09/28/2021
Case Number: DA 21-0090
DA 21-0090
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2021 MT 251N
IN THE MATTER OF:
D.R.V.,
A Youth in Need of Care.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Yellowstone, Cause No. DN 19-184
Honorable Mary Jane Knisely, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Kelly M. Driscoll, Driscoll Hathaway Law Group, Missoula, Montana
For Appellee:
Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Jonathan M. Krauss, Assistant
Attorney General, Helena, Montana
Scott D. Twito, Yellowstone County Attorney, Amanda Tiernan, Deputy
County Attorney, Billings, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: September 1, 2021
Decided: September 28, 2021
Filed:
c .,.--.
6-- 4f
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating
Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not
serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this
Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana
Reports.
¶2 Appellant, D.M.V. (Mother), appeals an order and judgment issued on
January 26, 2021, by the Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County,
terminating her parental rights over her eleven-year-old biological son, D.R.V. We affirm
the decision of the District Court to terminate Mother’s parental rights.
¶3 On May 16, 2019, the Child and Family Services Division of the Montana
Department of Public Health and Human Services (the Department) filed a petition for
emergency protective services, adjudication of D.R.V. as a youth in need of care (YINC),
and temporary legal custody of D.R.V.1 The Department’s petition was based on an
affidavit from a Department Child Protective Specialist (CPS). The affidavit cited
concerns related to methamphetamine use and distribution by D.R.V.’s parents, with whom
D.R.V. lived at the time. The affidavit described D.R.V.’s former home as a “typical meth
house with loose electrical wiring everywhere.” The affidavit also reported that D.R.V.
was frequently left at home without adults for extended periods of time and that D.R.V.
1
Around this same time, the Department also filed a separate petition for temporary legal custody
of D.R.V.’s older sister, O.R.V. However, O.R.V. turned eighteen years old during the course of
these proceedings and is not a party to this appeal.
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often went hungry. Based on these facts, the Department’s petition alleged physical neglect
of D.R.V. by Mother and by D.R.V.’s adoptive father, J.R.V. (Father).2
¶4 On June 3, 2019, D.R.V. was adjudicated as a YINC and temporary legal custody
was granted to the Department. Mother stipulated to this adjudication without objection.
Mother also agreed to complete a court-ordered treatment plan on this date. Amongst other
requirements, Mother’s treatment plan stipulated that she would schedule and complete a
chemical dependency evaluation from a Department-approved provider, schedule and
complete a mental health assessment from an approved provider, and “follow all
recommendations” from these providers. The treatment plan also required Mother to
schedule and attend individual counseling from an approved provider, submit to random
drug testing, and attend Department-supervised parental visits with D.R.V. According to
the District Court, the purpose of this treatment plan was to rehabilitate Mother’s parenting
skills for the purpose of reuniting her with D.R.V. As of May 16, 2019, the Department
placed D.R.V. in kinship foster care with his maternal aunt in Shepherd, Montana. Reports
from D.R.V.’s Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) indicate that D.R.V. has
remained “happy and safe” with his aunt for the duration of these proceedings.
¶5 As of Mother’s August 5, 2019, status hearing, she had completed a chemical
dependency evaluation and had enrolled in once-per-week drug treatment sessions at the
Rimrock Foundation addiction treatment facility (Rimrock) in Billings, MT. As of August
2
Father was arrested on October 21, 2019, on federal drug and firearm charges. Father pled guilty
and was sentenced to federal prison on October 23, 2020. Father’s parental rights to D.R.V. were
eventually terminated by the same January 2021 District Court order as Mother’s. Father currently
remains in prison and is not a party to this appeal.
3
5, 2019, Mother was also attending Department-supervised visits with D.R.V. and had
begun to undergo randomized drug testing via a drug-testing patch; however, Mother was
still testing positive for high levels of methamphetamine at this time. Also, as of this
appeal, Mother has never scheduled a mental health assessment with an approved provider.
¶6 At a September 4, 2019, meeting with a Department CPS, Mother informed the CPS
that she had not attended any treatment sessions at Rimrock in over 30 days because her
Medicaid insurance had been erroneously deactivated in early August 2019. Mother would
later confirm that, as of November 2019, her Medicaid coverage had been reinstated.
