In the Matter of the Termination of the Parent-Child Relationship of: B.C.M. (Minor Child), and C.J.C.M. (Mother) v. The Indiana Department of Child Services (mem. dec.)
MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Aug 14 2015, 6:04 am
Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as
precedent or cited before any court except for the
purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata,
collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Cynthia Phillips Smith Gregory F. Zoeller
Law Office of Cynthia P. Smith Attorney General of Indiana
Lafayette, Indiana
Robert J. Henke
Abigail R. Recker
Deputy Attorneys General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
In the Matter of the Termination August 14, 2015
of the Parent-Child Relationship Court of Appeals Case No.
of: B.C.M. (Minor Child), 79A02-1412-JT-895
and Appeal from the Tippecanoe
Superior Court
C.J.C.M. (Mother),
The Honorable Thomas K.
Appellant-Respondent, Milligan, Senior Judge
Trial Court Cause No.
v.
79D03-1407-JT-31
The Indiana Department of Child
Services,
Appellee-Petitioner.
Brown, Judge.
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[1] C.J.C.M. (“Mother”) appeals the involuntary termination of her parental rights
with respect to B.C.M. (“Child”). Mother raises one issue, which we revise and
restate as whether the evidence is sufficient to support the termination of her
parental rights. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] On October 5, 2013, Tippecanoe County Department of Child Services
(“DCS”) received a report alleging Child, who was six months old at the time,
was being neglected by Mother. Specifically, the report alleged that on that day
police officers responded to a disturbance at a home in Lafayette, Indiana, and
Mother, who was twenty years old at the time, was found to be intoxicated.
Mother later admitted to drinking and using marijuana on that date. 1 Mother
was alleged to have started an altercation with the sister of B.F., who is Child’s
father (“Father”),2 in which Child was present, and when law enforcement
attempted to stop the fight Mother was uncooperative with the officers and
assaulted one of them. Based on this report, a family case manager visited
Mother on October 10, 2013 and filed an intake officer’s report. The intake
officer’s report indicated that Mother refused to take a drug screen without a
court order, she would not provide details about her involvement in a fight at
1
The DCS intake officer’s report states that the home was that of Mother. Testimony at the termination
hearing indicated that the altercation occurred at the home of the sister of B.F., who is Child’s father.
2
The court also terminated the parental rights of Father, referred to in the order as “Alleged Father.”
Appellant’s Appendix at 13. Father, however, does not participate in this appeal. We therefore limit our
recitation of the facts to those pertinent solely to Mother’s appeal.
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the residence, she would not allow family case managers to make unannounced
visits without a court order, and that she had been arrested on August 16, 2013
for public intoxication and minor consumption, for which law enforcement had
been contacted initially due to a fight involving Mother and an employee at
“Filly’s.” DCS Exhibit A at 1. The intake officer’s report also noted that
Father was present at the home and that he denied knowing of Mother’s
involvement in the fight or that a fight had occurred.
[3] On October 21, 2013, DCS filed a petition alleging that Child was a Child In
Need of Services (“CHINS”), and on December 11, 2013, Child was
adjudicated a CHINS. That same day, the court issued a dispositional order in
which it ordered that Child be made a ward of the State and be placed in foster
care with his current foster placement. The court ordered Mother to participate
in services, treatment, and/or supervision including random drug and alcohol
screens, a drug and alcohol assessment, a parenting assessment, an anger
management assessment, a psychological evaluation, to follow all
recommendations from the assessments and evaluation, home based case
management, and visitation.
[4] On September 11, 2014, DCS filed a petition to terminate Mother’s parental
rights to Child. On December 1, 2014, the court held a termination hearing at
which both Mother and Father initially failed to appear but were represented by
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counsel.3 At the hearing Kathleen Carmosin, who oversaw the case as a family
case manager (“FCM”), testified that shortly after the altercation on October 5,
2013, Mother “fled to Indianapolis” without taking any clothes for Child or
having any way of providing for Child’s basic needs. Transcript at 9. She
testified that after attempts to locate Mother were unsuccessful, Mother
eventually returned and Child was removed on October 21, 2013. She
indicated that she first became aware of Mother because she had been the FCM
who oversaw a CHINS case of Mother’s mother, in which Mother’s two
brothers had been adjudicated CHINS, and in addition she had been involved
with a previous CHINS case involving another child of Mother which ended in
a voluntary termination of Mother’s parental rights to that child in February
2011.
