If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
UNPUBLISHED
In re ADAMS-LEE, Minors. January 15, 2019
Nos. 344180; 344187
Wayne Circuit Court
Family Division
LC No. 17-001163-NA
Before: LETICA, P.J., and CAVANAGH and METER, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
In these child protective proceedings, the trial court terminated respondent-mother’s
parental rights to the minor children pursuant to MCL 712A.19b(3)(b)(i) (parent’s act caused
physical injury), (g) (failure to provide proper care and custody), (j) (reasonable likelihood of
harm if returned to parent), and (k)(iii) (abuse of child involving battering, torture, or severe
physical abuse) and terminated respondent-father’s parental rights pursuant to MCL
712A.19b(3)(a)(ii) (desertion for more than 91 days), (b)(ii) (opportunity and failure to prevent
physical injury), (g) (failure to provide proper care and custody), (j) (reasonable likelihood of
harm if returned to parent), and (k)(i) (abuse of child involving abandonment). Both respondents
appeal as of right.1 We affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In the early morning hours of July 16, 2017, Detroit police officers were dispatched to
respondent-mother’s home in response to a report of a break-in. The officers found four of
respondents’ children—all under the age of four years old—in the living room, strapped in child
car seats without padding. The children were scantily clothed and discovered sitting in their
urine and feces. Respondents’ fifth child, who was then nine months old, was found in an
upstairs bedroom on the floor, partially under the bed. No adult was present. Respondent-
1
We consolidated respondents’ appeals to advance the efficient administration of the appellate
process. In re Adams-Lee Minors, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered June 21,
2018 (Docket Nos. 344180 and 344187).
mother had left the children alone in the house while she went to work. The home was squalid.
The basement was flooded with sewage. Feces and trash were strewn throughout the house. A
bathroom sink was blocked and partially full of dirty water. The children were transported to
Children’s Hospital, where they were admitted and treated for dehydration, malnutrition, failure
to thrive, and skin injuries.
Petitioner filed a petition for jurisdiction over the children and requested termination of
respondents’ parental rights at the initial dispositional hearing. Respondent-father established his
legal paternity to the five children for the first time after the proceedings began. Although
petitioner did not offer reunification services, respondents voluntarily participated in services
while proceedings were pending. Following a bench trial, the trial court asserted jurisdiction
over the children. The court also found that the statutory grounds for termination were
established by clear and convincing evidence and that termination of respondents’ parental rights
was in the children’s best interests.
II. DOCKET NO. 344180 (RESPONDENT-MOTHER)
Respondent-mother argues that the trial court erred in finding the existence of statutory
grounds for termination. We disagree. In an action to terminate parental rights, the petitioner
must prove by clear and convincing evidence that at least one statutory ground for termination in
MCL 712A.19b(3) exists. In re Trejo, 462 Mich 341, 355; 612 NW2d 407 (2000). The trial
court’s decision is reviewed for clear error. MCR 3.977(K); In re Trejo, 462 Mich at 356-357.
A finding is clearly erroneous when the reviewing court is left with the firm and definite
conviction that a mistake was made. In re JK, 468 Mich 202, 209-210; 661 NW2d 216 (2003).
“[T]his Court accords deference to the special opportunity of the trial court to judge the
credibility of the witnesses.” In re Fried, 266 Mich App 535, 541; 702 NW2d 192 (2005).
The trial court terminated respondent-mother’s parental rights pursuant to MCL
712A.19b(3)(b)(i), (g), (j), and (k)(iii), which, at the time the court entered its order, permitted
termination under the following circumstances:
(b) The child or a sibling of the child has suffered physical injury or
physical or sexual abuse under 1 or more of the following circumstances:
(i) The parent’s act caused the physical injury or physical or sexual abuse
and the court finds that there is a reasonable likelihood that the child will suffer
from injury or abuse in the foreseeable future if placed in the parent’s home.
* * *
(g) The parent, without regard to intent, fails to provide proper care or
custody for the child and there is no reasonable expectation that the parent will be
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able to provide proper care and custody within a reasonable time considering the
child’s age.[2]
* * *
(j) There is a reasonable likelihood, based on the conduct or capacity of
the child’s parent, that the child will be harmed if he or she is returned to the
home of the parent.
