Dept. of Human Services v. S. R. C.

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FILED: June 11, 2014 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON In the Matter of H. V., a Child. DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES, Petitioner-Respondent, v. S. R. C., Appellant. Washington County Circuit Court J120069 Petition Number 01J120069M A154634 Eric Butterfield, Judge. Argued and submitted on January 03, 2014. Sarah Peterson, Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for appellant. With her on the brief was Peter Gartlan, Chief Defender, Office of Public Defense Services. Michael R. Salvas, Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Anna M. Joyce, Solicitor General. Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Nakamoto, Judge, and Egan, Judge. EGAN, J. Reversed and remanded with instructions to enter a jurisdictional judgment omitting allegation G as a basis for jurisdiction; otherwise affirmed. 1 EGAN, J. 2 In this juvenile dependency case, mother appeals a judgment in which the 3 juvenile court found additional bases of jurisdiction over her daughter, H. The juvenile 4 court had initially asserted jurisdiction over H based on mother's drug use, H's exposure 5 to dangerous living conditions, and mother's rejection of assistance from the Department 6 of Human Services (DHS). Mother does not challenge those bases for jurisdiction, but 7 instead asserts that the juvenile court erred in asserting jurisdiction over H based on 8 additional allegations in an amended petition. Those allegations generally concerned the 9 level of care that mother had provided to H and her younger children, physical and verbal 10 abuse, H's exposure to domestic violence, and the sexual abuse of H by her stepfather. 11 For the reasons that follow, we reverse with respect to one of those additional allegations 12 and otherwise affirm. 13 Mother does not request that we exercise our discretion to engage in de 14 novo review, and we decline to do so. ORS 19.415(3)(b); ORAP 5.40(8)(c) (we conduct 15 de novo review only in "exceptional" cases). Therefore, in determining whether juvenile 16 court jurisdiction over H was warranted based on the allegations in the amended petition, 17 we view the evidence, as supplemented and buttressed by permissible derivative 18 inferences, in the light most favorable to the juvenile court's ruling and then assess 19 whether the record was legally sufficient to permit the outcome that was reached. Dept. 20 of Human Services v. N. P., 257 Or App 633, 639, 307 P3d 444 (2013). 21 At the time of the jurisdictional hearings on the amended petition, mother 1 1 had six children: H, age 14; J, age 12; M, age 7; O, age 3; S, age 15 months; and D, age 2 3 months.1 Beginning when H was approximately 12 years old, mother and the children 3 lived with stepfather for approximately 18 months. In April 2012, DHS removed H and 4 the other children from mother and stepfather's care. Shortly thereafter, DHS filed a 5 petition for juvenile court jurisdiction that alleged: 6 7 "A. The mother's use of Methamphetamine impairs her ability to provide minimally adequate care for [H] and [H]'s siblings. 8 9 10 11 12 "B. The mother has exposed [H] and [H]'s siblings to dangerous living conditions in which drug paraphernalia is present and accessible. The police found illegal substances and drug paraphernalia in the home and within reach of [H] and [H]'s siblings, which presents a threat of harm to [H] and [H]'s siblings. 13 14 "C. The mother's attitude and behavior result in overtly rejecting [Child Protective Services] intervention, refusing access to [H] and [H]'s siblings. 15 16 17 18 "D. The mother disclosed to police that she had used Methamphetamine as recently as April 12th, 2012; one night before police executed a search warrant on the home. The mother's use of Methamphetamine presents a threat to [H] and [H]'s siblings' safety. 19 "E. There is no legal father." 20 The juvenile court asserted jurisdiction on grounds A, B, C, and D.2 Mother does not 21 challenge those jurisdictional bases in this appeal. 22 DHS filed the amended petition at issue here approximately one year after 1 H turned 15 before entry of the judgment at issue. 2 It is unclear from the record whether the juvenile court asserted jurisdiction on the basis of allegation E. In an event, as we explain below, the juvenile court asserted jurisdiction on that basis after DHS realleged that there was no legal father in the amended petition that is at issue. 2 1 it filed the original petition. In addition to the previously established bases for 2 jurisdiction, the amended petition contained the following allegations: 3 4 5 "E. The mother has failed to provide adequate care and supervision for [H] and [H]'s siblings. The mother often expects [H] to provide care for her siblings. These circumstances present a threat to [H]'s safety. 6 7 8 "F. The mother has engaged in a pattern of discipline, physical aggression and verbal abuse, which has resulted in [H]'s distress and behavioral struggles. 9 10 "G. The mother has failed to protect [H] from inappropriate physical discipline, including the use of a[n] airsoft gun, by [stepfather].