Scott v. Arkansas Dept. Human Services - Parental Rights Termination
Summary
The Arkansas Court of Appeals affirmed the termination of parental rights for Katlyn and Steven Scott concerning their minor child. The court found clear and convincing evidence supported the termination grounds and that it was in the child's best interest, despite the parents' arguments regarding support for the findings and potential relative placement.
What changed
The Arkansas Court of Appeals has affirmed a lower court's decision to terminate the parental rights of Katlyn and Steven Scott concerning their minor child. The appellate court found sufficient evidence to support the statutory grounds for termination and concluded that termination was in the child's best interest. Steven Scott appealed, arguing insufficient support for the termination findings, while Katlyn Scott questioned whether termination was in the child's best interest without confirming potential placement with her sister.
This ruling means the termination of parental rights stands, impacting the legal status of the parents and the child. The decision affirms the authority of the Arkansas Department of Human Services and the Scott County Circuit Court in child welfare cases. Regulated entities involved in child welfare or family law should note the standards of evidence and best interest considerations applied in parental rights termination cases within Arkansas.
What to do next
- Review court opinion for implications on child welfare and parental rights proceedings in Arkansas.
- Ensure adherence to clear and convincing evidence standards in dependency-neglect and termination of parental rights cases.
- Document all actions and evidence meticulously in child welfare cases to support court findings.
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March 4, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Katlyn Scott and Steven Scott v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child
Court of Appeals of Arkansas
- Citations: 2026 Ark. App. 149
Docket Number: Unknown
Combined Opinion
Cite as 2026 Ark. App. 149
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION IV
No. CV-25-400
KATLYN SCOTT AND STEVEN Opinion Delivered March 4, 2026
SCOTT
APPELLANTS APPEAL FROM THE SCOTT
COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
[NO. 64JV-23-15]
V.
HONORABLE TERRY SULLIVAN,
ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF JUDGE
HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR
CHILD AFFIRMED
APPELLEES
BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge
Katlyn and Steven Scott appeal the Scott County Circuit Court’s order terminating
their parental rights to Minor Child (MC), who was born 29 November 2021. The circuit
court found clear and convincing evidence for three statutory grounds to terminate both
parents’ parental rights, and that doing so was in MC’s best interest. Steven argues there
was too little support for those findings. Katlyn, who had been living apart from Steven for
many months by the termination hearing, does not deny there were grounds to terminate
her parental rights. She argues the circuit court erred by finding termination was in MC’s
best interest without confirming whether he could achieve permanency (and honor the
statutory preference for relative placements) through placement with her sister. We affirm
termination as to both parents.
I.
This is the second appeal in this case. Steven appealed the circuit court’s 12
December 2023 order adjudicating MC dependent-neglected based on medical and
environmental neglect. We affirmed. Scott v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2024 Ark. App.
517, 699 S.W.3d 851. The facts that led the Arkansas Department of Human Services
(DHS) to take custody of MC are recited in more detail in that opinion. Briefly, Katlyn
had a history with DHS involving two previous children dating back to 2017. Id. at 1, 699
S.W.3d at 852. DHS opened a new case involving MC in June 2023 after receiving a
hotline call about environmental neglect. Id.
Ten days before the DHS home visit that started these proceedings rolling, the Scotts
had taken MC to the emergency room for a high fever. Id. at 3, 699 S.W.3d at 853. He
was diagnosed with strep throat and discharged the same day (August 15) with a prescription
for Keflex, an antibiotic. On August 25, DHS conducted a home visit in the protective-
services case. The DHS employees found MC feverish and lethargic, with his eyes rolling
back in his head, and covered with a rash. He was dirty and unkempt, and had a foul odor.
His Keflex prescription had been filled, but—ten days after the ER visit—the bottle was
almost completely full.
Neither parent had a driver’s license or transportation; a DHS program specialist
drove them to the ER again. Id. at 4, 699 S.W.3d at 854. At the hospital, MC was
diagnosed with impetigo, strep throat, and a viral infection. An ER doctor said that the
infection would not have been as severe if the Scotts had provided appropriate care when
2
the medication was first prescribed. Indeed, he said that if DHS personnel had not already
been present, he would have had to make a report for medical neglect.