(k) The parent abused the child or a sibling of the child and the abuse
included 1 or more of the following:[3]
* * *
(iii) Battering, torture, or other severe physical abuse.
Initially, we note that the trial court did not refer to MCL 712A.19b(3)(k)(iii) in its oral
findings, but it identified that subdivision as a basis for termination in its written order. We must
therefore presume that the trial court relied on subdivision (k)(iii) in terminating respondent-
mother’s parental rights. See In re Contempt of Henry, 282 Mich App 656, 678; 765 NW2d 44
(2009) (“[A] court speaks through its written orders and judgments, not through its oral
pronouncements.”). Although respondent-mother likewise neglected mention of this statutory
ground in her appellate brief, to the extent that the trial court terminated respondent-mother’s
parental rights on this basis, it clearly erred by doing so. This case indisputably involved serious
physical injuries suffered by the children as a result of respondent-mother’s neglect, but the
record contains no evidence that respondent-mother abused the minor children by way of
“[b]attering, torture, or other severe physical abuse.” To the contrary, two witnesses—including
Dr. Elizabeth Holzworth, M.D., an expert in pediatric medicine, pediatric emergency medicine,
and child abuse—explicitly testified that there was no evidence that the children had been
physically abused. Nonetheless, the trial court’s error was harmless because only one statutory
2
Pursuant to 2018 PA 58, effective June 12, 2018, subdivision (g) has been amended to now
provide:
The parent, although, in the court’s discretion, financially able to do so,
fails to provide proper care or custody for the child and there is no reasonable
expectation that the parent will be able to provide proper care and custody within
a reasonable time considering the child’s age.
3
As amended by 2018 PA 58, effective June 12, 2018, the introductory portion of subdivision
(k) now provides:
The parent abused the child or a sibling of the child, the abuse included 1
or more of the following, and there is a reasonable likelihood that the child will be
harmed if returned to the care of the parent . . . .
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ground need be established to terminate parental rights, In re Ellis, 294 Mich App 30, 32; 817
NW2d 111 (2011), and the record fully supports termination pursuant to the remaining statutory
grounds relied upon by the trial court.
Dr. Holzworth testified that the children suffered from mild to moderate dehydration and
malnutrition. Four of the children were diagnosed with failure to thrive. The children also
presented with skin injuries indicative of prolonged contact with a hard surface. Dr. Holzworth
testified that these injuries were caused by adverse conditions over a period of several days, a
week, or longer. The children’s conditions led to the filing of criminal charges against
respondent-mother, for which she pleaded guilty to fourth-degree child abuse, MCL
750.136b(7). This evidence supports the trial court’s finding that respondent-mother caused the
children to suffer physical injury and failed to provide proper care or custody. Respondent-
mother also failed to provide proper care by repeatedly leaving the young children unsupervised
overnight, in a house that was filthy with excrement, urine, and sewage. The children were also
exposed to incidents of domestic violence between respondent-mother and respondent-father.
MCL 712A.19b(3)(b)(i), (g), and (j) also require proof of a likelihood that harm or
improper care will recur. Specifically, subdivision (b)(i) requires “that there is a reasonable
likelihood that the child will suffer from injury or abuse in the foreseeable future if placed in the
parent’s home”; subdivision (g) requires that “there is no reasonable expectation that the parent
will be able to provide proper care and custody within a reasonable time”; and subdivision (j)
requires that there be “a reasonable likelihood, based on the conduct or capacity of the child’s
parent, that the child will be harmed if he or she is returned to the home of the parent.”
Respondent-mother argues that the court’s findings that injuries and neglect would likely recur
are clearly erroneous because she voluntarily engaged in rehabilitative services and demonstrated
parenting skills during supervised visitation. The trial court found, however, that her expressed
intentions and efforts were not credible in view of the extreme neglect that had been ongoing
when the children were discovered. This finding is not clearly erroneous. Respondent-mother
admitted that she left the children alone on at least three or five occasions. However, the
descriptions of the children’s injuries and the condition of the house suggested that the home
environment had been deteriorating over a longer period of time. Respondent-mother neglected
the children to an egregious degree. The trial court did not clearly err by finding that respondent-
mother’s parental deficiencies were so severe that there was no reasonable expectation that they
could be remedied within a reasonable time, notwithstanding her articulated acceptance of
responsibility and her participation in voluntary services.
