RENDERED: APRIL 28, 2022
TO BE PUBLISHED
Supreme Court of Kentucky
2021-SC-0180-DGE
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY, APPELLANT
CABINET FOR HEALTH AND FAMILY
SERVICES
ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
V. NOS. 2020-CA-1336, 2020-CA-1342 AND 2020-CA-1343
BULLITT CIRCUIT COURT NOS.
20-J-00145, 20-J-00145-003, 20-J-00146, 20-J-00146-003,
20-J-00147 AND 20-J-00147-003
TAMMY BAKER; BULLITT COUNTY APPELLEES
ATTORNEY'S OFFICE; K.T.,
DAUGHTER; K.T., FATHER;
K.T., SON 1; K.T., SON 2; AND
M.H., MOTHER
OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE HUGHES
VACATING AND REMANDING
This Court granted the Cabinet for Health and Family Services’ (CHFS or
Cabinet) motion for discretionary review to determine whether it is
governmentally immune from the dependency/neglect/abuse (DNA) actions
brought against it by a guardian ad litem (GAL). The Court of Appeals affirmed
the Bullitt County Family Court’s conclusion that the Cabinet is not
governmentally immune from DNA actions, but aptly noted that a DNA petition
against the Cabinet is “unusual.” Indeed, a separate petition in the
circumstances of this case was not simply unusual but totally unwarranted.
The GAL’s concerns and allegations regarding the Cabinet’s conduct with
respect to three children committed to its temporary custody should have been
addressed by motion in the context of the existing DNA cases not in separate
actions that have evolved into unnecessary, time-consuming disputes about
the Cabinet’s claimed governmental immunity. Aside from the total absence of
any legal justification for the GAL’s three new DNA petitions, the petitions were
moot on their face at the time they were filed because the safe return of the
children from Florida where their parents had taken them had already been
accomplished and any shortcomings on the Cabinet’s part could be addressed
in the pending DNA actions. Simply put, the three petitions filed by the GAL
should have been dismissed. Accordingly, we vacate the lower courts’
decisions and remand for dismissal of the GAL’s DNA petitions.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On June 9, 2020, the CHFS filed petitions in the Bullitt County Family
Court alleging, collectively, that three siblings, two-year-old twins and a one-
year-old child, whose natural father is K.T. (father) and natural mother is M.H.
(mother), were being abused or neglected by their mother. The grounds for the
petition in each child’s case follow:
CHFS received JC3[1] regarding incident where [mother] left [three
of her children, a five-year old and the two-year-old twins]
unattended in the car while she went into [a department store] to
reportedly use the bathroom. [Mother took the one-year-old child
with her.] Mother was charged with three counts of wanton
1 The JC-3 form is provided by the Justice and Public Safety Cabinet for a law
enforcement officer’s use when responding to a report of domestic violence and abuse
or dating violence and abuse. Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 209A.120(2).
2
endangerment via law enforcement citation and one count of
possession of marijuana via citation. CHFS already had an active
ongoing case with this family due to an incident[2] of supervision
neglect . . . . CHFS has made referral for KVC in-home services to
assist [mother] in learning appropriate supervision of the children
as well as to help further parenting skills. First Steps referral has
also been made on behalf of the child. CHFS also will be making 3
C’s childcare referral to assist the family with daycare services
reopening as COVID-19 restrictions reduce. CHFS is requesting
this case remain a non-removal, however would like court
involvement to assist in monitoring the family.[3]
Although “requesting non-removal,” the CHFS social worker also
completed the Emergency Custody Order Affidavit section of the AOC-DNA-1
form which allows the CHFS worker to provide additional facts which support a
2 The Cabinet’s brief does not give the details of the previous neglect case, but
the CASA volunteer’s report filed in the record July 15, 2020 provides the following
information:
The [mother] stated that the reason she had a previous case with
the Cabinet was because the teachers at [her daughter’s] school put her
on the bus to come home instead of straight to daycare as she always
went straight to daycare after school. The neighbor got her off the bus
and called CPS. [The mother] was working at McDonald’s and just
couldn’t get to her daughter in a very timely manner. Case was closed as
it was a non-issue.
The CASA report states the daughter is eight years old.
3 KRS 620.130(1) states:
In any proceeding under this chapter, when the court is petitioned to
remove or continue the removal of a child from the custody of his parent
or other person exercising custodial control or supervision, the court
shall first consider whether the child may be reasonably protected
against the alleged dependency, neglect or abuse, by alternatives less
restrictive than removal. Such alternatives may include, but shall not be
limited to, the provision of medical, educational, psychiatric,
psychological, social work, counseling, day care, or homemaking services
with monitoring wherever necessary by the cabinet or other appropriate
agency. Where the court specifically finds that such alternatives are
adequate to reasonably protect the child against the alleged dependency,
neglect or abuse, the court shall not order the removal or continued
removal of the child.
3
child’s removal from the home as the least restrictive placement at that time.