The circuit court entered an ex parte order for emergency custody on DHS’s petition
a few days later. It adjudicated MC dependent-neglected after a two-day hearing in
November 2023. The case goal then was reunification. The court ordered both parents to
follow the case plan and the court’s orders.
We affirmed the dependency-neglect finding in Scott, supra. The mandate issued 13
November 2024. Meanwhile, the court had continued to hold hearings. After a March
2024 review hearing, it found Steven had strengths in employment and health but often
used bad judgment. Further, it found the Scotts’ living conditions were “deplorable” and
the house was “abominable.” There was trash and animal excrement spread throughout.
For reasons we don’t know, the Scotts separated while the appeal was pending. 1
Since the separation, Katlyn had moved through seven residences in Waldron and small
towns in Crawford County. While staying with a friend, Katlyn became romantically
involved with the friend’s boyfriend. At the termination hearing, she testified she was
engaged to him and depended on food stamps and his income. Apart from two months,
she was unemployed throughout the case.
During the same period, Steven worked full time for Tyson at a chicken-processing
facility. But the stability and appropriateness of his housing situation continued to be issues.
After a permanency planning hearing in July 2024, the court noted that Steven had made
1
Both parents testified they were waiting to hire a divorce lawyer with their tax
refund.
3
progress in the case but was about to be evicted and had not found suitable replacement
housing. After a review hearing in October 2024, it found that though he had made
progress in some areas, the condition of his home at an October 6 home visit was “abysmal
and totally inappropriate and unsafe for the juvenile.” He was living in Boles then with his
aunt Betty and her five dogs in a two-bedroom trailer. He continued to live there through
the end of this record.
DHS petitioned to terminate the Scotts’ parental rights in October 2024 on four
grounds: twelve months’ failure to remedy; twelve months’ failure to provide significant
material support or maintain meaningful contact; subsequent factors; and aggravated
circumstances, specifically that there was little likelihood that continued services would
result in successful reunification. In the background, it had been exploring placement for
MC with Kallie Bales, MC’s maternal aunt in Colorado. By the October 2024 review
hearing, the court had received a favorable Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children
(ICPC) home study on Bales and her current partner. However, Bales was still married to
someone else. The court warned it would not consider placement until her divorce was
final. Bales finalized it; on December 16, DHS moved for discretion to place MC with
Bales, attaching a copy of her 7 November 2024 divorce decree.
The termination hearing began 14 January 2025 and resumed 11 March 2025. The
Department introduced photos from home visits to Betty’s trailer starting in October 2024.
DHS caseworker Melissa Meyers and program assistant Amber Duncan took the photos.
They testified about what they observed at the home. In early photos, virtually every
horizonal surface is stacked with things or boxes of things. One of the things is a bong.
4
(Betty’s, Meyers said.) Boxes and storage containers are stacked as many as four or five high
from the floor, even in the kitchen. Meyers testified she was concerned MC could pull
them over on himself. She was also concerned about an air conditioner with frayed wires.
They testified there were other problems the photos didn’t show, including dog urine
and feces and a strong odor. Meyers testified that hygiene had been a consistent problem
for both parents. It was bad enough that during visits at other houses, other parents had
complained about the smell because “it’s just kind of a lingering odor.” (She acknowledged
that Steven worked at a chicken-processing plant and might have brought the odor home.)
The conditions in Betty’s trailer waxed and waned, better one visit, worse at another. At
the December visit, Duncan said, there was dog urine and feces in the carpet, and it smelled
pretty bad. There were stacked dishes and food everywhere. This was not Christmas
clutter. Duncan said she noticed dog messes and offensive odors every time she visited the
house. Meyers acknowledged the house was much cleaner in January 2025—“better but
not clean,” according to Duncan. But Steven’s closet, which was right next to MC’s
intended crib, was stacked “all the way to the ceiling” with stuff.
The Department was more concerned with what they couldn’t see: Betty refused to
let them enter or look in two rooms, including her bedroom. According to Duncan, Betty
said she put the dogs in her bedroom so they wouldn’t bite. Meyers expressed concern
about the dogs, but they stayed. Steven testified that no one was allowed in his aunt Betty’s
bedroom because there were “firearms back there” and “blades back there.” He said she
was currently sleeping on the couch because that bedroom was “being rearranged.”
