In re C.W. ( 2020 )


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  •                               STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    In re C.W.                                                                         FILED
    May 27, 2020
    released at 3:00 p.m.
    No. 19-0505 (Mingo County 18-JA-14)                                            EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    OF WEST VIRGINIA
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    The petitioner herein, Father C.J. (“Father”),1 by counsel Susan J. Van Zant, appeals
    an order entered April 17, 2019, by the Circuit Court of Mingo County terminating Father’s
    parental rights to his minor child, C.W. The West Virginia Department of Health and
    Human Resources (“DHHR”), by counsel S. L. Evans, and the child’s Guardian ad Litem
    (“Guardian”), Cullen C. Younger, both respond in support of the circuit court’s order.
    Upon consideration of the parties’ briefs, oral arguments, and the appendix record,
    this Court concludes that the circuit court erred by terminating Father’s parental rights
    because the DHHR failed to present sufficient evidence, much less prove by clear and
    convincing evidence, that Father had abused and/or neglected his child as alleged in the
    DHHR’s petition. Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s order and remand this case
    for further adjudicatory proceedings to determine whether Father has abused and/or
    neglected his child. Because this case does not present a new or significant issue of law,
    and for the reasons set forth herein, we find this case satisfies the “limited circumstances”
    requirement of Rule 21(d) of the Rules of Appellate Procedure and is proper for disposition
    as a memorandum decision.
    The DHHR instituted this abuse and neglect proceeding in February 2018 when
    Mother B.W. (“Mother”) gave birth to her youngest child, who is not at issue in this
    proceeding but who tested positive for cocaine shortly after her birth. Additionally, upon
    her admission to the hospital prior to the child’s birth, Mother tested positive for cocaine
    1
    In cases, such as this, involving sensitive facts, we will refer to the parties by their
    initials only. See W. Va. R. App. P. 40(e) (restricting use of personal identifiers in cases
    involving children); In re I.M.K., 
    240 W. Va. 679
    , 682 n.1, 
    815 S.E.2d 490
    , 493 n.1 (2018);
    In re S.H., 
    237 W. Va. 626
    , 628 n.1, 
    789 S.E.2d 163
    , 165 n.1 (2016).
    1
    and marijuana. The DHHR’s petition further alleged that Mother’s prenatal physician
    attempted to refer her for counseling and substance abuse treatment during her pregnancy,
    but that Mother either had not followed through with such services or had abandoned such
    programs. Finally, the petition averred that the father of each of Mother’s three children,
    including C.J., who is the father of Mother’s child C.W., at issue herein, had failed to
    protect his child from Mother’s substance abuse. Although most of the petition focused on
    Mother’s alleged misconduct, with specific respect to Father, the DHHR represented that
    Mother had “stated that C[.] J[.] is C[.W.]’s alleged father, and he does visit with her, but
    they do not have a visitation plan.” Finally, the DHHR requested “care, custody and control
    of the respondent children, due to the mother’s drug usage during pregnancy, and C[.J.’s]
    . . . knowledge of her drug use, but failure to protect” his child.
    By order entered February 20, 2018, the Circuit Court of Mingo County granted
    emergency custody of the children to the DHHR. In support of its order, the DHHR found,
    with respect to Father, that “[t]he West Virginia Department of Health and Human
    Resources has substantiated that the Respondent C[.] J[.] has failed to protect the subject
    child, C[.] W[.]”2 The DHHR then placed the children, including C.W., with their maternal
    grandmother. Thereafter, the circuit court held a preliminary hearing on February 28, 2018,
    and, in its corresponding order entered on May 1, 2018,3 the court succinctly reiterated its
    2
    Although the circuit court directed, in its emergency order, that the parents’ child
    support obligations be calculated, it is not apparent from any of the court’s subsequent
    orders that such support obligations were assessed or that the parents have begun making
    these payments. On remand, the circuit court should ensure that the parents’ child support
    obligations have been calculated and that such monies are being collected on behalf of the
    parents’ children. See W. Va. R. P. Child Abuse & Neglect Proc. 16a (requiring entry of
    child support orders in cases involving change in child’s custodial placement).