The CHFS worker stated: “3 children ages 5, 2, & 2 left alone in motor vehicle
temperature approx 81° F.” The CHFS worker cited these additional facts as
the immediate risk to each child which justified entry of an ex parte order.4
The Family Court entered an order the same day removing the children
from their mother’s custody and placing them in the emergency custody of the
CHFS. The temporary removal hearing was held June 11, 2020.5 The father of
4 KRS 620.060(1) provides:
The court for the county where the child ordinarily resides or will reside
or the county where the child is present may issue an ex parte
emergency custody order when it appears to the court that removal is in
the best interest of the child and that there are reasonable grounds to
believe, as supported by affidavit or by recorded sworn testimony, that
one (1) or more of the following conditions exist and that the parents or
other person exercising custodial control or supervision are unable or
unwilling to protect the child:
(a) The child is in danger of imminent death or serious physical injury or
is being sexually abused;
(b) The parent has repeatedly inflicted or allowed to be inflicted by other
than accidental means physical injury or emotional injury. This
condition shall not include reasonable and ordinary discipline
recognized in the community where the child lives, as long as
reasonable and ordinary discipline does not result in abuse or neglect
as defined in KRS 600.020(1); or
(c) The child is in immediate danger due to the parent's failure or refusal
to provide for the safety or needs of the child.
The Family Court found that there were reasonable grounds to believe all three
conditions existed.
5 By the time of this hearing the three children had been placed with a paternal
aunt.
4
the children was not present at the hearing.6 The mother, through counsel,
agreed to the CHFS’s temporary custody of the children and the continued
placement with their paternal aunt. Adjudication was scheduled for July 16,
2020.
In the meantime, on June 30, 2020, the CHFS Social Services Clinician
(clinician) learned from the Social Service Specialist, who was completing a
formal home evaluation of the paternal aunt’s home, that the children were
with their father. More specifically, on July 1, 2020, the clinician learned that
the father had taken the children from the paternal aunt’s house to his new
residence in Florida. The children’s mother went with them.7 Bullitt County
Department for Community Based Services did not approve of the aunt
releasing the children into the father’s care although once the father learned
that the children were in the state’s care and contacted the Cabinet, it was
understood that the father would be assisting with the children while they were
in his sister’s care.
Five days later, on July 6, 2020, the clinician communicated the status
of the children to Family Court staff8 and distributed the email to others,
including the children’s GAL, Tammy Baker. The email indicated that the prior
6The father’s notice was sent to a Louisville, Kentucky address. As discussed
below, the father was residing in Florida.
7 Prior to this, the Court-Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) had informed the
mother that the court’s permission was required to take the children to Florida.
The email is an exhibit to the CHFS’s memorandum in support of its motion to
8
dismiss. The clinician’s affidavit, also an exhibit, states that Florida Child Protective
Services provided the information from the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, Child
Protection Investigation Division, on July 1.
5
week the paternal aunt allowed the children to go with their parents to Florida
where the paternal grandmother also resides. The clinician communicated that
once contacted and told to bring the children back to Kentucky, the family
attempted to obtain airline tickets as well as to repair their vehicle, but that
they did not have the financial means to return to Kentucky.
The clinician, who had been communicating with Florida Child Protective
Services (FCPS), also shared information provided by it on July 1. The Pinellas
County Sheriff’s Office, Child Protection Investigation Division (CPID),
completed a background check on the father and his girlfriend (who also lived
in the apartment), and found no history for either adult since moving to
Florida. The father had a few reports in Kentucky, having been charged with
improper display of registration plates, careless driving, possession of
marijuana, and shoplifting in 2016, as well as a failure to appear in 2018. The
girlfriend’s last charge was in 2015 for failure to provide an insurance card. No
other reports were found.
The record reflects the CPID completed a walk-through of the apartment,
which it reported to be clean, but a little cramped for five children and three
adults. Multiple beds were observed, and the mother had a playpen for the
youngest child. The CPID observed food and running water; plenty of baby
food, formula, diapers, and wipes; and a full closet of children’s clothes for all
ages. They saw no signs of drug paraphernalia or cigarettes. The family was
acting appropriately and responding to the children’s needs. The CPID
reported it did not see anything concerning for the father’s apartment, beyond
6
it being small.9 The clinician’s email communication then expressed that the
Cabinet is not allowed to recommend placement outside of Kentucky without
an official ICPC10 process and approval; that Cabinet administration had been
contacted; and that in the meantime, the Cabinet wanted to make the Family
Court aware of the current situation and seek the Family Court’s input.
The clinician later clarified through an affidavit that even before she
could initiate contact with Florida upon discovering that the children were
there, FCPS contacted her in the 8:00 a.m. hour on July 1. FCPS had received
a report that the children were in the custody of the state of Kentucky and that
the children were not allowed to leave the state of Kentucky. To the clinician’s
knowledge, FCPS did not receive independent allegations of abuse or neglect
but was involved solely due to the children being in Florida without permission
of the Cabinet in Kentucky.11
The same day the clinician sent the email advising of the children’s
status, the GAL filed an emergency motion for production of the children to the
court. As grounds for the motion, the GAL asserted that she was in receipt of
9 The clinician described the CPID report during her July 6 emergency hearing
testimony. The clinician’s affidavit was filed after the July 6 hearing and contained
the email text from the Florida CPID to the Bullitt County clinician describing the
background checks and home visit. The affidavit also stated that FCPS assessed the
children as safe; that FCPS was involved until the children were returned to Kentucky;
and that Bullitt County CPS had been in immediate and ongoing correspondence
regarding the assessment of safety and planning for the children’s return.