5
According to Steven, the January 2025 home visit left him with the impression that
the home was now appropriate. On February 28, Meyers and Duncan made an
unannounced visit. There was trash on the porch. Duncan noticed an odor even as she
walked up to the house. The odor was “even stronger whenever he opened the door and
came out.” Steven refused to let them in. Anna Noakes, A DHS supervisor, testified that
although Steven interacted well with MC during supervised visits, the Department had
never offered unsupervised visits because “his home hasn’t been appropriate to bring the
child to.” And at the last attempt to assess the home—that February 28 visit—DHS was
denied access. “So we don’t know.”
II.
The circuit court found DHS had proved by clear and convincing evidence that
there were three of four grounds DHS pleaded in the petition to terminate the Scotts’
parental rights: the twelve-month failure-to-remedy ground, Ark. Code Ann § 9-27-
341(b)(3)(B)(i)(a) (Supp. 2023); the subsequent-factors ground, id. § 9-27-
341(b)(3)(B)(vii)(a); and the aggravated-circumstances ground, id. § 9-27-
341(b)(3)(B)(ix)(a). 2 Steven admits all three findings are based on similar facts, chiefly his
housing and stability. 3
In the court’s bench ruling, it noted that one of the reasons the case opened was the
“abominable” conditions in the home. Though Steven (unlike Katlyn) had transportation
2
The Juvenile Code was repealed and recodified by Act 518 of 2025. However, the
Act was not in effect when the circuit court entered the termination order.
3
The proof relevant to grounds for termination diverges somewhat at the parties’
separation. Because only Steven contests that issue, we discuss his part.
6
and employment, “neither parent has shown an ability to provide a stable environment for
themselves, much less this young child.” Further, the court found it significant that Steven’s
aunt would not allow DHS access to her locked bedroom, and Steven had refused to let a
caseworker enter the home at all.
Steven argues that none of those grounds was supported by clear and convincing
evidence. But proof of even one ground is enough to affirm a termination if the best-
interest requirement is met. Boomhower v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2019 Ark. App. 397,
587 S.W.3d 231. There was sufficient proof for the failure-to-remedy ground here.
The Department’s burden of proof in termination-of-parental-rights cases is clear
and convincing evidence, a “degree of proof that will produce in the finder of fact a firm
conviction” as to what it must establish. Ring v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2021 Ark. App.
146, at 5, 620 S.W.3d 551, 555. We review de novo on the appellate record. Lindsey v.
Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2025 Ark. App. 491. But we will not reverse unless the court’s
findings were clearly erroneous, meaning that although there may be evidence to support
them, the entire evidence leaves us with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has
been made. Id. In that analysis we give the circuit court’s findings some deference because
we cannot observe the witnesses’ testimony and assess their credibility, as it could. Wagner
v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2023 Ark. App. 400, 675 S.W.3d 469.
Under the failure-to-remedy ground, the circuit court may terminate parental rights
if it determines
[t]hat a juvenile has been adjudicated by the court to be dependent-neglected
and has continued to be out of the custody of the parent for twelve (12)
months and, despite a meaningful effort by the department to rehabilitate the
7
parent and correct the conditions that caused removal, those conditions have
not been remedied by the parent.
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341 (b)(3)(B)(i)(a).
Though the medical-neglect issue might have precipitated DHS’s decision to remove
MC from the Scotts’ custody, the court adjudicated MC dependent-neglected because of
environmental neglect as well. We did not decide (or need to decide) in the first appeal
whether that finding was adequately supported; however, we recited evidence that when
DHS responded to the Scotts’ home after the June 2023 hotline call, the DHS employees
found “animal feces and urine on the floor, a large amount of trash and debris in the home,
and roaches.” Scott, 2024 Ark. App. 517, at 3, 699 S.W.3d at 853. MC himself was “in a
dirty playpen with no mattress or other bedding, his diaper was very full, and he was crying.”
Id. at 3–4, 699 S.W.3d at 853. Though conditions had sometimes improved—the Scotts
initially made a “huge cleanup effort”—follow-up visits showed the home was falling back
into that original state. Id. at 4, 699 S.W.3d at 853.
