Changeflow GovPing Courts & Legal M.L.D. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky Cabinet for ...
Routine Enforcement Amended Final

M.L.D. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services - Termination of Parental Rights Affirmed

Favicon for www.courtlistener.com Kentucky Court of Appeals
Filed
Detected
Email

Summary

The Kentucky Court of Appeals affirmed Family Court decisions in four consolidated cases involving termination of parental rights (TPR), ruling against appellants M.L.D. and M.D.F. and upholding the actions of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services regarding minor children R.L.A., L.A.D., C.J.T.D., and R.O.R.F. The appeals, docketed as 2025-CA-0566, 0568, 0570, and 0572, were all affirmed.

What changed

The Court of Appeals affirmed the Family Court's termination of parental rights rulings in four consolidated cases, upholding the Cabinet for Health and Family Services' position in each matter. The appeals were consolidated due to related parties and common factual backgrounds involving child welfare proceedings.

For affected parents and family law practitioners, this affirmance means the lower court's TPR orders are now final and enforceable. The non-precedential status limits broader application beyond these specific parties, but the ruling confirms the procedural standards applied in these Shelby Family Court proceedings.

What to do next

  1. Monitor for updates if involved in related TPR proceedings

Archived snapshot

Apr 10, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Jump To

Top Caption Disposition Combined Opinion

Support FLP

CourtListener is a project of Free
Law Project
, a federally-recognized 501(c)(3) non-profit. Members help support our work and get special access to features.

Please become a member today.

Join Free.law Now

April 10, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

M.L.D. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, Cabinet for Health and Family Services

Court of Appeals of Kentucky

Disposition

OPINION AND ORDER AFFIRMING

Combined Opinion

RENDERED: APRIL 10, 2026; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2025-CA-0566-ME

M.L.D.1 APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM SHELBY FAMILY COURT
v. HONORABLE S. MARIE HELLARD, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 24-AD-00041

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,
CABINET FOR HEALTH AND
FAMILY SERVICES; R.L.A; AND
L.A.D., A MINOR CHILD. APPELLEES

AND

NO. 2025-CA-0568-ME

M.L.D. APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM SHELBY FAMILY COURT
v. HONORABLE S. MARIE HELLARD, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 24-AD-00042

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,
CABINET FOR HEALTH AND

1
Pursuant to Court of Appeals Administrative Order No. 2006-10, to protect the privacy of
minors, we refer to parties in cases involving proceedings for the termination of parental rights
(“TPR”) by initials only.
FAMILY SERVICES; R.L.A.; AND
C.J.T.D., A MINOR CHILD APPELLEES

AND

NO. 2025-CA-0570-ME2

M.D.F. APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM SHELBY FAMILY COURT
HONORABLE S. MARIE HELLARD, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 24-AD-00043

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,
CABINET FOR HEALTH AND
FAMILY SERVICES; M.L.D.; AND
R.O.R.F., A MINOR CHILD APPELLEES

AND

NO. 2025-CA-0572-ME

M.L.D. APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM SHELBY FAMILY COURT
v. HONORABLE S. MARIE HELLARD, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 24-AD-00043

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,
CABINET FOR HEALTH AND

2
Because this appeal involves the same nexus of facts and parties as the three actions brought
by M.L.D., we have opted to resolve the cases via a single Opinion.

-2-
FAMILY SERVICES; M.D.F.; AND
R.O.R.F., A MINOR CHILD APPELLEES

OPINION AND ORDER
AFFIRMING


BEFORE: COMBS, ECKERLE, AND MOYNAHAN, JUDGES.

ECKERLE, JUDGE: Appellant, M.L.D. (“Mother”), seeks review of the Shelby

Family Court’s judgments terminating her parental rights to her three minor

children, and M.D.F. (“Father”3) appeals the judgment terminating his parental

rights to their child in common. After careful review of the briefs, record, and law,

we affirm the Family Court’s judgments and grant Mother’s appointed counsel’s

motion to withdraw.

I. Background Facts and Procedural History

The Cabinet became involved with these parties in May of 2020,

when the children were seven, six, and two years of age. After investigating a

report that the home in which the children resided with Mother was dirty and that

Mother was using illegal substances, the Cabinet developed an in-home service

plan. In August of 2020, the Cabinet filed dependency, neglect, and abuse

3
Father is only biologically related to the youngest child, R.O.R.F.; however, for ease of
reference, we will refer to him as Father without any distinction. The older children’s father did
not participate in the action below and has not appealed the judgment terminating his parental
rights.

