Christine Rodriguez v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children ( 2024 )


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  •                                  Cite as 
    2024 Ark. App. 469
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION I
    No. CV-24-111
    CHRISTINE RODRIGUEZ                             Opinion Delivered October 2, 2024
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                                              [NO. 26JV-23-196]
    ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF        HONORABLE LYNN WILLIAMS,
    HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR      JUDGE
    CHILDREN
    APPELLEES AFFIRMED
    CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge
    Christine Rodriguez appeals from the order of the Garland County Circuit Court
    placing custody of her two children, MC1 and MC2, 1 with their father and closing their
    dependency-neglect case. On appeal, she argues that the circuit court abused its discretion
    when it denied her motion for continuance; in addition, she contends that the court erred
    in granting custody to the children’s father and closing the case without giving her proper
    notice that reunification services would be terminated. We affirm.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    The Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) received a phone call from local
    law enforcement on April 27, 2023, after MC1 flagged down a passing motorist to request
    1
    MC1 is a female born in 2008, and MC2 is a male born in 2011.
    help because there was no food in the home. Upon conducting a child-welfare check at the
    home of a family friend where MC1 had been staying, DHS determined that Rodriguez’s
    whereabouts were unknown. DHS also learned that fifteen-year-old MC1 had not attended
    school since January. Accordingly, DHS exercised a seventy-two-hour hold on MC1 and
    subsequently filed a petition for dependency-neglect alleging that she was at substantial risk
    of serious harm as a result of abandonment, abuse, neglect, and parental unfitness. Although
    DHS noted that it had not been able to locate MC2 at the time it filed the petition, it asked
    that he also be placed in DHS’s custody.
    The circuit court entered an ex parte order for emergency custody on May 1, placing
    MC1 in DHS’s custody. The court also directed DHS to locate MC2, assess his home for
    safety, and, if necessary, take him into custody as well. Following a probable-cause hearing,
    which Rodriguez did not attend, the court continued custody of MC1 with DHS and ordered
    MC2 into DHS custody. The adjudication hearing was scheduled for June 21.
    On June 21, Rodriguez appeared for the hearing, as did the children’s father, Dennis
    Lorenzo, who lives in Arizona. At the parents’ request, the court appointed counsel for both
    of them. In addition, the court placed custody of MC2 with Lorenzo and ordered that MC1
    should have weekly phone calls with him until the next hearing. The court then continued
    the remainder of the adjudication hearing until July 19.
    Following the July 19 hearing, the court entered an agreed adjudication order. In this
    order, the parents stipulated that the children were dependent-neglected due to
    environmental neglect resulting from Rodriguez’s failure to provide adequate supervision.
    2
    The court also determined that Lorenzo was a nonoffending parent. With no objection
    noted by Rodriguez, the court placed the children in Lorenzo’s temporary custody and set
    the goal of the case as reunification with a fit and proper parent and a concurrent goal of
    placement with relatives or fictive kin. Finally, the court scheduled a review hearing for
    October 25.
    On October 23, however, the court entered an order continuing the review hearing
    until November 15. At the outset of the November hearing, Rodriguez’s counsel informed
    the court that she was not present. Counsel stated that Rodriguez had told him she did not
    receive notice of the hearing and that he realized after going through his communication
    with her that he had failed to tell her about it. Counsel therefore asked for a one-week
    continuance “so [Rodriguez] could have notice of the hearing.” DHS objected to the
    continuance, noting that Lorenzo was ready to proceed with the hearing that day. The court
    denied the request and proceeded with the review hearing.
    During the hearing, Jamie Moran, the case supervisor, testified that the initial removal
    of MC1 occurred because she had called for help because she had nothing to eat and was
    unable to attend school. MC1 had been staying with Rodriguez’s elderly friend; the friend
    was unable to care for MC1, and Rodriguez could not be located. Since that time, both
    children had been placed with their father, whom Moran described as the nonoffending
    parent. She added that DHS had asked Arizona Child Protective Services to conduct an
    assessment of his home, and that agency determined that he was fit and appropriate. She
    further stated that the children had been placed with him, and they were happy and doing
    3
    well. Because DHS had had no contact from Rodriguez, it was Moran’s recommendation
    that the case be closed and custody of the children placed with their father.
