Ronnie Midgett appeals from the decision of the probate court by which his parental rights were terminated and the appellee, Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS), was appointed guardian of his three children with the power to consent to adoption. The sole issue raised is whether DHS complied with a statutory requirement to provide remedial support services designed to reunite the child and the parents before seeking to establish grounds for the guardianship. The trial court found that DHS had made reasonable efforts to deliver “applicable available services” to the family. We agree that compliance with the statute was had and affirm.
Testimony of DHS caseworker Suzann Henry showed that the Midgett family began receiving services from the agency in 1977. In that year one of the children was placed in foster care as a result of having been abused. The child was later returned to the family, and services continued. A second child was placed in foster care in 1978 where he remained over two years. The mother left the home in 1980 because of abuse administered by Ronnie Midgett. DHS lost contact with the case while the family was in Texas, but it was known that a Texas agency placed one of the children with an aunt while the family was there after placing him in foster care twice as the result of physical abuse. Contact was regained in 1986 when the family returned to Craighead County.
In January, 1986, a protective services case was reopened on the family due to a report of child abuse. At that point the family consisted of Ronnie Midgett and his four children. The mother continued to live away from the home. She received services from DHS, or was offered them, up until the time of the hearing in this matter.
Ronnie Midgett was convicted of first degree murder of his eight-year-old son as the result of a brutal beating which occurred in May, 1986. We affirmed the conviction after modifying it to second degree murder. Midgett v. State,
At the time of the hearing in this matter, the applicable statute provided for establishment of grounds for a guardianship, and in Ark. Code Ann. § 9-9-304(F)(ii) (1987), which has since been repealed, it was further provided:
However, before grounds may be established under this subdivision, the court must be satisfied that the parents have received for a period of up to six (6) months in the discretion of the court, from the Arkansas Department of Human Services, remedial support services designed to reunite the child and the parents and that such services have failed to substantially reduce the risk of harm to the child.
The statute was not very clear in that one cannot tell whether the discretion of the court was to be applied to the matter of whether the services were to be provided or only to the matter of their duration. In any event, there was no requirement that the services be provided in the six months immediately preceding the guardianship hearing. In Watson v. Dietz,
Midgett cites Santosky v. Kramer,
Affirmed.
