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  • In re Lopez (unpublished)

    Posted on June 24th, 2010 Melinda Deel No comments

    Wouldn’t you know it?  The day after I get around to posting In re Mason, the Court of Appeals issues its first reversal based it: In re Lopez (unpublished).  In this case, father appealed Judge Dobrich’s (Cass County) termination of his parental rights to his child, Y, pursuant to MCL 712A.19b(3)(g) and (h).

    The child came to the attention of DHS on allegations that mother was allowing her children to miss excessive amounts of school.  There were also allegations that when she gave birth to one of the children, she tested positive for marijuana and opiates.  Father was incarcerated in Indiana at the time the case was initiated and throughout the proceedings.  Father’s earliest release date was April 19, 2011.

    On April 6, 2009, mother entered a plea and father did not object to jurisdiction.  The foster care worker never had any contact with father “due to him being incarcerated out of state.”  There was information that the worker communicated with father via mail.

    A supplemental petition was filed on October 29, 2009, alleging father “failed to participate in any way in order to be reunited with” Y.

    Father had a history of incarceration.  He first went to prison in 2000 and was released on parole on October 5, 2007.  At that time, mother gave him custody of Y.  This lasted until December 2008, when he returned to prison for violating his parole.

    At the hearing, father testified that he had not been provided with any services from DHS and he was on the waiting list for programs in the prison.

    The worker testified that upon release father would not be able to immediately provide proper care and custody of the child.  Father testified he would be able to do so because he had in the past.

    Based on these facts, the trial court found a statutory basis to terminate parental rights under (3)(g) and (3)(h).  On appeal, Father challenged the trial court’s decision under (3)(h) only.   However, the trial court interpreted his argument on the whole could be read as addressing the “reasonable expectation” component of (3)(g) and found the issue was not abandoned.

    MCL 712A.19b(3)(h) states:

    The parent is imprisoned for such a period that the child will be deprived of a normal home for a period exceeding 2 years, and the parent has not provided for the child’s proper care and custody, and there is no reasonable expectation that the parent will be able to provide proper care and custody within a reasonable time considering the child’s age.

    The Court found the trial court clearly erred in finding a statutory basis based on (3)(h) because father’s earliest release date of April 19, 2011, was only 18 months from October 2009.  Thus, the facts did not show that father would be imprisoned for more than 2 years past the date of the petition.  The Court acknowledged this was only his earliest release date, but noted that petitioner did not present evidence of the maximum discharge date and failed to meet its burden on that element.  The Court noted that under In re Mason incarceration alone was not a basis for termination.

    MCL 712A.19b(3)(g) states:

    The parent, without regard to intent, fails to provide proper care or custody for the child and there is no reasonable expectation that the parent will be able to provide proper care and custody within a reasonable time considering the child’s age.

    The Court found the trial court clearly erred in finding a statutory basis under this ground because DHS did not provide father with any services and services were not readily available to him while incarcerated.  The Court noted that father was incarcerated in Indiana, but found that nothing in the Supreme Court’s ruling in In re Mason led it to conclude that out-of-state incarceration limits or modifies the statutory obligation of DHS.  Thus, it held that DHS failed to fulfill its statutory obligation to adequately involve or evaluate father, by failing to offer him any services and by failing to include him in any service plan.

    Having found DHS did not establish a statutory basis under either (3)(h) or (3)(g), the Court reversed and remanded the case.

    My Opinion:

    This case deals primarily with the reasonable efforts to reunify the family DHS must make with an incarcerated parent. The panel in this case is of the opinion that Mason makes no distinction between a parent incarcerated in-state versus out-of-state.  The opinion is correct that Mason does not address the efforts required by DHS to a parent incarcerated out-of-state.   But, this is probably because that was not the facts in Mason.  DHS policy does not allow workers to cross the state line, so I am not sure DHS can provide any services to a parent incarcerated out-of-state, other than under some interstate compact.

    You can view or download the case here: In re Lopez

    © 2010, Melinda Deel. All rights reserved.

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