remain in DCF custody with a
    goal of reunification with mother. At the time of the June 18, 2014 disposition hearing, J.Y. was
    living with mother four days a week and in foster care the remaining three days per week. Father
    had visitation with the child two hours per week. The disposition case plan, which was filed a few
    days before the disposition hearing and approved by the court, stated that father had attended
    scheduled visits regularly and had a warm relationship with his son, but otherwise had made no
    progress toward case plan goals. The requirements of the original case plan remained in place,
    with the added condition that father participate in, complete, and follow recommendations of a
    psychiatric evaluation. An August 2014 post-disposition-review report indicated that father had
    *
    Mother’s other son by a different father was living with her and J.Y. That child is the
    subject of separate proceedings.
    not participated in a substance-abuse evaluation, had not participated in the required batterer’s and
    parent-education programs, had not attended all shared parenting meetings, and had not obtained
    a psychiatric evaluation.
    By February 2015, DCF had concluded that it would not seek any reunification with father,
    in part due to his sending threatening and hateful messages to mother in the fall of 2014. Father
    had also previously threatened to use firearms at a courthouse and blow himself up in front of J.Y.
    As the result of his threatening behavior, father’s visits with his child were suspended sometime
    in the second half of 2014. Although father obtained a substance-abuse screening, he failed to
    follow through on recommendations or a second meeting. He was not accepted into a batterer’s
    program because he failed to acknowledge any issues with anger or violence. He had maintained
    appropriate employment and housing, however, and his visits with J.Y. had progressed to being
    partially unsupervised at his home before they were suspended. Father petitioned for reinstatement
    of his visits in February 2015, but the superior court denied the request, instead conditioning the
    resumption of visits on father actively participating in the case plan.
    The February 2015 case plan, which was approved by the superior court on February 19,
    2015, set concurrent goals of reunification with mother or adoption. In July 2015, DCF changed
    its permanency recommendation to adoption only. The permanency report indicated that father
    was continuing to send abusive text messages to mother. Father had still not participated in any
    treatment for substance abuse, despite his admission that he was drinking a significant amount of
    alcohol and the fact that he had been arrested in the summer of 2014, while these proceedings were
    pending, for felony cultivation of marijuana. In June 2015, J.Y. and his brother were placed with
    their maternal aunt in Douglasville, Georgia.
    In August 2015, DCF filed petitions seeking to terminate both mother’s and father’s
    parental rights. Mother voluntarily relinquished her parental rights in September 2015,
    conditioned on father’s rights being terminated. A termination hearing with respect to father was
    held in January 2016. In a March 21, 2016 decision, the superior court terminated father’s parental
    rights, finding by clear and convincing evidence that: (1) father’s ability to parent J.Y. had
    stagnated because of his failure to improve his capacity to care for the child by engaging in services
    aimed at addressing issues that led to J.Y. being taken into state custody more than two years
    earlier; and (2) termination of father’s parental rights was in J.Y.’s best interests because father
    had not played a significant or constructive role in J.Y.’s life and would not be able to resume his
    parental duties within a reasonable period of time, given his continuing lack of insight into his
    need for case-plan services.
    On appeal, father argues that the superior court overlooked the fact that his inability to play
    a constructive role in J.Y.’s life as a noncustodial parent was due to factors beyond his control.
    Father points to the superior court’s findings indicating that his visits with his son, with whom he
    was found to have a warm relationship, were progressing until they were suspended based on
    issues that he claims were irrelevant. He states that while addressing substance abuse and anger
    management may be relevant to his ability to become a custodial father, there is no evidence that
    his substance abuse, violence, or anger had any impact on his parent-child contact with his son.
    He contends that the disruption of his noncustodial relationship with his son—the result of the
    suspension of his visits and the placement of the child with his maternal aunt in Georgia—was
    beyond his control.
    We find no merit to these arguments. The superior court was not required to select a
    disposition alternative that allowed father to continue parent-child contact in a noncustodial role.
