Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 219
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION II
No. CV-22-676
Opinion Delivered April 12, 2023
JUSTIN RICHIE APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
EIGHTH DIVISION
[NO. 60JV-20-585]
V.
HONORABLE TJUANA C. BYRD,
ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN JUDGE
SERVICES AND MINOR CHILDREN
APPELLEES REVERSED AND REMANDED
MIKE MURPHY, Judge
Justin Richie appeals the July 27, 2022 order terminating his parental rights to his
two children, MC1 and MC2 (ages four and two at the time of termination). On appeal, he
argues that the grounds pleaded do not support the termination of his parental rights and
that termination of his parental rights was not in the children’s best interest. We reverse and
remand.
MC1 and MC2 were taken into custody of the Arkansas Department of Human
Services (DHS) in August 2020 when they were removed from the custody of their mother,
Natalie Edwards, due to her drug use. Justin was named as a putative father. The children
were subsequently adjudicated dependent-neglected, but the court explicitly stated that the
children were not removed from Justin’s custody, and it was declining to address if he
contributed to the dependency-neglect or his fitness. Justin did not participate in the first
review hearing but was present for the second review hearing, which took place in April
2021. At this hearing, he was named a father of MC1 and MC2 and added as a defendant
to the case.
A permanency-planning hearing was held in August 2021. Although he was found to
be MC1 and MC2’s parent, Justin was not represented by counsel. At that hearing, he
testified that he had allowed Natalie to live with him some while she was homeless but that
she was not living with him at the time of the hearing. He explained that he missed his
psychological evaluation and parenting classes because of work. His home study was not
approved because he was allowing Natalie to stay with him. He said that he has been sober
since his release from prison four years ago for possession of controlled substance. He is on
parole and submits to random drug screens for parole. The court ultimately found that Justin
was in partial compliance but still changed the goal of the case to adoption.
DHS and the attorney ad litem filed a joint petition to terminate the parental rights
of both parents, but at the termination hearing, Justin still had not been appointed counsel.
The court terminated Natalie’s parental rights and continued the matter as it pertained to
Justin. On March 7, 2022, the ad litem, on behalf of the children, petitioned to terminate
Justin’s parental rights, alleging the grounds of subsequent factors and aggravated
circumstances.
The court heard from several witnesses at the termination hearing.
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Justin testified that he lives in North Little Rock, and he used to be in a relationship
with Natalie. He said their relationship was rocky and centered on drug use. When DHS
told him, around January or February of 2022, that his relationship with her was a barrier
to getting his kids back, he said that he had no intention of being around her anymore and
would get a restraining order if necessary. He admitted that, around October of 2021, he
thought of Natalie as “the one” (and had posted about it on Facebook), but that since then,
he has spoken a lot with his counselor and mentors, and everyone has impressed on him
that if he wants his children back, he cannot have Natalie around. He testified that he now
understands having her in the children’s lives is not good for them.
He testified that his sobriety date is September 26, 2021. He began inpatient drug
treatment that day and completed the treatment on October 27, 2021. He then actively
participated in an intensive outpatient program, and he still attends NA meetings. He has
completed every requirement DHS has asked of him and he testified that he has a great
relationship with the children’s current and former foster parents.
Justin has two other children ages ten and thirteen. He shares custody of those
children with their mother. They lived with him before the COVID-19 pandemic, but he
was not able to facilitate both Zoom school with them and work, so they went to live with
their mother. He has them every weekend, there are no restrictions, and they have never
been taken from him.
Justin is a foreman for a plumbing company; he makes twenty-five dollars an hour;
he is current on his bills; he has reliable transportation and a driver’s license with no
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restrictions; and he is active at New Life Church. He said he is on parole from a charge four
years ago, but it will be finished in about a month. He had only one violation in that entire
time, and when he completed rehab, he was placed back on parole without restrictions. He
is randomly drug screened as a part of his parole. He has a support system in place and
completed counseling the week before.
Dr. George DeRoeck testified next. He testified that he conducted a psychological
evaluation on Justin on January 18, 2022. At that time, Justin self-reported that he and
Natalie had been separated for twelve months. Dr. DeRoeck said that if he had known Justin
and Natalie had actually been together during that time, it would have changed his
evaluation. He diagnosed Justin with avoidant antisocial disorder. He said that due to the
volatility of Justin and Natalie’s relationship, Justin’s reunification with the children should
be a slow process, six to eight months from the time Justin achieved sobriety.
