Court Opinion

ID: 9369347
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-08 16:05:38.492675+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:14.355683
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                    No. 22-1851
                               Filed February 8, 2023

IN THE INTEREST OF A.S., K.S. and L.S.,
      Minor Children,

A.S., Father,
       Appellant,

D.S., Mother,
       Appellant.
________________________________________________________________

       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Susan Cox, District

Associate Judge.

       A mother and father separately appeal a juvenile court order adjudicating

their three children as in need of assistance. AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.

       Magdalena Reese of Des Moines Juvenile Public Defender, Des Moines,

for appellant father.

       Arielle M. Lipman of Lipman Law Firm, P.C., West Des Moines, for appellant

mother.

       Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Mary A. Triick, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

       Lynn Vogan of Youth Law Center, Des Moines, attorney and guardian ad

litem for minor children.

       Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Ahlers and Buller, JJ.
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AHLERS, Judge.

         A mother and father separately appeal the juvenile court’s order

adjudicating their three children1 in need of assistance.

         The parents divorced over a decade ago. Their dissolution decree granted

the father physical care of the children, subject to the mother’s visitation rights.

The parents later reconciled and lived together as a family.

         The department of health and human services became involved following

the father’s arrest for possession of marijuana, cocaine, and drug paraphernalia.

The department investigated allegations that the father used methamphetamine

and cocaine while caring for the children and used marijuana with the oldest child.

A child protection worker spoke to the father, who denied using methamphetamine

but admitted using cocaine earlier in the month. The father stated a drug test

would likely be positive for cocaine and marijuana.         The father denied using

marijuana with his child or providing the child with the drug. He admitted the child

took his marijuana and a pipe. The father agreed to move in with his parents

pending completion of a drug test.

         The children’s mother told the child protection worker she was unaware of

any illegal substances in the home.      While agreeing the father was recently

arrested for possession of drugs, she noted that he was caught with the

substances outside the home. The mother admitted to marijuana use one or two

times a month.       She denied allegations of physical domestic violence but

acknowledged verbal arguments with the father.         She stated the arguments

1   The children were born in 2006, 2007, and 2011.
                                          3

affected the children and the youngest child voiced feelings of self-harm, prompting

the mother to enlist the assistance of a school counselor.

       The child protection worker spoke to the older two children and toured the

home. She advised the parents that the father could return to the home and she

“had no concerns for behavioral indicators of illicit drug use.” Three days later, the

mother decided to move out of the home and into her mother’s home. She advised

the child protection worker that she and the father had an argument about whether

the children could attend the father’s music concert that evening. She also told the

worker about an incident two months earlier involving mutual physical violence.

The next day, the department received drug test results from the father, which were

positive for the active ingredient in marijuana and alcohol.

       The children remained with the father. The parents reverted to the physical

care and visitation provisions contained in the dissolution decree. The department

did not seek to have the children removed from either or both parents’ custody.

       Several months after the child abuse investigation concluded, the State filed

a petition to have the children adjudicated in need of assistance under Iowa Code

section 232.96A(3)(b) and (14) (2022). At the adjudication hearing, the State

offered ten exhibits to which the parents stipulated. No further evidentiary record

was made.2 The juvenile court adjudicated the children in need of assistance

2 We have discouraged and continue to discourage the practice of conducting
juvenile hearings based on written reports rather than testimony, as it makes
review more challenging, and it presumably makes it more difficult for the juvenile
court to make necessary factual findings. See, e.g., In re H.V., No. 20-0934, 2020
WL 6157826, at *4–6 (Iowa Ct. App. Oct. 21, 2020) (reversing juvenile court’s order
terminating parental rights due to the State’s failure to prove its case when its
evidence consisted exclusively of exhibits for which inadequate foundation was
lain). As the parties stipulated to admissibility of the exhibits here, we have a
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under both grounds raised in the State’s petition. The children remained in the

parents’ custody. The court later filed a dispositional order confirming adjudication.

       On appeal, the parents contend the State failed to prove the grounds for

adjudication cited by the juvenile court.           Because the grounds may affect

subsequent proceedings, we will address both. See In re J.S., 846 N.W.2d 36, 41

(Iowa 2014).