    3
    In reviewing the appendix record, this Court has observed a disturbing trend in this
    case of substantial delays between the dates upon which hearings are held and the entry of
    orders resulting from those hearings. We remind circuit courts of the rules establishing
    strict guidelines for the entry of abuse and neglect orders and the need to be ever vigilant
    in expediting abuse and neglect matters in an effort to promptly achieve permanency for
    the children involved in such proceedings. See W. Va. R. P. Child Abuse & Neglect Proc.
    27 (establishing time within which adjudicatory hearing order must be entered) & 36
    (dictating filing period for entry of dispositional hearing order). See also 
    W. Va. Code § 49-4-601
    (j) (prioritizing abuse and neglect proceedings); Syl. pt. 1, in part, In Interest of
    Carlita B., 
    185 W. Va. 613
    , 
    408 S.E.2d 365
     (1991) (“Child abuse and neglect cases must
    be recognized as being among the highest priority for the courts’ attention. Unjustified
    procedural delays wreak havoc on a child’s development, stability and security.”).
    2
    earlier finding of “probable cause to believe that the Respondents [Mother and the three
    children’s fathers, including Father C.J.] abused and/or neglected the subject-children
    [sic].” Following an adjudicatory hearing on June 6, 2018, the circuit court entered an
    adjudicatory order ten months later on April 17, 2019, again finding “by clear and
    convincing evidence that the Respondents [including Father] abused and neglected the
    subject-children [sic].”4 The circuit court then held a dispositional hearing on January 26,
    2019, and by order entered April 17, 2019, found that “the Respondent [sic] is [sic]
    presently unwilling or unable to correct the conditions of abuse and/or neglect that
    necessitated the removal of the subject-children” and that “there is no reasonable likelihood
    the Respondents can or will correct the conditions in the near future.” As a result, the court
    terminated Father’s parental rights to his child.
    Father was absent from the preliminary hearing, did not attend the subsequent
    adjudicatory hearing, and also failed to appear for the dispositional hearing. 5 Neither did
    Father communicate with his appointed counsel during the underlying abuse and neglect
    proceedings. Nevertheless, Father claims that he maintained contact with his child
    throughout the entire time that the underlying abuse and neglect case was pending. He
    now appeals the circuit court’s termination of his parental rights contending that the DHHR
    failed to prove his alleged abuse and/or neglect of C.W. by the requisite clear and
    Although we are cognizant of difficulties associated with the current Covid-19
    global pandemic and the Court’s declaration of a judicial emergency during this time, such
    concerns and state of judicial emergency were not at issue at the time of the underlying
    proceedings, which were conducted during 2018 and 2019. See text, infra, for additional
    orders in the underlying abuse and neglect proceedings that were entered significantly after
    the hearings to which they pertain.
    4
    At the beginning of the adjudicatory hearing, Mother voluntarily relinquished her
    parental rights to all three of her children at issue in the underlying abuse and neglect case,
    including C.W. who is the subject of the instant appeal.
    5
    Although not apparent from the circuit court’s orders, representations of counsel
    set forth in the transcripts of the circuit court’s hearings suggest that there was a question
    as to whether Father, as well as other fathers of Mother’s children, had actually been served
    with the DHHR’s abuse and neglect petition so as to receive notice of this case, and,
    therefore, the circuit court ordered that Father, and the other such fathers, be served by
    publication. Even after service by publication, however, Father did not appear at any of
    the underlying hearings or communicate with his counsel about this case.