10 Interstate compact on the placement of children. This compact, effective
until the contingency is met, is contained in KRS 615.030.
11 The record does not reflect who reported to Florida Child Protective Services
the children’s presence in Florida and their status with the Cabinet.
7
email correspondence from the CHFS social worker informing the parties that
the parents had taken the children to Florida despite the Cabinet having
custody of the children. The motion was joined by the Bullitt County Attorney.
During a hearing on the motion, the GAL requested an order for the children to
be returned immediately and stated if necessary the Cabinet should secure the
assistance of the Florida police.
The Family Court heard the emergency motion that afternoon. With the
coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak resulting in a global pandemic declaration by
the World Health Organization and a state of emergency declaration by
Kentucky Governor Beshear in March 2020, in compliance with the Kentucky
Supreme Court protocols to mitigate the virus spread while maintaining access
to Kentucky courts, the court conducted a remote hearing. Testimony was
received by video from the clinician and another CHFS worker, the CASA
Supervisor, and the father.12 The clinician testified that after the father found
out that his children were in the Cabinet’s temporary custody he had reached
out to the Cabinet and the Cabinet had begun evaluating placement of the
children with him.13
The clinician also described efforts taken at that point to effectuate the
children’s return to Kentucky. Along with providing information contained in
12 The father participated from Florida.
13 During the July 6 hearing, the CASA Supervisor reported that on June 16 the
mother told her that the father was on his way from Florida and he was going to try to
get custody of the children.
8
the email she sent that morning, the clinician indicated that the Cabinet
administration was determining the means, including air travel, by which the
children could be retrieved from Florida. The clinician stated that prior to the
July 4 holiday weekend, efforts were made to get airline tickets or a vehicle and
that communication was maintained with FCPS over the weekend and
continuing to that morning.
The clinician testified that she last saw the children on June 9,14 while
the CASA Supervisor reported that she saw the children at the paternal aunt’s
home the week of June 1515 and that the mother told her that the father was
on his way from Florida. The father stated that he arrived at his sister’s home
between June 18-20, or maybe June 23, and that he stayed for approximately
seven days, leaving on June 30.
The father also stated that he did not act maliciously by taking his
children to Florida and that he was leading “with his heart.” The father stated
that his sister’s air conditioner went out while he was at her home, she had six
children of her own to care for and the placement of his three young children
with her was a burden for her. He noted that his intention was to be a good
father and the children were his responsibility. He further stated he knew he
did not have custody and that the CHFS did, but he did not have the
14 The clinician later stated in an affidavit that June 9, 2020 was her monthly
visit.
15 The CASA volunteer’s report filed later stated that she met with the mother
and the children on June 17.
9
opportunity to speak at the first hearing. He had talked with an attorney at the
Department of Public Advocacy and did not understand why he, the dad, was
not given custody; additionally, his attorney would be making motions for him.
He further stated that but for his car problems, he intended to come back to
Kentucky with the children on July 8.
The Family Court ordered the CHFS to return the children to Kentucky
within twenty-four hours.16 The Family Court further ordered the CHFS to
contact the Bullitt County Attorney on that same day, July 6, to initiate
criminal proceedings against the parents to assist in the return of the children
to Kentucky.
A case review was held July 9, 2020. The witnesses included the CHFS
Regional Family Services Supervisor, CHFS Supervisor, and the clinician.
Despite dealing with COVID-19 challenges, according to testimony, the
children were safely returned to Kentucky late afternoon/early evening July 8,
2020 by airplane, under the supervision of two CHFS employees, and were
placed in foster care. Testimony was taken as to the course of events following
the July 6, 2020 emergency hearing. The Family Court summation noted that
No parties could provide any acceptable explanation as to why the
children have remained out of CHFS custody since the emergency
hearing on Monday. It is not apparent that any employee of CHFS
. . . tried to enforce [the court order placing the children in the care
and control of the CHFS] in the State of Florida and recover these 3
children. Further, the witnesses verified that after the 7/6/2020
16 Because, as of April 14, 2020, the Bullitt County Family Circuit Court
Divisions had issued a general order requiring the CHFS to notify those divisions
within one hour of discovery by the CHFS that a child is missing or has run away, the
Family Court reserved a contempt ruling on the CHFS’s failure to follow that order.
10
emergency hearing, a criminal complaint was initiated through the
[Bullitt County Attorney’s Office]. It was not clear that a warrant
had been issued; however the parties allude to the belief that was
the case. No explanation has been provided as to why a warrant
has not been served upon the parents in Florida or why actions for
enforcement were not implemented.
....