[5] FCM Carmosin testified that Mother completed a psychological evaluation,
and that Mother was recommended for individual outpatient therapy for
substance abuse, individual therapy, and medication services. She testified that
Mother’s attendance at individual therapy was “[n]on-existent,” noting that she
participated in two or three sessions at her home in Lafayette, that soon after
Mother moved to Kokomo, and that, although she was referred to services in
Kokomo, she did not participate in those services. Id. at 12. FCM Carmosin
indicated that Mother did not participate in medication management, that
3
The record reflects at some point during the presentation of the first witness, Kathleen Carmosin, Mother
arrived in court, wherein page 16 of the Transcript reveals that Mother spoke out of turn during Carmosin’s
testimony.
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Mother was referred to Child and Family Partners, and that she participated
sporadically throughout the course of the case until approximately March 2014
when she began avoiding services and not participating any longer. She
indicated that during the pendency of the case Mother was able to have stable
housing for only “about three months” and that the longest stretch Mother had
been employed was “probably four to six or four to eight weeks,” in which she
was employed “dancing at strip clubs.” Id. at 13-14. FCM Carmosin testified
that Mother was not able to accomplish any of her case management goals,
including obtaining stable housing, employment, and parenting and other
independent living skills, due to lack of participation and desertion.
[6] FCM Carmosin further stated that, in March 2014, Mother told her home based
case manager that she was going to Chicago with a couple of other women to
dance to earn extra money, that she told her McDonald’s employer “that she
was going to have a procedure done,” and that she called FCM Carmosin “to
indicate that she had been kidnapped by two African-American males and
taken to Illinois.” Id. at 15. She stated that between March and August of 2014
she had no more than five conversations with Mother and that Mother was not
participating in any services during that time. She indicated that when she left
the case in August 2014 she did not think Mother had made sufficient progress
in services that would alleviate Child’s need for removal because “[a]t that time
[M]other had just shown back up from being – per her report in Illinois, she had
got – kind of lost her housing; I do not believe she had employment if she had
been in Illinois and she had lost her employment with McDonalds at that time
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so no means to support herself or [Child].” Id. at 23. She also noted that in
mid-July of 2014 she and the CASA visited Mother, and Mother refused a drug
screen.
[7] On cross-examination, FCM Carmosin testified that Mother’s visitations with
Child were suspended in April 2014 after she had left for Chicago and reported
being kidnapped. She testified that Mother tested positive for drugs on April
12, 2014, and that she did not believe Mother submitted to a drug test after that.
[8] FCM Sarah Atchison, who took over for FCM Carmosin on the case, testified
that she had reviewed the entire DCS case file prior to taking over and that
during her time as FCM Mother had not participated in any services. She
indicated that Mother’s visitation had been suspended, that at one point Mother
called and asked for visitation, and that she explained that the court would have
to change its visitation order in order to grant Mother visitation. She testified
that she did not know where Mother was residing and that, to her
understanding, Mother had not been employed during her time on the case.
She did not believe that Mother was participating in mental health treatment
through DCS or otherwise. She testified that she did not believe the conditions
leading to removal had been remedied and would be a threat to Child’s well-
being because neither parent had “adequately addressed the safety issues that
led to DCS involvement and there’s concerns regarding the understanding of
the medical condition and supervision, and stability overall.” Id. at 97. She
testified that termination was in Child’s best interest due to both parents’ “lack
of progress; they have been inconsistent with services, not able to provide stable
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housing or to meet [Child’s] basic needs throughout the case. . . . There’s an
instability and safety issues that are still present.” Id. FCM Atchison noted that
Child had been placed in foster care with his siblings and was doing very well in
that placement. She noted that DCS had a post-termination plan of adoption
by the foster parents.
