Justin K., Morgan B. v. Dcs, L.K. ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                       NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    JUSTIN K., MORGAN B., Appellants,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SAFETY, L.K., Appellees.
    No. 1 CA-JV 22-0137
    FILED 11-10-2022
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. JD39171
    The Honorable Michael D. Gordon, Judge
    SPECIAL ACTION JURISDICTION ACCEPTED IN PART AND
    RELIEF DENIED;
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Robert D. Rosanelli Attorney at Law, Phoenix
    By Robert D. Rosanelli
    Counsel for Appellant Justin K.
    Czop Law Firm, PLLC, Higley
    By Steven Czop
    Counsel for Appellant Morgan B.
    Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Tucson
    By Jennifer R. Blum
    Counsel for Appellee Department of Child Safety
    JUSTIN K., MORGAN B. v. DCS, L.K.
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Cynthia J. Bailey delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge Samuel A. Thumma and Vice Chief Judge David B. Gass
    joined.
    B A I L E Y, Judge:
    ¶1             Justin K. (“Father”) appeals the termination of his parental
    rights to L.K. (“the child”). He argues that the Department of Child Safety
    (“DCS”) did not provide adequate reunification services. Father and
    Morgan B. (“Mother”) both appeal the denial of her motion for change in
    physical custody. For the following reasons, we accept special action
    jurisdiction as to the custody motion, deny relief, and affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2            Father and Mother are the child’s biological parents and were
    both incarcerated when the child was born in March 2020. DCS filed a
    dependency shortly after the child’s birth alleging Mother’s neglect due to
    substance abuse, incarceration, failure to treat her mental health, and failure
    to provide for the child’s basic needs. DCS alleged the child was dependent
    as to Father based on the length of his incarceration and his failure to take
    any steps to establish paternity or seek custody or parenting time with the
    child.
    ¶3             When Mother pled no contest to the dependency allegations,
    the court found the child dependent as to her in May 2020 and adopted a
    family reunification case plan. Father contested the petition pending a
    paternity test. Following the paternity test, the court found Father to be the
    child’s biological father in February 2021.
    ¶4            At a May 2021 hearing, the court changed the case plan to
    severance and adoption. In June 2021, DCS moved to terminate Mother and
    Father’s parental rights. DCS asserted Mother was neglecting to provide
    proper and effective parental care due to substance abuse and that the
    length of Mother’s felony incarceration deprived the child of a normal
    home. See Ariz. Rev. Stat. (“A.R.S.”) § 8-533(B)(3), (4). DCS also asserted
    Father’s rights should be terminated due to the length of his felony
    incarceration. See A.R.S. § 8-533(B)(4). These grounds were later amended
    2
    JUSTIN K., MORGAN B. v. DCS, L.K.
    Decision of the Court
    to allege fifteen-months’ time-in-care as to Mother.           See A.R.S. § 8-
    533(B)(8)(c).
    ¶5             The court held a termination adjudication in October 2021,
    which Mother contested. Father pled no contest to the allegations in the
    petition but requested that, if the court did not terminate Mother’s rights,
    his rights not be terminated under the court’s best interests analysis.
    ¶6            While the matter was under advisement, and just after our
    Supreme Court filed its decision in Jessie D. v. Dep’t of Child Safety, 
    251 Ariz. 574
     (2021), Father moved to withdraw his no-contest plea and set a status
    conference about visitation. Father’s counsel noted on information and
    belief that DCS had made no effort to provide for visitation or to help Father
    form a bond with the child despite Father requesting visitation by video
    conference for that purpose.
    ¶7            Around the same time, Mother moved for a change in
    physical custody. She noted that, even though DCS had conducted a home
    study for the child’s placement with a paternal relative, DCS’s
    representative testified that DCS did not plan to place the child with that
    relative.
    ¶8            The court granted Father’s motion to withdraw his plea and
    reopen evidence as it related to his rights. Further, the court granted DCS’s
    December 2021 motion to order Father receive video visitation. The court
    also granted Mother’s subsequent motion to reopen evidence as to her
    rights based on her release from prison.
