In re Adoption Anne
In re Adoption Anne
Opinion of the Court
Following a trial, a judge of the Juvenile Court found the mother unfit to parent the child, terminated her parental rights, and approved the adoption of the child by the preadoptive mother (who was also the foster mother).
1. Judicial bias. The mother claims that, due to her involvement in prior proceedings before the same judge,
Here, the mother did not move for the judge's recusal; "[a]lthough this does not necessarily mean there was no bias, we do take [it] into consideration when viewing the record."
"Every case rises and falls on its own merits. So, I don't want you to think for a minute that I'm going to be influenced by what happened before. But if you're really serious about what's going to happen in the future, I'll help take you through that future, and you'll get your kid back."
Furthermore, the judge provided the mother with multiple opportunities to comply with her service plan and reunify with the child, which she failed to do. "Although it is possible that an unfavorable disposition could develop during prior proceedings, where that disposition is not 'so extreme as to display clear inability to render fair judgment,' it does not warrant recusal for bias." Matter of a Care & Protection Summons, supra at 240, quoting from Liteky v. United States,
2. Erroneous findings of fact and conclusions of law. The mother also claims that the judge based the termination decision on erroneous factual findings and conclusions of law. Although one of the challenged factual findings lacks evidentiary support, it is outweighed by the totality of evidence in favor of termination.
Upon review, we give substantial deference to a judge's decision to terminate parental rights, which must be supported "by clear and convincing evidence, based on subsidiary findings proved by at least a fair preponderance of evidence." Adoption of Jacques,
Here, the record supports the following challenged subsidiary findings. The mother has a record that includes six criminal charges, including an assault and battery dated after the child's birth.
The mother failed to comply with tasks assigned to her pursuant to the service plan. For instance, the mother often arrived late to scheduled visits with the child and was unprepared with snacks and activities. During visits, she was inattentive to the child's needs and was often distracted by her telephone and ongoing conflicts with her parents and the foster mother. The mother's living space is cluttered and exposes the child to hazards such as cat vomit and urine, craft supplies, and drug paraphernalia. The child spent minimal time in the mother's exclusive care
The mother has been inconsistent with her drug treatment: she has missed group therapy meetings and at least one dose of her methadone treatment,
On this record, we are convinced that the determination of unfitness was supported by clear and convincing evidence. The judge made detailed and thorough findings, supported by the record, and considered a "constellation of factors" to conclude that the mother was unfit and that termination was in the child's best interests. Adoption of Greta,
Decree affirmed.
The father's rights were also terminated; he is not a party to this appeal.
In the first proceeding, the mother was the subject child in a Child Requiring Assistance/Child in Need of Services petition. In the second proceeding, the mother's parental rights to her first child were terminated. That child is not involved here.
The mother relies on Commonwealth v. Coyne,
We note, however, that the mother's failing to move for recusal prior to the trial and then raising claims of bias in this appeal, is questionable. See Demoulas v. Demoulas Super Mkts., Inc.,
The mother challenges this finding on the basis that five of the six charges were dismissed, one "had yet to have a disposition or trial," and four occurred prior to the child's birth. This argument goes to the weight of the evidence, rather than its support in the record, and for this, we defer to the judge. See Adoption of Ilian,
For example, the child tested positive for morphine and was addicted to methadone at birth; she was hospitalized to receive treatment for her withdrawal symptoms. Furthermore, the mother was repeatedly observed asleep while holding and feeding the child in the hospital. Rather than driven by fatigue, the mother's falling asleep and slumping over on top of the child was due to her high morphine dosage postpartum. Doctors and nurses continually educated the mother about the safety issue this posed to the child, reminding her that "suffocation risk is a real possibility, especially as the mother is methadone medicated which seems to be making her sleep more deep[ly]," but the mother's denial and continued missteps drew concern from doctors and nurses about her ability to care for the child.
The mother disputes the judge's finding that the child lived with the mother for one month while the mother was in treatment at Angel House and spent "a handful of overnight visits" with the mother. The record does not support this finding, and indicates that the child lived with the mother for at least three months. However, this does not constitute reversible error because the ultimate determination of unfitness is supported by other clear and convincing evidence and this finding is "not central to the ultimate conclusion of unfitness. Even without [this] finding[ ], that conclusion has clear and convincing evidentiary support." Care & Protection of Olga,
The record reflects that the mother missed one dose on August 3, 2014, because "she sprained her ankle and was in too much pain to come in." On October 15, 2015, the mother also reported to a DCF social worker that she missed her dose one time, but could not remember when that had occurred.
With respect to the mother's challenge to "stale evidence," although "isolated problems in the past or stale information cannot be a basis for a determination of current parental unfitness," Adoption of Rhona,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.