[9] Mary Hood, who was the CASA appointed to the case on October 31, 2013,
testified that at the beginning Mother visited with Child and “was very
appropriate,” but that Mother stopped visiting in April 2014 after the court
ordered visitation ceased “until she had some mental issues addressed.” Id. at
107-109. She indicated that Mother stopped communicating with her soon
after visitation was ordered stopped, and after that she saw Mother only once
when she and FCM Carmosin visited Mother at the Tippecanoe County Jail in
July 2014. CASA Hood testified that at the Jail, she told Mother to “get her life
back together” and to start services again in order to begin visitation, but was
met with resistance from Mother. Id. at 111. She testified that she believed
reunification with Mother posed a threat to Child because she did not “think
the stability is there. I think . . . the parenting skills still need to be addressed.”
Id. at 118. She stated that it was in Child’s best interest that Mother’s parental
rights be terminated for the same reasons. She also testified that she agreed
with DCS’s plan of adoption by foster parents.
[10] Mother was called as a witness, and she stated that she had been “diagnosed
with borderline personality disorder,” as well as other mental illnesses, and that
she knew she needed medicine but did not have money for it. Id. at 124.
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Although she spoke to the court at length, she did not indicate whether she had
procured stable housing or employment.
[11] On December 5, 2014, the court issued its order terminating Mother’s parental
rights to Child (the “Termination Order”).
Discussion
[12] The issue is whether the evidence is sufficient to support the termination of
Mother’s parental rights. When reviewing the termination of parental rights,
we will not reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of the witnesses. Bester
v. Lake Cnty. Office of Family & Children, 839 N.E.2d 143, 147 (Ind. 2005).
Instead, we consider only the evidence and reasonable inferences that are most
favorable to the judgment. Id. When reviewing findings of fact and
conclusions thereon in a case involving a termination of parental rights, we
apply a two-tiered standard of review. Id. First, we determine whether the
evidence supports the findings, and second whether the findings support the
judgment. Id. We will set aside the trial court’s judgment only if it is clearly
erroneous. Id. A judgment is clearly erroneous if the findings do not support
the trial court’s conclusions or the conclusions do not support the judgment. Id.
[13] This court has long had a highly deferential standard of review in cases
concerning the termination of parental rights. In re K.S., 750 N.E.2d 832, 836
(Ind. Ct. App. 2001). The purpose of terminating parental rights is not to
punish the parents, but to protect their children. Id. A trial court need not wait
until a child is irreversibly harmed before terminating the parent-child
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relationship. McBride v. Monroe Cnty. Office of Family & Children, 798 N.E.2d
185, 203 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003).
[14] In order to terminate a parent-child relationship, DCS is required to allege and
prove, among other things:
(B) that one (1) of the following is true:
(i) There is a reasonable probability that the conditions that
resulted in the child’s removal or the reasons for placement
outside the home of the parents will not be remedied.
(ii) There is a reasonable probability that the continuation of the
parent-child relationship poses a threat to the well-being of the
child.
*****
(C) that termination is in the best interests of the child . . . .
Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4(b)(2). The State’s burden of proof for establishing these
allegations in termination cases “is one of ‘clear and convincing evidence.’” In
re G.Y., 904 N.E.2d 1257, 1260-1261 (Ind. 2009) (quoting Ind. Code § 31-37-14-
2), reh’g denied. If the court finds that the allegations in a petition described in
Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4 are true, the court shall terminate the parent-child
relationship. See Ind. Code § 31-35-2-8(a).
A. Remedy of Conditions
[15] We note that the involuntary termination statute is written in the disjunctive
and requires proof of only one of the circumstances listed in Ind. Code § 31-35-
2-4(b)(2)(B). Because we find it to be dispositive under the facts of this case, we
limit our review to whether DCS established that there was a reasonable
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probability that the conditions resulting in the removal or reasons for placement
of the Child outside the home will not be remedied. See Ind. Code § 31-35-2-
4(b)(2)(B)(i).
[16] In making such a determination, the court must judge a parent’s fitness to care
for his or her child at the time of the termination hearing, taking into
consideration evidence of changed conditions. In re N.Q., 996 N.E.2d 385, 392
(Ind. Ct. App. 2013). Due to the permanent effect of termination, the trial court
also must evaluate the parent’s habitual patterns of conduct to determine the
probability of future neglect or deprivation of the child. Id. The statute does
not simply focus on the initial basis for a child’s removal for purposes of
determining whether a parent’s rights should be terminated, but also those bases
resulting in the continued placement outside the home. Id. A court may
properly consider evidence of a parent’s prior criminal history, drug and alcohol
abuse, history of neglect, failure to provide support, and lack of adequate
housing and employment. Id. A trial court can reasonably consider the
services offered by DCS to the parent and the parent’s response to those
services. Id. Further, where there are only temporary improvements and the
pattern of conduct shows no overall progress, the court might reasonably find
that under the circumstances, the problematic situation will not improve. Id.