[The clinician stated that] in regard to steps to remove the children
from parents in FL, . . . she had taken no steps because she was
not directed to do that. . . . Court notes this is despite CHFS
having custody; custody removal from mother; the court ordering
the children to be returned to KY within 24 hrs; and the court’s
directive to CHFS to initiate criminal action on 7/6/2020 for
kidnapping, custodial interference or whatever the Commonwealth
deemed appropriate given the Commonwealth was just notified
7/6/2020 as well.[17]
At the end of the July 9 hearing, the Family Court stated that it had no
idea whether any additional petitions were to be forthcoming related to the
allegations that were in front of the court and the parents’ involvement, but the
court assumed that someone was looking into that. The court expressed that
there had been violation of multiple court orders, that the Cabinet had
basically allowed the children to be kidnapped and not done anything about it,
and that the court would address all those issues at the disposition of the case.
17 The Cabinet filed a motion to alter, amend or vacate the order related to the
review hearing on July 9, 2020, seeking to clarify certain factual statements made in
the court’s summary. In support of the motion the clinician filed an affidavit stating
that the criminal complaint filed by the Cabinet was understood to be the legal action
necessary to assist in the children returning, however deemed necessary.
The Family Court denied the motion because the docket order and
supplemental information related to a review concerning the status of return of the
children to CHFS care. The Family Court explained that a formal contempt hearing
had yet to be held, and that any clarifications of previous statements and/or factual
information regarding the children’s chain of custody were to be addressed at that
contempt hearing.
11
The next day, July 10, 2020, two other DNA petitions were filed regarding
the three children in their respective cases (identified as trailers 002 and 003 of
the original June 2020 DNA petition filed for each child). The CHFS filed a
petition (trailer 002) alleging the children were neglected or abused by their
mother and father in relation to the parents taking the children to Florida
without prior CHFS approval. The GAL also filed a petition (trailer 003) alleging
the CHFS neglected or abused the children, the grounds for the petition being
the following:
Despite learning that the children had been taken to Florida
without the consent or knowledge of the Cabinet, the Cabinet
waited until July 6, 2020 to alert the Bullitt County Attorney or
Guardian ad Litem for the children. The Cabinet made no
attempts to have the children taken into custody by the police in
Florida. An emergency hearing was held on July 6, 2020 on the
motion of the Guardian ad Litem to have the children returned to
Kentucky. During said hearing, representatives of the Cabinet
testified to the following: they were aware the children had been
removed from Kentucky by the parents and taken to Florida; this
knowledge was gained by the Cabinet on June 30, 2020; the
County Attorney and Guardian ad Litem were alerted to this
removal on Monday, July 6, 2020. At the hearing on July 6, 2020,
the Cabinet was ordered to have the children back in Kentucky
within 24 hours and they were further ordered to file criminal
charges related to kidnapping and/or custodial interference
against the parents. The parents were present at the electronic
hearing and heard these orders. Despite the ability of the Cabinet
to have the police in Florida enforce the Cabinet’s custody order
and immediately remove the children in Florida, the Cabinet took
no steps to retrieve the children from their parents until
Wednesday, July 8, 2020. For two days after the parents were
made aware that they were going to be criminally charged and that
the children would be returned to Kentucky, the children were left
with the parents despite the Cabinet’s custody order. The inaction
of the Cabinet placed these children at great risk of harm.
12
Notably, the GAL stated in the petition that she “is not seeking a removal
of custody from the [CHFS].”18 The Family Court’s temporary removal order
maintained the children as “[p]laced in temporary custody of [the CHFS].” A
pretrial conference was scheduled.
Before that conference, the CHFS filed a motion to dismiss arguing that
the neglect petitions against the Cabinet did not state a viable cause of action
against the Cabinet because the Cabinet is entitled to governmental
immunity.19 The Bullitt County Attorney and the GAL filed written responses
in opposition.20 The Family Court, relying on Stratton v. Commonwealth,
18 KRS 610.050, dealing with temporary change in custody, states:
If it appears to the court, by affidavit or by sworn testimony, that
the child . . . is in such condition or surroundings that his welfare is
being harmed or threatened with harm to such a degree that his best
interest requires that his custody be immediately changed by the court
from the original custodian to another, the judge may sign an order
giving temporary custody of the child to a suitable custodian consenting
to temporary custody. However, if this case involves allegations of
dependency, neglect, or abuse, no emergency removal or temporary
custody orders shall be effective unless the provisions of KRS Chapter
620 are followed . . . . The temporary custody order shall be effective
until the case is heard on its merits or until modified by the court. As a
result of such order, the child shall be placed in custody and care in a
home or other suitable facility.
19 The Cabinet in the alternative requested a change of venue, the Family Court
judge to recuse herself, and a neutral GAL be appointed for the children.
20 The GAL argued:
[I]t is an absurd prospect the CHFS could act in the role of
custodian, neglect the needs of children in its care resulting in actual
harm befalling the children, and then could hide behind the doctrine of
governmental immunity to protect itself from a [DNA] petition. CHFS did
not raise the doctrine of governmental immunity when a petition alleging
neglect was filed against it in 2014 in Bullitt Family Court . . . . After a
day-long adjudication hearing, [the Family Court] found the allegations of
13
Cabinet for Families and Children, 182 S.W.3d 516 (Ky. 2006), and Yanero v.
Davis, 65 S.W.3d 510, 519 (Ky. 2001), denied the Cabinet’s motion.