Nevertheless, as of September 2019, Mother was no longer participating in her required
drug treatment program at Rimrock. Mother also ceased participation in randomized drug
testing at this same time. Going forwards, despite continuous outreach efforts by the
Department to Mother, the record indicates that Mother never again participated in
randomized drug testing, nor did she return to Rimrock or engage in any other drug
treatment program up through the time of her appeal.
¶7 In November 2019, Mother’s trailer home was ruined in a storm, rendering her
homeless. Mother later informed the District Court that she has been “staying with a
friend” since this date. The Department provided contact information to help Mother apply
for and find new housing, but Mother ultimately did not take any action.
¶8 On December 12, 2019, the Department filed a petition to extend temporary legal
custody based on a new affidavit from a Department CPS. The affidavit asserted that
additional time was needed for Mother to complete her treatment plan and that Mother had
not yet addressed her methamphetamine use. The affidavit also noted that Mother had yet
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to address the safety concerns related to her (prior) trailer home that had led to D.R.V.’s
temporary removal. On January 6, 2020, the District Court held a hearing on the
Department’s petition to extend temporary legal custody. Mother was not in attendance,
but her attorney indicated that Mother had reviewed both the new petition and the new CPS
affidavit and did “not voice any objection.” On January 9, 2020, the District Court issued
an order granting an extension of temporary legal custody to the Department, and Mother
stipulated to this order.
¶9 In February 2020, Mother informed the Department that she had been let go from
her job in January of 2020. Mother would remain without a job for the rest of these
proceedings.
¶10 In March 2020, a CPS informed Mother that the Department had submitted a new
treatment referral for her to attend online/virtual treatment sessions at Rimrock subject to
that provider’s new COVID-19 protocols, but Mother did not enroll. During a phone call
with this same CPS on April 21, 2020, Mother stated that she had contacted Rimrock, “but
declined to begin treatment, as she [did] not feel she would do well with online groups and
counseling.” During this phone call, the CPS informed Mother that the Department would
be filing for permanent legal custody of D.R.V.
¶11 On May 11, 2020, the Department filed a petition for permanent legal custody and
termination of Mother’s parental rights. The petition was based on a new CPS affidavit
stating that Mother had not made any progress on her treatment plan goals nor met the
necessary conditions for the return of D.R.V. to her care. The affidavit stated that Mother
“ha[d] struggled to obtain housing and ha[d] not yet engaged in treatment to address her
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chemical dependency.” On June 25, 2020, D.R.V.’s CASA submitted a formal CASA
report recommending parental termination on the grounds that Mother “ha[d] not
completed her [treatment plan]” and that she did not “hav[e] a current residence.”
¶12 On November 2 and 5, 2020, the District Court held hearings on the Department’s
petition for parental termination. At these hearings, a CPS testified that the only treatment
plan task successfully completed by Mother during the then seventeen-month duration of
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her case was “going to visits [with D.R.V.]” and “nothing else.” The CPS also testified
that the Department’s visitation center noted that Mother’s scheduled visits with D.R.V.
had been “very inconsistent” and that Mother had missed multiple visits without first
notifying the visitation center.
¶13 During the November 2020 hearings, Mother testified that “[she had] not
successfully completed [her] treatment plan.” Mother also testified that, since ending her
weekly sessions at Rimrock in August of 2019, she had not sought to re-engage in any form
of Department-approved drug counseling, despite this being a requirement of her stipulated
treatment plan. Similarly, Mother also admitted that she had not, at any point, participated
in a mental health assessment nor otherwise attended any mental health treatment sessions
since the treatment plan was implemented. Nevertheless, Mother asserted in her testimony
that she would be able to successfully complete her treatment plan going forward if she
were granted additional time to do so.
¶14 D.R.V.’s therapist, Dr. Kelly Ogger (Dr. Ogger), also testified during the November
2020 hearings. Dr. Ogger stated that D.R.V. had developed ongoing mental health issues
related to his parents’ lack of consistency and the trauma that he was exposed to while in
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their care. Dr. Ogger also testified that lengthy reunification therapy, consistency with
visits, and individual therapeutic services for D.R.V.’s mother would likely be needed
before reunification could occur.