[3] 11 12 "H. [H] has been present during domestic violence between the mother and [stepfather], which places [H] in threat of harm. 13 14 "I. The mother has an anger control problem that interferes with her ability to safely parent [H]. 15 16 "J. The mother has failed to obtain appropriate medical treatment for [H]'s sibling. 17 18 19 "K. The mother was aware that * * * [stepfather] was sexually abusing [H] at the time of the removal of the children from the family home. The mother failed to protect [H] or intervene on [H]'s behalf. 20 21 "L. [H was] sexually abused by * * * [stepfather]. The mother is aware of the abuse and remains in a relationship with [stepfather]. 22 "M. There is no legal father." 23 In the jurisdictional judgment on the original petition, the trial court 24 continued H's prior placement in foster care, and H was living with foster parents at the 25 time of the hearings on the amended petition. Both mother and stepfather were 3 Allegation G originally alleged the use of a "BB gun"; the juvenile court changed it to allege "airsoft gun" at the close of evidence. 3 1 incarcerated. Mother was scheduled for release in December 2015; the record does not 2 reveal when stepfather will be released. Following several contested hearings, the 3 juvenile court asserted jurisdiction over H as to each allegation in the amended petition. 4 The court did not make any specific findings, but instead stated that, as to all of the 5 additional allegations, "I believe the loss has been realized. The threat is ongoing. 6 [Mother has] such a history of extreme dysfunction that, you know, the--the threat is real, 7 to me. It's there. It's ongoing. * * * There's absolutely an ongoing threat from where I'm 8 coming from." 9 As relevant here, juvenile dependency jurisdiction is appropriate when a 10 child's "condition or circumstances are such as to endanger the welfare" of the child. 11 ORS 419B.100(1)(c). To determine if the child is endangered, we look to whether those 12 conditions or circumstances "present a current threat of serious loss or injury." Dept. of 13 Human Services v. C. J. T., 258 Or App 57, 61, 308 P3d 307 (2013). "The key inquiry is 14 whether, under the totality of the circumstances, there is a reasonable likelihood of harm 15 to the welfare of the child." Dept. of Human Services v. G. J. R., 254 Or App 436, 443, 16 295 P3d 672 (2013). When a parent challenges a juvenile court's decision to assert 17 jurisdiction based on additional allegations asserted in an amended petition, we examine 18 whether sufficient evidence exists, "from which a reasonable factfinder could conclude 19 by a preponderance of the evidence, either that a current risk of harm to [the child] exists 20 from the additional allegation standing alone, or that the additional allegation contributes 21 to or enhances the risk associated with the already established bases of jurisdiction." Id. 4 1 at 444. We consider each additional allegation "in connection with any other allegations 2 because sometimes two allegations together present a more compelling case than either 3 one alone." Id. at 443 (internal quotation marks omitted). "[W]hen determining whether 4 the court has jurisdiction because of conditions and circumstances, the focus must be on 5 the child's current conditions and circumstances and not on some point in the past." Dept. 6 of Human Services v. L. G., 251 Or App 1, 4, 281 P3d 681, adh'd to as modified on 7 recons, 252 Or App 626, 290 P3d 19 (2012). 8 9 With an exception discussed below, mother does not dispute that DHS introduced sufficient evidence to prove the underlying facts alleged in the amended 10 petition. It is enough for our purposes here to briefly recite, in the light most favorable to 11 the juvenile court's ruling, some of the circumstances that H was exposed to. Mother 12 used methamphetamine; H was the primary caregiver for her younger siblings, which 13 entailed supervising them, preparing them food, cleaning the house, and attending to 14 them when mother and stepfather fought; O is one of H's younger siblings that H cared 15 for; O injured herself falling and mother failed to get appropriate medical treatment for 16 the injury; mother once threw H up against a car, had pushed H, and had pulled her hair; 17 H had witnessed frequent episodes of domestic violence between mother and stepfather 18 and had once physically intervene dto protect mother from stepfather; mother and 19 stepfather verbally abused the children by calling them vulgar and derogatory names; 20 stepfather raped H in their home; and, after mother discovered that stepfather had raped 21 H, mother did not remove stepfather from the home. 5 1 We affirm the juvenile court's assertion of jurisdiction on allegations E, F, 2 H, I, J, K, and L. There was sufficient evidence to establish the facts alleged. When 3 those allegations are considered in view of each other and the previously established 4 jurisdictional bases, G. J. R., 254 Or App at 444, the juvenile court did not err in 5 concluding that H's "condition or circumstances are such as to endanger the welfare of 6 [H]." ORS 419B.100(1)(c); State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. N. W., 232 Or App 101, 111, 221 7 P3d 174 (2009), rev den, 348 Or 291 (2010) (juvenile court jurisdiction is appropriate 8 where reading the individual allegations in view of one another "synergistically creates a 9 whole that is more dangerous than the sum of its parts"). 