    3
    convincing evidence and that the circuit court erred by not granting him visitation with his
    child.6
    With respect to this Court’s review of a circuit court’s final order in an abuse and
    neglect case, we previously have held:
    Although conclusions of law reached by a circuit court are subject to
    de novo review, when an action, such as an abuse and neglect case, is tried
    upon the facts without a jury, the circuit court shall make a determination
    based upon the evidence and shall make findings of fact and conclusions of
    law as to whether such child is abused or neglected. These findings shall not
    be set aside by a reviewing court unless clearly erroneous. A finding is
    clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence to support the finding, the
    reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm
    conviction that a mistake has been committed. However, a reviewing court
    may not overturn a finding simply because it would have decided the case
    differently, and it must affirm a finding if the circuit court’s account of the
    evidence is plausible in light of the record viewed in its entirety.
    Syl. pt. 1, In Interest of Tiffany Marie S., 
    196 W. Va. 223
    , 
    470 S.E.2d 177
     (1996).
    The main issue presented by this appeal is whether the circuit court erred in
    terminating Father’s parental rights to his child. Before a court may terminate a parent’s
    parental rights, however, the court first must adjudicate the parent as an abusive and/or
    neglectful parent.
    At the conclusion of the adjudicatory hearing, the court shall make a
    determination based upon the evidence and shall make findings of fact and
    conclusions of law as to whether the child is abused or neglected and whether
    the respondent is abusing, neglecting, or, if applicable, a battered parent, all
    of which shall be incorporated into the order of the court. The findings must
    be based upon conditions existing at the time of the filing of the petition and
    proven by clear and convincing evidence.
    
    W. Va. Code § 49-4-601
    (i). To support such a determination, both the governing statute
    and our prior case law make clear that the allegations of abuse and/or neglect set forth in
    the DHHR’s petition must be proved by clear and convincing evidence. See 
    id.
     See also
    6
    Mother relinquished her parental rights to C.W. The permanency plan for this child
    is adoption by the child’s current foster family.
    4
    Syl. pt. 1, in part, In Interest of S.C., 
    168 W. Va. 366
    , 
    284 S.E.2d 867
     (1981) (“W. Va.
    Code, 49-6-2(c) [1980] [now 
    W. Va. Code § 49-4-601
    (i)], requires the State Department
    of Welfare [now the Department of Health and Human Resources], in a child abuse or
    neglect case, to prove ‘conditions existing at the time of the filing of the petition . . . by
    clear and convincing proof.’”).
    Moreover, to adjudicate a parent as abusive, it is not necessary for the parent,
    him/herself, to have committed the acts constituting abuse. Rather, having knowledge of
    and/or acquiescing in the abusive behavior is sufficient to adjudicate a parent as abusive.
    See 
    W. Va. Code § 49-1-201
     (“‘Abused child’ means a child whose health or welfare is
    being harmed or threatened by: (A) A parent, guardian or custodian who knowingly or
    intentionally inflicts, attempts to inflict or knowingly allows another person to inflict,
    physical injury or mental or emotional injury, upon the child or another child in the
    home.”); Syl. pt. 7, W. Va. Dep’t of Health & Human Res. ex rel. Wright v. Doris S., 
    197 W. Va. 489
    , 
    475 S.E.2d 865
     (1996) (“The term ‘knowingly’ as used in West Virginia Code
    § 49-1-3(a)(1) (1995) [now 
    W. Va. Code § 49-1-201
    ] does not require that a parent actually
    be present at the time the abuse occurs, but rather that the parent was presented with
    sufficient facts from which he/she could have and should have recognized that abuse has
    occurred.”); Syl. pt. 3, In Interest of Betty J.W., 
    179 W. Va. 605
    , 
    371 S.E.2d 326
     (1988)
    (“W. Va. Code, 49-1-3(a) (1984) [now 
    W. Va. Code § 49-1-201
    ], in part, defines an abused
    child to include one whose parent knowingly allows another person to commit the abuse.
    Under this standard, termination of parental rights is usually upheld only where the parent
    takes no action in the face of knowledge of the abuse or actually aids or protects the abusing
    parent.”).