¶15 On January 26, 2021, the District Court issued an order terminating Mother’s
parental rights. The District Court’s findings of fact included the following statement:
[I]t is clear that [Mother] has not made any progress on her treatment plan
and will not be able to do so within a reasonable amount of time. [Mother]
failed to address the issues that led to the Department’s involvement. She
has not addressed her substance abuse or mental health concerns. She has
less stability now than when the case began, she does not have housing or
employment and struggles to demonstrate any kind of consistency.
The District Court’s order further concluded that Mother had not successfully completed
her treatment plan and that Mother’s conduct was unlikely to “change within a reasonable
time,” thereby warranting the termination of Mother’s parental rights under Montana’s
relevant legal standard, § 41-3-609(1)(f)(i)-(ii), MCA (“Criteria for [parental]
termination”). The District Court further concluded that continuation of the parent-child
relationship “will likely result in continued abuse and neglect” and that “[t]he conduct and
condition of [Mother] renders her unfit, unwilling, or unable to provide [D.R.V.] with
adequate parental care.” On February 23, 2021, Mother filed a notice of appeal with this
Court. Mother’s appeal challenges the District Court’s decision to terminate her parental
rights.
¶16 This Court reviews a district court’s decision to terminate parental rights for an
abuse of discretion, considering the applicable standards of Title 41, chapter 3, MCA. In re
D.D., 2021 MT 66, ¶ 9, 403 Mont. 376, 482 P.3d 1176; In re D.E., 2018 MT 196, ¶ 21, 392
7
Mont. 297, 423 P.3d 586. In interpreting these statutes, “a court abuses its discretion if it
terminates parental rights based on clearly erroneous findings of fact, erroneous
conclusions of law, or otherwise acts arbitrarily, without employment of conscientious
judgment, or exceeds the bounds of reason resulting in substantial injustice.” In re D.D.,
¶ 9; In re D.E., ¶ 21.
¶17 Section 41-3-609(1)(f)(i)-(ii), MCA, states that a court may order termination of
parental rights upon finding—by clear and convincing evidence—that:
[T]he child is an adjudicated youth in need of care and both of the following
exist:
(i) an appropriate treatment plan that has been approved by the court has not
been complied with by the parents or has not been successful; and
(ii) the conduct or condition of the parents rendering them unfit is unlikely
to change within a reasonable time.
¶18 Mother’s appeal does not contest D.R.V.’s status as an adjudicated YINC, nor does
it contest the fact that Mother failed to complete her court-approved treatment plan.
Instead, Mother’s appeal argues that the District Court abused its discretion when it
terminated Mother’s parental rights because the Department allegedly did not meet its
statutory burden of showing that the conduct of Mother was “unlikely to change within a
reasonable time,” as required by § 41-3-609(1)(f)(ii), MCA. Instead, Mother’s appeal
argues that an extension of temporary legal custody—rather than the permanent
termination of Mother’s parental rights—was the proper disposition in this matter.
¶19 When issuing a finding that the conduct or condition of parents is “unlikely to
change within a reasonable time” under § 41-3-609(1)(f)(ii), MCA, a court is statutorily
permitted to consider a variety of factors specific to the factual circumstances of an
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individual case.3 Section 41-3-609(2), MCA. Mother’s appeal asserts that Mother still
remains “likely to change within a reasonable time” on three separate grounds: (1) that
Mother only failed to complete her in-patient drug treatment program due to an
unexplained lapse in her Medicaid coverage; (2) that due to the scaled-back activity of the
Department during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Department failed to provide Mother
with “reasonable efforts” to assist her in completing her treatment plan; and (3) that
Mother’s allegations of domestic violence committed by her husband were not properly
considered by the District Court in evaluating the progress that she made on her treatment
plan.
¶20 After considering each of Mother’s arguments, we are not convinced that Mother
would be “likely to change within a reasonable time.” First, Mother’s appeal argues that
Mother remains likely to change because she would have completed her in-patient drug
treatment sessions at Rimrock in 2019 were it not for an unexplained lapse in her Medicaid
coverage. Mother’s appeal implies that this unanticipated lapse in coverage began in
August 2019 and caused Rimrock to cancel her remaining weekly appointments after she
had attended just four sessions. However, Mother’s own testimony from the November 2,
2020, hearing notes that her lapse in Medicaid coverage lasted no more than “four months.”