Respondent-mother maintains that her parental deficiencies were likely rooted in her
traumatic background as a court ward whose own parents’ parental rights were terminated when
she was 14 years old. She suggests that the state failed in its responsibility to support her efforts
at becoming an adequate parent. However, MCL 712A.19b(3)(g) provides that failure to provide
proper care is grounds for termination without regard to the parent’s intent. Similarly,
subdivision (j) provides for termination where the court finds that the child is likely to be harmed
“based on the conduct or capacity” of the parent. MCL 712A.19b(3)(j) (emphasis added).
Accordingly, respondent-mother cannot avoid termination of her parental rights by attributing
her deficiencies to past events. Respondent-mother repeatedly left five very young children
alone at home for several hours. She failed to provide adequate food and fluids, failed to provide
basic hygiene, and failed to maintain a minimally adequate home. Her method of “protecting”
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the children was to restrain them in filthy unpadded car seats and to lay a mobile infant on her
bed. These were not failures in complex parenting practices, but failures in meeting the
children’s most essential and obvious needs. Respondent-mother’s background does not excuse
exposing the children to the abusive conditions and risk of further extreme neglect.
Respondent-mother also argues that petitioner mistakenly determined that it was required
to petition for permanent custody and contends that petitioner was instead required to provide
reunification services. Respondent-mother did not preserve this issue by raising it in the trial
court. See In re TK, 306 Mich App 698, 703; 859 NW2d 208 (2014) (“In general, issues that are
raised, addressed, and decided by the trial court are preserved for appeal.”). Issues concerning
the application and interpretation of statutes are typically reviewed de novo, In re Laster, 303
Mich App 485, 487; 845 NW2d 540 (2013), but unpreserved issues are reviewed for plain error
affecting substantial rights, In re Utrera, 281 Mich App 1, 8; 761 NW2d 253 (2008).
After a child has been removed from a parent’s custody, petitioner is generally required
to make reasonable efforts to reunify the child and the family. MCL 712A.19a(2). “The
adequacy of the petitioner’s efforts to provide services may bear on whether there is sufficient
evidence to terminate a parent’s rights.” In re Rood, 483 Mich 73, 89; 763 NW2d 587 (2009)
(opinion by CORRIGAN, J.). However, services are not required in every situation. See MCL
712A.18f(1)(b); In re Plump, 294 Mich App 270, 272; 817 NW2d 119 (2011). “Services need
not be provided where reunification is not intended.” In re LE, 278 Mich App 1, 21; 747 NW2d
883 (2008). “[T]he petitioner is not required to provide reunification services when termination
of parental rights is the agency’s goal.” In re Moss, 301 Mich App 76, 91; 836 NW2d 182
(2013) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
Respondent-mother argues that this was not a case in which petitioner was mandated to
seek termination of parental rights; therefore, the trial court was required to provide reunification
services before considering termination of her parental rights. But MCL 722.638(3) clearly
recognizes petitioner’s discretion to petition for termination at the initial disposition “even
though the facts of the child’s case do not require” DHHS to file a mandatory termination
petition. In other words, although petitioner was not mandated to seek termination, it was
permitted to do so. Respondent-mother thus fails to demonstrate a plain error affecting her
substantial rights arising from petitioner’s decision to seek termination of her parental rights at
the initial dispositional hearing.4
4
MCL 722.638 provides:
(1) The department shall submit a petition for authorization by the court
under section 2(b) of chapter XIIA of 1939 PA 288, MCL 712A.2, if 1 or more of
the following apply:
(a) The department determines that a parent, guardian, or custodian, or a
person who is 18 years of age or older and who resides for any length of time in
the child’s home, has abused the child or a sibling of the child and the abuse
included 1 or more of the following:
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(i) Abandonment of a young child.
(ii) Criminal sexual conduct involving penetration, attempted penetration,
or assault with intent to penetrate.
(iii) Battering, torture, or other severe physical abuse.
(iv) Loss or serious impairment of an organ or limb.
(v) Life threatening injury.
(vi) Murder or attempted murder.