-3-
(“DNA”) petitions alleging that Mother was not complying with the plan and that

the children were therefore at risk of harm. The Cabinet was subsequently granted

temporary custody of the children on the 12th of that month. Mother stipulated

that her marijuana use placed the children at risk, and the Family Court adjudged

that they were abused or neglected.

The Cabinet developed a case plan for reunifying the parties. It

included Father in the case plan even though the DNA petition did not name him.

The Family Court’s approved plan required the parents to complete assessments

for substance abuse, parenting, and mental health (with Mother additionally

mandated to have an assessment for domestic violence) and to follow all provider

recommendations therefrom. The Court additionally ordered Mother and Father to

pay child support in the amounts of $375 and $206.50 per month, respectively.

In April of 2021, the Cabinet filed a motion to hold Mother in

contempt, asserting that she was $1,994 in arrears on child support. Mother

stipulated to contempt, and the Family Court sentenced her on November 10, 2021,

to 179 days probated for two years on the condition that she pay child support as

ordered plus an additional sum towards the arrearage. In April of 2022, the

Cabinet filed a motion to hold Father in contempt, asserting that he was $3,005 in

arrears. Father stipulated to contempt, and the Family Court sentenced him to 179

-4-
days conditionally discharged, after he paid $2,000 towards his arrearage, for two

years so long as he remained current in his child support obligation.

On August 25, 2022, Mother regained sole custody of the children,

although the Cabinet continued to monitor and work with the parties for almost one

more year, until July of 2023. At that time, the Family Court revoked Father’s

conditional discharge after the Cabinet alleged that he was $2,747 in arrears on

child support, and the Family Court found that he had the ability to meet his

financial obligation but chose not to do so voluntarily.

Three months later, the Cabinet filed a second set of DNA petitions

alleging that Mother had tested positive for methamphetamines and amphetamines

and that the home was in disarray, with food and trash throughout, including the

sleeping areas. The Cabinet did not name Father as a responsible party, but it

noted that he was incarcerated and thus could not take custody of his child. The

Court granted emergency custody to the Cabinet on October 20, 2023, and the

children have thereafter remained in foster care. Mother stipulated to the

allegations, and the Family Court adjudged that the children were abused or

neglected.

The Cabinet developed a new case plan to aid Mother and Father in

reunifying with the children, and the Family Court approved this plan at the

dispositional hearing. The plan required Mother and Father to maintain a clean

-5-
and sober lifestyle (Father having tested positive for benzodiazepines and cocaine

in December of 2023), submit to random drug screens, complete protective

parenting classes, and undergo substance abuse and mental health assessments and

follow all provider recommendations. It further mandated that Mother maintain

stable housing and employment and participate in consistent and appropriate

visitation with the children.

On September 27, 2024, the Cabinet filed the underlying TPR

petitions, and on March 4, 2025, the Family Court held a final hearing. The

assigned social worker testified at that hearing that the Cabinet had placed the

children together in foster care; the children had no ongoing, severe physical health

needs; and the Cabinet had met individual mental health needs with medication

and therapy. The social worker stated that the Cabinet intended to place the

Children with a maternal aunt, who had recently come forward and was in the

process of becoming an approved foster parent to adopt the children. The social

worker acknowledged that the children were well bonded with Mother and Father4

and that the supervised, bi-weekly visits with the children went consistently well.

She noted that Mother, and Father especially, brought food and gifts for the

children during visits.

4
Father only had visitation with his child, but he brought gifts for all three children.

-6-
The social worker stated, however, that neither Mother nor Father had

completed the most recent case plan. She reported that Mother had undergone her

required assessments. However, Mother had failed to provide proof that she was

attending mandated Narcotics Anonymous meetings or individual counseling

sessions; she had not completed protective parenting classes; she did not have

appropriate housing for the children; and she was unemployed. The social worker

averred that Mother sporadically attended visitation with her children until October

2025 and that her visits had been briefly suspended in the fall of 2024 after she

missed several in a row. Similarly, the social worker noted that, until January of

2025, when Mother entered inpatient substance-abuse treatment at Volunteers of

America (“VOA”), Mother had inconsistently complied with her random drug-

screening requirement, resulting in three5 presumptive-positive tests. The social

worker acknowledged that Mother had tested negative for illegal substances since

her initial screen in October of 2023, which had showed a positive result for

methamphetamines and amphetamines.