The court also heard from Amanda Joshlin, a social worker who completed Justin’s
home study a year earlier. She said that the only reason the home study was denied was
because Natalie was living there. She was concerned Justin did not seem to understand the
problem with having Natalie there. Courtney Parnell, the CASA advocate, said that Justin
had told her in January 2022 that he was not in a relationship with Natalie. Courtney’s
concern was that Natalie might show back up if they were to go home with Justin. She also
said Justin’s visits with the children were appropriate.
James Skelton, Justin’s peer-support specialist and the executive director of Natural
State Recovery Centers; and Dwight Merritt, Justin’s therapist, both testified to Justin’s
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commitment to sobriety and his children, his overall stability, and his lack of a relationship
with Natalie. Merritt testified that he did not know exactly when Justin’s relationship with
Natalie ended but that they spoke of it as it related to his past.
Jamie Tacito, a caseworker for Connected Foster Care (a private foster agency
contracted by DHS), testified that Justin has made almost every visit with his children, there
is a bond between the children and Justin, and that Justin is always prepared and appropriate
at the visits. She said he is a proactive parent and asks if there is anything else he can be
doing, without prompting. Justin has had six unsupervised visits with the children, and she
supports reunification. Melissa Trotter, the current DHS caseworker on the case, stated
Justin had completed all services ordered, and she believes it is in the children’s best interest
to be reunified with their father and that his rights not be terminated. She said that she had
been assigned the case the month before, and Justin’s home had not been evaluated by DHS
since April 2021, but she would personally go to Justin’s house after the hearing to perform
a walk through. Melissa developed her opinion after speaking with the former DHS
caseworkers on the case and the foster parents.
At the conclusion of the evidence, the court terminated Justin’s parental rights. It
found that the ad litem had proved the grounds in the petition by clear and convincing
evidence. From the bench the court explained that
[s]ervices were ordered in the case and of significance then and throughout the case
was the long-term relationship between Mr. Richie and Ms. Edwards, and that
relationship was and has been described as toxic, unhealthy and even identified as a
drug relationship. These two have a history of using drugs together, and the best
interest of these children has to be the paramount concern of this Court.
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My findings weigh heavily on Mr. Richie’s credibility, his judgement, and his insight,
and by most accounts, the visits with his children go very well, and the evidence before
the Court is that he has done the services. The concern of the Court, however, is that
Mr. Richie did not give the same account of his sobriety or his relationship with Ms.
Edwards in his psychological evaluation, his drug and alcohol assessment or in a
therapeutic setting. All of the dates and the contacts are inconsistent in each of those
various reportings.
I have no firm sense of when or if the relationship with Ms. Edwards ended, as even
after indicating Mr. Richie realized the relationship was toxic and not good for him,
there is some evidence via social media that he has -- well he identified her as “the
one.” His therapist, Mr. Merritt, was not certain if Mr. Richie and Ms. Edwards were
in a relationship or not. He felt like Mr. Richie had made some acknowledgments
about the unhealthiness of the relationship, but he couldn’t with certainty say either
what the level of the relationship was.
Ultimately, I have to consider the long term health safety and welfare of these
children, and I, quite frankly, find that there are many ways that Mr. Richie could
have shown the Court and/or the Department that has completely separated from a
women he believed was the one, with whom he had on and off-again relationship
with for nearly two years and who's rights have been terminated as against these
children.
I find that Mr. Richie has made efforts to check the boxes, but I know that he has not
been credible regarding his relationship with Ms. Edwards and his sobriety during
this case. Mr. Richie ultimately then has not done what is necessary to show that he
is a fit parent with the judgement and insight necessary to protect these children on
a long-term basis, and this Court cannot leave these children with Mr. Richie and just
go away.
The Court finds that it is in the best interest that the termination petition be granted,
finding that they are adoptable, based on the testimony by Elizabeth Oldridge, that
there are some 158 possible resources with the two as a sibling group data matching,
and the only barrier to adoption is the termination of parental rights. These children
are at substantial risk of further instability, exposure to the toxic relationship with
Ms. Edwards and Mr. Richie and then potential drug exposure because placing them
with him could very potentially be the same as placing them with Ms. Edwards, and
so the Court does then grant the termination[.]