[17] Mother asserts, without citation, that DCS did not meet its burden of clear and
convincing evidence, noting that she “was diagnosed with a mental illness, and
was not given enough time or enough intensive services to remedy her
disorder,” and that to the extent “[t]he reasons for removal included a lack of
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employment and housing stability, [] Mother believed that she and the Father
were working together to resolve those issues at the time of trial.” Appellant’s
Brief at 10. DCS argues that “Mother fails to make a cogent argument because
she does not cite to any case law supporting her assertion that DCS must prove
services as part of a termination case,” and that, in any event, the record reveals
that she “had over a year to participate in services, but she failed to participate
in the plethora of services she was provided.” Appellee’s Brief at 20. DCS also
notes that she continued to use illegal substances and alcohol during the
pendency of the case and failed to maintain contact with Child.
[18] To the extent Mother suggests that her housing and employment issues were
being “resolved” at the termination hearing, Appellant’s Brief at 10, our review
of the record does not reveal that Mother discussed the current status of her
employment and housing situations at the hearing. Moreover, FCM Carmosin
testified that during the pendency of the case Mother was able to have stable
housing for only “about three months” and that the longest stretch Mother had
been employed was “probably four to six or four to eight weeks,” in which she
was employed “dancing at strip clubs.” Transcript at 13-14. She testified that
at the time she left the case in August 2014, Mother had lost her employment at
McDonald’s and had lost her housing. FCM Atchison testified that she did not
know where Mother was residing and that, to her understanding, Mother had
not been employed during her time on the case.
[19] Regarding Mother’s arguments that DCS did not provide adequate services, the
record before us reveals that DCS’s efforts at providing services to Mother were
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reasonable, and indeed, to the extent that Mother may have received
inadequate services, it was not for lack of effort on the part of DCS. FCM
Carmosin testified that Mother’s attendance at individual therapy was “[n]on-
existent,” noting that she participated in two or three sessions at her home in
Lafayette, that soon after Mother moved to Kokomo, and that, although she
was referred to services in Kokomo, Mother did not participate in those
services. Id. at 12. She testified that Mother was referred to Child and Family
Partners and that she participated on and off throughout the course of the case
up until approximately March 2014 when she began avoiding services and not
participating any longer. FCM Atchison testified that during her time on the
case Mother did not participate in any services. CASA Hood testified that
Mother stopped communicating with her soon after visitation was ordered
stopped, and after that she saw Mother only once when she and FCM
Carmosin visited Mother at the Tippecanoe County Jail in July 2014, where she
encouraged Mother to “get her life back together” and to start services again in
order to begin visitation but was met with resistance from Mother. Id. at 111.
[20] “A pattern of unwillingness to deal with parenting problems and to cooperate
with those providing services, in conjunction with unchanged conditions,
supports a finding that there exists no reasonable probability that the conditions
will change.” Lang v. Starke Cnty. Office of Family & Children, 861 N.E.2d 366,
372 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007), trans. denied. In addition, although county
departments of public welfare routinely offer services to assist parents in
regaining custody of their children, as DCS did in this particular case for
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Mother, this court has previously explained that the law concerning termination
of parental rights does not require DCS to offer such services. As long as the
elements of Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4 are proven by clear and convincing evidence,
termination of parental rights may occur. In re B.D.J., 728 N.E.2d 195, 201
(Ind. Ct. App. 2000); see also In re A.P., 734 N.E.2d 1107, 1118 (Ind. Ct. App.
2000) (stating elements required for termination of parental rights set forth in
Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4 are exclusive), reh’g denied, trans. denied.
