Court Opinion

ID: 2717610
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-08-13 14:07:36.255808+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:28:09.846266
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                   No. 14-0599
                              Filed August 13, 2014

IN THE INTEREST OF J.D. AND E.D.,
Minor Children,

Z.D., Father,
Appellant.
________________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Cerro Gordo County, Annette L.

Boehlje, District Associate Judge.

      The father appeals the termination of his parental rights to his children,

J.D. and E.D. AFFIRMED.

      Dylan J. Thomas, Mason City, for appellant father.

      Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kathrine S. Miller-Todd, Assistant

Attorney General, Carlyle D. Dalen, County Attorney, and Nichole Benes,

Assistant County Attorney, for appellee State.

      Nicole Olson of Heiny, McManigal, Duffy, Stambaugh & Anderson, P.L.C.,

Mason City, for appellee mother.

      Mark Young and Crystal L. Ely of Young Law Office, Mason City,

attorneys and guardians ad litem for minor children.

      Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vogel and Bower, JJ.
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PER CURIAM

       The father appeals the termination of his parental rights to his children,

J.D. and E.D. He asserts that, because the State did not petition that his rights

should be terminated under Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(h) (2013), the juvenile

court improperly found termination warranted on that paragraph.        He further

argues that the requirements for termination were not met, because the children

were never removed from his care, and they could have been returned to his

care at the time of the termination hearing. He also argues termination was not

in the children’s best interest and that the bond between him and the children

should have precluded termination.     We conclude the juvenile court properly

terminated the father’s parental rights under the county attorney’s petition cited

paragraph (f) and that the citation to paragraph (h) in the disposition was merely

a scrivener’s error. Furthermore, due to the father’s consistent violent behavior

toward the mother and complete unwillingness to engage in services to correct

his behavior, termination is in the children’s best interest, and none of the

considerations under Iowa Code section 232.116(3) preclude termination.

Consequently, we affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

       J.D., born June 2003, and E.D., born August 2005, first came to the

attention of the Department of Human Services (DHS) in December 2011. In the

DHS report, it was noted the mother was using bath salts and abusing

prescription drugs, the father had severely beaten the mother on several different

occasions, and he had also hit J.D. over the head with a toy plastic gun.

Specifically, the report stated:
                                            3

       Throughout the assessment it was reported that [the father] would
       physically hit [the mother] and lock her out of the house. [The
       mother] reported that he tied her hands behind her back, and [the
       father] would force her to make self-deprecating statements like
       she is a junkie or a whore, and then record those statements. [The
       mother] shared that she had suffered from physical abuse in the
       past from [the father]. For example, [the father] broke her nose
       while they were living in South Carolina. She reported that she was
       a victim of recent domestic violence as [the father] had beaten her
       up badly on or around November 24, 2011. [The mother] was
       taken to the ER in Mason City after [the father] hit her in the head
       leaving bumps, dragged her across the room and threw her down
       the stairs, as well as [the father] reportedly stepping on her neck
       and kicking her. [The mother] reported that [the father] had used
       zip-ties to tie her hands together to restrain her. While she was in
       the ER on 11-24-11 it was noted that [the mother] had several
       bruises in various stages of development. [The mother] and her
       grandmother reported that these bruises were due to the domestic
       violence that was inflicted upon her by [the father].

The allegations of abuse regarding the November 2011 beating were supported

by photographs, which were entered into evidence at the termination hearing.

       The mother and father separated in 2011.1              While the original DHS

investigation was focused on the mother and her substance abuse issues, once

the physical abuse was discovered, the investigation focused on the father. The

children were residing with the mother until a civil order of protection was

dismissed, at which point the father picked the children up at school, citing

concerns the mother was not able to parent them adequtely. He then took the

children home with him.

       The children were adjudicated in need of assistance on February 23,

2012, following a hearing, in which the juvenile court found it was not in their best

1
  The mother and father were married in 2003, separated in 2009, then reconciled for a
brief period of time in 2011. Following their separation in 2011, a dissolution decree was
entered on May 29, 2013. The decree ordered joint legal custody with the mother as the
primary caretaker. The mother cooperated with all DHS services and the children
remain in her care.
                                        4

interest to remain with the father. In its recitation of facts, the court noted the

mother was no longer abusing substances, and was otherwise complying with

DHS services.     The father, on the other hand, was an abuser who took no

responsibility for his actions. The children were removed from the father’s care

on February 27.

      Services were offered to the father, including: family safety, risk, and

permanency services; psychological evaluations; mental health counseling; drug

testing; substance abuse evaluations and treatment; supervised visitation;

transportation; crisis intervention (domestic violence) services; family team

meetings; CASA; and coordination with the Department of Corrections.

      The father was granted supervised visitation. While the children clearly

shared a bond with the father, service providers and psychologists were

concerned this bond was not healthy. For example, the father told the children

that the mother, DHS, and other case workers were sinners who would suffer the

consequences when it came time for judgment, and would implicitly encourage

the children to defy the mother, despite the service providers informing him this

behavior was inappropriate.    The father also recorded all visitation sessions.