The Court of Appeals, citing Bryant v. Louisville Metro Housing Authority,
568 S.W.3d 839 (Ky. 2019), agreed with the Cabinet that it performs an
integral governmental function. But considering University of Kentucky v.
Moore, 599 S.W.3d 798 (Ky. 2019), which holds that the state is not sovereignly
immune from a declaratory judgment action in which the court is asked to
declare a person’s rights under a statute, the Court of Appeals analyzed
whether KRS Chapter 620’s statutory framework, with no potential for a
monetary damage award against the state, allowed the GAL’s DNA petitions
against the Cabinet. The Court of Appeals concluded that in light of KRS
600.020(47) and KRS 620.070’s clear language, the legislature authorized the
filing of a DNA petition against the Cabinet and upheld the Family Court’s
neglect filed against the CHFS were true. CHFS took no appeal. The
case was [then prosecuted by the GAL] as an Assistant County Attorney.
Responding to the CHFS argument that she is not a neutral GAL, the GAL
stated that she had great concerns for the safety of the children after the facts of this
case came to light on July 6, 2020 and July 9, 2020; that she felt compelled to file a
petition alleging neglect based on those facts as learned in court; that she is not
attempting to gain custody of the children; and that she simply believes that based
upon the facts as presented, that a finding should be made.
In its order denying the Cabinet’s motion to dismiss, the Family Court stated
that “the Cabinet may not cherry pick when it chooses to invoke this alleged
immunity. The history of this jurisdiction includes at least three prior cases, in the
other [Family Court division], wherein CHFS was found to have neglected children
placed in its care and custody by the Court.”
If indeed the 2014 petitions against the Cabinet sought only a finding of
neglect, it appears they suffered a deficiency similar to the current petitions at issue.
14
decision. After noting the “unusual” procedure of separate DNA actions against
the Cabinet, the Court of Appeals stated: “It is seldom necessary to file a new
petition against the Cabinet because the court retains jurisdiction over the
terms of placement and custody of the children.”
This Court granted the Cabinet discretionary review. The Cabinet
continues to maintain that it is entitled to governmental immunity, disagreeing
with the Court of Appeals’ analysis that the General Assembly waived the
Cabinet’s right to governmental immunity in DNA matters. Again, we do not
reach that issue because the GAL’s new DNA petitions were procedurally
improper in the first instance.
ANALYSIS
The Kentucky General Assembly directs that the Kentucky Unified
Juvenile Code, KRS Chapters 600 to 645, shall be interpreted to effectuate the
purposes expressed in KRS 600.010(2), the first listed purpose being that “[t]he
Commonwealth shall direct its efforts to promoting protection of children.”
KRS 600.010(2)(a). The General Assembly also pronounced that because
“[c]hildren have certain fundamental rights which must be protected and
preserved, including but not limited to, the rights to adequate food, clothing
and shelter; the right to be free from physical . . . or emotional injury . . . and
the right to a secure, stable family,” sometimes it is necessary to remove a child
from his or her parents in order to protect and preserve the rights and needs of
children. KRS 620.010. The Commonwealth’s policy is that “in order to
[e]nsure that children are not removed from families except when absolutely
15
necessary,” “the court shall show that other less restrictive alternatives have
been attempted or are not feasible.” KRS 600.010(2)(c).
In accordance with the purpose of promoting protection of children and
pertinent to the allegations in this neglect/abuse case,21 KRS 620.070 and KRS
600.020(1)(a)2 read together allow “any interested person” to file a petition
alleging that the child’s “parent, guardian, person in a position of authority or
special trust, . . . or other person exercising custodial control or supervision of
the child” harmed or threatened harm to the child’s health or welfare by
“creat[ing] or allow[ing] to be created a risk of physical or emotional injury[22]
. . . to the child by other than accidental means.”
“Position of authority,” “position of special trust,” and “person exercising
custodial control or supervision” are defined terms. See KRS 600.020(1)(a),
KRS 600.020(47). “Position of authority” means but is not limited to
the position occupied by a biological parent, adoptive parent,
stepparent, foster parent, relative, household member, adult youth
leader, recreational staff, or volunteer who is an adult, adult
athletic manager, adult coach, teacher, classified school employee,
21 According to KRS 600.020(20), a child may be either a “dependent child” or
an “abused or neglected child,” but not both. “Dependent child” means “any child,
other than an abused or neglected child, who is under improper care, custody, control,
or guardianship that is not due to an intentional act of the parent, guardian, or person
exercising custodial control or supervision of the child.” Id. Although this is a
neglect/abuse case, references to the similar procedure dependency action are
maintained in certain quoted statutes below.
22 Within the Unified Juvenile Code, “physical injury” means “substantial
physical pain or any impairment of physical condition,” KRS 600.020(49), and
“emotional injury” means “an injury to the mental or psychological capacity or
emotional stability of a child as evidenced by a substantial and observable impairment
in the child’s ability to function within a normal range of performance and behavior
with due regard to his or her age, development, culture, and environment as testified
to by a qualified mental health professional,” KRS 600.020(26).
16
certified school employee, counselor, staff, or volunteer for either a
residential treatment facility or a detention facility as defined in
KRS 520.010(4), staff or volunteer with a youth services
organization, religious leader, health-care provider, or employer.