The circuit court was aware of all this. And all of it sounds familiar. We must affirm
the circuit court’s finding that Steven failed to remedy the environmental neglect that caused
MC’s removal from the home, even if it was a closer call than some. We do not reweigh
the evidence to make findings in the first instance; we review the circuit court’s findings for
clear error. Lindsey, supra. The Scotts’ inability to provide a consistently safe home
environment for MC was a theme in this record. Steven argues we should reverse even so
because there was insufficient proof of a “meaningful effort” by DHS to correct those
conditions. But we cannot entertain that argument. He did not appeal the previous orders
finding DHS had made reasonable efforts or raise that issue at the termination hearing.
8
Yarbrough v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2016 Ark. App. 429, at 7–8, 501 S.W.3d 839, 843–
44 (collecting cases).
III.
Finally, both parents argue, albeit for different reasons, that the circuit court erred by
finding termination was in MC’s best interest. The circuit court must base its best-interest
finding on consideration of at least two factors, the likelihood of adoptability and the
potential harm caused by returning the child to the custody of the parent. Ark. Code Ann.
§ 9-27-341 (b)(3)(A)(i)–(ii). Neither parent challenges the circuit court’s finding that MC is
adoptable.
Steven argues that, for the same reasons he contends there was insufficient evidence
of grounds for termination, there was insufficient evidence of potential harm. The ultimate
issue in any termination-of-parental-rights case, regardless of a parent’s compliance with a
case plan, is whether the parent has become a stable, safe parent able to care for his or her
child. Cobb v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2017 Ark. App. 85, 512 S.W.3d 694. Further, a
child’s need for permanency and stability may override a parent’s request for more time to
improve his circumstances. Id.
In the termination order, the circuit court observed that “we are at 19 months in this
case and not even close to the parents having unsupervised visitation.” It found neither
parent was compliant with counseling and visitation, nor did either parent have suitable
housing. Though Steven had attended court-ordered counseling until October 2024, his
therapist had since discharged him for “no showing” several sessions. Steven testified in
March 2025 that the provider stopped sending reminders and, without them, he lost track
9
of the days. Indeed, he both displayed and admitted trouble judging how much time had
passed. He could not recall the month he had last seen a counselor, or even whether it was
within the last month and a half. He said, “[M]y days and months are so clustered together,
I barely remember yesterday.” Challenged, he repeated, “I barely remember what all
happened yesterday.” He had not gone to counseling since November.
The potential-harm factor of the best-interest analysis does not require the circuit
court to find actual harm would occur or affirmatively identify the potential harm. Phillips
v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2020 Ark. App. 169, 596 S.W.3d 91. The evidence must be
viewed in a forward-looking manner and considered in broad terms. Id. Given how the
removal proceedings started—with both parents failing to administer antibiotics MC had
been prescribed for a serious illness—we could not reverse the circuit court on this point.
Finally, Katlyn argues the circuit court erred by finding termination was in MC’s best
interest without considering whether MC could achieve permanency (and preserve the
family ties to her) through a relative placement with Bales. She did not preserve that
argument for appeal. The circuit court was aware that an ICPC home study for Bales had
been approved, and that DHS supported placing MC with her. DHS’s motion for discretion
to make that placement was still pending in March 2025; the court mentioned it, and
promised a hearing on it, after the termination hearing ended.
But the parties had not argued, for example, that the court should determine her
suitability for placement before the termination hearing and consider it instead of
10
termination. There are indications Bales cooperated and was willing to accept custody. 4
But she had not moved to intervene in the action, and there was no evidence she had an
existing bond with MC. Compare Borah v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2020 Ark. App. 491,
612 S.W.3d 749 (reversing termination where testimony established that grandmother who
had a bond with child had repeatedly tried to receive placement). The parties in
termination-of-parental-rights cases are not excused from preserving arguments in circuit
court. We do not reverse a circuit court for ignoring relative-placement issues without
evidence it was asked to consider them. Lindsey, supra; Hile v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs.,
2023 Ark. App. 173; Huggins v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 2022 Ark. App. 371.
Affirmed.
TUCKER and THYER, JJ., agree.
Jennifer Oyler Olson, Arkansas Commission for Parent Counsel, for separate
appellant Steven Scott.
Dusti Standridge, for separate appellant Katlyn Scott.
Kaylee Wedgeworth, Ark. Dep’t of Human Services, Office of Chief Counsel, for
appellee.
Dana McClain and Linda J. Hamilton, attorneys ad litem for minor child.
4
The transcript indicates Bales was present for the first day of the termination hearing
in January 2025. She did not testify.
11
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