(b) The department determines that there is risk of harm, child abuse, or
child neglect to the child and either of the following is true:
(i) The parent’s rights to another child were terminated as a result of
proceedings under section 2(b) of chapter XIIA of 1939 PA 288, MCL 712A.2, or
a similar law of another state and the parent has failed to rectify the conditions
that led to the prior termination of parental rights.
(ii) The parent’s rights to another child were voluntarily terminated
following the initiation of proceedings under section 2(b) of chapter XIIA of 1939
PA 288, MCL 712A.2, or a similar law of another state, the parent has failed to
rectify the conditions that led to the prior termination of parental rights, and the
proceeding involved abuse that included 1 or more of the following:
(A) Abandonment of a young child.
(B) Criminal sexual conduct involving penetration, attempted penetration,
or assault with intent to penetrate.
(C) Battering, torture, or other severe physical abuse.
(D) Loss or serious impairment of an organ or limb.
(E) Life-threatening injury.
(F) Murder or attempted murder.
(G) Voluntary manslaughter.
(H) Aiding and abetting, attempting to commit, conspiring to commit, or
soliciting murder or voluntary manslaughter.
(2) In a petition submitted as required by subsection (1), if a parent is a
suspected perpetrator or is suspected of placing the child at an unreasonable risk
of harm due to the parent’s failure to take reasonable steps to intervene to
eliminate that risk, the department shall include a request for termination of
parental rights at the initial dispositional hearing as authorized under section 19b
of chapter XIIA of 1939 PA 288, MCL 712A.19b.
(3) If the department is considering petitioning for termination of parental
rights at the initial dispositional hearing as authorized under section 19b of
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In support of her argument that services were required before termination of her parental
rights, respondent-mother relies upon MCL 712A.19a(2), which provided the following at the
time the trial court entered its order terminating respondent-mother’s parental rights:
The court shall conduct a permanency planning hearing within 30 days
after there is a judicial determination that reasonable efforts to reunite the child
and family are not required. Reasonable efforts to reunify the child and family
must be made in all cases except if any of the following apply:
(a) There is a judicial determination that the parent has subjected the child
to aggravated circumstances as provided in section 18(1) and (2) of the child
protection law, 1975 PA 238, MCL 722.638.
(b) The parent has been convicted of 1 or more of the following:
(i) Murder of another child of the parent.
(ii) Voluntary manslaughter of another child of the parent.
(iii) Aiding or abetting in the murder of another child of the parent or
voluntary manslaughter of another child of the parent, the attempted murder of the
child or another child of the parent, or the conspiracy or solicitation to commit the
murder of the child or another child of the parent.
(iv) A felony assault that results in serious bodily injury to the child or
another child of the parent.
(c) The parent has had rights to the child’s siblings involuntarily
terminated.[5]
(d) The parent is required by court order to register under the sex
offenders registration act.
chapter XIIA of 1939 PA 288, MCL 712A.19b, even though the facts of the
child’s case do not require departmental action under subsection (1), the
department shall hold a conference among the appropriate agency personnel to
agree upon the course of action. The department shall notify the attorney
representing the child of the time and place of the conference, and the attorney
may attend. If an agreement is not reached at this conference, the department
director or the director’s designee shall resolve the disagreement after consulting
the attorneys representing both the department and the child. [Emphasis added.]
5
MCL 712A.19a(2)(c) was amended by 2018 PA 58, effective June 12, 2018, to provide that
reunification efforts need not be made where “[t]he parent has had rights to the child’s siblings
involuntarily terminated and the parent has failed to rectify the conditions that led to that
termination of parental rights.”
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Respondent-mother’s argument is unpersuasive because MCL 712A.19a pertains to permanency
planning hearings and related procedures for children who have already been adjudicated
temporary court wards and who have been placed in foster care. See MCL 712A.19a(1). Its
requirements concerning provision of reunification services did not apply to respondent-mother’s
children who had not yet been adjudicated court wards, and who were the subjects of a petition
to terminate parental rights at the initial disposition.
Respondent-mother lastly argues that the trial court erred in finding that termination of
her parental rights was in the children’s best interests. Once a statutory ground for termination is
established, the trial court shall order termination of parental rights if it finds that termination is
in the child’s best interests. MCL 712A.19b(5). The trial court’s best-interest decision is
reviewed for clear error. In re Trejo, 462 Mich at 356-357.