    ¶9            During a combined evidentiary hearing held over five days in
    April 2022, DCS caseworkers testified that DCS sent Father letters as early
    as April 2020, offering visitation and suggesting he send letters, pictures, or
    gifts, and participate in services offered by the Arizona Department of
    Corrections (“ADOC”). They testified that after Father requested visitation
    in October 2021, DCS worked with ADOC to set up visitation, despite
    periods when ADOC stopped responding.
    ¶10          The court denied Mother’s motion to change custody and
    granted DCS’s motions to terminate parental rights in May 2022. The court
    found DCS provided sufficient reunification efforts to both parents
    including visitation with Father beginning in January 2022. The court
    found DCS had proven the grounds of chronic substance abuse and fifteen-
    months’ time-in-care as to Mother.
    3
    JUSTIN K., MORGAN B. v. DCS, L.K.
    Decision of the Court
    ¶11           As to Father, the court found that the length of his felony
    incarceration would preclude a normal home for the child. In particular,
    the court found the child was born after Father was incarcerated, Father had
    first requested visitation in October 2021, and therefore, the child had no
    pre-existing attachment and bond to him. The court called the prospect of
    Father creating and nurturing a bond while likely incarcerated until the
    child turns seven “daunting” and noted that Father’s presence “will be
    more of an intrusion and would detract from a normal home life,” given the
    placement’s distance from Yuma, where Father was incarcerated.
    ¶12           After finding that termination was in the child’s best interests,
    the court considered Mother’s motion to change the child’s placement to a
    paternal cousin. The court weighed the testimony of DCS’s child
    attachment expert about the disruption and damage of moving the child
    from the only home the child had ever known. The court noted both the
    current and Mother’s proposed placement were considered kinship and
    that both ranked equally under A.R.S. § 8-514(B)(3). The court found
    Mother’s proposed placement would not benefit the child more than the
    current placement. The court also found that DCS had made adequate
    efforts to find kinship placements and that though Mother’s proposed
    placement was suitable, it came too late and would be unnecessarily
    disruptive to the child.
    ¶13           Mother and Father timely appealed. We have jurisdiction
    over Father’s appeal pursuant to Article 6, Section 9 of the Arizona
    Constitution, A.R.S. §§ 8-235(A), 12-120.21(A)(1), and 12-2101(A)(1), as well
    as Arizona Rule of Procedure for the Juvenile Court 601(b)(2)(F).
    DISCUSSION
    I.     We accept special action jurisdiction over the issue of custody,
    but the parents lack standing to challenge the child’s placement
    on appeal.
    ¶14             We have an independent duty to determine our jurisdiction
    over an appeal. Ruesga v. Kindred Nursing Ctrs., L.L.C., 
    215 Ariz. 589
    , 593,
    ¶ 8 (App. 2007). Mother does not challenge any of the termination grounds
    on appeal; she argues only that the superior court erred by denying her
    motion to move the child to her proposed placement.                      Mother
    acknowledges that the proper mechanism for appealing an interlocutory
    order for placement in an ongoing dependency is by special action. See
    Jessicah C. v. Dep’t of Child Safety, 
    248 Ariz. 203
    , 207, ¶ 16 (App. 2020).
    4
    JUSTIN K., MORGAN B. v. DCS, L.K.
    Decision of the Court
    ¶15           But Mother argues the practical effect of the superior court’s
    decision to hold a combined termination adjudication together with her
    motion for change of placement, and then to issue a decision on both
    simultaneously, rendered the denial of her motion to change placement a
    final appealable order. See Maricopa Cnty. Juv. Action No. JD-5312, 
    178 Ariz. 372
    , 374 (App. 1994); see also Ariz. R. P. Juv. Ct. (“ARJCP”) 601(b)(2)(F)
    (noting “final orders include . . . an order granting or denying a petition or
    motion for termination of parental rights.”).