In her testimony at the same hearing, Mother took responsibility for

her poor decisions and asked for additional time to correct her mistakes. She

5
In her testimony, the social worker only specifically identified one drug screen in October of
2024 that Mother had failed to appear for post-petition. She otherwise, and only generally,
indicated that Mother was unsystematic. The Cabinet introduced records of Mother’s drug
screens showing two missed tests in the spring of 2024, but there are no records after September
6, 2024.

-7-
attributed her non-compliance with the case plan to the fact that after the children

were removed from her custody, she entered into a year-long relationship with a

domestically violent partner who withheld access to her money and vehicle; but

she asserted that she had since escaped the relationship. Mother explained that she

was benefiting from inpatient treatment at VOA, which she explained was a

rehabilitation program for mothers. She testified that VOA diagnosed her with

post-traumatic stress disorder, taught her coping skills to prevent relapse, and

bettered her self-understanding. Mother reported that she would graduate from

treatment in the following month; VOA would help her locate housing and

employment; and she would then be able to complete the protective parenting

classes. Mother argued that the termination of her parental rights would hurt the

children, who had always been with her, although she acknowledged that the

children needed consistency in their home.

Regarding Father’s progress, the social worker stated that the Cabinet

had made referrals in November of 2023 for engaging in parenting classes and

assessments for substance abuse and mental health. She reported that Father was

still participating in parenting classes; he was required to retake his substance

abuse assessment after he was initially untruthful about his history of drug use; he

had only started his substance abuse services in October of 2024; and he provided

no proof that he had completed his mental health assessment. The social worker

-8-
acknowledged that Father had tested negative for illegal substances since his

positive drug screen in December 2023, but she stated that he had missed two6 tests

that were deemed presumptively positive. Finally, the social worker testified that

Father had always attended his bi-weekly supervised visits with his child, and he

had appropriate housing with the child’s paternal grandmother.

In his testimony, Father attributed his failure to complete his case plan

to being incarcerated (although he was released in November 2023), his

demanding work schedule, and his difficulties with reading and writing

(specifically regarding the protective parenting classes). He stated that in the

months leading up to the March 2025 hearing, he had completed his mental health

assessment; he was attending the recommended individual therapy sessions; and he

was switching from group to individual parenting classes to overcome his learning

difficulties. He acknowledged that his child had never lived with him and that he

could not explain the reasons that he was not given custody after the first DNA

proceeding. Father nonetheless asserted that he had raised the child and claimed

that he had bought her everything she wanted or at least needed, and that the

termination of his parental rights was not in the child’s best interest.

6
The Cabinet introduced a record of Father’s drug screens that showed that he had tested a week
late in January of 2024 and had failed to test in May of the same year.

-9-
On April 3, 2025, the Family Court issued its judgment terminating

Mother’s maternal and Father’s parental rights. Mother appealed. In accordance

with A.C. v. Cabinet for Health and Family Services, 362 S.W.3d 361 (Ky. App.

2012), her counsel thereafter filed a brief pursuant to Anders v. California, 386

U.S. 738, 87 S. Ct. 1396, 12 L. Ed. 2d 493 (1967), attesting that no meritorious

issues exist to present to this Court; her advocate also filed a motion to withdraw as

counsel on appeal. The Family Court afforded Mother an opportunity to file a

brief pro se, but Mother declined to do so. Father also appealed as to his child and

filed a brief on the merits. We will introduce additional facts as they become

relevant.

II. Standard of Review

We review the Family Court’s findings of fact under the clearly

erroneous standard. Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (“CR”) 52.01. If supported

by substantial evidence, we are obligated to give great deference to the Family

Court’s findings. D.G.R. v. Commonwealth, Cabinet for Health and Family

Services, 364 S.W.3d 106, 113 (Ky. 2012). However, we review de novo the

application of the law to those facts. Id. Additionally, specific to Mother, when

appointed counsel files an Anders brief, the Court must “independently review the

record and ascertain whether the appeal is, in fact, void of nonfrivolous grounds for

reversal.” A.C., 362 S.W.3d at 372.

