Legal Case

CHINS: J S v. Indiana Department of Child Services

Court

Indiana Supreme Court

Decided

June 19, 2025

Jurisdiction

S

Importance

54%

Significant

Case Summary

IN THE Indiana Supreme Court FILED Jun 19 2025, 1:59 pm CLERK Supreme Court Case No. 24S-JC-300 Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court In the Matter of E.K. (Child in Need of Services); J.S. (Mother), Appellant –v– Indiana Department of Child Services, Appellee Argued: January 16, 2025 | Decided: June 19, 2025 Appeal from the Whitley Circuit Court No. 92C01-2308-JC-50 The Honorable Matthew J. Rentschler, Judge On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals No. 23A-JC-2909 Opinion by Chief Justice Rush Justices Massa, Slaughter, Goff, and Molter concur. Rush, Chief Justice. The Indiana General Assembly’s statutory framework governing children-in-need-of-services (CHINS) proceedings imposes two overarching duties on trial courts: to exercise independent discretion in assessing a child’s best interests and to safeguard parties’ rights by ensuring due process and entering CHINS adjudications only when all statutory elements are met. By fulfilling these duties of independent judgment and adherence to the law, courts can balance the State’s interest in protecting vulnerable children with a parent’s right to raise their children. Here, an adoptive mother declined to take back into her home a teenage son with a long history of violence toward her and his siblings. The Department of Child Services (DCS) sought a CHINS 1 adjudication on the basis that the mother failed to supply the child with necessary shelter. At the fact-finding hearing, the mother asked the court to enter one of two alternative CHINS adjudications: a CHINS 6 based on the child endangering himself or others; or a CHINS 10 based on his fetal alcohol syndrome diagnosis. The court deferred to DCS’s filing decision in denying the mother’s request and entered a CHINS 1 adjudication. We vacate and remand. In reaching this disposition, we first provide a statutory roadmap of CHINS proceedings—from investigation through fact-finding—for the benefit of not only these parties but also our trial courts, DCS, practitioners, and families. Then, in applying that roadmap, we hold that DCS failed to present evidence showing the mother either had the financial means to provide her son with a safe home or failed to seek other reasonable means to do so—a requisite element of CHINS 1. We also hold that the trial court should have independently assessed whether the child’s best interests called for a CHINS 6 or 10 adjudication. But because significant procedural shortcomings make it inappropriate on this record to adjudicate the child under either category, we remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-JC-300 | June 19, 2025 Page 2 of 27 Facts and Procedural History This case turns on whether an adoptive mother sought all reasonable means to keep her teenage son safe after his persistent violent outbursts led her to decline to take him back from out-of-home placements. As such, it is important to lay out a detailed history of the son’s violence and the mother’s consistent efforts to seek help. E.K. is the adopted son of J.S. (Mother) and A.K. (Father). He was exposed to drugs and alcohol in the womb and was born in 2008 with fetal alcohol syndrome. He has since been diagnosed with ADHD, autism, and disruptive mood dysregulation disorder. When E.K. was two years old, Mother and Father fostered him and, after six months, adopted him. Mother and Father subsequently divorced in 2020, and Mother had custody of their children. Before the proceedings at issue here, Mother worked as a classroom special needs assistant in Allen County where she gained experience and training in managing and modifying children’s difficult behaviors. And at the time of these proceedings, E.K. was fifteen years old and had an older sister, two younger brothers, and a younger sister living in Mother’s home. He also had two younger stepsiblings living in Father’s home. From an early age, E.K. struggled with controlling his anger and aggression. At age four, he threw a block at his baby brother’s head, causing a wound that needed stitches. By age nine, his behavior escalated to flipping over his bed and trying to break a second-story window, leading to a stay at Parkview Behavioral Health Institute. E.K.’s behavior then stabilized for a few years while he received “all kinds of outpatient therapies.” But by 2021, when E.K. was

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Case Details

Case Details

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Status

Decided

Date Decided

June 19, 2025

Jurisdiction

S

Court Type

district

Legal Significance

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Importance Score
Significant
Score54%
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0

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AddedJun 19, 2025
UpdatedJun 19, 2025

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Date FiledJune 19, 2025
Date DecidedJune 19, 2025

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Importance Score
0.5

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Jakmian, C. v. City of Phila.