    In his appeal to this Court, Father alleges that the circuit court erred by terminating
    his parental rights to his child because the DHHR failed to present sufficient evidence to
    prove its allegations of abuse and/or neglect. We agree. The DHHR presented scant
    evidence to establish that Father had abused and/or neglected his child by failing to protect
    her from Mother’s substance abuse, but scant evidence does not satisfy the “clear and
    convincing” level of evidence required for an adjudication. See 
    W. Va. Code § 49-4
    -
    601(i); Syl. pt. 1, in part, S.C., 
    168 W. Va. 366
    , 
    284 S.E.2d 867
    .
    Moreover, representations of counsel during oral argument suggest that Father did
    not interact with Mother when he had contact with his child because the child was staying
    with another family member. If this is, in fact, the case, the DHHR also has failed to
    address whether Father “knowingly” allowed his child to be abused and/or neglected by
    another sufficient to support a finding of abuse. See 
    W. Va. Code § 49-1-201
    ; Syl. pt. 7,
    5
    Doris S., 
    197 W. Va. 489
    , 
    475 S.E.2d 865
    ; Syl. pt. 3, Betty J.W., 
    179 W. Va. 605
    , 
    371 S.E.2d 326
    .
    In light of the dearth of evidence in this case to support the circuit court’s disposition
    terminating Father’s parental rights, we reverse the circuit court’s order of April 17, 2019,
    and remand this case to the circuit court to conduct an adjudicatory hearing to determine
    whether there exists clear and convincing evidence to support the DHHR’s allegations that
    Father abused and/or neglected his child.7
    Reversed and Remanded.
    ISSUED:       May 27, 2020
    CONCURRED IN BY:
    Chief Justice Tim Armstead
    Justice Elizabeth D. Walker
    Justice Evan H. Jenkins
    DISSENTING AND WRITING SEPARATELY:
    Justice Margaret L. Workman
    Justice John A. Hutchison
    Workman, J., dissenting:
    I dissent from the majority’s decision to permit petitioner to willfully ignore
    the proceedings below, yet escape the consequences of his indifference to his parental
    rights. Petitioner failed to appear at any of the five hearings conducted below over the
    course of a year—proceedings where the termination of his parental rights was plainly
    being pursued. Petitioner evaded contact with DHHR and ignored his own court-appointed
    attorney until after his parental rights were terminated. With scarcely a mention of
    petitioner’s complete refusal to appear and defend his parental rights, the majority now
    inexplicably reverses his adjudication due to the “scant” evidence of petitioner’s failure to
    protect C. W. from her mother, B. W.’s, rampant drug abuse. What the majority fails to
    7
    Due to our resolution of this case and the need to remand this matter for further
    proceedings, it is premature to consider Father’s additional assignment of error regarding
    post-termination visitation.
    6
    appreciate is that even “scant” evidence of abuse and/or neglect, when intentionally left
    unrebutted by a parent, may be sufficiently clear and convincing. Our caselaw has made
    that abundantly clear for nearly two and a half decades.
    In Syllabus Point Two of West Virginia Department of Health & Human
    Resources ex rel. Wright v. Doris S., this Court held:
    Because the purpose of an abuse and neglect proceeding
    is remedial, where the parent or guardian fails to respond to
    probative evidence offered against him/her during the course
    of an abuse and neglect proceeding, a lower court may properly
    consider that individual’s silence as affirmative evidence of
    that individual's culpability.
    
    197 W. Va. 489
    , 
    475 S.E.2d 865
     (1996) (emphasis added). In short, if an abuse and neglect
    respondent appears in the proceedings and stands silent in the face of the allegations, that
    silence may be considered affirmative evidence of the abuse and/or neglect. For reasons
    that are unclear, the majority would grant greater leniency to a respondent who refuses to
    so much as even make an appearance.
    Obviously, Doris S. does not only apply where a parent actually appears at
    the proceeding and then fails to defend himself. Where a parent, properly served, refuses
    so much as to even appear, he is standing just as silent as if he were sitting in the courtroom.
    What this holding lends to the “scant” evidence bemoaned by the majority is that
    petitioner’s failure to appear is tantamount to silence, which is affirmative evidence of
    culpability. Therefore, petitioner’s silence and refusal to participate became a part of the
    body of evidence against him.