3
Additionally, when determining whether a parent’s conduct or condition is “unlikely to change
within a reasonable time,” § 41-3-609(2), MCA, requires a court to “enter a finding that
continuation of the parent-child legal relationship will likely result in continued abuse or neglect
or that the conduct or the condition of the parents renders the parents unfit, unable, or unwilling to
give the child adequate parental care.” The District Court’s January 2021 order correctly entered
a finding that continuing Mother’s parent-child relationship with D.R.V. would “result in
continued abuse or neglect” of D.R.V.
9
Moreover, at the November 5, 2020, hearing, Mother testified that her lapse in coverage
may have been for an even shorter duration than four months, as she stated during
questioning that she believed her Medicaid coverage was actually reinstated “by August or
September of 2019.” Regardless of the precise timeline of this lapse in coverage, Mother
nevertheless failed to continue her treatment plan at Rimrock or seek any additional drug
treatment once her Medicaid was reinstated—a fact which Mother also admitted to during
her November 2020 testimony. In the time since Mother’s Medicaid coverage was
reinstated and her appeal, which was filed in February of 2021, Mother had, at minimum,
fifteen months to recommence her drug treatment sessions and still failed to do so. Thus,
the District Court did not fail to adequately consider Mother’s lapse in Medicaid coverage
in its ruling that Mother was not “likely to change within a reasonable time.”
¶21 Second, Mother’s appeal asserts that the unique circumstances of the COVID-19
pandemic hindered her ability to successfully complete her treatment plan. Specifically,
Mother argues that, as of March 2020, the Department—by offering a more limited array
of in-person services in response to the COVID-19 pandemic—failed to make “reasonable
efforts” to assist her in completing her treatment plan. Indeed, this Court has previously
held that “[a]lthough determination of whether the Department made reasonable efforts is
not a separate requirement for termination, it may be a predicate for finding that . . . [a]
parent is unlikely to change within a reasonable time—one of the factors required for
termination of a parent’s rights.” In re R.L., 2019 MT 267, ¶ 18, 397 Mont. 507, 452 P.3d
890 (emphasis added). In R.L., this Court further clarified that “[w]hat constitutes
reasonable efforts is not static or determined in a vacuum, but rather is dependent on the
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factual circumstances of each case.” In re R.L., ¶ 22. Under this precedent, Mother argues
that the Department’s temporary cessation of in-person visitation with D.R.V.—which
occurred at the same time that several Department-approved treatment providers also
ceased offering in-person appointments—did not meet the threshold of “reasonable
efforts,” and thus hampered her ability to successfully visit with D.R.V. and complete the
other aspects of her treatment plan.
¶22 Nevertheless, we find that the Department’s efforts to assist Mother in completing
her treatment plan were reasonable under the factual circumstances. First, as Mother’s
appeal notes, the services required by her treatment plan—including visitation with D.R.V.
and meetings with Department-approved treatment providers—were still made available
virtually beginning in March 2020. Given the public health dangers posed by in-person
gatherings after the onset of the COVID-19 crisis, the switch to virtual child visitation by
the Department—as well as the switch to virtual treatment sessions by the Department’s
approved treatment providers—was highly reasonable. Moreover, although Mother
alluded to the fact that she may not have had access to a computer during her November
2020 testimony, Mother’s appeal does not clarify whether this was indeed the case.
Mother’s appeal also does not argue at any point that she lacked the requisite internet or
computer access needed to schedule and attend virtual appointments with D.R.V. and with
approved treatments providers. Instead, the record indicates that Mother’s lack of
engagement with the Department and its approved treatment providers after March 2020 is
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largely of her own accord4—a finding which is also consistent with the pattern of disinterest
in completing her treatment plan that Mother had already demonstrated prior to March
2020, during the first ten months of her treatment plan. As this Court has previously held,
“apathy and/or active resistance to engagement with the Department [by a parent] does not
constitute failure on the Department’s part to provide reasonable efforts.” In re R.L., ¶ 22.