These children were exposed to extreme neglect in respondent-mother’s care.
Respondent-mother admitted to leaving these five young children alone overnight at least three
or five times, exposing them to a substantial risk of harm. Furthermore, even when respondent-
mother was present with the children, she so dangerously neglected them that they suffered from
dehydration, malnourishment, skin injuries, and developmental delays. The deplorable state of
the home further indicated that respondent-mother could not provide minimally adequate care
even when she was not working. Only a fortuitous report of a break-in led to law enforcement,
medical, and social services involvement, extricating the children from these deplorable, life-
threatening conditions. Additionally, respondent-mother admitted that her children had been
present during incidents of domestic violence between her and respondent-father. The trial court
did not clearly err by finding that termination of respondent-mother’s parental rights was in the
children’s best interests.
III. DOCKET NO. 344187 (RESPONDENT-FATHER)
Respondent-father argues that the trial court erred in finding the existence of statutory
grounds for termination. In addition to relying on MCL 712A.19b(3)(g) and (j), the trial court
found that termination of respondent-father’s parental rights was also justified under MCL
712A.19b(3)(a)(ii), (b)(ii), and (k)(i), which, at the time the court entered its order, permitted
termination under the following circumstances:
(a) The child has been deserted under either of the following
circumstances:
* * *
(ii) The child’s parent has deserted the child for 91 or more days and has
not sought custody of the child during that period.
(b) The child or a sibling of the child has suffered physical injury or
physical or sexual abuse under 1 or more of the following circumstances:
* * *
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(ii) The parent who had the opportunity to prevent the physical injury or
physical or sexual abuse failed to do so and the court finds that there is a
reasonable likelihood that the child will suffer injury or abuse in the foreseeable
future if placed in the parent’s home.
* * *
(k) The parent abused the child or a sibling of the child, the abuse included
1 or more of the following:
(i) Abandonment of a young child.
The evidence indicated that respondent-father took no active involvement in supporting
or caring for the children, even when he knew they were not being adequately supervised or
cared for in respondent-mother’s custody. He testified that he saw the children less frequently
after he moved to Flint and admitted that he did not see the children at all from March to July
2017. Although he blamed his absence on respondent-mother’s refusal to permit visitation, he
admitted that he never paid child support and he did not establish legal paternity before these
proceedings began. He instead acquiesced to respondent-mother’s alleged refusals of his
requests to see the children. Rather than agreeing to a formal support arrangement, he simply
accepted respondent-mother’s rejections of his inquiries regarding the children’s needs. Most
significantly, he did not contact the police or Child Protective Services when he personally
discovered that respondent-mother had left the young children alone, unsupervised. Instead, he
made excuses for respondent-mother by stating that he came from a culture in which leaving
children unsupervised for short time periods was acceptable. Respondent-father was content to
leave the children to respondent-mother’s inadequate care, without ensuring that she was capable
of or able to provide proper care. Respondent-father’s failure to actively involve himself in the
children’s lives and his resignation of the children to respondent-mother’s care in such an
obviously unfit environment justified termination under MCL 712A.19b(3)(a)(ii), (b)(ii), (g), (j),
and (k)(i).
Although respondent-father does not specifically challenge petitioner’s decision to seek
termination at the initial dispositional hearing, he argues that he was not given sufficient time to
work toward reunification. However, as already noted, petitioner has discretion to seek
termination at the initial dispositional hearing when it deems that action appropriate, MCL
722.638(3), and reunification services are not required when termination of parental rights is
petitioner’s goal, In re Moss, 301 Mich App at 91. Given the extreme neglect involved here, we
find no error in petitioner’s decision to seek prompt termination or the trial court’s findings
regarding the existence of statutory grounds.
Further, the trial court did not clearly err by finding that termination of respondent-
father’s parental rights was in the children’s best interests. Respondent-father’s attention to the
children during supervised visitation did not outweigh his history of abandoning them to
respondent-mother’s obviously inadequate care. Respondent-father was a passive parent for
years in the period leading up to the police discovery in July 2017. The children are in need of
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parents who will proactively protect them and provide for their needs. They were not required to
wait for respondent-father to finally take an interest in and demonstrate his commitment to their
care.
Affirmed.
/s/ Anica Letica
/s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
/s/ Patrick M. Meter
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