-10-
III. Analysis

Involuntary TPR actions are governed by Kentucky Revised Statutes

(“KRS”) 625.090. TPR may be granted only if the Family Court finds that a three-

pronged test has been met by clear and convincing evidence. Id. First, the

children must be deemed abused or neglected as defined by KRS 600.020(1). KRS

625.090(1)(a). Second, the Family Court must find the existence of at least one of

the statutory grounds for termination listed in KRS 625.090(2). And third,

termination must be found to be in the best interest of the children after

consideration of the factors listed in KRS 625.090(3). We will review each prong

in turn.

As Father noted, the Family Court’s determinations in the DNA

proceedings pertained solely to Mother. However, as permitted by KRS

625.090(1)(a)2., and as part of the underlying TPR proceedings, the Family Court

independently determined that the children were abused or neglected. Specifically,

the Family Court found that Mother and Father had abused or neglected the

children by failing to make sufficient progress towards identified goals in the

Cabinet’s Court-approved treatment plan that would have permitted the children to

be placed in their care, resulting in the children’s being in foster care for 15 out of

the most recent 48 months, and thus satisfying KRS 600.020(1)(a)9. The Family

Court’s finding is supported by the uncontested evidence that Mother and Father

-11-
made no significant progress towards the case plan’s tasks until October of 2024,

which was one year after the children had been placed in foster care. The finding

was further bolstered by uncontroverted evidence that Mother and Father had not

completed their plans by the time of the TPR hearing in March of 2025, which

more than satisfied the 15-month requirement. Accordingly, the Family Court did

not err, and the first prong has been satisfied regarding TPR for both Mother and

Father.

We turn now to the second prong, the existence of a statutory

ground. Though KRS 625.090(2) only requires that one of the listed statutory

grounds exists to terminate parental rights, the Family Court found that the Cabinet

had proven three separate grounds. Specifically, the Family Court found that: (1)

Mother and Father had failed to provide parental care and protection for the

children for six months with no reasonable expectation of improvement, KRS

625.090(2)(e); (2) Mother and Father had continuously or repeatedly failed, for

reasons other than poverty alone, to provide essential food, clothing, shelter,

medical care, or education reasonably necessary and available for the children’s

well-being with no reasonable expectation of significant improvement in the

immediately foreseeable future, KRS 625.090(2)(g); and (3) the children have been

in foster care for 15 cumulative months out of the 48 months preceding the filing

of the TPR petitions, KRS 625.090(2)(j).

-12-
The Family Court’s third finding as to the second prong is supported

by conclusive evidence that the children had been in foster care for 34 cumulative

months out of the 48 months preceding the September 27, 2024, filing of the

underlying TPR petitions; this timeline is more than twice the required period.

Thus, the second prong of KRS 625.090 has been satisfied for both Mother and

Father, and we need not consider Father’s argument regarding the sufficiency of

the Family Court’s alternative findings.

Finally, we will address the third prong, whether the termination of

Mother’s and Father’s parental rights is in the children’s best interest. As required

by statute, the Family Court analyzed the six factors set out in KRS 625.090(3),7

7
The factors are:

(a) Mental illness[,] intellectual disability, or disability [that] renders the parent
consistently unable to care for the immediate and ongoing physical or
psychological needs of the child[ren] for extended periods of time;

(b) Acts of abuse or neglect as defined in KRS 600.020(1) toward any child in the
family;

(c) . . . [W]hether the cabinet has, prior to the filing of the petition[, m]ade
reasonable efforts as defined in KRS 620.020 to reunite the child[ren] with the
parents . . . [;]

(d) The efforts and adjustments the parent has made in his or her circumstances,
conduct, or conditions to make it in the child[ren]’s best interest to return
[them] to [their] home within a reasonable period of time, considering the age
of the child[ren];

(e) The physical, emotional, and mental health of the child[ren,] and the prospects
for the improvement of the child[ren]’s welfare if termination is ordered; and

-13-
making detailed findings as to each, before it determined that granting the TPR

was in the children’s best interest.

