MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), FILED
this Memorandum Decision shall not be Aug 13 2019, 9:50 am
regarded as precedent or cited before any
court except for the purpose of establishing CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
the defense of res judicata, collateral and Tax Court
estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Danielle L. Flora Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Fort Wayne, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
Katherine A. Cornelius
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
In the Termination of the Parent- August 13, 2019
Child Relationship of: Court of Appeals Case No.
19A-JT-222
S.S. (Minor Child) Appeal from the Allen Superior
and Court
The Honorable Charles F. Pratt,
A.S. (Father), Judge
Appellant-Respondent, The Honorable Sherry A. Hartzler,
Magistrate
v.
Trial Court Cause Nos.
02D08-1804-JT-125
The Indiana Department of 02D08-1804-JT-126
Child Services,
Appellee-Petitioner.
Robb, Judge.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-JT-222 | August 13, 2019 Page 1 of 18
Case Summary and Issue
[1] A.S. (“Father”) appeals the termination of his parental rights to S.S. (“Child”)
and presents the sole issue of whether the juvenile court’s order terminating his
parental rights was clearly erroneous. Concluding it was not clearly erroneous,
we affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] Child was born on August 25, 2003, to Father and C.S. (“Mother”). Father
and Mother married in December of 2009 or 2010 but separated in December
2015. Mother also has another child, J.R.A., whose father is J.A.1
[3] The Department of Child Services (“DCS”) initially became involved in this
case in September 2015 due to concerns of lack of supervision. While Father,
Mother, Child, and J.R.A. were living in a motel, DCS received a call that
J.R.A., who was ten years old at the time, was seen on the motel’s property
unsupervised. On September 28, 2015, the juvenile court held a preliminary
hearing and found that probable cause existed to believe J.R.A. and Child were
children in need of services (“CHINS”). The State filed a petition alleging the
1
Mother’s rights as to Child and J.R.A., as well as J.A.’s parental rights as to J.R.A., were also terminated in
the same order at issue. However, this appeal pertains only to S.S. and Father. Mother and J.A. do not
participate in this appeal. Accordingly, we have limited our recitation of the facts to those pertaining to
Father.
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children to be CHINS pursuant to Indiana Code section 31-34-1-1.2 At a
hearing on October 13, 2015, Father admitted that he is employed part-time,
resides in a local motel with Mother and Child, is not able to provide
independent and sustainable housing for his family, and would benefit from
court intervention to provide services for himself and Child. That same day,
Child was adjudicated a CHINS. As part of the parent participation plan, the
juvenile court ordered Father to (among other things): refrain from criminal
activity; maintain appropriate housing; provide Child with appropriate clothing;
complete a diagnostic assessment at Quality Counseling and follow any
recommendations; obtain and maintain employment; obey the terms of his
probation; submit to drug testing by DCS; and complete home-based services
including parenting classes, transportation, housing, employment, and
parenting. See Exhibits, Volume 1 at 22.
[4] Child remained with Father and Mother at the motel for several months. DCS
requested a detention hearing to discuss the possibility of removing Child
because Mother and Father were not complying with services. Prior to the
2
Specifically, the petition alleges:
Inability, Refusal or Neglect, I.C. 31-34-1-1: 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.
Exhibits, Volume 1 at 147.
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hearing, Mother contacted DCS and requested that Child be removed. In
December 2015, Child was placed into foster care.
[5] Father was incarcerated numerous times in 2016: February/March 2016,
March/April 2016, and July through September 2016. Following a
permanency hearing on September 13, 2016, the juvenile court found that
Father “failed to enroll or satisfactorily participate in the services and programs
required in the dispositional decree [because Father] has been incarcerated in
the Allen County Jail since July 21, 2016 on a probation violation[.]” Id. at 54.
After his release in September 2016, Father was placed on work release through
January 2017. After work release, Father maintained his own housing at the
Wells Street Mobile Home Court from January through April 2017.
Throughout the three years of this case, excluding these several months, Father
did not maintain independent housing – he was either incarcerated, living in
motels, or staying with friends. Nonetheless, in March 2017, the juvenile court
ordered a plan for reunification of Child with Father. In the meantime, Child
remained in foster care.