Following a visit on July 8, 2013, E.D. requested that visitations with the father

cease. Both children demonstrated negative behavior following visits with the

father. While told he could and should contact the children’s therapist, the father

never did so. As the juvenile court noted throughout the dispositional and review

hearings and in the termination order, the father made no progress and showed

no improvement with regard to these issues over the course of two years. Due to

this inability to engage with the children in an appropriate manner, and the
                                        5

detrimental effects the visits were having on the children, visitation was

terminated in November 2013.

      Throughout the course of proceedings, the father was resistant to

intervention and suggestions.     He consistently denied any abuse occurred

between him and the mother and otherwise refused to take any responsibility for

his actions, choosing to blame others.      Whenever service providers would

attempt to address his issues, he would refuse to talk about them, denying he

had any problems, and instead focusing on the mother and her perceived faults

as a parent and as a person. The service providers noted he obsessed over her.

Even on appeal, he continues to assert the multiple injuries the mother suffered

were self-inflicted. While he avoided a number of drug tests for inexplicable

reasons, he tested positive for marijuana in June 2012.

      A psychological evaluation of the father, dated June 2012, stated:

              Persons with test results like [the father] may harbor a good
      deal of hostility as well as rebellious impulses. They may typically
      control their anger only to have sudden and dramatic temper out
      bursts. [The father’s] MMPI-2 profile suggests that he does not
      take responsibility for his problems in living and that he is instead
      prone to rationalizing and justifying his actions. According to the
      test results, he also is one to engage in displacement of blame. He
      may sometimes engage in guilty self-reproach that evolves into
      self-pity. At present, he seems to be feeling particularly mistreated
      and victimized.
              ....
              He also appears to be an angry person who may have
      periodic and dramatic temper outbursts that punctuate longer
      periods of control. There would seem to be a narcissistic quality to
      his personality with associated inability to assume responsibility for
      his problems.

      The father submitted as an exhibit a letter from his psychologist, who met

with him ten times between January and July 2013, though by the time the
                                          6

termination hearing occurred, there had been approximately thirty visits. The

letter stated:

       In these 10 sessions, we further reviewed the concerns raised by
       Dr. Harper in his evaluation of June 2012, which I continue to
       consider to be more extrapolation from records of accusation
       against [the father] rather than based on assessment with relevant
       and valid psychological instruments . . . . We have continued to
       work on perspective and emotional regulation around what he has
       felt is a very biased and distorted portrayal of him and his concerns
       that the welfare of his children is not being prioritized in the way
       that his ex-wife is being supervised . . . . [W]e have also been
       working on a course of anger management . . . . He has been open
       and responsive to this material despite his contention that he has
       never had issues with his temper other than during the brief time
       when he found himself hurt and betrayed by his wife’s infidelity five
       years ago, which is the one occasion when he admits that he hit
       her. In summary, [the father] continues to comply with the
       requirement to be in therapy and to address issues pertaining to the
       proper perspective in raising children and in how to best manage
       difficult emotions including anger.

However, during the termination hearing, the same psychologist testified that “in

terms of needing to improve in the way that he has managed his frustration and

aggravations, he would maintain that he didn’t feel that there was that much to

improve upon.”

       The father has a nursing background and was employed in the Army

National Guard for thirteen years.         As of January 3, 2014, the father’s

employment situation was unknown. He claimed he was employed but refused

to supply DHS or the court with any of his employment information. At the time

of the hearing he was living with relatives.

       The father also has a criminal history. He was convicted of operating

while intoxicated and assault causing bodily injury on January 24, 2014. His

victim in this case was a man who had dated the mother after her and the
                                         7

father’s separation, with the assault taking place on September 22, 2013, and

resulting in the victim’s broken clavicle. He was also convicted of two counts of

domestic assault causing bodily injury—due to the 2011 beating of the mother—

on September 16, 2013.        However, at the termination hearing, he refuted

responsibility for these actions, claiming he acted in self-defense and the mother

in fact caused him to assault her. He was also jailed for thirty days for failing to

comply with his pretrial release requirements, from April 9 to May 10, 2013.

       Due to the father’s unwillingness to engage in services and his complete

lack of progress over the course of two years, the State filed a petition to

terminate his parental rights. A contested hearing was held on January 24, 27,

28, and 31, 2014, in which service providers, psychologists, character witnesses,

the mother, and the father testified. The juvenile court terminated the father’s

parental rights on March 31, 2014. The father appeals.

II. Standard of Review

       We review termination proceedings de novo. In re S.R., 600 N.W.2d 63,

64 (Iowa Ct. App. 1999). The grounds for termination must be proved by clear

and convincing evidence. Id. Our primary concern is the children’s best interest.

Id.

III. Merits

       As an initial matter, the adjudicatory section in the juvenile court’s order,

which cited Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(h),2 was clearly a scrivener’s error.