    More to the point, “the invocation of silence by a parent or guardian in an
    abuse and neglect proceeding goes to the heart of the treatability question which is essential
    in these cases, as the nature of the proceedings is remedial and not punitive.” Id. at 498,
    
    475 S.E.2d at 874
    . Where a parent not only refuses to respond to abuse and neglect
    allegations, but refuses altogether to participate in the proceedings to protect his parental
    rights, on what basis can his rights be preserved? How can a parent stood credibly accused1
    1
    The majority states simply that the evidence was “scant” on petitioner’s failure to
    protect. However, there was admitted twice-daily cocaine use on the part of B. W. and
    evidence that petitioner visited regularly with C. W., yet C. W.’s exposure to the substance
    abuse continued unabated. The majority has effectively found DHHR’s proof of a
    “negative,” i.e. a “failure” to protect, inadequate. What more affirmative proof could
    DHHR offer to establish that petitioner did “nothing”? See Com. v. 1997 Chevrolet, 
    106 A.3d 836
    , 869 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 2014) (“[A] party required to prove a negative is saddled
    7
    of failing to protect his child correct any such conditions of abuse and neglect where he
    will not even participate in the process by appearing?2
    The majority badly exposes itself by basing its decision primarily on a
    “representation[] of counsel during oral argument[.]” The majority states that petitioner’s
    awareness of B. W.’s drug abuse may have been hampered because visitation with C. W.
    occurred at the home of “another family member,” rather than at B. W.’s home. First, there
    is no such evidence whatsoever in the record on appeal and is therefore an improper basis
    upon which to base reversal and remand. Secondly, what petitioner’s counsel stated during
    arguments was that the visitations occurred “at the maternal grandmother’s home.” 3 As
    testimony contained in the appendix record reveals, visitation occurred there because that
    is where both C. W. and B. W. lived.4
    Nonetheless, the majority is concerned that “[i]f this is, in fact, the case” it is
    questionable whether DHHR proved petitioner “knowingly” failed to protect C. W. This
    Court should not be engaging in speculation about what the evidence below might reveal
    if only petitioner were given yet another chance to appear and defend himself. If the
    with a ‘virtually impossible burden.’” (quoting Com. v. Buonopane, 
    599 A.2d 681
    , 683 n.2
    (Pa. Super. Ct. 1991)).
    2
    During oral arguments, petitioner’s counsel indicated that petitioner explained his
    failure to appear by insisting that he simply did not understand his rights were in
    jeopardy—a belief of which his counsel could have easily disabused him had he so much
    as bothered to respond to her efforts at contact. Counsel also suggested that because
    petitioner alleged that his visitation continued uninterrupted during the proceedings, he
    thought and hoped the status quo would remain. This is merely further evidence that
    petitioner had no interest in or intention of serving as a full-time parent to C. W., preferring
    to simply “visit” with her despite the fact that he knew her mother’s parental rights were
    in jeopardy.
    3
    Archived oral arguments have recently been made available on the Court’s
    website. www.courtswv.gov/supreme-court/calendar-docket.html.
    4
    Testimony from the father of the newborn which was subject of the proceedings
    indicated that B. W. lived with her mother (i.e. the maternal grandmother) at least
    throughout her pregnancy:
    Q.     During that nine months did you and [B. W.] live together?
    A.     No, we did not. She lived with her mother.
    8
    majority is concerned that petitioner was not aware of B. W.’s drug abuse, petitioner had
    every opportunity (five, in fact) to appear and tell the court as much.
    Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    Hutchison, J., dissenting:
    The circuit court’s termination order should be affirmed. There is evidence in the
    record to support the petitioner’s adjudication, and he should not be given a second chance
    to litigate this case in light of his complete and utter failure to participate in any aspect of
    the circuit court’s abuse and neglect proceedings.