10 One aspect of mother's arguments concerning those assignments of error 11 merits discussion. Mother argues that the evidence was insufficient to show a current 12 risk of serious loss or injury to H as of the time of the hearings on the amended petition. 13 Mother points out that she was incarcerated at the time of those hearings and will not be 14 released until 2015 (when H will be almost 18 years old), that the juvenile court had 15 already asserted jurisdiction over H, and that H was in foster care pursuant to that 16 jurisdiction. Mother asserts that most of the allegations in the amended petition concern 17 historical circumstances that no longer exist, e.g., H living in the same house with an 18 unincarcerated mother and stepfather and an absence of court and DHS intervention in 19 their lives. Mother thus argues that, because the circumstances show that it is unlikely 20 that she will ever parent H again, the evidence is insufficient to show that H is currently 21 at risk of serious harm or loss with respect to the allegations in the amended petition. 6 1 We reject mother's attempt to wield the fact that H had been placed in foster 2 care as a reason to find that the additional allegations in the amended jurisdictional 3 petition do not present a current threat of harm. The fact that H was in foster care was 4 possible because the juvenile court had jurisdiction over H; the juvenile court, in turn, 5 only had that authority because it had determined that H's welfare was endangered by 6 mother's parenting. Mother's argument in this regard is thus a cynical one, for the court's 7 order removing H from the serious risk of harm posed by mother was predicated on its 8 determination that mother's parenting had created a serious risk of harm for H. It having 9 been determined that mother endangered H's welfare, mother cannot here be permitted to 10 rely on that fact in an effort to prevent DHS from establishing that H's welfare was 11 endangered for additional reasons. 12 In that regard, we also note that the type and extent of the efforts that 13 mother and DHS must make if mother hopes to one day reunify with H will be 14 determined by reference to the established bases for jurisdiction. ORS 419B.476(2); see 15 Dept. of Human Services v. N. T., 247 Or App 706, 715, 271 P3d 143 (2012) ("The 16 particular issues of parental unfitness established in the jurisdictional judgment provide 17 the framework for the court's analysis of each question--that is, both DHS's efforts and a 18 parent's progress are evaluated by reference to the facts that formed the bases for juvenile 19 court jurisdiction."). The allegations by DHS in the amended petition represent an 20 attempt to more precisely identify the risk that mother's parenting presents to H and, 21 consequently, the efforts that those involved must make in order to bring about a 7 1 reunification between mother and H. It is important to encourage as complete an 2 understanding of the scope of the harm that mother's parenting presents to H as possible. 3 For that reason, the fact that H is currently receiving protection because of the juvenile 4 court's jurisdiction cannot be used by mother to argue that the asserted additional 5 jurisdictional bases do not present a current risk of harm to H. It is with that 6 understanding, and in view of the fact that mother will be released from prison in the 7 coming months, that we conclude that the juvenile court did not err in asserting 8 jurisdiction over H as to allegations E, F, H, I, J, K, or L. 9 With respect to allegation G, that mother "has failed to protect [H] from 10 inappropriate physical discipline, including the use of a[n] airsoft gun, by [stepfather]," 11 mother argues that the evidence was legally insufficient to establish that mother had, in 12 fact, failed to protect H from stepfather's "inappropriate physical discipline." We agree 13 with mother. Although there was evidence that stepfather physically disciplined certain 14 of her siblings, including with the use of an airsoft gun, there was no evidence that 15 stepfather had physically disciplined H.4 Consequently, there is no evidence that mother 16 failed to protect H from stepfather's physical discipline. The juvenile court therefore 17 erred in asserting jurisdiction over H as to mother on that basis. 18 That leaves allegation M, that there is no legal father. Mother assigns error 19 to the juvenile court's assertion of jurisdiction on that basis, but does not provide us with 20 any arguments about why the juvenile court erred in that respect. We therefore decline to 4 When asked whether stepfather had physically disciplined her, H responded: "No." 8 1 address that assignment of error. See Harnisch v. College of Legal Arts, Inc., 243 Or App 2 16, 25, 259 P3d 67 (2011) ("[W]e do not make or develop a party's argument when that 3 party has not endeavored to do so itself."). 4 5 Reversed and remanded with instructions to enter a jurisdictional judgment omitting allegation G as a basis for jurisdiction; otherwise affirmed. 9

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