In re KENNETH D., a Minor (The People of the State of Illinois, Petitioner-Appellee,
v.
Martha L., Respondent-Appellant).
Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, Third Division.
*546 Edwin Burnette, Public Defender, Cook County, Marsha Watt, Assistant Public Defender, Chicago, for Appellant.
Richard A. Devine, State's Attorney, James E. Fitzgerald, Nancy Kisicki, Mary P. Needham, Assistant State's Attorneys, Chicago, for Appellee, the People.
Office of the Public Guardian, Cook County, Robert F. Harris, Kass A. Plain, Christopher J. Williams, Chicago, for Appellee, the Minor.
Justice THEIS delivered the opinion of the court:
Following an adjudicatory hearing, the trial court found that the minor, Kenneth D., was neglected due to an injurious environment and abused due to a substantial risk of physical injury pursuant to section 2-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (the Act) (705 ILCS 405/2-3(1)(b), (2)(ii) (West 2004)). At a subsequent dispositional hearing, the court held that respondent, Martha L., was unable for some reason other than financial circumstances alone to care for, protect, train, or discipline the child. The court made the child a ward of the court and placed him in the custody of the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS).
On appeal, respondent contends (1) the trial court's adjudicatory findings based on the theory of anticipatory neglect were against the manifest weight of the evidence; (2) the trial court erroneously excluded evidence of respondent's compliance with services after Kenneth was taken into protective custody; and (3) the trial court erred in considering respondent's lack of prenatal care as grounds for a finding of anticipatory neglect and violated her constitutional right to privacy under the fourteenth amendment. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court's adjudication of abuse and neglect.
BACKGROUND
Respondent is the mother of four children. Three of her children were born drug-exposed and were in DCFS custody with findings of abuse and neglect. Her fourth child, Kenneth, was born on December 27, 2004. On January 5, 2005, the State filed a petition for adjudication of wardship and a motion for temporary custody. The State's petition alleged that Kenneth was neglected in that his environment was injurious to his welfare and that he was abused in that there was a substantial risk of physical injury by other than accidental means. In support, the State alleged that respondent and the putative father lived together. They had three other children who were in DCFS custody with findings of abuse and neglect. Respondent had two prior indicated reports for substance misuse and had an extensive history of illegal drug use. Respondent had no prenatal care prior to Kenneth's birth. The petition further alleged that in March 2002, a case was opened to provide services to the family, and both parents had not cooperated with services.
On August 22, 2005, the court commenced an adjudicatory hearing with respect to the State's petition. Respondent was not present. DCFS investigator Lanice Kincade-Turner testified that on December 27, 2004, she was assigned to investigate a report that Kenneth had been born exposed to a sexually transmitted disease. Turner was told by respondent that she already had a caseworker and that she was cooperating with services. *547 Kenneth's putative father, Cedric D., told Turner that he lived with respondent and was the father of all of her children, and expected that Kenneth would be returned home.[1] Turner then spoke with the family's caseworker, Susan Barry. Barry advised Turner that respondent was indeed not involved in recommended services for drug treatment, counseling or parenting skills classes. Turner believed that respondent's last urine drop was in January 2004. Based upon her investigation, Turner sought protective custody of Kenneth due to risk of harm.
Barry, respondent's caseworker, testified that she had been working with the family for the past two years. Respondent had three other children who were involved with DCFS because all three were born drug-exposed. Two of her children were in private guardianship due to respondent's failure to complete services. According to Barry, respondent admitted to her that she had an ongoing drug problem and admitted to smoking a cocainelaced cigarette right before she gave birth to her daughter, Kylie, on January 6, 2004. Barry further stated that as of the date Kenneth was born, respondent had not cooperated with the recommended services and was still in need of out-patient drug rehabilitation treatment, parenting skills training and consistent random urine drops. Barry stated that respondent submitted to urine drops on June 18, 2004, August 19, 2004, August 26, 2004, September 2, 2004, and January 4, 2005. These tests were negative. Barry requested that respondent submit to weekly urine drops, but respondent told her she was not able to submit every week because she had summer employment with the Chicago Park District and worked 30 to 40 hours per week.
The hearing was then continued to August 29, 2005. Respondent testified and acknowledged that she tested positive for cocaine in September 2002. In May 2004, she enrolled in a drug treatment program, but did not complete the program because she was working for the park district. She reenrolled in September 2004, but did not complete treatment because she was "pregnant, tired, miserable" and "heavy." Respondent further testified that she only sought prenatal care once during her pregnancy with Kenneth because she was uncomfortable taking off her clothes and being "stuck with those needles." She took prenatal vitamins and iron pills left over from her previous pregnancy. She stated that she had no physical problems during the pregnancy, but was experiencing emotional problems.