Specifically, the Family Court found that the Cabinet had made

reasonable efforts to reunify Mother and Father with the children and that there

were no additional services that would permit reunification within a reasonable

period considering the ages of the children, who were then 11, 10, and 6 years of

age. The Family Court acknowledged the specific efforts that Mother and Father

had made in completing their case plans. However, the Family Court was

unpersuaded that this only recent progress demonstrated a long-term change

permitting reunification with Mother or an initial grant of custody to Father within

a reasonable time considering the significant period that both Mother and Father

had failed to make any real progress at all. The Family Court noted that the

children had been in foster care for approximately four out of the last five years

(over half of the youngest child’s life). The Family Court further found that the

children’s needs had been met by the Cabinet and that their welfare would improve

if TPR were granted, citing the Cabinet’s intention to have the children be adopted

by their maternal aunt. Finally, the Family Court found that both parents had been

in arrears on their child-support obligations.

(f) The payment or the failure to pay a reasonable portion of substitute physical
care and maintenance if financially able to do so.

-14-
Father argues generally that the record fails to support the Family

Court’s best-interest determination by clear and convincing evidence. We are

unconvinced. The Family Court’s multiple, detailed findings are all supported by

the evidence. They include specifically the neglect of the children; the efforts of

Mother, Father, and the Cabinet to reunify the family safely; the children’s

wellbeing and their prospects for achieving permanency through adoption; and

Mother’s and Father’s non-compliance with their support obligations. We

recognize that the Family Court “has substantial discretion in determining the best

interest[] of the child[ren] under KRS 625.090[(3).]” D.G.R., 364 S.W.3d at 112.

A Court abuses its discretion if its decision is arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or

unsupported by sound legal principles. Commonwealth v. English, 993 S.W.2d

941, 945 (Ky. 1999). Having reviewed the record, we conclude that the Family

Court did not abuse its discretion in determining that it was in the children’s best

interest to terminate Mother and Father’s parental rights to them.

Finally, Father asserts that the Family Court’s conclusion of law that

granting TPR was in the children’s best interest was insufficient because it failed to

reference specifically any findings of fact in support. This unsupported contention

is wholly without merit. A conclusion of law need not recite the Court’s

previously made findings of fact to be valid. See CR 52.01 (“In all actions tried

upon the facts without a jury[,] the court shall find the facts specifically and state

-15-
separately its conclusions of law thereon[.]”). Moreover, the alleged failure

amounts to, at most, harmless error, which would afford Father no relief. See CR

61.01 (“The court at every stage of the proceeding must disregard any error or

defect in the proceeding which does not affect the substantial rights of the

parties.”).

IV. Conclusion

For the foregoing reasons, the Shelby Family Court’s orders are

AFFIRMED and Mother’s appointed counsel’s motion to withdraw is GRANTED.

ALL CONCUR.

ENTERED: April 10, 2026___
HON. AUDRA J. ECKERLE
JUDGE, COURT OF APPEALS

BRIEF FOR APPELLANT M.L.D.: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE CABINET
FOR HEALTH AND FAMILY
Michael G. Sims SERVICES, COMMONWEALTH OF
Louisville, Kentucky KENTUCKY, IN 2025-CA-0566-ME,
2025-CA-0568-ME, AND 2025-CA-
0572-ME:

Kevin Martz
Covington, Kentucky

-16-
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT M.D.F.: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE CABINET
FOR HEALTH AND FAMILY
Erin R. Pippin SERVICES, COMMONWEALTH OF
Shelbyville, Kentucky KENTUCKY IN 2025-CA-0570-ME:

Erika Priddy
Elizabethtown, Kentucky

-17-

Get daily alerts for Kentucky Court of Appeals

Daily digest delivered to your inbox.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

About this page

What is GovPing?

Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission

What's from the agency?

Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from KY Courts.

What's AI-generated?

The plain-English summary, classification, and "what to do next" steps are AI-generated from the original text. Cite the source document, not the AI analysis.

Last updated

Classification

Agency
KY Courts
Filed
April 10th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
2025-CA-0566-ME, 2025-CA-0568-ME, 2025-CA-0570-ME, 2025-CA-0572-ME
Docket
2025-CA-0566-ME 2025-CA-0568-ME 2025-CA-0570-ME 2025-CA-0572-ME

Who this affects

Applies to
Criminal defendants Healthcare providers Government agencies
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Parental rights termination Family court appeals Child welfare
Geographic scope
US-KY US-KY

Taxonomy

Primary area
Judicial Administration
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Healthcare Civil Rights

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when Kentucky Court of Appeals publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

You're subscribed!