[6] In late August 2017, Father was incarcerated again for three days. On August
31, 2017, the juvenile court found that Father has failed to satisfactorily
participate in services as required by the dispositional decree. At that time,
Child’s permanency plan was changed from reunification with Father to
termination of parental rights with adoption. In January 2018, Father was
incarcerated, and Child was placed with her maternal aunt. In February, the
juvenile court held a permanency hearing and found Father failed to participate
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in therapy, cooperate with home-based services, submit to drug screens, and
comply with services before incarceration. Father admitted he was struggling
with addiction. DCS subsequently filed a petition to involuntarily terminate
Father’s parental rights.
[7] Father was released from incarceration on June 27, 2018, and was ordered to
live at the Thirteen Step House, a half-way house program, until December
2018 followed by three years of probation.
[8] A two-day hearing on the petition to terminate Father’s rights took place on
September 28 and October 3, 2018. At the hearing, Father testified that he used
synthetic marijuana daily in 2016 and 2017, but in August 2017, he began using
heroin daily until his incarceration in January 2018. Testimony also revealed
that Father had been successful in maintaining sobriety while in the half-way
house program although he was only several months into the program.
Nonetheless, on December 31, 2018, the juvenile court issued its order
terminating Father’s parental rights, finding in relevant part:
55. The Court finds that leading up to [Father’s]
incarceration[,] he was convicted of Possession of Synthetic
Marijuana in November 2017; Driving while Suspended,
Criminal Mischief, and Driving While Intoxicated in August
2017.
56. Previously, Father had been incarcerated at Work Release
from September 2016 through January 2017 after his probation
was revoked.
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57. The Court finds that from the time the underlying Child in
Needs of Services matter began, Father had only had his own
housing for a 4-month period from January 2017 through April
2017. Otherwise, he was living in motels, incarcerated, in work
release or in a half-way house.
58. . . . [Father] has a total of eight (8) felony convictions in
Allen County alone.
59. . . . [Father has] been abusing heroin[] on a daily basis from
August 2017 through January 2018.
60. The Court finds that after his release in June 2018 Father
immediately went into placement at the half-way house.
61. At the time of these proceedings, Father was participating
in substance abuse treatment and moral recognition therapy
through the orders of the criminal proceedings.
62. The Court finds . . . that although Father is compliant with
the [Thirteen Step program], a prognosis of recovery cannot be
given until someone is discharged from the program and
maintains their recovery.
63. The Court finds that prior to or after [Father’s]
incarcerations he had not been compliant with therapy or home-
based services.
64. . . . Father never participated in homebased casework or
parenting classes with Whittington [Services]. . . .
65. The Court finds that Father was also referred to home
based services with Sergi Church of Whittington. . . . Church
worked with [Father] from October 2016 through May 2017.
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66. When Church first met with [Father], he was on work
release for the next six months. They established goals of
employment, housing, parenting and accessing community
resources.
67. Eventually Father stopped attending and participating in
services and by the time of closure he had not addressed or
completed any of the established goals, with the exception of a
brief employment that had ended by May of 2017.
68. . . . [Father] participated in homebased casework and
supervised visitation with [Child.] . . . The goals . . . were to
address housing and employment as well as a parenting
curriculum. The Court finds that [Father] worked with [Bruno
Taylor] from September 2017 through November 2017.
69. The Court finds that one of the guidelines for visitation
requires that a parent provide food if visitation occurs over meal
time. . . . [T]his guideline was communicated to Father and his
visitation[s] were scheduled from 4:00 p.m. through 8:00 p.m.
once per week according to Father’s availability.
70. By the time services ended Father was not employed and
did not have independent housing.
71. [S]ervices ceased in November 2017 when Taylor obtained
a protective order against Father.
72. [D]uring the course of a supervised visitation Father did
not have food or the funds to provide a meal to his daughter.
When Taylor provided him with options such as a meal at the
rescue mission, Father refused and became agitated, loud, and
told Taylor that “he was going to cause problems.” Taylor
feared [for] the safety of the [C]hild and feeling personally
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threatened accepted Father’s invitation to end the visitation.
Whittington ultimately closed their services with Father as a
result of the threat. The Court finds through Taylor that Father
had not made progress in his goals to obtain independent housing
and employment during the last two (2) months he worked with
Whittington.
73. Ultimately at the time of the termination proceedings, the
Court also finds that Father had only had 4 visits in the year 2018
with [Child] and had not yet restarted his visitations at the time
of the termination proceedings.
***
90. . . . Guardian Ad Litem[] for [Child] contend[s] that
termination is in the best interests of [Child] citing, failure to
complete and participate in services, multiple incarcerations with
respect to [Father], failure to maintain visitation[,] . . . and
essential need of [Child] to have permanency. . . .