2
  To terminate under Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(h), the State must prove by clear
and convincing evidence the child is three years of age or younger, adjudicated CINA,
removed from home for six of the last twelve months, and the child cannot be returned
home.
                                        8

The county attorney’s petition alleged section 232.116(1)(f), and the termination

order set forth the factors to be proved under paragraph (f). The court then went

through the proper analysis for termination under paragraph (f) throughout the

decision.   A typographical error is not grounds for reversal.     See State v.

Yarborough, 536 N.W.2d 493, 497 (Iowa Ct. App. 1995).         Consequently, the

argument that the termination should be reversed because the State did not

prove grounds to terminate under paragraph (h) is without merit.

      To terminate parental rights under Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(f), the

State must show the child is four years or older, adjudicated CINA, has been

removed from the parent’s care for the last twelve consecutive months, and

cannot be returned to the parent’s care. The father’s unsupported statement the

children were never removed from his care is unsupported in the record. The

children were clearly removed from his care on February 27, 2012, and never

returned. He was only allowed to see the children during supervised visits, and

he never progressed to unsupervised visits. Consequently, the requirement in

paragraph (f) that the children be removed from his care for twelve consecutive

months has been met.

      We also agree with the juvenile court the State proved by clear and

convincing evidence the children cannot be returned to the father’s care, and

more time would not correct the situation. The father has shown no progress or

willingness to engage in services throughout the pendency of this proceeding.

He consistently denies any abuse ever occurred, which evidences an

unwillingness to modify his violent behavior. The fact he abused the mother in

front of the children and yet never acknowledged that any harm occurred to
                                          9

either the mother or the children, shows how dangerous it would be to return the

children to his care. As the DHS worker testified:

       Domestic violence in homes where children may not directly see
       the physical hitting but hear or can sense intimidation or maybe
       hear stuff from a different room, still has a very negative impact on
       their emotional well-being, how they do in school, can impact their
       brain development at an early age, can impact their relationships as
       they get older, there’s a whole bunch of stuff that goes into it.
       When kids are in a room when there’s domestic violence, there’s
       research that says their heart rate increases, their stomachs hurt,
       it’s just negatively affecting their whole well-being. So domestic
       violence when kids are present or even in the vicinity of it, has a
       very negative impact on their overall development.

       We also agree that termination is in the children’s best interest pursuant to

Iowa Code section 232.116(2). The father’s testimony at the termination hearing

and behavior in the past two years shows his inability to parent the children

adequately and safely. He adamantly contends there was no abuse. However, it

is vital the parent acknowledge and recognize abuse occurred before any

meaningful change can take place. See In re L.B., 530 N.W.2d 465, 468 (Iowa

Ct. App. 1995). As stated previously, he has refused all attempts to help him

correct his behavior. And as the children’s guardian ad litem noted in the report

to the court:

       Had [the father] made a conscious decision at any point over the
       past year to comply, even minimally, with the court orders, I do not
       believe that we would be at this point. The fact that [the father],
       knowing that his future with his children is hanging in the balance,
       has still failed to comply with the orders and to challenge the
       validity of nearly each and every facet of this case, is truly sad and I
       believe, is clear and convincing evidence that no amount of time
       and effort on the part of the Department or the Court will result in
       compliance. As such, it does not appear that any amount of time or
       effort will improve [the father’s] ability to resume positive and
       healthy interaction with his children.
                                         10

       In determining the future actions of the parent, his past conduct is

instructive. In re J.E., 723 N.W.2d 793, 798 (Iowa 2006). In this case, the father

has not modified his behavior at all, and it is clear he has no intention of ever

doing so. “[W]hen a parent is incapable of changing to allow the child to return

home, termination is necessary.” In re T.T., 541 N.W.2d 552, 557 (Iowa Ct. App.

1995). Furthermore, the unequivocal opinion of each DHS worker, as well as the

children’s therapist, that the children cannot be returned to the father’s care and

termination is in their best interest, shows that reunification cannot be achieved.

       Additionally, none of the considerations in Iowa Code section 232.116(3)

should preclude termination of the father’s parental rights. While the children

share a bond with the father, as a DHS worker testified, “I don’t believe it’s been

an overly healthy relationship . . . and regardless of the type of abuse that

children experience at the hands of a parent or a caregiver, very frequently there

is a bond there.”

       The relative-placement consideration should not apply either, given the

father’s violent abuse of the mother. Having this apply would only serve to put

the mother and children in danger. See In re C.K., 558 N.W.2d 170, 174 (Iowa

1997) (“An appropriate determination to terminate a parent-child relationship is

not to be countermanded by the ability and willingness of a family relative to take

the child.”). Moreover, while J.D. expressed some hesitation about the father’s

parental rights being terminated, as the juvenile court noted, this opinion by no

means was unequivocal.        Most importantly, however, each expert opinion

counseled against allowing the father to resume care of the children.

Consequently, the considerations listed in Iowa Code section 232.116(3) do not
                                      11

preclude termination of the father’s parental rights, and we affirm the juvenile

court’s order.

       AFFIRMED.