61 Mass. App. Ct. 260 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2004
The biological mother appeals from decrees entered pursuant to G. L. c. 210, § 3, terminating her parental rights as to the three youngest of her five children: Ramona, bom on September 28, 1988, Curt, bom on June 22, 1990, and Sam, born on April 18, 1991. At all relevant times since removal from her mother’s care in early 1999, Ramona has been in the same preadoptive foster care setting, where she has flourished, and she wishes to be adopted by her foster mother. Accordingly, Ramona expresses reservation about her decree only insofar as it precludes posttermination and postadoption visitation between and among the siblings. Curt and Sam, neither of whom are in preadoptive homes nor wish to be adopted, join their mother in appealing their decrees, claiming in effect that it renders them legal orphans.
1. Background. The Department of Social Services (department) brought a care and protection proceeding pursuant to G. L. c. 119, § 24, in May, 1998, as to all five children,
On appeal, the mother contends that, as to all three children, the judge’s findings of fact were based upon stale evidence and were insufficiently detailed to support the ultimate finding that she was, at the time of trial, unfit to parent each of the three children. The boys support this position as it concerns their mother’s fitness to parent them and further contend, with the mother, that the evidence did not support the ultimate finding that it was in their best interests that the mother’s parental rights be terminated. Finally, the mother and the boys maintain that the judge erred in failing to provide for posttermination and postadoption visitation between and among the mother and the boys.
2. Unfitness to parent. Faced with a petition to dispense with parental consent to adoption, a judge must first determine whether the parent is currently unfit to further the welfare and
In addition to Ramona’s participation in certain of the 1998 behaviors occasioned by the mother’s neglect as earlier detailed,
The judge’s findings with regard to the mother’s current fitness to parent Curt and Sam, however, are considerably more sparse. The judge found that Curt’s behavior regressed when the mother missed visits with him. The judge found that, during one visit between and among the mother, Beth, Curt, Ramona, and Sam, Sam kept to himself. These findings, even when viewed in conjunction with the 1998 behaviors occasioned by maternal neglect, fall short of what is necessary to sustain a
In addition to being child-specific, a determination of unfitness must be based on current evidence. While a judge may rely upon a parent’s prior pattern of behavior in determining parental unfitness, the judge is required to assess whether a parent is currently unfit. Adoption of Paula, 420 Mass. 716, 730 (1995). See Adoption of Carlos, 413 Mass. 339, 348 (1992). This inquiry requires the judge to focus on the present. Adoption of Paula, supra at 731 (‘‘A judge whose order will have the effect of irreversibly terminating the legal parent-child relationship must focus on the present circumstances of the parent and the child, taking into account recent positive gains, [if any] . . .”). Here, the bulk of the judge’s findings as to the mother’s unfitness to parent Curt and Sam rested upon events occurring more than two years prior to trial, even though recent evidence of the mother’s parenting was available. For example, the mother had successful, unsupervised, overnight visitation with Beth prior to trial; by the time of trial, Beth was visiting with the mother almost daily; the department recommended reunification of Beth and her mother, and filed a motion to dismiss Beth from the petition, which was allowed. Recent evidence of the mother’s participation in a parenting program, a nurturing program, and an anger-management program was also available.
The lack of specific and current findings regarding the
3. Best interests of the children. A determination of parental unfitness is the first of two “cognate and connected” steps in the process of determining whether termination of parental rights should occur. Petition of the New England Home for Little Wanderers to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 367 Mass. 631, 641 (1975). After ascertaining unfitness, the judge must determine whether the parent’s unfitness is such that it would be in the child’s best interests to end all legal relations between parent and child. See Petition of the Dept. of Social Servs. to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 391 Mass. 113, 119 (1984); Adoption of Carlos, 413 Mass. at 350-351. “[E]yen if a parent is found to be unfit, there are some situations in which the child’s best interest may be served without a decree of termination.” Adoption of Flora, 60 Mass. App. Ct. at 342.
The situation with Curt and Sam is quite different. At the time of trial, Curt and Sam were each almost of an age to prevent his own adoption, see G. L. c. 210, § 2,
The decrees terminating the parental rights of the mother with respect to Curt and Sam are accordingly vacated, and the matter is remanded to the Juvenile Court for such further proceedings as are necessary and appropriate to determine forthwith the issue of parental fitness as to each boy and to
So ordered.
Ted, bom on June 15, 1983, Beth, bom on September 4, 1985, and the three children who are the subject of this appeal: Ramona, Curt, and Sam.
The incidents included the following: breaking into a school, knocking over computers and throwing books; throwing rocks at a babysitter; breaking into a car and causing damage; jumping into traffic and trying to grab or hit passing cars; tampering with a neighbor’s lawn mower; stealing a flare gun and starting a brush fire; jumping from the roof of the family home onto the roof of another home; and climbing a neighbor’s house with a ladder.
The mother was incarcerated for thirty days for assault and battery committed upon a babysitter in 1998.
At the time of trial, Curt was residing in specialized foster care. Sam was also in foster care.
The evidence showed that the mother attended visits with each of her children regularly, if imperfectly, despite the fact she had a thirty to fifty minute drive in each direction from her home to visit them at their placements.
The second oldest of the children, Beth, had unsupervised, overnight visitation with the mother for one year prior to trial. At trial, the department dismissed Beth from the petition to dispense with parental consent for adoption and articulated a goal for Beth of reunification with the mother. Beth was returned to the mother’s care in June, 2002.
See note 3, supra.
See note 12, infra.
For example, it is not obvious that there is evidentiary support for the finding that “[d]uring April and May 2001, [the mother] was not in touch with the Department or her children.”
Those findings of the judge that were most current did not disclose the “grievous shortcomings” indicative of parental unfitness, see Petition of the New England Home for Little Wanderers to Dispense with Consent to Adop
The judge found that Ramona did not want to live with her mother because she felt that when she did live with her, she was always hungry, did not get enough food or sleep, and did not bathe or have clean underwear.
“A decree of adoption shall not be made . . . without the written consent of the child to be adopted, if above the age of twelve . . . G. L. c. 210, § 2.
If, upon remand, the judge were to determine that the mother’s parental rights should be terminated as to Curt or Sam, we also remand the question of posttermination visitation as to such child. The Supreme Judicial Court has held that a judicial order for postadoption contact may be warranted where the evidence points to “significant, existing bonds between the child and a biological parent,” and if “no preadoptive family has yet been identified, and where a principal, if not the only, parent-child relationship in the child’s life remains with the biological parent.” Adoption of Vito, 431 Mass. 550, 563-564 (2000).