Appealed Order 11-13, 15. Based on these findings, the juvenile court
concluded as follows:
6. [Father] had . . . not obtained or demonstrated the stability
necessary to provide care and supervision for [Child]. [He] has
established a pattern of incarcerations, criminal activity, and drug
use for which he has in fact not provided care or support for
[Child]. Further, given Father’s lengthy history of substance
abuse, his recent participation in services related to his addiction
does not discount the years of non-compliance in these
proceedings. The Court would further note that any recent
sobriety has only been accomplished with strict oversight and the
threat of incarceration. For nearly three years the goal of
reunification was not sufficient to motivate [Father].
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7. [Father’s] failure to follow through with services and visitation
is indicative of [his] instability and inability to remedy the
reasons for [Child’s] removal and continued placement outside of
[his] care.
8. . . . [T]ermination of parental rights and the plan for care
and treatment for adoption will provide [Child] with the
nurturance[,] care and protection [she] require[s]. It is therefore
in [Child’s] best interests that the petition to terminate parental
rights be granted.
Id. at 16. Father now appeals. Additional facts will be provided as necessary.
Discussion and Decision
I. Standard of Review
[9] The Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution protects a
parent’s right to raise his or her children. In re D.D., 804 N.E.2d 258, 264 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2004), trans. denied. Although “[a] parent’s interest in the care,
custody, and control of his or her children is ‘perhaps the oldest of the
fundamental liberty interests[,]’” parental interests are not absolute and “must
be subordinated to the child’s interests in determining the proper disposition of
a petition to terminate parental rights.” Bester v. Lake Cty. Office of Family &
Children, 839 N.E.2d 143, 147 (Ind. 2005) (quoting Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S.
57, 65 (2000)). Thus, the parent child relationship may be terminated when a
parent is unable or unwilling to meet their parental obligations. Id. And a
juvenile court need not wait until a child is irreversibly harmed such that her
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physical, mental, and social development is permanently impaired before
terminating parental rights. McBride v. Monroe Cty. Office of Family & Children,
798 N.E.2d 185, 199 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003). We are cognizant that involuntary
termination of parental rights is the most severe action a juvenile court can take
as it severs all rights of a parent to his or her child. Matter of D.G., 702 N.E.2d
777, 780-81 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998). Therefore, termination is considered a last
resort, “available only when all other reasonable efforts have failed.” Id. at 781.
[10] Given the juvenile court’s unique position, we review the termination of
parental rights with great deference. In re J.C., 994 N.E.2d 278, 283 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2013). We do not reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of the
witnesses. Bester, 839 N.E.2d at 147. Instead, we consider the evidence and
reasonable inferences most favorable to the juvenile court’s judgment. Id. As
required by Indiana Code section 31-35-2-8(c), the juvenile court entered
findings of fact and conclusions of law when terminating Father’s parental
rights. Therefore, we apply a two-tiered standard of review: we first determine
whether the evidence supports the findings, then whether the findings support
the judgment. K.E. v. Ind. Dep’t of Child Servs., 39 N.E.3d 641, 646 (Ind. 2015).
We will set aside the juvenile court’s judgment only if it is clearly erroneous,
namely when “the findings do not support the [juvenile] court’s conclusions or
the conclusions do not support the judgment.” Bester, 839 N.E.2d at 147
(internal quotation omitted).
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II. Statutory Requirements for Termination
[11] To terminate the parent-child relationship, the State must prove by clear and
convincing evidence:
(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; and
(D) that there is a satisfactory plan for the care and treatment of
the child.
Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4(b)(2) (emphasis added); see also Ind. Code § 31-37-14-2
(“A finding in a proceeding to terminate parental rights must be based upon
clear and convincing evidence.”). “[I]f the court finds that the allegations in a
petition described [above] are true, the court shall terminate the parent-child
relationship.” Ind. Code § 31-35-2-8(a) (emphasis added).
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[12] Because Indiana Code section 31-35-2-4(b)(2)(B) is written in the disjunctive,
the juvenile court was only required to find that one of the elements of
subsection (b)(2)(B) was established by clear and convincing evidence. In re
I.A., 903 N.E.2d 146, 153 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009). Here, the juvenile court
concluded that there was a reasonable probability that the conditions, namely
Father’s instability, that led to Child’s removal and continued placement
outside his care will not be remedied.