Respondent further acknowledged that she was supposed to participate in random drug screening. According to respondent, her caseworker would call her regarding drug screening and then she would not hear from her for another month or longer. Respondent testified that she was asked to participate in drug screening in June 2004 and the result was negative. She also testified that in order to work for the park district in the summer, she had to test negative for drugs. No testimony was presented and no medical records were admitted during the adjudicatory hearing by either party with respect to Kenneth's health at birth and whether he was born drug exposed.[2]
*548 At the conclusion of the adjudicatory hearing, the trial court held that the State had met its burden of proving that Kenneth was neglected due to an injurious environment and abused due to substantial risk of physical injury. The trial court based its conclusion on respondent's failure to seek prenatal care and her failure to obtain and complete needed services. The court noted that respondent's discomfort was not a reason to forgo important prenatal care, and that working full-time and being uncomfortable in pregnancy were not excuses for failing to obtain the necessary drug treatment and other services for the welfare of her child. The court concluded that Kenneth was subject to anticipatory neglect.
At a subsequent dispositional hearing, the trial court found it in Kenneth's best interest to make him a ward of the court, found respondent unable to care for him, and placed him in the custody of DCFS. Thereafter, respondent filed a timely appeal, raising claims of error solely with respect to the adjudicatory hearing.
ANALYSIS
Respondent contends that the court's ruling, that Kenneth was neglected due to an injurious environment and abused because of a substantial risk of physical injury, was against the manifest weight of the evidence where the evidence presented by the State was limited to past sibling abuse, and where her drug tests results were negative during and after her pregnancy with Kenneth.
A "neglected minor" includes any minor under 18 years of age whose environment is injurious to his or her welfare. 705 ILCS 405/2-3(1)(b) (West 2004); In re Arthur H.,
Under the theory of "anticipatory neglect," the State seeks to protect not only children who are the direct victims of neglect or abuse, but also those who have a probability to be subject to neglect or abuse because they reside, or in the future may reside, with an individual who has been found to have neglected or abused another child. Arthur H.,
Cases involving allegations of abuse and neglect are sui generis, and must be decided based upon their unique facts. Arthur H.,
Applying these principles to the present case, there was sufficient evidence to support the trial court's findings of anticipatory neglect of Kenneth. The State presented evidence of prior sibling neglect due to respondent's three previous children being born drug-exposed. Only 11 months before Kenneth was born, she gave birth to a drug-exposed infant. Beyond that evidence, the record reflects that between the time respondent's daughter was born drug-exposed in January 2004 and the time Kenneth was born in December 2004, respondent failed to take measures to correct the conditions that brought her previous children into the DCFS system with findings of abuse and neglect.
Inexplicably, no evidence was presented at the hearing regarding whether Kenneth was born drug-exposed. Nevertheless, at the time he was born, respondent had a history of drug abuse, had failed to complete a drug treatment program, had failed to attend recommended parenting classes, and had failed to comply with consistent random drug screening. Although respondent tested negative on the few dates that she chose to comply with drug screening, her compliance over the 11-month period was erratic and inconsistent. According to Barry, respondent acknowledged that she had an ongoing drug addiction. The evidence reveals that by the time Kenneth was born and the State's petition was filed, respondent had made no progress in ameliorating her drug problems and the attendant risks those problems posed to Kenneth. Accordingly, the trial court's findings of abuse and neglect were not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
Next, respondent contends that the trial court erred in relying on her lack of prenatal care as grounds for a finding of anticipatory neglect. Specifically, she argues that the State cannot compel her to submit to medical care and that compelling her to take those measures would violate her constitutional right to privacy. The State and the Office of the Public Guardian maintain that respondent waived this argument because she invited the error. We agree.
