In the Matter of: Mi.H. and Ma.H. (Minor Children), Children in Need of Services and M.H. (Father) v. The Indiana Department of Child Services (mem. dec.)
MEMORANDUM DECISION FILED
Mar 31 2016, 8:38 am
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), CLERK
this Memorandum Decision shall not be Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
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
Jill M. Acklin Gregory F. Zoeller
McGrath, LLC Attorney General of Indiana
Carmel, Indiana
Robert J. Henke
Abigail R. Recker
Deputy Attorneys General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
In the Matter of: March 31, 2016
Mi.H. and Ma.H. (Minor Court of Appeals Case No.
49A05-1509-JC-1280
Children), Children in Need of
Services Appeal from the Marion Superior
Court
and
The Honorable Marilyn A.
M.H. (Father), Moores, Judge
Appellant-Respondent, Trial Court Cause No.
49D09-1504-JC-1463
v. 49D09-1504-JC-1464
The Indiana Department of
Child Services,
Appellee-Plaintiff
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Baker, Judge.
[1] M.H. (Father) appeals the juvenile court’s order declaring his two children,
Mi.H. and Ma.H., to be children in need of services (CHINS). He argues that
there is insufficient evidence supporting the CHINS adjudication and the
dispositional order. Finding the evidence sufficient, we affirm.
Facts
[2] Mi.H. was born in June 2006 and Ma.H. was born in September 2007 to Father
and the children’s mother.1 Father has another child, B.H., with a different
mother, S.F. In March 2014, B.H. was declared a CHINS because of S.F.’s
substance abuse and Father’s failure to protect B.H. Throughout B.H.’s
CHINS case, Father engaged in domestic violence with S.F., repeatedly failed
to submit to required drug screens, and tested positive for methamphetamine on
at least one occasion. On June 25, 2015, the Department of Child Services
(DCS) filed a petition to terminate the parent-child relationship between B.H.
and Father.
[3] On April 29, 2015, DCS removed Mi.H. and Ma.H. from Father’s custody and
placed them in relative care. On May 1, 2015, DCS filed a petition alleging that
Mi.H. and Ma.H. were CHINS because of Father’s substance abuse. 2 As a
condition of Father exercising parenting time with the children, the juvenile
1
Their mother has not appealed the CHINS adjudication.
2
The CHINS petition also contained allegations regarding the children’s mother.
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court ordered that he participate in random drug screens. Father did not make
himself available for the drug screens, however, and as of June 29, 2015, no
drug screens had been successfully administered.
[4] At the time of the factfinding hearing, Father had been working with a home-
based therapist since November 2014. The therapist testified that in the weeks
leading up to the factfinding hearing, Father became less consistent with his
appointments. She had “concerns about Father’s decision-making and
interpersonal relationship skills . . . and believes that his poor decision-making
skills impede his ability to parent his children. She described his home and life
as ‘chaos,’ with multiple police and CPS calls to his home.” Appellant’s App.
p. 90.
[5] S.F., the mother of Father’s other child, continued to test positive for illegal
substances throughout B.H.’s CHINS case. Father admitted that he had found
drugs in his home where S.F. had been sleeping, that he knew she had been
prostituting from his home, and that he believed she had stolen firearms and
medications from his home. Notwithstanding these ongoing issues, however,
Father repeatedly allowed her to babysit Mi.H. and Ma.H. and remain in his
home. After S.F. alleged that a domestic violence incident had taken place in
April 2015, the juvenile court entered a no contact order, which Father violated
on at least two occasions.
[6] At the time of the factfinding hearing, Father was on probation for possession
of a controlled substance. In B.H.’s CHINS case, Father told the juvenile court
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that he had a prescription for the drugs for which he was arrested. But in the
instant CHINS case, he claimed that the conviction was the result of an
employee leaving drugs in his vehicle. Moreover, the juvenile court found
Father’s answers regarding police calls to his home to be dishonest: “Father
testified that the police had been called to his residence 3-4 times in the last
year; however, further testimony demonstrated that the police have been to
Father’s residence 9 times in the last year[.]” Id. at 91.
[7] At the June 30, 2015, factfinding, DCS orally moved to have the pleadings,
including the CHINS petition, conform to the evidence presented at trial, and
the juvenile court granted the motion.3 The juvenile court issued its order
adjudicating the children to be CHINS on July 6, 2015. On August 6, 2015, the
juvenile court held a dispositional hearing and issued a dispositional order the
same day. The dispositional order required Father to participate with
homebased case management, random drug screens, and a substance abuse
assessment. Father now appeals.
3
Father states that as a result of this order, this case presents “a unique procedural posture.” Appellant’s Br.
p. 9. But he does not argue that the juvenile court erred by granting DCS’s motion, nor do we find any
compelling reason to conclude there was error in this regard.
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Discussion and Decision
I. Standard of Review
[8] Father argues that there is insufficient evidence supporting the CHINS
adjudications. Our Supreme Court has explained the nature of a CHINS
proceeding and appellate review of a CHINS finding as follows:
A CHINS proceeding is a civil action; thus, “the State must
prove by a preponderance of the evidence that a child is a
CHINS as defined by the juvenile code.” In re N.R., 919 N.E.2d
102, 105 (Ind. 2010). We neither reweigh the evidence nor judge
the credibility of the witnesses. Egly v. Blackford County Dep’t of
Pub. Welfare, 592 N.E.2d 1232, 1235 (Ind. 1992). We consider
only the evidence that supports the trial court’s decision and
reasonable inferences drawn therefrom. Id. We reverse only
upon a showing that the decision of the trial court was clearly
erroneous. Id.