       Iowa Code section 232.96A(3)(b) requires proof a child “has suffered or is

imminently likely to suffer harmful effects as a result of . . . [t]he failure of the child’s

parent . . . to exercise a reasonable degree of care in supervising the child.” Iowa

Code section 232.96A(14) requires proof that “the child’s parent[] . . . suffers from

a mental incapacity, a mental condition, imprisonment, or drug or alcohol abuse

that results in the child not receiving adequate care or being imminently likely not

to receive adequate care.”

       A founded child abuse report for denial of critical care named the child’s

father as the parent responsible for allowing the oldest child access to his

marijuana. The mother lived with the father at the time. On our de novo review of

the record, we conclude the report provides evidentiary support for the juvenile

court’s adjudication of the children as in need of assistance under

section 232.96A(3)(b).

       As to adjudication under section 232.96A(14), we note that the father has

repeatedly used illegal drugs both before and after being arrested for possessing

them. There has been at least one incident of physical violence between the

different outcome than in H.V., but we continue to discourage the practice of trying
the case on exhibits only.
                                          5

parents in the home during the time the father has been using illegal drugs, and

there have been other instances of verbal altercations. In addition, the father’s

drug use resulted in one of the children gaining access to his stash. Also, after

being convicted of possessing illegal drugs and being placed on probation, he was

compliant for a bit but then began missing appointments and ducking drug testing.

This resulted in him being held in contempt and jailed for violating his probation

only a few months before the adjudication hearing.             He also completed a

substance-abuse evaluation around that time during which he admitted his drug

use interfered with his functioning. By the time of the adjudication hearing two

months later, he still had not started recommended treatment. To his credit, by the

time of the dispositional hearing, he had begun treatment. But his treatment was

in its infancy and does not erase the history that occurred before his belated

treatment efforts. If things go well, the case can always close, but, for the time

being, the fact that the father just began long-recommended drug treatment does

not negate the need to adjudicate the children under section 232.96A(14). On our

de novo review, we find that the children were properly adjudicated under

section 232.96A(14).

       AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.

Buller, J., concurs; Vaitheswaran, P.J., partially dissents.
                                           6

VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge (concurring in part and dissenting in part).

         I concur in part and dissent in part. I agree the State proved the children

were in need of assistance under Iowa Code section 232.96A(3)(b) (2022). I

disagree that the State proved the children were in need of assistance under Iowa

Code section 232.96A(14).

         Iowa Code section 232.96A(14) requires proof that “the child’s parent[] . . .

suffers from a mental incapacity, a mental condition, imprisonment, or drug or

alcohol abuse that results in the child not receiving adequate care or being

imminently likely not to receive adequate care.” There was scant if any evidence

of    parental “mental incapacity,” “mental condition,” or “imprisonment.”3

Accordingly, adjudication under this provision had to rest on “drug or alcohol

abuse.” As the majority notes, the child protection worker advised the parents she

“had no concerns for behavioral indicators of illicit drug use.” The department

declined to confirm the allegation that the father “used or possessed cocaine in the

presence of his children” or “used methamphetamine.”            That left the father’s

positive drug test for the active ingredient in marijuana. The department essentially

discounted the test as a basis for finding the father an inadequate caretaker by

authorizing the father to return to the home and by allowing him to resume his

parenting functions. Notwithstanding the department’s affirmation of his parenting

abilities, the father followed the substance-abuse evaluator’s recommendation to

pursue intensive outpatient treatment.

3   Following his arrest, the father was jailed and released after several hours.
                                       7

      As for the mother, the department documented her admission to occasional

marijuana use but made no finding of “drug or alcohol abuse.” The department

further noted that a substance-abuse evaluation contained “no recommendations”

for the mother to undergo drug treatment.

      Adjudication under section 232.96A(14) also had to rest on a finding that

the substance abuse resulted “in the child not receiving adequate care or being

imminently likely not to receive adequate care.” As noted, the department allowed

the father to return to the home and resume his caretaking role.        And the

department did not seek to have the children formally removed from either or both

parents’ custody. Indeed, the department reported that the parents were “able to

meet the needs of the children and appear[ed] to have age-appropriate

expectations for the children.” On my de novo review of the record, I would

conclude the State failed to prove the children were in need of assistance under

section 232.96A(14).