427 S.E.2d 598 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1993
Appellant appeals an order of the Juvenile Court of Cobb County terminating her parental rights with respect to her two youngest children, S. M. S. and D. E. S. The father’s parental rights to S. M. S. and D. E. S. were also terminated, but no appeal has been filed from that portion of the juvenile court’s order. In her sole enumeration of error on appeal, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the order.
The record shows S. M. S. and D. E. S., who were three and five years old, respectively, at the time of the termination hearing, are the youngest of appellant’s six children. Appellant had her first child when she was twelve years old and that child as well as the next oldest child was adopted in Ohio, where appellant lived before moving to Georgia. The present proceedings concerned appellant’s four remaining children. Appellant consented to the termination of her parental rights with respect to the two middle children, who were twelve and seven years of age at the time of the hearing, and who had been in foster care since being removed from the home in 1985. As to S. M. S. and D. E. S., appellant admitted that the previous home environment had been unsuitable for her children, but asked for more time to remedy that situation. The record shows the children had been raised in an environment of unrelenting domestic violence and the children’s father (appellant’s common-law husband) had on numerous occasions inflicted severe, and on at least one occasion, almost fatal, physical abuse upon appellant. Appellant had also inflicted physical abuse on the father, having struck him with such objects as a broom, skillet and radio. Evidence was presented that both parents used drugs and alcohol in the past, and the father’s, if not the mother’s, use of such substances appeared to be a contributing, if not precipitating, factor to the parents’ physical confrontations. At the time of the hearing the mother denied the current use of alcohol or drugs, but the evidence showed the father continued to use alcohol although he maintained his consumption had decreased.
The father was ordered by the court to leave the home in 1985 when the two middle children were removed, but he returned and he
In January 1991 the court entered a plan designed to reunite appellant with S. M. S. and D. E. S. Appellant admitted at the termination hearing, held in February 1992, that she had not complied with this plan. Specifically, the record shows appellant failed to obtain adequate housing for the children, although she was employed and financially capable of doing so. Appellant also failed to stabilize the home environment and likewise failed to obtain counseling designed to address her past history as a battered woman. According to appellant, the week before the hearing she did make some efforts to comply with the plan and at the time of the hearing she had made arrangements to move from the Thunderbird Motel, where she had been staying, to an apartment. She also attended one counseling session during the week before the hearing. Appellant further testified she had finally realized that she and the children’s father could not reconcile and she was now ready to take the steps necessary to finalize divorce proceedings which she had instituted in January of the previous year. Although appellant testified she and the father had separated, she admitted she allowed him to stay with her at times, and that he had spent the night in her motel room on Sunday, February 2,1992, a few days prior to the termination hearing. The father testified he was prepared to “step aside” and planned to move back to Ohio so appellant could regain custody of S. M. S. and D.. E. S. Appellant asked for six more months and another chance to be a proper mother to her two youngest children.
“ ‘The appropriate standard of appellate review in a case of this sort is whether after reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the appellee, any rational trier of fact could have found by clear and convincing evidence that the natural parent’s rights to custody were lost. The factfinding and weighing of evidence is to be done in the trial court under the clear and convincing evidence test. The reviewing court is to defer to the lower court in the area of factfinding and should affirm unless the appellate standard of review, here the rational factfinder test, is not met. When we apply that test here we note the . . . evidence presented to the trial court and con-