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The resulting order recited that the subsequent-factors ground found at Arkansas
Code Annotated section 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(vii)(a) (Supp. 2021) and the aggravated-
circumstances ground found at Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-34l(b)(3)(B)(ix)(a)(3)
support termination and that termination is in the children’s best interest. The order
specifically recites that
Justin Richie has had ample opportunity and services to demonstrate a sustained
benefit from the services provided that were designed to make him a fit parent.
However, the Court finds that Justin Richie is not credible regarding his relationship
with Natalie Edwards or the dates regarding his sobriety. The conflicting testimony
regarding his relationship was abundant and this Court finds that placing custody of
[MC1] and [MC2] with Justin Richie is akin to placing custody back with Natalie
Edwards. Justin Richie testified that his relationship ended with Natalie around the
end of January or February of 2022. He also testified that he remembered posting on
the social media site, Facebook, in the fall of 2021, that Natalie was “the one” because
at that time they were still in a relationship. He also posted a picture of them together
in January 2022 at a recovery meeting and testified that he would visit her about once
each month when she was in treatment. The testimony from Dr. George DeRoeck,
who conducted the psychological evaluation, was that Justin Richie reported he had
been separated from Natalie Edwards for twelve (12) months. Additionally, Dr.
DeRoeck testified about the significance that Justin Richie did not report that
Natalie’s rights had been terminated and reported he was “unaware if she was working
the case.” Dr. DeRoeck diagnosed Justin with anti-social personality traits and
testified that he was not forthcoming during the evaluation. Testimony from the
CASA advocate, whom this Court finds credible, was that a staffing was held in
February 2022 and at that time Justin Richie was insistent that he cut off ties with
Natalie Edwards as soon as her parental rights were terminated in November 202l.
The CASA advocate testified that Justin Richie always maintained in his
conversations with her that he did not have contact with Natalie. Justin Richie’s
therapist, Dwight Merritt, testified that he had been seeing Justin for twelve (12)
weeks. He testified that he thought Justin had ties to Natalie in the beginning of their
sessions but believes that he cut ties with her at some point. Dwight Merritt was
uncertain about when the relationship between Justin and Natalie ended.
Since the inception of this case there has been extensive evidence regarding the
lengthy and toxic relationship between Justin Richie and Natalie Edwards. The
relationship is drug-fueled and Ms. Edwards is a trigger for Mr. Richie. Today, the
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Court does not find Justin Richie credible regarding whether or not he is still in a
relationship with Natalie Edwards. Continuing with therapy repeating a psychological
evaluation, and offering more services would be of little benefit to this family. Justin
Richie has checked all the boxes, but is not honest regarding basic facts that are
paramount to the safety of his children. He gives a different date regarding when his
relationship ended with Ms. Edwards nearly each time he is asked. The juveniles have
been in foster care for nearly two (2) years and there are many ways Justin Richie
could have demonstrated he was not in a relationship with Ms. Edwards, but instead
the evidence shows they have continued their “on again off again” relationship
throughout the duration of this case.
Justin appeals and argues that the termination is supported by neither grounds nor
best interest. We agree with Justin that this record lacks clear and convincing evidence of
grounds to support termination or that termination is in the children’s best interest.
In order to terminate parental rights, the trial court must find by clear and convincing
evidence that termination is in the best interest of the juvenile, taking into consideration (1)
the likelihood that the juvenile will be adopted if the termination petition is granted; and
(2) the potential harm, specifically addressing the effect on the health and safety of the child,
caused by returning the child to the custody of the parent. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-
341(b)(3)(A)(i) & (ii) (Supp. 2021). The order terminating parental rights must also be based
on a showing by clear and convincing evidence as to one or more of the grounds for
termination listed in section 9-27-341(b)(3)(B). However, only one ground must be proved
to support termination. Best v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2020 Ark. App. 485, 611 S.W.3d
690.
A trial court’s order terminating parental rights must be based upon findings proved
by clear and convincing evidence. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3). Clear and convincing
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evidence is defined as that degree of proof that will produce in the fact-finder a firm
conviction as to the allegation sought to be established. Posey v. Ark. Dep’t of Health & Hum.
