In the Interest of: A.J.E., a Minor
1142 EDA 2016
Pa. Super. Ct.Jan 23, 2017Background
- Child A.E. was adjudicated dependent and placed in DHS custody in August 2013 after reports of maternal substance use, neglect, and unstable housing; child later moved through kinship placements and then with unrelated foster parents.
- Mother admitted to alcohol and illicit drug use; was incarcerated mid‑2014 (released November 2014); DHS developed a Family Service Plan (FSP) requiring parenting classes, substance‑use and mental‑health treatment, housing, and supervised visitation.
- Mother sporadically engaged with services (some prison‑based programming, intermittent outpatient treatment) but did not complete required programs, lost housing, and was inconsistent in attending visits; one drug screen detected high traces of cocaine.
- DHS filed a petition to involuntarily terminate parental rights on November 3, 2014; trial and permanency goal change hearing occurred March 2, 2016.
- The trial court found DHS proved grounds for termination under 23 Pa.C.S. §2511(a)(1), (2), (5), and (8), and that termination met the child’s best interests under §2511(b); it also approved changing the permanency goal to adoption. The Superior Court affirmed.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument (Mother) | Defendant's Argument (DHS) | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether §2511(a)(1) termination was supported (failure/refusal to perform parental duties over 6 months) | Mother argued insufficient evidence of intent or refusal to parent | DHS showed sustained non‑completion of FSP objectives, inconsistent visitation, failure to use prison services during statutory six‑month period | Court held clear and convincing evidence supported §2511(a)(1) termination |
| Whether §2511(a)(2) termination was supported (repeated incapacity/neglect not remediable) | Mother claimed compliance with goals and ability to parent now | DHS pointed to pattern of noncompliance, continued substance issues, unstable housing, inconsistent visitation | Court held evidence supported termination under §2511(a)(2) |
| Whether §2511(a)(5) termination was supported (conditions leading to placement continue for 6 months) | Mother argued DHS did not prove conditions continued and reasonable efforts were insufficient | DHS showed child had been in care >6 months, Mother failed to remedy conditions despite referrals and services | Court held §2511(a)(5) grounds proven and services were reasonable |
| Whether §2511(a)(8) termination was supported (12+ months in care and conditions persist) | Mother argued recent compliance made conditions changed | DHS emphasized 31 months in care, continued unmet FSP objectives, recent drug screen and unstable housing | Court held §2511(a)(8) grounds satisfied and termination served child's needs |
| Whether §2511(b) (bond/best interest) and change of goal to adoption were proper | Mother argued termination would harm child and she had bond/was improving | DHS and witnesses testified child lacked bond with Mother, is bonded to foster parents, and would not suffer irreparable harm; adoption serves stability | Court found no beneficial parental bond, termination and goal change to adoption in child’s best interest |
Key Cases Cited
- In re Adoption of Atencio, 650 A.2d 1064 (Pa. 1994) (standard for clear and convincing evidence in termination proceedings)
- In re Adoption of S.M., 816 A.2d 1117 (Pa. Super. 2003) (scope of review and parental‑rights termination principles)
- In re N.C., 763 A.2d 913 (Pa. Super. 2000) (review standards for termination orders)
- In re Adoption of Charles E.D.M., 708 A.2d 88 (Pa. 1998) (primacy of child’s needs and welfare under §2511(b))
- In re D.J.S., 737 A.2d 283 (Pa. Super. 1999) (incarceration does not preclude termination where parent fails to use available resources)
- In re NW, 851 A.2d 508 (Pa. Super. 2004) (timing and reasonableness of permanency efforts; children should not remain in limbo beyond reasonable limits)
- In re K.Z.S., 946 A.2d 753 (Pa. Super. 2008) (permissible reliance on social‑worker observations for bond analysis)
