In the Interest of: C.S.H., a Minor
In the Interest of: C.S.H., a Minor No. 2315 EDA 2016
Pa. Super. Ct.Apr 24, 2017Background
- Four children (born 2007–2013) were adjudicated dependent after DHS received reports of inadequate food, housing, and medical care and concerns about parental substance use and engagement; children diagnosed with neurofibromatosis and/or developmental needs.
- Children were removed/placed into foster care in late 2013; DHS provided services and a Family Service Plan, with reunification efforts and periodic permanency hearings over 2014–2015.
- Father completed some programs and claimed compliance (therapy, ARC programs, D&A counseling, employment, home repairs), but records and evaluators indicated inconsistent participation, positive drug screens, and administrative discharges from treatment.
- Evaluations (PCEs) and a treating clinician concluded Father minimized DHS concerns, failed to acknowledge children’s medical/behavioral needs, and lacked capacity to provide safety and permanency.
- DHS filed petitions on Dec. 22, 2015 to involuntarily terminate parental rights under 23 Pa.C.S. § 2511(a)(1), (2), (5), (8) and (b); after hearings, the trial court terminated Father’s rights under § 2511(a)(1), (2), (8) and (b); Superior Court affirmed.
Issues
| Issue | Father’s Argument | DHS/Respondent’s Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether clear-and-convincing evidence supported termination under § 2511(a)(1)/(2) (parental conduct/unsuitability) | Father argued he complied with FSP goals, maintained visits/employment, and can presently care for children | DHS showed Father minimized problems, inconsistently completed treatment, had positive drug screens, and failed to meet children’s special medical/behavioral needs | Court found insufficient parental capacity and credible evidence of ongoing conditions; termination upheld (court relied on § 2511(a)(8) analysis as well) |
| Whether § 2511(a)(8) grounds were met (12+ months in placement; conditions persist; termination serves children’s needs) | Father disputed that conditions persisted, pointing to program completion and bond | DHS demonstrated children were removed >12 months, conditions remained (housing, recognition of needs, treatment noncompliance), and termination would serve children’s welfare | Court held § 2511(a)(8) satisfied; termination appropriate |
| Whether termination would violate § 2511(b) (best interests; effect on developmental/physical/emotional needs) by severing parent-child bond | Father argued a parental bond existed and severing it would harm children and impede formation of new bonds | DHS and foster-care evidence showed children strongly bonded to pre-adoptive foster parents; Father’s interactions were limited and not parental in nature | Court concluded termination would not cause irreparable harm and was in children’s best interests; § 2511(b) satisfied |
| Whether the trial court abused discretion/erred in credibility findings | Father claimed evidence of compliance was overwhelming and court misweighed it | Trial court relied on evaluations, witness observations, treatment records, and visitation reports to find Father minimized issues and lacked sustained progress | Appellate court deferred to trial court’s credibility findings and found no abuse of discretion; affirmed |
Key Cases Cited
- In re R.J.T., 9 A.3d 1179 (Pa. 2010) (standards for appellate review and burden of proof in termination cases)
- In re Adoption of S.P., 47 A.3d 817 (Pa. Super. 2012) (bifurcated analysis under § 2511: parental conduct then child’s needs)
- In re B.L.W., 843 A.2d 380 (Pa. Super. 2004) (affirmance may rest on any single § 2511(a) subsection)
- In re K.Z.S., 946 A.2d 753 (Pa. Super. 2008) (interpretation of § 2511(a)(8) and 12‑month remedial period)
- In re N.A.M., 33 A.3d 95 (Pa. Super. 2011) (consideration of parental bond alongside child safety and foster relationships)
- In re T.S.M., 71 A.3d 251 (Pa. 2013) (courts must weigh children’s need for timely permanency and bonds with foster parents)