KRS 532.045(1)(a). “Position of special trust” means “a position occupied by a
person in a position of authority who by reason of that position is able to
exercise undue influence over the minor.” KRS 532.045(1)(b). A “person
exercising custodial control or supervision” is “a person or agency that has
assumed the role and responsibility of a parent or guardian for the child, but
that does not necessarily have legal custody of the child.” KRS 600.020(47)
(emphasis added).
With KRS 600.020(47) using the broad “agency” term and not limiting
the agency which may assume the role and responsibility of a parent or
guardian for the child, and KRS 600.020(13) defining “commitment” as “an
order of the court which places a child under the custodial control or
supervision of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, Department of
Juvenile Justice, or another facility or agency until the child attains the age of
eighteen (18) unless otherwise provided by law,” the Court of Appeals
concluded that the Cabinet, an agency having temporary custody of the
children, met the definitional requirement of a “person exercising custodial
control and supervision” and, consequently, a DNA action could properly be
filed against it. While the definition of the term “commitment” makes evident
that the CHFS may exercise custodial control and supervision in a given
17
matter, at the point the GAL filed these DNA petitions against the Cabinet the
proceedings had yet to reach adjudication of whether the children were
neglected or abused, KRS 620.100(3), and accordingly had yet to reach
disposition, at which point a child may be committed to the Cabinet, KRS
620.140(1)(d); see also KRS 620.090(6), KRS 620.100(4). Even though the
children had not been committed to the Cabinet, the petitions against it were
still arguably allowed under KRS 600.020(1)(a)2 because the Cabinet had
“assumed the role and responsibility of a parent or guardian” for the children
as provided in KRS 600.020(47). To the extent it had temporary custody, the
Cabinet can be said to occupy that role although the paternal aunt was the
person charged with their day-to-day care under Cabinet supervision.
In its motion to dismiss the GAL’s petitions, the Cabinet did not argue
that it was not a person exercising custodial control and supervision but
instead argued it was governmentally immune from the GAL’s neglect claims
against it. Again, the circumstances here do not support the GAL’s DNA
petitions, not necessarily because the Cabinet is governmentally immune from
a DNA petition (a question that is not properly before us in this case), but
because the GAL’s allegations against and dissatisfaction with the Cabinet’s
efforts to return the children to Kentucky could be, and in fact were, properly
dealt with in the context of the original actions filed by the Cabinet on behalf of
each child. As with a show-cause/contempt proceeding, see Cabinet for Health
and Fam. Servs. v. J.M.G., 475 S.W.3d 600, 615 (Ky. 2015), the record
pertinent to disposition of the GAL’s allegations against the Cabinet is
18
contained within the original case.23 Stated simply, everything underpinning
the new DNA petitions came directly and solely from events occurring under
the pending petitions after the Cabinet was granted temporary custody.
The Court of Appeals ended its opinion stating:
[W]e must note that it is unusual to bring a DNA petition against
the Cabinet. It is seldom necessary to file a new petition against
the Cabinet because the court retains jurisdiction over the terms of
placement and custody of the children. In addition, the court
possesses the inherent authority to enforce its orders against the
Cabinet through the use of its contempt powers. See Cabinet for
Health and Fam. Servs. v. J.M.G., 475 S.W.3d 600, [618-19] (Ky.
2015).[24] For these reasons, we express no opinion concerning the
merits of the GAL’s petitions in this case or the scope of any
available remedy. Those are matters which must be decided upon
later adjudication by the family court.
While the appellate court noted the oddity of the situation and somewhat
reluctantly addressed the Cabinet’s governmental immunity, we go a step
further and reiterate that the GAL’s new DNA petitions against the Cabinet
were procedurally improper in the first instance.
The primary or initial objective of a KRS Chapter 620 neglect or abuse
action is to determine if a child is receiving proper parental care, but if the
23 Although it may seem the GAL may have been better served by filing a motion
for contempt, without allegations that the Cabinet violated a court order, the
allegations within the DNA petition are not sufficient for that procedure.
Commonwealth, Cabinet for Health and Fam. Servs. v. Ivy, 353 S.W.3d 324, 332 (Ky.
2011) (“In a civil contempt proceeding, the initial burden is on the party seeking
sanctions to show by clear and convincing evidence that the alleged contemnor has
violated a valid court order.”). Furthermore, as noted in J.M.G., 475 S.W.3d at 616,
the possibility of proceeding against the Cabinet as an entity in a contempt
proceeding, as opposed to individual Cabinet employees, is something this Court has
never addressed.