III. Termination of Father’s Parental Rights
[13] Father challenges the juvenile court’s conclusion that there is a reasonable
probability that the conditions that led to Child’s removal and continued
placement outside of his care will not be remedied. Specifically, he argues there
was insufficient evidence to support termination because “in the months
immediately preceding the termination trial, [he] had made significant progress
addressing his drug abuse.” Brief of Appellant at 10. We begin by noting that
Father does not appear to challenge any of the juvenile court’s specific
findings.3 Therefore, these unchallenged findings are accepted as true.
McMaster v. McMaster, 681 N.E.2d 744, 747 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997).
3
In his brief, he lists the juvenile court’s findings and states that “[w]hile the above findings may be
considered accurate, none of them are true in the context of the evidence presented at the termination trial.
For example, it is accurate that [Father] was abusing heroin on a daily basis from August 2017 through
January 2018. However, no testimony was presented that [Father] continued to abuse illegal drugs after
January, 2018.” Brief of Appellant at 16. Here, it appears that Father is not actually challenging the juvenile
court’s findings but rather its conclusions drawn from the findings or omission of other more favorable
findings.
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[14] In determining whether the conditions that led to removal are likely to be
remedied, we engage in a two-step analysis: we first identify the conditions that
led to Child’s removal, and then determine whether there is a reasonable
probability that those conditions will not be remedied. K.E., 39 N.E.3d at 647.
The second step requires the juvenile court to evaluate a parent’s fitness to care
for a child at the time of the termination hearing and consider a parent’s pattern
of conduct to determine whether there is a “substantial probability of future
neglect or deprivation of the children.” In re T.F., 743 N.E.2d 766, 774 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2001), trans. denied. In evaluating a parent’s fitness, the juvenile court
may properly consider a parent’s criminal history, substance abuse issues,
history of neglect, failure to provide support, lack of adequate housing and
employment, and services offered by DCS to a parent and the parent’s response
to those services. A.D.S. v. Ind. Dep’t of Child Servs., 987 N.E.2d 1150, 1157
(Ind. Ct. App. 2013), trans. denied. Moreover, we have held a pattern of
unwillingness to deal with parenting problems and to cooperate with counselors
and those providing services, in conjunction with unchanged and unacceptable
home conditions, supports a finding that there is no reasonable probability the
unacceptable conditions in the home will be remedied. Matter of D.B., 561
N.E.2d 844, 848 (Ind. Ct. App. 1990).
[15] The record reveals that Child’s continued placement outside Father’s care was
due to Father’s lack of stability, including his lack of suitable housing, frequent
incarcerations, substance abuse problems, and failure to successfully comply
with services. First, Brandi Haywood, DCS caseworker, was assigned to the
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case in December 2015 while Father, Mother, and Child were living in a motel.
Haywood testified that Father completed a diagnostic assessment with Quality
Counseling Psychological Services, which recommended that Father complete
individual and home-based services. However, Father did not successfully
complete either. In late 2015/early 2016, DCS referred Father to Angela
Solano, a home-based caseworker, to go through parenting classes. At the
termination hearing, Solano testified that Father did not complete parenting
classes “[b]ecause he didn’t show up[. W]e had our initial meeting and then
after that he didn’t show.” Transcript, Volume 1 at 85. Therefore, Solano
never had the opportunity to work with Father on any other home-based
services.
[16] From October 2016 to May 2017 Father worked with Sergi Church, a home-
based caseworker with Quality Counseling. Father established goals to obtain
and maintain employment and housing and complete a parenting curriculum.
When Father initially began services, he was in work release and Church
assisted Father in looking for housing and employment. After completing work
release, Father moved into the Wells Street Mobile Park and obtained
employment with Patriot Tire, where he worked for approximately two
months. Ultimately, however, services ended due to Father’s lack of
attendance. Church explained, “we attempted to meet with [Father] multiple
times at his residence at the Well’s [sic] Street Trailer Park [but] he would no-
show or cancel at the last minute and then part of our attendance policy he
never resumed services after that.” Id. at 92. At the end of services, Father
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“was working but he wasn’t employed at an actual company he was doing jobs
for other people[.]” Id. at 91. Although Father completed the housing goal, he
did not complete the parenting curriculum and Church opined that the
employment goal would not have been completed “because [Father] wasn’t
fully employed enough to maintain the housing and stability for his children.”
Id. at 93.