    Rodriguez’s attorney called no witnesses and presented no evidence, but he did voice
    Rodriguez’s objection to closure of the case and asked “for the full time that this case be
    worked on.” The court nevertheless granted the motion to close and awarded permanent
    custody of the children to Lorenzo. An order to that effect was entered on November 21.
    On November 22, Rodriguez moved to set aside the order placing the children with
    their father and closing the case. Rodriguez argued that the closure of the case amounted to
    a termination of reunification services to her without statutory notice and violated her due-
    process rights. In her accompanying brief, she acknowledged that the court was statutorily
    authorized to transfer temporary or permanent custody to the noncustodial parent on a
    finding that it is in the best interest of the children to do so. She argued, however, that
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-327(a)(1)(B)(iv)(b) (Supp. 2023) provides that “an
    order of a transfer of custody to the non-custodial parent does not relieve the Department
    of Human Services of the responsibility to provide services to the parent from whom custody
    was removed, unless the court enters an order to relieve the department of the
    responsibility.” She urged that because DHS asked the court to close the case after it had
    placed the children with their father, it was, in effect, “asking to be relieved of providing
    reunification . . . services” without timely filing a motion for no-reunification services. The
    failure to “provide the required notice” violated her due-process rights, Rodriguez argued.
    4
    She therefore asked the court to set aside its order to close the case and order DHS to
    continue to provide reunification services to her.
    DHS responded by noting that Rodriguez acknowledged that a court has the authority
    to transfer custody to a noncustodial parent pursuant to section 9-27-327(a)(1)(B)(iv)(a). It
    pointed out, however, that nothing in that statute requires a party to file any type of motion
    prior to a court’s decision to transfer custody. It added that even if some type of notice were
    required, Rodriguez had been told in October 2023 that DHS would be seeking permanent
    custody with Lorenzo.2 Accordingly, DHS asked the court to deny Rodriguez’s motion to set
    aside.
    The circuit court entered an order denying Rodriguez’s motion on December 11, and
    Rodriguez timely appealed. She now argues to this court that the circuit court erred in
    denying her request for a continuance of the review hearing; in addition, she asserts that the
    court erred in granting permanent custody of the children to Lorenzo and closing the case.
    II. Standard of Review
    In dependency-neglect cases, the standard of review on appeal is de novo, but we do
    not reverse the circuit court’s findings unless they are clearly erroneous. Samuels v. Ark. Dep’t
    of Hum. Servs., 
    2016 Ark. App. 2
    , 
    479 S.W.3d 596
    . A finding is clearly erroneous when,
    2
    DHS attached as an exhibit a copy of an email from Jamie Moran to Rodriguez’s
    attorney and others on October 23, 2023, stating that “[w]e recommend permanent custody
    with the father and close the case. We have still not heard from the mother at all.” That
    email also contained a copy of the court report, which likewise reflected that “mother is
    currently unable to locate” and that placement with Lorenzo in Arizona was “the most
    permanent, fit placement for MC1 and MC2.”
    5
    although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left
    with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. Link v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum.
    Servs., 
    2023 Ark. App. 569
    , 
    680 S.W.3d 724
    .
    III. Discussion
    A. Denial of Rodriguez’s Request for Continuance
    In her first point on appeal, Rodriguez argues that the circuit court erred when it
    denied her request for a continuance at the beginning of the review hearing. A motion for
    continuance shall be granted only upon a showing of good cause. Williams v. Ark. Dep’t of
    Hum. Servs., 
    2019 Ark. App. 194
    , 
    575 S.W.3d 415
    . We will not reverse the denial of a motion
    for continuance absent an abuse of discretion amounting to a denial of justice. 