¶23 The third and final argument in Mother’s appeal alleges that, in the time since
D.R.V.’s case was first adjudicated, she experienced domestic violence from her husband
(Father), which harmed her ability to successfully complete her treatment plan.
Specifically, Mother’s appeal alleges that she “repeatedly disclosed allegations of domestic
violence by [Father] to the Department, yet there was an absence of [domestic violence]
services directed at Mother” by the Department. Mother’s appeal claims the District
Court’s ruling failed to properly account for this fact. However, the District Court record
reveals that, in October 2019, in response to Mother’s reports of violence and threats from
Father, the Department expressly offered to help Mother go to the police and file a
restraining order against him. Additionally, in January 2020, in response to Mother’s
assertion that she remained fearful of her husband, the Department gave Mother contact
information for the sheriff’s office, the YWCA, and a women’s shelter. However, Mother
admitted during her November 2020 testimony that she never followed up on these offers
of assistance. Moreover, the record indicates that Father has been incarcerated since
4
An affidavit from a CPS dated May 11, 2020, indicates that, as of April 2020, Mother had gotten
back in touch with the Rimrock treatment center in Billings. However, that same affidavit also
states that Mother told the Department that she refused to begin treatment virtually because she
did “not feel she would do well with online groups and counseling.”
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October 2019, significantly restricting his contact with, and access to, Mother for the
majority of the time that her treatment plan was in place. For these reasons, the District
Court did not abuse its discretion by failing to give appropriate weight to Mother’s
allegations of domestic abuse in terminating her parental rights.
¶24 We affirm the District Court’s determination that Mother is “unlikely to change
within a reasonable period of time” and uphold the termination of her parental rights under
§ 41-3-609(1)(f)(i)-(ii), MCA. In deciding whether to terminate parental interests under
Title 41 of the Montana Code, the “chief concern” must ultimately be “the best interests of
the child.” In re M.V.R., 2016 MT 309, ¶ 27, 385 Mont. 448, 384 P.3d 1058; In re T.S.,
2013 MT 274, ¶ 30, 372 Mont. 79, 310 P.3d 538. Although this Court is sympathetic to
Mother’s unfortunate circumstances, none of Mother’s arguments on appeal adequately
address how the extension of temporary legal custody that she requests would be in
D.R.V.’s best interests. At the time of this appeal, Mother remains homeless, is without a
job, and continues to suffer from debilitating substance abuse issues—all of which severely
harm her ability to effectively care for D.R.V. Mother’s appeal fails to inspire confidence
that any of these factors will change in the foreseeable future, nor does her appeal contain
any blueprint as to how Mother plans to change her situation going forward.
¶25 This Court has also noted that, when making a decision regarding parental
termination, “[c]hildren need not be left to ‘twist in the wind’ when their parents fail to
give priority to their stability and permanency.” In re T.S., ¶ 30 (citations omitted). The
November 2020 testimony of Dr. Ogger, D.R.V.’s therapist, lends further credence to this
point and illustrates D.R.V.’s strong need for permanency in his living situation:
13
I think most importantly what’s in his best interests is that permanency of
some sort . . . for [D.R.V.]. He has been living in this limbo land where he
doesn’t know [if] he should attach where he is, if he is going home. He’s . . .
unable to work on . . . a lot of his trauma and things that we are trying to do
in counseling, because I think he’s still unsure of what’s going to happen
next. I think for [D.R.V.], the important thing is to let him have some kind
of idea of what is going to happen for him, where is he going to be; because
that will allow him, then, to start to move forward. . . .
¶26 We affirm the decision of the District Court to terminate Mother’s parental rights
under § 41-3-609(1)(f)(i)-(ii), MCA, and grant permanent legal custody of D.R.V. to the
Department.
¶27 We have determined to decide this case pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c) of our
Internal Operating Rules, which provides for memorandum opinions. This appeal presents
no constitutional issues, no issues of first impression, and does not establish new precedent
or modify existing precedent.
¶28 Affirmed.
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
We concur:
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
/S/ JIM RICE
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