24 But see n.23, supra.
19
parent is not exercising custodial control and supervision, then that the person
exercising custodial control and supervision (OPECCS) is providing proper care
to the child. See KRS 620.010, KRS 600.020(1)(a), KRS 620.070. The petition,
a verified statement, sets forth allegations in regard to the child and initiates
formal court involvement in the child’s case. KRS 600.020(48); KRS 610.020.25
The petitioner, making the petition in the interest of the child, KRS 610.020,
KRS 610.060, may request the child’s removal from the parent or the OPECCS,
as the case may be.26 Unless waived by the child and his parent or OPECCS, a
temporary removal hearing is held. KRS 620.080(1).27 The court then
determines at the hearing “whether there are reasonable grounds to believe
that the child would be dependent, neglected or abused if returned to or left in
the custody of his parent or [OPECCS] even though it is not proved conclusively
25 KRS 610.020(1) provides in part:
Except as otherwise provided in KRS Chapters 600 to 645 . . . [t]he
complaint and all subsequent court documents shall be entitled: “In the
interest of . . . , a child.” The complaint shall be verified and may be
upon information and belief. It shall set forth plainly:
(a) The facts which bring the child within the purview of KRS Chapters
600 to 645; . . . .
26 The request for emergency, immediate removal may be made pursuant to
KRS 620.060(1). When emergency custody is granted, “[c]ustody may be placed with a
relative taking into account the wishes of the custodial parent and child or any other
appropriate person or agency including the cabinet.” KRS 620.060(2).
27 When emergency custody is granted, the hearing is held “[w]ithin seventy-two
(72) hours, excluding weekends and holidays, of the time when an emergency custody
order is issued or when a child is taken into custody without the consent of his parent
or other person exercising custodial control or supervision.” KRS 620.080(1)(a). When
the case is commenced by the filing of the petition, the temporary removal hearing is
held within ten (10) days of the date of filing. KRS 620.080(1)(b).
20
who has perpetrated the dependency, neglect or abuse.” KRS 620.080(2). The
Commonwealth bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence
and if the Commonwealth fails to establish the dependency, neglect or abuse,
the child is to be released to or retained in the custody of his parent or
OPECCS. KRS 620.080(2).
If, after completion of the temporary removal hearing, the court
finds there are reasonable grounds to believe the child is
dependent, neglected or abused, the court . . . issue[s] an order for
temporary removal and . . . grant[s] temporary custody to the
cabinet or other appropriate person or agency. Preference [is] given
to available and qualified relatives of the child considering the
wishes of the parent or [OPECCS], if known.
KRS 620.090(1). “The child . . . remain[s] in temporary custody with the
cabinet [no longer than] forty-five (45) days from the date of the removal from
his home.” KRS 620.090(6).28 Within that forty-five (45) days, “[t]he court . . .
conduct[s] the adjudicatory hearing[29] and . . . make[s] a final disposition.”
KRS 620.090(6).30 “The disposition . . . determine[s] the action to be taken by
the court on behalf of the child and his parent or [OPECCS].” KRS
28 At the time the DNA petitions were filed, this provision was codified in KRS
620.090(5). Its recodification under KRS 620.090(6), 2021 Ky. Acts ch. 47, § 5, was
effective June 29, 2021.
29“The adjudication shall determine the truth or falsity of the allegations in the
complaint. The burden of proof [belongs to] the complainant, and a determination of
dependency, neglect, and abuse [is] made by a preponderance of the evidence.” KRS
620.100(3).
30 “The court may extend such time after making written findings establishing
the need for the extension and after finding that the extension is in the child’s best
interest.” KRS 620.090(6).
21
620.100(4).31 “An order of temporary custody to the cabinet” is expressly
mentioned as “not . . . a permissible dispositional alternative.” KRS
620.140(2).
On their face, in terms of an injury allegation, the GAL’s DNA petitions,
alleging the Cabinet placed the three children at risk of harm, may appear
sufficient to state a cause of action against the Cabinet. The GAL took issue
with the Cabinet’s delay in informing the GAL and the Family Court that the
children had been taken to Florida, not involving the Florida police in securing
31 Potential dispositions for children under eighteen include informal
adjustment of the case by agreement, which may be entered into at any time. For
example, “[i]nformal adjustment may include an agreed plan by which . . . [t]he parent
or [OPECCS] agrees that grounds exist for a finding of dependency, neglect, or abuse,
and agrees to the conditions of protective orders under [KRS 620.140(1)(b)] for a
duration of up to one (1) year.” KRS 620.140(1)(a)1 (as amended by 2021 Ky. Acts ch.
79, § 1, effective June 29, 2021).
Other potential dispositions are protective orders, such as “placing the child in
his or her own home under supervision of the cabinet or its designee with services as
determined to be appropriate by the cabinet,” KRS 620.140(1)(b)2; “[r]emoval of the
child to the custody of an adult relative, fictive kin, other person, or child-caring
facility [as defined in KRS 600.020(10)] or child-placing agency [as defined in KRS
600.020(11)], taking into consideration the wishes of the parent or [OPECCS],” KRS
620.140(1)(c); and “[c]ommitment of the child to the custody of the cabinet for
placement for an indeterminate period of time,” KRS 620.140(1)(d).
While KRS 620.140 provides some flexibility with the determination of the
disposition, some provisions are mandatory if certain dispositions are chosen. For
example, before any child is
placed out of his or her home under the supervision of the cabinet, the
court shall determine that reasonable efforts have been made by the
court or the cabinet to prevent or eliminate the need for removal and that
continuation in the home would be contrary to the welfare of the child.