    Id.
     A circuit
    court abuses its discretion when it acts improvidently and without due consideration. 
    Id.
     The
    appellant bears the burden of proof and must show that he or she was prejudiced by the
    denial. Collier v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    2022 Ark. App. 100
    , 
    641 S.W.3d 67
    .
    At the beginning of the November 15, 2023 review hearing, the following colloquy
    occurred between the court and Rodriguez’s counsel:
    COURT:        [Counsel], you represent?
    COUNSEL:      Christina Rodriguez, Your Honor.
    COURT:        Is she present?
    COUNSEL:      She is not, Your Honor.
    COURT:        And have you had––when was the last contact you had with her?
    6
    COUNSEL:      Actually, as we speak, Your Honor. Apparently, according to her, she
    did not receive notice of this hearing. I went through my
    communication with her and it does appear I failed to do that, Your
    Honor, and so I apologize to the Court for that. I would ask for a one-
    week continuance so she could have notice of the hearing.
    [The court then heard objections to the continuance request from the attorney ad
    litem, counsel for DHS, and counsel for Lorenzo.]
    COURT:        [Counsel], was your client here at the last hearing when I set this
    hearing today?
    COUNSEL:      Your Honor, I don’t believe she was at that hearing, but this hearing
    was originally set for October 25 and had been continued from that
    date, Your Honor. That was the hearing she had notice of.
    COURT:        I’m going to deny that motion and we’ll go forward.
    On appeal, Rodriguez argues that the circuit court abused its discretion in denying
    her request for a one-week continuance. She asserts the court’s decision was arbitrary because
    it had previously continued the case from October 25 to November 15. She further claims
    that she was prejudiced by the court’s decision because she was deprived of the opportunity
    to be present and defend against DHS’s request to grant permanent custody to Lorenzo and
    close the case. Citing Campbell v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 
    2016 Ark. App. 146
    ,
    at 4, she complains that the circuit court ignored the necessity of “balancing the interests of
    all parties” when a continuance is sought in a termination case.
    Rodriguez’s reliance on Campbell is misplaced. In Schultz v. Arkansas Department of
    Human Services, 
    2021 Ark. App. 93
    , this court clarified that the “balancing of interests
    referenced in Campbell” is applicable only when “parents have pending criminal charges that
    are related to the termination proceedings, and where the courts are tasked with balancing
    7
    the protection of the parents’ constitutional right against self-incrimination and effective
    representation with the protection of their parental rights.” 
    2021 Ark. App. 93
    , at 7. Here,
    as in Schultz, Rodriguez did not have pending criminal charges related to the dependency
    proceedings; accordingly, Campbell’s balancing test is inapplicable.
    Rodriguez’s argument also fails for other reasons. First, she failed to make the
    requisite showing of good cause, and second, she failed to demonstrate how she was
    prejudiced by the denial of the continuance. As to the issue of good cause, it is undisputed
    that Rodriguez had notice of a review hearing that was set to take place October 25 and was
    represented by counsel. It is also undisputed that it was not until the morning of November
    15––some twenty-one days later––that Rodriguez told her attorney that she was unaware of
    the hearing that day and that she wanted more time to work on her case. Although
    Rodriguez argues on appeal that good cause existed for a continuance because counsel failed
    to notify her of the new November hearing date, counsel failed to explain why he was making
    the continuance motion on the morning of the hearing. In other words, whether Rodriguez
    appeared on the originally set hearing date of October 25 and learned then that the hearing
    did not take place that day or whether she failed to appear on the October date, no
    explanation was offered as to why she waited twenty-one days to check in with counsel and
    learn of the new date. Moreover, according to the colloquy set forth above, Rodriguez
    appears to have been on the telephone with her counsel as counsel was requesting the
    continuance. Despite the denial of the request to continue the in-person hearing, no
    immediate request was then made that Rodriguez be permitted to appear via telephone,
    8
    Zoom, or some other remote method. When deciding whether a continuance should be
    granted, the circuit court should consider several factors, including the diligence of the
    movant. Smith v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    93 Ark. App. 395
    , 
    219 S.W.3d 705
     (2005). The
    lack of diligence alone is sufficient to deny a continuance. Hill v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs.,
    
    2013 Ark. App. 760
    . For these reasons, Rodriguez has failed to demonstrate that good cause
    existed for a continuance.