80% match
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Jun 2025

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West Virginia Supreme Court
Jun 2025

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Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Marietta Area Healthcare, Inc. (Justice Bunn, concurring in part, and dissenting in part)

80% match
West Virginia Supreme Court
Jun 2025

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Jacklin Romeo, Susan S. Rine, and Debra Snyder Miller v. Antero Resources Corporation (Justice Walker, dissenting)

80% match
West Virginia Supreme Court
Jun 2025

No. 23-589, Jacklin Romeo, Susan S. Rine, and Debra Snyder Miller v. Antero Resources Corporation FILED June 11, 2025 Walker, Justice, dissenting: released at 3:00 p.m. C. CASEY FORBES, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA This certified question proceeding presents a new wrinkle to a perennial problem: how to calculate the lessor’s royalty payment under the terms of an oil and gas mineral lease. In the underlying case before the district court, the plaintiffs allege that Antero Resources Corporation breached their contracts by deducting post-production costs from their royalty payments; this is one of the most contentious legal issues in the oil and gas industry. “On one side of the spectrum is the established and majority ‘at the well’ approach, while on the other is the minority ‘first marketable product’ approach.”1 Today, the majority of this Court selects neither of those options and expands Wellman2/Tawney’s3 “point of sale” requirement to (1) oil and gas processed and shipped to downstream 1 William T. Silvia, Slouching Toward Babel: Oklahoma’s First Marketable Product Problem, 49 Tulsa L. Rev. 583 (Winter 2013). 2 See Syl. Pt. 4, Wellman v. Energy Res., Inc., 210 W. Va. 200, 557 S.E.2d 254 (2001) (“If an oil and gas lease provides for a royalty based on proceeds received by the lessee, unless the lease provides otherwise, the lessee must bear all costs incurred in exploring for, producing, marketing, and transporting the product to the point of sale.”). 3 See Syl. Pt. 10, Estate of Tawney v. Columbia Natural Res., 219 W. Va. 266, 633 S.E.2d 22 (2006) (“Language in an oil and gas lease that is intended to allocate between the lessor and lessee the costs of marketing the product and transporting it to the point of sale must expressly provide that the lessor shall bear some part of the costs incurred between the wellhead and the point of sale, identify with particularity the specific deductions the lessee intends to take from the lessor’s royalty (usually 1/8), and indicate the method of calculating the amount to be deducted from the royalty for such post- production costs.”). 1 locations as far away as the Gulf Coast of Louisiana, and (2) enhanced byproducts such as natural gas liquids. Because the majority’s holding expands the breadth of an already unsound rule, I respectfully dissent. Oil and gas leases are contracts.4 And under West Virginia law, contracts are to be interpreted to carry out the intent of the parties, as that intent is evidenced by the contract’s language. I would have taken this opportunity to rewrite the certified questions and overrule our holdings in Wellman/Tawney. Tawney was a mistaken decision, an outlier on the day it was decided and one that’s become lonelier with time. Its predecessor Wellman, also wrongly decided, set the stage for what has become two decades of massive judicial revision of oil and gas leases across our State. In Wellman, this Court addressed an action brought by the lessors seeking damages for failure to pay proper royalties.5 Similar to the leases at issue here, the leases in Wellman provided for natural gas royalties of “‘one-eighth (1/8) of the market value of such gas at the mouth of the well[.]’”6 When resolving the question of whether or what expenses were properly deductible, the Court acknowledged the split of authority regarding deduction of post-production costs and the rationale of those states holding that post- 4 Ascent Res. - Marcellus, LLC v. Huffman, 244 W. Va. 119, 125, 851 S.E.2d 782, 788 (2020); see also Phillip T. Glyptis, Viability of Arbitration Clauses in West Virginia Oil and Gas Leases: It Is All About the Lease!!!, 115 W. Va. L. Rev. 1005, 1007 (2013) (“[A] lease is by definition a contract. All rights and protections are controlled by the principles of contract law and depend on the proper construction.”). 5 Wellman, 210 W. Va. at 204, 557 S.E.2d at 258. 6 Id. 2 production costs are not properly deductible from the lessor’s royalty.7 The Court noted that under the implied covenant to market, the lessee embraces the responsibility to get the oil or gas in marketable condition and actually transport it to market.8 Noting simply that like other marketable product rule states, “West Virginia holds that a lessee impliedly covenants th

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