    2
    As we explained in In re S.B., 
    174 Vt. 427
    , 428 (2002) (mem.), a termination proceeding “is not a
    custody case in which the family court “must balance the prospective advantages of different
    placement options, but rather “a legislatively created [] proceeding in which the court is required
    to weigh specific statutory factors when determining whether to grant a petition for termination of
    parental rights.” Id.; see In re T.T., 
    2005 VT 30
    , ¶ 7, 
    178 Vt. 496
     (stating that court need not revisit
    statutory permanency hearing options “and explain why it is choosing termination of parental right
    over other options”). The question is whether changed circumstances and the child’s best interests
    warrant a modification of the disposition order.
    Here, the trial court first determined that father’s failure to make any progress on most of
    the case-plan goals amounted to stagnation of his ability to parent J.Y., which constituted a change
    of circumstances sufficient to examine the child’s best interests under the statutory factors set forth
    in 33 V.S.A. § 5114(a). See Id. § 5113(b) (providing that court may modify existing order on
    grounds that change of circumstances requires such action to serve child’s best interests). The
    court then considered each of the statutory best-interest factors and concluded that termination of
    father’s parental rights was in J.Y.’s best interests. Father does not challenge any of the superior
    court’s findings and conclusions, which support this determination. See In re D.S., 
    2014 VT 38
    ,
    ¶ 22, 
    196 Vt. 325
     (“As long as the court applied the proper standard, we will not disturb its findings
    unless they are clearly erroneous, and we will affirm its conclusions if they are supported by the
    findings” (quotation omitted)).
    The record does not support father’s contention that stagnation of his relationship with J.Y.
    was due to circumstances beyond his control. Father refused to engage in most of the required
    case-plan services even though he was aware that doing so was imperative to maintaining contact
    with his child. Not only did he continue to refuse to engage in necessary services, but he also
    engaged in threatening conduct against mother and others that led to cessation of his visits with
    J.Y. long before the child was placed with his maternal aunt in Georgia. The threatening conduct
    at issue was not unrelated to his ability to parent and the child’s best interests. The trial court
    identified various instances of threatening conduct by father preceding suspension of his visitation
    with J.Y. including the following: In March 2014, in a conversation with mother’s sister, he
    referred to an upcoming court hearing and threatened to use guns and bombs at the courthouse.
    When confronted by the police, father minimized his behavior by saying that he was just “venting.”
    In the fall of 2014 father sent texts to mother that included profanity, disturbing name calling, and
    threats, much of which the trial court described as too disturbing for the court to repeat. While the
    court was not certain from the record whether visits were suspended after the March 2014 incident,
    or whether father was able to continue visits until after the threatening messages to mother in the
    fall of 2014, the court clearly found that father’s threatening behavior led to the suspension of his
    visits. The trial court subsequently conditioned renewed visitation on father’s participation in the
    batterers’ program and substance abuse treatment—a condition father did not satisfy. The
    suggestion that father’s contact with J.Y. was suspended as a result of factors beyond his control
    is unsupported by the record and the trial court’s findings.
    Nor did the trial court err in failing to conclude that father’s relationship with J.Y. should
    have overcome all other statutory best-interest factors, including his inability to resume parental
    responsibilities in a reasonable time. While father’s two-hour weekly visits with J.Y. were going
    well before they were discontinued and may have reflected a warm relationship between father
    and son, the record supports the trial court’s failure to conclude that maintaining this relationship
    was so critical to the child’s best interests as to outweigh the other factors. Cf. In re J.M., 
    2015 VT 94
    , ¶¶ 8-9, __ Vt. __, 
    127 A.3d 921
     (affirming superior court’s denial of termination petition
    where court found that although father would be unable to resume his parental rights within
    3
    reasonable period of time, father’s noncustodial role should be maintained because it provided
    emotional support for child who had experienced considerable turmoil and who had no other
    significant personal relationships or supportive community). In contrast to the situation in J.M.,
    in this case the superior court found that father had never played a significant role in J.Y.’s life
    and that J.Y. had been in state custody since January 2014, had been living since June 2015 with
    his brother in a supportive family that wanted to adopt him, and had never spoken to his adoptive
    family about father. The court’s findings and conclusions concerning changed circumstances and
    the statutory best-interest factors support the court’s termination order.
    Affirmed.
    BY THE COURT:
    _______________________________________
    Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice
    _______________________________________
    Beth Robinson, Associate Justice
    _______________________________________
    Harold E. Eaton, Jr., Associate Justice
    4
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2016-114

Filed Date: 8/19/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021