[17] Bruno Taylor, a home-based case manager, also testified at the fact-finding
hearing. On September 28, 2017, DCS arranged for Taylor to complete home-
based services with Father and supervise Father’s visitations with Child. Taylor
testified that Father was “very aggressive” during the services, which inhibited
his ability to provide services. Id. at 57. Father “felt like he had been through
the services once before . . . but [Taylor] did recommend certain ways of finding
housing and finding other trailer homes” they could use during services. Id.
Father completed applications for employment online and Taylor attempted to
take Father to a temporary services agency, but Father refused. Father failed to
obtain employment or independent housing during the services. Ultimately,
services were terminated after two months because Father made threats toward
Taylor and his company during a visitation. As a result, Taylor filed for and
received a Protective Order against Father.
[18] With respect to housing, Father only had his own housing for a three- or four-
month period in 2017. At all other times during the pendency of this case,
Father was either incarcerated or living in motels. In fact, Father has been
incarcerated five separate times since this matter began in 2015. Further, in its
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order, the juvenile court found that Father had been convicted of eight felonies
in Allen County alone.4 Most recently, Father was incarcerated from January
12, 2018 through June 27, 2018, and was ordered to complete a Restoration
Court Program as part of his criminal case. Following his release, Father
immediately began the program at Thirteen Step House, which is a men’s half-
way house. The program requires participants to attend AA meetings, remain
drug free, work, obtain a sponsor, and attend counseling. Father had
successfully completed three months of the six-month program at the time of
the termination hearing. Father was expected to complete the program in
December 2018 and would then begin three years of probation.
[19] Stephen Swain, the house manager at the Thirteen Step House, testified that
Father is required to “maintain gainful employment or he has to work more
than 30 hours a week . . . [and] take random drug testing through me[ and]
through house arrest[.]” Id. at 236. Swain also testified that Father was doing
well in the program and believed it was “highly likely that [Father] will stay
sober [after completing the program] but that’s up to him.” Id. at 237-38.
However, given the “tremendous amount of structure and oversight” in the
program, Swain agreed that the real test is whether an individual can maintain
sobriety after discharge and that it was too early to determine whether Father
would succeed in a less restrictive environment. Id. at 239. Nonetheless, Swain
4
It is unclear from the record when Father was convicted of these felonies.
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believed Father’s success in the program would also make him successful after
discharge.
[20] In essence, Father argues that the juvenile court erred in weighing his past
behavior more heavily than his recent improvements in concluding the
conditions that led to Child’s removal and continued placement outside of his
care will not be remedied. We view this as an invitation to reweigh the
evidence in Father’s favor, which we cannot do. Bester, 839 N.E.2d at 147. As
our supreme court has explained, the juvenile court is entrusted with carefully
balancing a parent’s fitness at the time of the termination hearing versus a
pattern of conduct. In re E.M., 4 N.E.3d 636, 643 (Ind. 2014). Accordingly, the
juvenile court
has discretion to weigh a parent’s prior history more heavily than
efforts made only shortly before termination. Requiring
[juvenile] courts to give due regard to changed conditions does not
preclude them from finding that parents’ past behavior is the best
predictor of their future behavior.
Id. (emphasis added) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Here,
the juvenile court specifically concluded that Father’s past behavior rather than
his recent progress through a court-ordered program was the best predictor of
his future behavior: “given Father’s lengthy history of substance abuse, his
recent participation in services related to his addiction does not discount the
years of non-compliance in these proceedings.” Appealed Order at 16.
Furthermore, the juvenile court also noted that Father’s recent sobriety “has
only been accomplished with strict oversight and the threat of incarceration.
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For nearly three years the goal of reunification was not sufficient to motivate
[him].” Id.
[21] Ultimately, the evidence in the record demonstrates a pattern of incarceration,
substance abuse, criminal activity, and failure to successfully complete services.
Therefore, we find that DCS presented sufficient evidence to support the
juvenile court’s conclusion that there was a reasonable probability that the
conditions that led to Child’s removal and continued placement outside of
Father’s care, namely his instability, will not be remedied.
Conclusion
[22] In sum, we conclude there was sufficient evidence to support the juvenile
court’s conclusion that a reasonable probability existed that the reasons for
Child’s removal and continued placement away from Father will not be
remedied. Thus, the judgment of the juvenile court is not clearly erroneous.
Accordingly, we affirm.
[23] Affirmed.
Mathias, J., and Pyle, J., concur.
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