KRS 620.140(1)(c). This determination is also required before any child is committed
to the cabinet. Id. However, some parental circumstances negate the requirement
that reasonable efforts (as defined in KRS 620.020(13)) be made to reunify the child
with the family. KRS 610.127.
22
the children (even though Florida CPS had no concerns about their living
conditions or treatment) and taking forty-eight hours to return the children to
Kentucky (instead of the twenty-four hours ordered by the court).
Significantly, however, the petitions state that the GAL “is not seeking a
removal of custody from the Cabinet for Health and Family Services.” While
the requested relief, or more accurately the lack thereof, on its own suggests a
lack of a justiciable controversy, see Commonwealth Cabinet for Health & Fam.
Servs., Dep’t for Medicaid Servs. v. Sexton by & through Appalachian Reg’l
Healthcare, Inc., 566 S.W.3d 185, 195 (Ky. 2018), the preceding review of KRS
Chapter 620’s purpose and framework for protecting children and the review of
the record make clear that the GAL’s DNA petitions were improper and
unnecessary. While perhaps encouraged by the Family Court’s suggestion at
the end of the July 9 hearing that other petitions were expected, these
unnecessary petitions diverted attention and resources from the central issue
of the children’s care and safety to the speed and effectiveness of the Cabinet’s
response when it learned the paternal aunt had allowed the children to leave
the state. This foray expended trial and appellate court resources, including
this Court’s, unnecessarily. Any concerns about the Cabinet’s response to this
situation could have been raised by the GAL or the Family Court sua sponte in
the existing DNA proceedings and in fact they were so raised.
On July 6, the GAL filed an emergency motion in those original cases,
asking the Family Court to order either the mother or the Cabinet to produce
the children, i.e., seeking their return from Florida to Kentucky. The Family
23
Court granted relief and although that return occurred in forty-eight hours
rather than twenty-four,32 the children were returned unharmed and then
placed by the Cabinet in foster care. Nevertheless, the GAL disagreed with the
Cabinet’s handling of the children’s cases upon learning that the parents had
taken the children to Florida33 and disagreed especially with the lack of police
intervention in Florida to remove the children swiftly from the parents and
return them to Kentucky. Despite the fact that the children were returned
safely and placed in foster care on July 8, the GAL filed three new DNA
petitions against the Cabinet on July 10—two days after the children were back
in Kentucky. At that point, the GAL’s concerns for the children’s safety as a
result of being with their parents, and criticisms of the Cabinet’s manner of
effectuating their return from Florida without police involvement, even if
deemed an appropriate basis for a DNA petition, were largely moot. If the
Cabinet was irresponsibly lax in reporting the children’s absence or securing
their return, if deferring to Florida Child Protective Services’ judgment
regarding the children’s safety instead of involving Florida police or any other
aspect of this incident was problematic, those issues were properly addressed
32 It appears that it took two days because of CHFS administrative requirements
and COVID-19 impacting airline reservations. Two Cabinet workers flew to Florida
and returned the children within approximately forty-eight hours of when the Family
Court ruled. We note that in the interim the children were with both parents in a
home that had been deemed by Florida child protection authorities to be safe and
presenting no concerns.
33 As noted previously, the Family Court had already reserved contempt
proceedings as to the CHFS failure to comply with the April 2020 general order and
timely notify the Family Court that the children were missing.
24
in the existing DNA cases—the cases which had resulted in the Cabinet having
temporary custody of the children in the first place. In so noting the authority
of the Family Court to address those issues if appropriate and necessary on
remand, we emphasize that any contempt proceeding would have to comply
with the procedures identified and discussed in Cabinet for Health and Family
Services v. J.M.G., 475 S.W.3d 600 (Ky. 2015), and be premised on violation of
a court order.
In closing, this case is more than a little perplexing. The Cabinet did not
condone the parents taking the children out of the state and because it cannot
constantly supervise every placement, it cannot be held responsible for the
paternal aunt allowing the children’s parents to take them to Florida. Should
the Cabinet have learned of that trip earlier, perhaps by more closely
monitoring the paternal aunt’s home? Should it have notified the court on July
1 when it learned the children were in Florida instead of waiting until July 6
even though Florida Child Protective Services was on notice and had found the
children to be in safe conditions as of July 1? Was contacting Florida police to
enforce the court’s custody order necessary and appropriate in these
circumstances? These and other questions can be addressed in the context of
the original DNA proceedings. As for the GAL’s DNA petitions, they should
have been dismissed at the outset for the reasons outlined in this Opinion.
25
CONCLUSION
Having carefully reviewed the record in this matter, we vacate both lower
courts’ orders and remand to Bullitt Family Court for dismissal of the GAL’s
petitions against the Cabinet.
All sitting. All concur.
COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
Jennifer Ellen Clay
Cabinet for Health & Family Services
Office of Legal Services
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES,
TAMMY BAKER; K.T., DAUGHTER;
K.T., SON 1; AND K.T., SON 2:
Tammy Renee Baker
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
BULLITT COUNTY ATTORNEY’S
OFFICE:
Joshua Richard Bolus
Assistant County Attorney
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
M.H., MOTHER:
John E. Spainhour, Jr.
Givhan & Spainhour, PSC
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
K.T., FATHER:
James Robert Miller
26