    ¶16           We agree with Mother that the effect of combining the two
    orders had the practical effect of ending the case. Still the denial of her
    motion to change placement is unappealable. See Brionna J. v. Dep’t of Child
    Safety, 
    247 Ariz. 346
    , 349-50, ¶ 10 (App. 2019). Instead, the exercise of our
    special action jurisdiction is appropriate, even if the order denying her
    motion is interlocutory and unappealable. See id. at 350-51, ¶ 14.
    ¶17             Even so, we hold that Mother lacks standing to appeal the
    denial of her motion. The parents do not challenge either the termination
    grounds found by the superior court or its best interests findings (which are
    supported by the record) and as such waived those arguments. See Crystal
    E. v. Dep’t of Child Safety, 
    241 Ariz. 576
    , 577, ¶ 1 (App. 2017) (by challenging
    only the best interests findings, parents “abandon[] and waive[] any
    challenge to the court’s finding of the statutory” grounds for termination).
    Once grounds for termination have been proven and the court finds by a
    preponderance of the evidence that termination is in the child’s best
    interests, the biological parent loses all interest in the child’s post-severance
    placement. Antonio M. v. Ariz. Dep’t of Econ. Sec., 
    222 Ariz. 369
    , 370, ¶ 2
    (App. 2009). We find no merit in Mother’s argument that she has standing
    because she moved to change the child’s placement before the superior
    court severed her rights. In short, Mother simply lacks standing to
    challenge the child’s placement at this point, and to the extent Father joins
    this argument in his brief, he too lacks standing for the same reason. 
    Id.
    Accordingly we cannot (and do not) consider this argument on appeal.
    II.     DCS made reasonable efforts to facilitate visits between Father
    and the child after Father belatedly requested them.
    ¶18            Father likewise fails to challenge – and waives any argument
    as to – the statutory grounds or best interests findings. See Crystal E., 241
    Ariz. at 577, ¶ 1. Father instead argues that DCS failed to prove it had
    engaged in diligent efforts to reunify him with the child. DCS has a
    constitutional obligation to undertake reasonable efforts to preserve the
    family. Donald W. v. Dep’t of Child Safety, 
    247 Ariz. 9
    , 22, ¶ 46 (App. 2019)
    5
    JUSTIN K., MORGAN B. v. DCS, L.K.
    Decision of the Court
    (citing Marina P. v. Ariz. Dep’t of Econ. Sec., 
    214 Ariz. 326
    , 333, ¶ 37 (App.
    2007)); see also Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 753-54 (1982). Incarceration
    alone does not render a parent unfit, and DCS must still provide services
    “designed to address an incarcerated parent’s desire to maintain a parent-
    child relationship,” while incarcerated. Jessie D., 251 Ariz. at 582, ¶ 21. But
    this requirement arises only if “an incarcerated parent requests
    reunification services, such as visitation.” Id.
    ¶19           Father argues that because he had virtual visits with the child
    for only three months, DCS’s efforts were per se insufficient. But, as Father
    admits, DCS offered visits at the outset of the case – soon after the child was
    born in March 2020. Father first requested visits in October 2021, eight
    months after genetic testing established his paternity. DCS’s obligation to
    make reasonable efforts to provide services began when Father requested
    them. See id. We therefore reject his argument that DCS should have
    engaged in more strenuous efforts before he requested services.
    ¶20            Father also argues the three-month delay between requesting
    and receiving services shows that DCS’s efforts were ineffectual. But the
    record contains reasonable evidence that DCS diligently and repeatedly
    contacted ADOC to facilitate visitation and eventually secured a court
    order for video visits. To the extent Father invites us to reweigh the
    evidence of DCS’s efforts on appeal, we decline to do so. Alma S. v. Dep’t of
    Child Safety, 
    245 Ariz. 146
    , 151, ¶ 18 (2018). Father has shown no error.
    ¶21           Reasonable evidence supported the findings of the superior
    court as to both parents and they have shown no error.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶22           We accept special action jurisdiction in part, decline relief,
    and affirm.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1 CA-JV 22-0137

Filed Date: 11/10/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/10/2022