    As to the question of prejudice, Rodriguez has also failed to demonstrate she was
    prejudiced by court’s denial of her motion for continuance. It is axiomatic that this court
    will not reverse the denial of a motion for continuance absent an abuse of discretion
    amounting to a denial of justice, Burkett v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    2016 Ark. App. 570
    , 
    507 S.W.3d 530
    , and the denial of a motion for continuance will not be reversed absent a
    showing of prejudice. Britt v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    2022 Ark. App. 95
    , 
    640 S.W.3d 721
    .
    In Isbell v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 
    2019 Ark. App. 110
    , 
    573 S.W.3d 19
    , the
    appellant sought a continuance because she was unable to attend her termination hearing.
    The circuit court denied it, and this court affirmed, holding that there had been no evidence
    that demonstrated the likelihood of her attendance in the future, she was represented by
    counsel throughout the proceedings, and she did not show how her presence at the hearing
    would have changed the outcome. Id. at 13, 
    573 S.W.3d at
    27 (citing Sanderson v. Ark. Dep’t
    of Hum. Servs., 
    2012 Ark. App. 481
    ).
    The same is true here. On appeal Rodriguez makes the conclusory statement that she
    was prejudiced because her attorney “was unable to present any defense without his client’s
    9
    presence.” She fails, however, to suggest what that defense might have been or that the
    outcome would have changed if she had been allowed to present it. Rodriguez was appointed
    counsel June 23, 2023. Her counsel continued representing her through the July 19
    stipulation in which Rodriguez agreed that temporary custody of the children be placed with
    Lorenzo, their father. This was the same counsel who was present on the date of the
    November review hearing. Thus, her attorney was familiar with the case and, in fact, engaged
    in cross-examination of witnesses on Rodriguez’ behalf. At the end of DHS’s case, counsel
    stated he had no witnesses and that “my client did indicate she would object to this and
    would ask for the full time that this case be worked on.” Furthermore, counsel failed to list
    any services his client was requesting, nor did he inform the court what evidence would have
    been supplied had Rodriguez appeared. Even in her brief, Rodriguez fails to identify any
    services that she would have requested that would have assisted her in the return of the
    children to her custody. Rather, DHS presented proof that it had been unable to locate
    Rodriguez and that she had been absent throughout most of the dependency-neglect case. In
    the absence of a demonstration of prejudice by Rodriguez, we are left with no choice but to
    affirm. See Britt, 
    supra
     (affirming when mother did not proffer the testimony she would have
    presented if granted a continuance and made no arguments that the circuit court’s findings
    would have been any different if the case had been continued).
    B. Reunification Services
    In her second point on appeal, Rodriguez argues that the circuit court erred in
    granting permanent custody to Lorenzo and closing the case when she was not given “proper
    10
    notice required by statute” that reunification services would be terminated.3 Rodriguez’s
    argument is premised on the adjudication statute found at Arkansas Code Annotated section
    9-27-327(a)(1)(A)(iv). This statute provides that at an adjudication hearing,
    (a) The court may transfer temporary custody or permanent custody to the
    noncustodial parent after a review of evidence and a finding that it is in the best
    interest of the juvenile to transfer custody, or the court may order family time with
    the noncustodial parent.
    (b) An order of transfer of custody to the noncustodial parent does not relieve the
    Department of Human Services of the responsibility to provide services to the parent
    from whom custody was removed, unless the court enters an order to relieve the
    department of the responsibility.