Initially, respondent never objected to the allegations set forth in the petition for adjudication of wardship, which included her failure to obtain prenatal care, and never moved to strike those allegations before the trial court. See 735 ILCS 5/2-612(c) (West 2004) ("[a]ll defects in pleadings, either in form or substance, not objected to in the trial court are waived"). Furthermore, the State had the *550 burden of proof at the hearing and never elicited any evidence on the issue of respondent's prenatal care in its case-in-chief. Indeed, it was respondent who injected the evidence into the proceedings and neither the State nor the Public Guardian followed up on her testimony in cross-examination. A party cannot complain of error which that party induced the court to make or to which that party consented. In re Detention of Swope,
Next, we address respondent's contention that the trial court erred in excluding evidence at the adjudicatory hearing of respondent's participation in services after Kenneth was taken into protective custody by DCFS. At the completion of the hearing, respondent made an offer of proof that, if allowed to testify, she would state that she completed parenting classes in the spring of 2005, completed outpatient drug treatment in June 2005, tested negative for drugs in 2005, and visited Kenneth everyday in 2005.
Under the Act, the rules of evidence in the nature of civil proceedings are applicable to the adjudicatory hearing. 705 ILCS 405/2-18(1) (West 2004). Whether evidence is admissible is within the discretion of the circuit court, and its ruling will not be reversed absent an abuse of that discretion. In re Kenneth J.,
In determining the relevance of respondent's conduct after Kenneth was taken into protective custody, we find the case of In re S.W.,
"Evidence that a parent substantially completed offered services, or otherwise refrained from prior objectionable conduct following removal of the child, does not somehow absolve or erase the parent's initial failing that triggered State intervention and removal of the child. Rather, such evidence is appropriately considered at the second stage of the termination hearing, at which the court considers whether it is in the best interest of the minor that parental rights be *551 terminated. At that time, the full range of the parent's conduct can be considered." C.W.,199 Ill.2d at 217 ,262 Ill. Dec. 802 ,766 N.E.2d at 1116 .
Although the court in S.W. recognized that C.W. dealt with a termination of parental rights hearing and not an adjudication hearing involving the abuse and neglect of a child, by analogy it found that the mother's subsequently completed services and subsequent behavior were properly considered at the dispositional hearing, and not the adjudicatory hearing. S.W.,
This position is consistent with the purpose of an adjudicatory hearing, which is "to determine whether the allegations of a petition * * * that a minor under 18 years of age is * * * neglected * * * are supported by a preponderance of the evidence." 705 ILCS 405/1-3(1) (West 2004). Here, as in S.W., we find that respondent's subsequent completion of services after the removal of Kenneth was not relevant to the allegations in the petition, namely, whether at the time Kenneth was taken into protective custody, respondent had a drug problem that made Kenneth's environment injurious and created a substantial risk of physical injury to him. Rather, her subsequent conduct was properly admitted at the dispositional hearing, where "[a]ll evidence helpful in determining [the best interest of the child] * * * may be admitted and may be relied upon to the extent of its probative value, even though not competent for the purposes of the adjudicatory hearing." 705 ILCS 405/2-22(1) (West 2004).
We further find this position consistent with the Act's stated purpose to insure a just and speedy resolution of abuse and neglect cases. The Act expressly "recognizes that serious delay in the adjudication of abuse, neglect, or dependency cases can cause grave harm to the minor and the family and that it frustrates the health, safety and best interests of the minor and the effort to establish permanent homes for children in need." 705 ILCS 405/2-14(a) (West 2004). As a result, the Act requires that "an adjudicatory hearing shall be commenced within 90 days of the date of service of process." 705 ILCS 405/2-14(b) (West 2004). Thus, to hold that evidence regarding a respondent's efforts to remediate the problem or evidence that she refrained from prior objectionable conduct following protective custody of a child was relevant to the adjudicatory hearing would be inconsistent with the stated purpose of the statute. It would encourage the respondent to delay the adjudicatory hearing beyond the stated time frame and thereby potentially frustrate the health, safety and best interest of the child. Additionally, we note that a contrary holding would undermine the newly adopted Supreme Court Rule 901 (eff. July 1, 2006)(adopted February 10, 2006), which includes procedures designed to reinforce strict compliance with statutory deadlines and impose limitations on continuances.
Respondent cites In re Edricka C.,
We agree with the general proposition of law in Edricka C. that there is no bright-line post-petition test for admissibility of evidence. Rather, the test for admissibility of post-petition evidence will depend on whether it is relevant to the allegations in the petition. Compare S.W.,
For all of the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
Affirmed.
HOFFMAN, P.J., and KARNEZIS, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The record reflects that Cedric was served with notice of the petition, that he never appeared in the trial court, and that the court ultimately entered a finding that he was unwilling and unable to care for Kenneth. He is not a party to this appeal.
[2] Indeed, the records admitted at the dispositional hearing from Kenneth's developmental, occupational and physical therapists indicate that Kenneth was born exposed to cocaine and syphilis.