There are three elements DCS must prove for a juvenile court to
adjudicate a child a CHINS. DCS must first prove the child is
under the age of eighteen; DCS must prove one of eleven
different statutory circumstances exist that would make the child
a CHINS; and finally, in all cases, DCS must prove the child
needs care, treatment, or rehabilitation that he or she is not
receiving and that he or she is unlikely to be provided or accepted
without the coercive intervention of the court. In re N.E., 919
N.E.2d at 105.
In re K.D., 962 N.E.2d 1249, 1253–54 (Ind. 2012) (footnote omitted).
[9] Here, DCS alleged that the children were CHINS pursuant to Indiana Code
section 31–34–1–1, which provides as follows:
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A child is a child in need of services if before the child becomes
eighteen (18) years of age:
(1) the child’s physical or mental condition is seriously
impaired or seriously endangered as a result of the
inability, refusal, or neglect of the child’s parent, guardian,
or custodian to supply the child with necessary food,
clothing, shelter, medical care, education, or supervision;
and
(2) the child needs care, treatment, or rehabilitation that:
(A) the child is not receiving; and
(B) is unlikely to be provided or accepted without the
coercive intervention of the court.
[10] Our Supreme Court has interpreted this provision to require “three basic
elements: that the parent’s actions or inactions have seriously endangered the
child, that the child’s needs are unmet, and (perhaps most critically) that those
needs are unlikely to be met without State coercion.” In re S.D., 2 N.E.3d 1283,
1287 (Ind. 2014).
II. Sufficiency
[11] Initially, we note that Father’s sole argument on appeal appears to be that there
are insufficient findings of fact supporting the dispositional order. 4 Indiana
4
He does not contest any of the specific services included in the dispositional order.
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Code section 31-34-19-10(a) sets forth the requirements for findings that must
accompany dispositional orders:
The juvenile court shall accompany the court’s dispositional
decree with written findings and conclusions upon the record
concerning the following:
(1) The needs of the child for care, treatment, rehabilitation,
or placement.
(2) The need for participation by the parent, guardian, or
custodian in the plan of care for the child.
(3) Efforts made, if the child is a child in need of services, to:
(A) prevent the child’s removal from; or
(B) reunite the child with;
the child’s parent, guardian, or custodian in accordance
with federal law.
(4) Family services that were offered and provided to:
(A) a child in need of services; or
(B) the child’s parent, guardian, or custodian;
in accordance with federal law.
(5) The court’s reasons for the disposition.
(6) Whether the child is a dual status child under IC 31-41.
Father does not argue that the dispositional order failed to comply with these
statutory requirements. Instead, he seems to argue that the dispositional order
must contain findings of fact supporting the CHINS adjudication. That is
simply not the case. Nowhere in the statute are such findings required to be
part of a dispositional decree. Consequently, this argument must fail.
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[12] Giving Father the benefit of the doubt, we will infer that he intended to argue
that the findings and evidence supporting the CHINS adjudication are
insufficient.5 As noted above, DCS presented the following evidence at the
factfinding hearing:
Father has a history with DCS, including a pending termination of
parental rights case regarding another child.
Although Father was ordered to comply with random drug screens at the
initial hearing in this case, he had failed to make himself available to do
so even once in the two months leading up to the factfinding hearing. In
B.H.’s CHINS case, he repeatedly failed to comply with drug screens and
tested positive for methamphetamine on at least one occasion.
Father’s homebased therapist testified that she has concerns about his
decisionmaking skills and that his home life is extremely chaotic. She
also stated that Father was becoming more inconsistent in his
participation with her services.
Father maintained a relationship with S.F., the mother of his other child.
S.F. babysat for Mi.H. and Ma.H. and even stayed in the home at times,
notwithstanding her ongoing drug use, prostituting out of the home, and
suspected thefts from the home.
In the year leading up to the factfinding hearing, the police had been
called out to Father’s home on nine different occasions.
Father exhibited dishonesty to the juvenile court regarding both his prior
criminal history and the number of police visits to his home.
S.F. alleged that she and Father had engaged in an act of domestic
violence. The court then put a no contact order in place, which Father
admittedly violated on at least two occasions.
5
Father argues that “it is impossible to know the juvenile court’s reasoning in issuing the decision that it
did.” Appellant’s Br. p. 10. If the “decision” he refers to is the dispositional order, as noted above, he does
not argue that the order failed to meet the relevant statutory requirements. And if the “decision” is the
CHINS adjudication, the juvenile court issued a lengthy and detailed order explaining its reasoning in full.
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This evidence establishes a troubling pattern of behavior on Father’s part. It
reveals that he ignores court orders, exhibits dishonesty, and chooses to place
his children in the care of someone who he knows has ongoing drug abuse
issues and was prostituting herself out of his home. Their lives are chaotic and
frequently interrupted by police calls and DCS investigations. We find that this
evidence is sufficient to support the juvenile court’s conclusion that the children
are CHINS.
[13] The judgment of the juvenile court is affirmed.
May, J., and Brown, J., concur.
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