    Rodriguez asserts that the circuit court was within its authority to transfer custody of
    MC1 and MC2 to Lorenzo pursuant to subsubsection (a), but she argues that the court never
    entered an order to relieve DHS of the responsibility to provide services under subsubsection
    (b). More specifically, Rodriguez asserts that “[i]f DHS wished to grant permanent custody to
    [Lorenzo] under Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-327, it was required to first obtain an
    order terminating reunification services [under] Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-
    365.”4 She argues that because DHS did not provide the twenty days’ notice required for
    3
    Notably, Rodriguez does not challenge the actual grant of permanent custody to
    Lorenzo.
    4
    Section 9-27-365(c) provides the grounds for an order terminating reunification
    services as follows:
    An order terminating reunification services on a party and ending the duty of the
    Department of Human Services to provide services to a party shall be based on a finding of
    clear and convincing evidence that:
    (1) The termination of reunification services is in the child’s best interest; and
    11
    terminating reunification services under section 9-27-265, she was deprived of due process,
    and the “closure order must be reversed.”
    Contrary to Rodriguez’s assertions, however, the adjudication statute is not applicable
    here. By the time the court placed the children with Lorenzo, the case had proceeded to the
    point of a six-month review hearing. See 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-337
     (Supp. 2023). We are
    therefore unconvinced that Rodriguez’s argument, premised as it is on section 9-27-327, is
    well founded.
    (2) One (1) or more of the following grounds exist:
    (A) A circuit court has determined that the parent, guardian, custodian, or
    noncustodial parent has subjected the child to aggravated circumstances that include:
    (i) A child’s being abandoned;
    (ii) A child’s being chronically abused;
    (iii) A child’s being sexually exploited;
    (iv) A child’s being subjected to extreme or repeated cruelty or sexual abuse;
    (v) A determination by a circuit judge that there is little likelihood that services to the
    family will result in successful reunification;
    (vi) A child has been removed from the custody of the parent or guardian and placed
    in foster care or the custody of another person three (3) or more times in the past fifteen (15)
    months; or
    (vii) A child’s or a sibling’s being neglected or abused such that the abuse or neglect
    could endanger the life of the child; or
    (B) A circuit court has determined that the parent has:
    (i) Committed murder of a child;
    (ii) Committed manslaughter of a child;
    (iii) Aided or abetted, attempted, conspired, or solicited to commit murder or
    manslaughter;
    (iv) Committed a felony battery that results in serious bodily injury to any child;
    (v) Had parental rights involuntarily terminated as to a sibling of the child; or
    (vi) Abandoned an infant as defined in § 9-27-303(1).
    Clearly, there were no allegations in this case that any of these circumstances existed.
    12
    The only caselaw that Rodriguez cites in support of her argument is Meyers v. Arkansas
    Department of Human Services, 
    2017 Ark. App. 614
    , 
    533 S.W.3d 654
    , in which this court
    reversed a grant of permanent custody because DHS failed to file a termination-of-
    reunification-services motion. Meyers, however, is distinguishable in three important
    respects. First, in Meyers, DHS sought to place custody of the children with their father at the
    adjudication hearing itself; as such, section 9-27-327 was directly implicated. Here, on the other
    hand, section 9-27-327 is not implicated because the case had proceeded to the point of a
    six-month review hearing. Second, the attorney ad litem in Meyers expressly asked for “no
    reunification services” because there were no services that could be provided that would help
    Meyers. This court held that because there was an express request to cease the services that
    had been ongoing for at least six months, DHS was required to have given Meyers the
    requisite statutory notice.5 Here, on the other hand, there is no evidence that DHS had ever
    provided services to Rodriguez because she remained out of contact with DHS throughout
    the pendency of the case. Consequently, DHS never expressly sought cessation of services.