    The petitioner father was charged with abusing and neglecting his child, C.W., by
    failing to protect her from abuse and neglect inflicted by the mother, B.W. West Virginia
    Code § 49-1-201 (2018) expressly defines “abused child” to include a child whose health
    or welfare is threatened by a “parent, guardian, or custodian who . . . knowingly allows
    another person to inflict[] physical injury or mental or emotional injury[] upon the child or
    another child in the home.” See e.g., Syl. Pt. 4, W.Va. Dept. of Health & Human Res. ex
    rel. Wright v. Doris S., 
    197 W.Va. 489
    , 
    475 S.E.2d 865
     (1996) (recognizing that knowingly
    failing to protect child constitutes abuse).
    Critically, the term “knowing” in West Virginia Code § 49-1-201 encompasses both
    “known” and “should have known”:
    The term “knowingly” as used in West Virginia Code §
    49-1-3(a)(1) (1995) [now W.Va. Code 49-1-201] does not
    require that a parent actually be present at the time the abuse
    occurs, but rather that the parent was presented with sufficient
    facts from which he/she could have and should have
    recognized that abuse has occurred.
    Wright, 197 W.Va. at 492, 
    475 S.E.2d at 868
    , syl. pt. 7. In this case, the petitioner was
    presented with sufficient facts such that he should have recognized the abuse was
    occurring.
    C.W. and other children in the home were the victims of abuse inflicted by their
    mother, B.W., as a result of B.W.’s severe and ongoing drug abuse. B.W. admitted using
    cocaine twice a day every day, as well as marijuana, while she was caring for the children.
    Her youngest child was born with illegal drugs in her system. Despite this drug abuse, the
    9
    petitioner entrusted B.W. with the care of his child. The petitioner did not live in the home
    with C.W. and B.W., but he lived in the same county and B.W. testified that he visited with
    C.W. before the abuse and neglect petition was filed. Indeed, in his brief to our Court, the
    petitioner admits that he “had significant parenting time with the child prior to the Petition
    being filed and a significant bond” with the child. Thus, if the petitioner really had as much
    parenting time with his child as he and B.W. claim, then he should have known that his
    child was at risk due to B.W.’s rampant, uncontrolled drug use. By taking no steps to ensure
    C.W.’s safety, he was not acting as a fit parent who protects his child from harm and the
    threat of harm. Moreover, during the preliminary hearing, the CPS Worker assigned to
    investigate this case testified to her conclusion that the petitioner had failed to protect the
    child. The evidence presented during the preliminary hearing was incorporated into the
    record of the adjudicatory hearing and was unrebutted.
    Just as important to my conclusion is the fact that the petitioner failed to participate
    in any part of this case during the entire year the matter was pending in circuit court. 1 The
    petitioner failed to appear at any hearings, including the adjudicatory and dispositional
    hearings. He failed to attend any meetings of the multi-disciplinary treatment team. He
    failed to contact the DHHR regarding the welfare of his child or the status of the ongoing
    proceedings. He couldn’t even be bothered to communicate with his own lawyer who was
    court-appointed to assist him. Pursuant to long-standing authority, his failure to respond
    constitutes affirmative evidence against him:
    “‘Because the purpose of an abuse and neglect
    proceeding is remedial, where the parent or guardian fails to
    respond to probative evidence offered against him/her during
    the course of an abuse and neglect proceeding, a lower court
    may properly consider that individual’s silence as affirmative
    evidence of that individual’s culpability.’ Syl. Pt. 2, West
    Virginia Dept. of Health and Human Resources ex rel. Wright
    v. Doris S., 
    197 W.Va. 489
    , 
    475 S.E.2d 865
     (1996).” Syl. Pt.
    2, In re Daniel D., 
    211 W.Va. 79
    , 
    562 S.E.2d 147
     (2002).
    Syl. Pt. 2, In re K.P., 
    235 W.Va. 221
    , 
    772 S.E.2d 914
     (2015). Frankly, I am at a loss to
    understand why the majority has chosen to allow the petitioner a “do over” in this matter.
    For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    1
    Notably, the petitioner does not assign any error regarding his receipt of service
    of process of the abuse and neglect petition.
    10