[21] Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the trial court’s findings are supported
by ample evidence. These findings, in turn, support the court’s conclusion that
there is a reasonable probability the conditions resulting in Child’s removal
from Mother’s care will not be remedied. As previously explained, a trial court
must judge a parent’s fitness to care for his or her child at the time of the
termination hearing, taking into consideration the parent’s habitual patterns of
conduct to determine the probability of future neglect or deprivation of the
child. In re N.Q., 996 N.E.2d at 392. Despite being offered extensive services,
Mother has failed to make any significant improvement in her ability to care for
Child. Mother’s arguments on appeal amount to an invitation to reweigh the
evidence, and this we may not do. See Bester, 839 N.E.2d at 147. In addition, it
would be unfair to ask Child to continue to wait until Mother is willing to
obtain, and benefit from, the help that she needs. See In re Campbell, 534 N.E.2d
273, 275 (Ind. Ct. App. 1989) (stating that the court was unwilling to put the
children “on a shelf” until their mother was capable of caring for them).
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[22] Based upon the court’s findings and the record, as discussed herein, we
conclude that clear and convincing evidence supports the trial court’s
determination that there is a reasonable probability that the conditions leading
to Child’s removal would not be remedied and that the court’s conclusion is not
clearly erroneous.
B. Best Interests
[23] We next consider Mother’s assertion that DCS failed to demonstrate that
termination of her parental rights was in Child’s best interests. Mother argues
that “[t]he fact that [she] allegedly cannot provide the perfect home for the child
is irrelevant under the best interest standard” and that she loves Child.
Appellant’s Brief at 12. She asserts, again without citation, that “[s]he has
remedied the conditions which resulted in the removal of her child to her best
ability” and that “[i]t is clear that [she] has made some strides in both her
personal stability and her ability to parent her child.” Id.
[24] We are mindful that in determining what is in the best interests of a child, the
trial court is required to look beyond the factors identified by the DCS and to
the totality of the evidence. McBride, 798 N.E.2d at 203. In so doing, the court
must subordinate the interests of the parent to those of the child. Id. The court
need not wait until a child is irreversibly harmed before terminating the parent-
child relationship. Id. Children have a paramount need for permanency which
the Indiana Supreme Court has called a central consideration in determining
the child’s best interests. In re E.M., 4 N.E.3d 636, 647-648 (Ind. 2014).
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However, “focusing on permanency, standing alone, would impermissibly
invert the best-interests inquiry . . . .” Id. at 648. This court has previously held
that the recommendation by both the case manager and child advocate to
terminate parental rights, in addition to evidence that the conditions resulting in
removal will not be remedied, is sufficient to show by clear and convincing
evidence that termination is in the child’s best interests. A.D.S. v. Ind. Dep’t of
Child Servs., 987 N.E.2d 1150, 1158-1159 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013), trans. denied.
[25] At the termination hearing, FCM Atchison testified that termination of
Mother’s parental rights was in Child’s best interest due to Mother’s “lack of
progress; they have been inconsistent with services, not able to provide stable
housing or to meet [Child’s] basic needs throughout the case. . . . There’s an
instability and safety issues that are still present.” Transcript at 97. Also,
CASA Hood testified that it was in Child’s best interests that Mother’s parental
rights be terminated because she did not “think the stability is there. I think . . .
the parenting skills still need to be addressed.” Id. at 118.
[26] Based on the totality of the evidence as discussed and set forth in the trial
court’s order, including the recommendations of FCM Atchison and CASA
Hood, and in light of our deferential standard of review, we conclude that the
court’s determination that termination is in Child’s best interests is supported by
clear and convincing evidence and is not clearly erroneous. See In re J.C., 994
N.E.2d 278, 290 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013) (observing that “[r]ecommendations of
the case manager . . . in addition to evidence the conditions resulting in removal
will not be remedied, are sufficient to show by clear and convincing evidence
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that termination is in the child’s best interests”), reh’g denied; In re A.I., 825
N.E.2d 798, 811 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005) (testimony of court appointed advocate
and family case manager, coupled with evidence that conditions resulting in
continued placement outside the home will not be remedied, is sufficient to
prove by clear and convincing evidence termination is in child’s best interests),
trans. denied.
Conclusion
[27] We conclude that the trial court’s judgment terminating the parental rights of
Mother is supported by clear and convincing evidence. We find no error and
affirm.
[28] Affirmed.
Friedlander, J., and Riley, J., concur.
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