    Third and finally, in Meyers, the appellees conceded under the facts of that case that it was
    reversible error for the circuit court to close the case without reunification services because
    5
    Meyers did not receive six months of services within the confines of the dependency-
    neglect proceeding. Rather, a protective-services case had been opened in October 2016, and
    DHS attempted to provide services to Meyers from then until January 2017. DHS filed the
    petition for emergency custody and dependency-neglect on February 13, 2017, and the
    adjudication hearing that was at issue in that case was held April 19, 2017. Thus, Meyers
    received services for approximately four months through the protective-services case and for
    approximately two months through the dependency-neglect case.
    13
    Meyers did not receive the required statutory notice and joined Meyers’s request that this
    court reverse the circuit court’s decision to not order reunification services and close the
    case. There are no such concessions here. Both DHS and the attorney ad litem on behalf of
    the children vehemently argue in support of affirming the circuit court’s decisions.
    Apart from the inapposite Meyers case, Rodriguez cites no authority for the principle
    that a motion for no reunification services under section 9-27-365 is a prerequisite for a
    court’s granting a transfer of custody to a noncustodial parent and closing the case. Indeed,
    her argument ignores other statutes permitting a transfer of custody during dependency-
    neglect proceedings without reference to section 9-27-365. See, e.g., 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27
    -
    334(a)(2)(A) (Supp. 2023) (permitting a court to transfer custody of a juvenile to a relative
    upon a finding of dependency-neglect); 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-338
    (c)(1) (Repl. 2020)
    (permitting the same at a permanency planning hearing). Likewise, she disregards multiple
    cases affirming the grant of permanent custody to a relative and closing the case at all phases
    of dependency-neglect proceedings without so much as mentioning section 9-27-365. See,
    e.g., Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs. v. Jones, 
    97 Ark. App. 267
    , 
    248 S.W.3d 507
     (2007) (granting
    permanent custody to child’s grandparents and closing the case at the probable-cause
    hearing); Canada v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    2016 Ark. App. 564
    , 
    507 S.W.3d 523
     (awarding
    permanent custody of children to relatives following permanency-planning order and closing
    the case); Wheatley v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    2016 Ark. App. 538
    , 
    503 S.W.3d 86
     (awarding
    permanent custody of children to grandparents after fifteen-month review hearing and
    closing the case).
    14
    Furthermore, we agree with DHS’s observation that when a court grants permanent
    custody to a noncustodial parent, the case must be closed because at that point, permanency
    has been achieved, and the child is no longer dependent-neglected. See 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9
    -
    27-303(43) (Supp. 2023) (“‘Permanent custody’ means custody that is transferred to a person
    as a permanency disposition in a juvenile case and the case is closed.”) (emphasis added); Young
    v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    2012 Ark. 334
    , at 1 (holding that “[a] dependency-neglect case is
    closed when the child is no longer dependent-neglected under the Juvenile Code” and noting
    that once the circuit court places a child in the permanent custody of another, that child is
    no longer dependent-neglected). Neither the “permanent custody” statute nor the relevant
    caselaw requires DHS to expressly move to stop reunification services when permanent
    custody is placed with the noncustodial parent and the case is closed.
    In order to accept Rodriguez’s argument, we would have to read into every statute
    that authorizes placement of a juvenile in a relative’s custody a requirement that the court
    must conduct a no-reunification analysis under section 9-27-365. Nowhere in our statutes or
    caselaw does such a prerequisite exist, and we will not add words to a statute to convey a
    meaning that is not there. See Mahone v. Ark. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    2011 Ark. 370
    , 
    383 S.W.3d 854
    . We therefore decline to accept her invitation to do so and affirm the circuit court’s
    denial of her motion to continue as well as the court’s decision to grant permanent custody
    to Lorenzo and close the case.
    Affirmed.
    HARRISON, C.J., and GRUBER, J., agree.
    15
    Jennifer Oyler Olson, Arkansas Commission for Parent Counsel, for appellant.
    Marc D. Tave, Ark. Dep’t of Human Services, Office of Chief Counsel, for appellee.
    Dana McClain, attorney ad litem for minor children.
    16
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 10/2/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/2/2024