Servs., 370 Ark. 500, 262 S.W.3d 159 (2007). On appeal, the appellate court reviews
termination-of-parental-rights cases de novo but will not reverse the trial court’s ruling unless
its findings are clearly erroneous. Id. A finding is clearly erroneous when, although there is
evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with a definite and
firm conviction that a mistake has been made. Id. In determining whether a finding is clearly
erroneous, an appellate court gives due deference to the opportunity of the trial court to
judge the credibility of witnesses. Mason v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2022 Ark. App. 124, at
2, 642 S.W.3d 260, 262.
The subsequent-factors ground requires the moving party to prove the following
elements: (1) that other factors or issues arose, (2) that those factors or issues arose after the
petition was filed, (3) that those factors or issues prevented the juveniles’ placement with a
parent; (4) that appropriate family services were offered; and (5) that the parent manifested
the incapacity or indifference to remedy the subsequent factors or issues. Ark. Code Ann.§
9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(vii)(a).
The aggravated circumstances ground requires that a parent is found by a court of
competent jurisdiction to have subjected any juvenile to “aggravated circumstances” defined
as (1) a determination by a judge that there is little likelihood that any further services to the
family would result in reunification. Ark. Code Ann § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(ix)(a).
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The major issue the court had with returning the children to Justin was the court’s
uncertainty about Justin’s past with Natalie and his credibility on when that relationship
ended. It was concerned he was still in a relationship with Natalie, and it did not find Justin
credible on the subject. A credibility finding, however, is not synonymous to a finding that
further services would not result in reunification or that Justin was incapable or indifferent
remedying the barriers to reunification. To the contrary, the only evidence on this record
was that once DHS clearly explained to Justin that continued contact with Natalie was
keeping him from his children, Justin took significant and measurable steps to cut ties with
her. He sought advice from his therapist and support network, and every witness to testify
stated that Justin and Natalie were not presently in a relationship. Justin had achieved
unsupervised visitation. By all accounts, Justin is the opposite of an indifferent parent who
cannot benefit from services. The grounds for termination are not supported by clear and
convincing evidence.
For the same reasons, we also hold that the court’s best-interest finding is
unsupported. We have said it so frequently that it is now axiomatic: few consequences of
judicial action are so grave as the severance of natural family ties. See Meyers v. Ark. Dep’t of
Hum. Servs., 2017 Ark. App. 614, 533 S.W.3d 654. The fundamental liberty interest of
natural parents in the care, custody, and management of their child does not evaporate
simply because they have not been model parents or have lost temporary custody of their
child to the State. Rhine v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2011 Ark. App. 649, 386 S.W.3d 577.
A termination of parental rights is both total and irrevocable—it leaves the parent with no
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right to visit or communicate with the child, or to participate in, or even to know about, any
important decision affecting the child’s religious, educational, emotional, or physical
development. Lassiter v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 452 U.S. 18 (1981). As long as there is reason to
believe that positive, nurturing parent-child relationships exist, the law favors preservation,
not severance, of natural familial bonds. Mason v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2022 Ark. App.
124, at 17, 642 S.W.3d 260, 270.
On this point, Mason, is persuasive. In Mason, the trial court’s biggest concern was
the father’s relationship with a girlfriend he had during the pendency of the case. She had
prior felony and misdemeanor drug convictions. We wrote that
[w]hile we share the trial court’s concern about this relationship, the record shows
that Miranda no longer lives with Venson and has her own residence. There was also
no evidence that, during C.M.’s trial home placement with Venson, Miranda had
ever spent the night there. The exact status of their relationship is unclear, and the
record does not show that either the trial court or DHS informed Venson that
preservation of his parental rights depended on his termination of this relationship.
In light of the unrefuted evidence of Venson’s compliance, progress, and close bond
with C.M., we conclude that his association with Miranda cannot justify the trial
court’s order severing Venson’s parental rights.
Like in Mason, given Justin’s compliance, progress, and bond with his children, we
cannot say that his past relationship with the mother of his children necessarily justifies
severing his parental rights. There is no evidence that any real risk of potential harm exists
because of this prior relationship, or that the children’s best interest would be served by
having their father permanently and irrevocably removed from their lives. Having considered
the evidence before us, we find clear error in the trial court’s termination of Justin’s parental
rights, and we reverse and remand.
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Reversed and remanded.
HARRISON, C.J., and BARRETT, J., agree.
Dusti Standridge, for appellant.
Dana McClain, attorney ad litem for minor child.
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