In the Interest of J. M., a Child , 337 Ga. App. 811 ( 2016 )


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  •                             THIRD DIVISION
    MILLER, P. J.,
    MCFADDEN and MCMILLIAN, JJ.
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    July 7, 2016
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A16A0612. IN THE INTEREST OF J. M., a child.
    MCMILLIAN, Judge.
    After this Court granted his application for discretionary appeal, the putative
    father of J. M. appealed the juvenile court’s order denying his petition to legitimate
    the child. We affirm for the reasons set forth below.
    “We review a trial court’s ruling on a legitimation petition for abuse of
    discretion.” Binns v. Fairnot, 
    292 Ga. App. 336
    , 337 (665 SE2d 36) (2008). In so
    doing, we review the trial court’s factual findings for clear error and will only sustain
    such findings if there is competent evidence to support them. Neill v. Brannon, 
    320 Ga. App. 820
    , 822 (1) (738 SE2d 724) (2013).
    J. M. was born March 4, 2014, and at the time both J. M. and his mother tested
    positive for methamphetamine. The next day, the Department of Family and Children
    Services (DFACS) filed a dependency complaint and petition to obtain custody of J.
    M. The juvenile court held a dependency hearing and later issued an order placing J.
    M. in DFACS’s custody on May 29, 2014. The putative father filed his petition for
    legitimation on December 4, 2014, and the juvenile court held a hearing on the
    petition on April 27, 2015.
    At the hearing, the parties stipulated to the fact that DNA testing showed that
    the putative father was J. M.’s biological father. However, J. M.’s mother testified
    that she opposed the legitimation of her child because she did not believe that the
    putative father’s behavior would change. She said that he did not have a job, was still
    doing drugs, and was back in jail. She also stated that she did not like the
    neighborhood in which he lived because a lot of people in the vicinity used drugs.
    Both parents had a history of drug use, and they used drugs together on multiple
    occasions, sometimes at the house where the putative father was living. The mother
    said that the putative father and she had no romantic relationship and had only slept
    together once. She had believed that someone else was the father of J. M. until the
    DNA test showed otherwise. The mother had decided to surrender her rights in J. M.
    to give him a better life and stability in the home where he had been his whole life
    because neither the putative father nor she were able to provide J. M. a home.
    2
    At the time of the hearing, the putative father had been in jail for approximately
    two months awaiting trial on charges of possession of methamphetamine, possession
    of tools for the commission of a crime, and possession of a firearm during the
    commission of a criminal offense. Since the time of J. M.’s birth, the putative father
    also had been arrested on another occasion but had bonded out. And at some point he
    had pled guilty to several charges of misdemeanor theft by receiving. Prior to his
    arrest on February 11, 2015, the putative father had been living with his grandparents
    and had been attempting to get into a drug rehabilitation program. He said that he had
    worked for about six months for a construction company and then about three months
    for a pizza delivery business, although he had been unemployed for about one month
    before his arrest. The putative father had never owned his own home, never been
    married, and never fathered another child.
    The putative father said that he had started using drugs approximately ten years
    earlier when he was a teenager, and he ultimately became a heroin addict. He said he
    went to substance abuse treatment in connection with that addiction and successfully
    completed the program, with one relapse since; however, he had begun using
    methamphetamine prior to his arrest.
    3
    During her pregnancy, J. M.’s mother told the putative father he was not the
    biological father of the child, but he nevertheless bought her groceries and a washer
    and dryer before J. M.’s birth. The putative father said that he first realized that J. M.
    could be his child when he saw a picture taken about one week after the child’s birth,
    and he then sought a DNA test. Since that time he had been visiting J. M. every week.
    Although he did not provide any child support, he had given the child gifts at
    Christmas. He hoped to go straight to an inpatient treatment facility after he was
    released from jail, and during his incarceration, he had been attending substance
    abuse and life skills classes, as well as Narcotic Anonymous and Alcoholics
    Anonymous meetings. The putative father said that he wanted to legitimate J. M.
    because he wanted to be a better father than he previously had been and a better father
    than his own father.
    DFACS created a case plan for the putative father on December 30, 2014,
    which required that he maintain stable housing; legitimate J. M.; attend and
    successfully complete parenting classes; complete a substance abuse assessment and
    follow all treatment recommendations; attend all visits with the child; remain drug
    and alcohol free for six consecutive months and test negative on random drug tests;
    arrange for adequate child care; attend and complete a psychological evaluation and
    4
    follow the recommendations; and enroll and successfully complete an inpatient drug
    rehabilitative program. The DFACS case worker assigned to J. M.’s case testified that
    the putative father had completed only certain requirements of his case plan. He had
    submitted to the substance abuse and psychological evaluations and to three DFACS
    drug tests, but he tested positive for drugs on all three.
    The guardian ad litem appointed to the case recommended that the trial court
    deny the putative father’s petition for legitimation based, inter alia, on his long
    history of drug use and his lack of a steady employment history.
    In considering a petition to legitimate,
    the court must initially determine whether the father has abandoned his
    opportunity interest to develop a relationship with the child. Then,
    depending on the nature of the putative father’s relationship with the
    child and other surrounding circumstances, the standard for evaluating
    whether legitimation is appropriate is either a test of his fitness as a
    parent or the best interest of the child.
    (Citation omitted.) In the Interest of B. H.-W., 
    332 Ga. App. 269
    , 272 (3) (772 SE2d
    66) (2015). See also In the Interest of Baby Girl Eason, 
    257 Ga. 292
    , 296 (1) (358
    SE2d 459) (1987). In considering the best interest of the child, the juvenile court “is
    not bound by the desires and contentions of the parents” but instead “must examine
    5
    the benefits that might flow to the child if [he or] she were legitimated and to consider
    the legal consequences of the grant of the petition.” (Citation omitted.) In the Interest
    of M. K., 
    288 Ga. App. 71
    , 73 (2) (653 SE2d 354) (2007). Thus, “trial courts may
    consider the best interest of the child and deny the petition under certain
    circumstances, even if the petitioner is in fact the biological father of the child.” In
    the Interest of C. L., 
    284 Ga. App. 674
    , 676 (1) (644 SE2d 530) (2007). See also
    OCGA § 15-11-26 (listing factors to be evaluated “[w]henever a best interests
    determination is required”).1
    Here, the juvenile court issued an oral ruling at the April 27, 2015 hearing
    denying the legitimation petition and entered a written order to that effect on
    September 1, 2015 (the “September 1 Order”).2 In the written order, the juvenile court
    1
    The legitimation proceeding in this case was initiated after the new Juvenile
    Code, including the current version of OCGA § 15-11-26, went into effect. See Ga.
    L. 2013, pp. 294, 514 § 5-1.
    2
    The putative father subsequently filed a motion to vacate the September 1
    Order, and the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion on September 22,
    2015. The trial court issued an order denying the motion on October 2, 2015 (the
    “October 2 Order”). However, the putative father had filed his application for
    discretionary appeal of the September 1 Order the day before, on October 1, 2015.
    This Court granted the application on October 23, 2015 , and the putative father filed
    his notice of appeal in this case the same day. Although the notice of appeal
    referenced both the September 1 and October 2 Orders and he cites evidence
    presented at the September 22 hearing in his appellate brief, the putative father
    6
    found that the putative father was an unrehabilitated user of illegal drugs over a ten-
    year period; nothing prevented him from rehabilitating himself during that period;
    after DFACS issued the case plan, the putative father should have stayed clean and
    immediately begun supporting his child, yet the putative father did not provide any
    diapers, clothes, or other forms of support for J. M., other than a few “token gifts”3;
    the putative father failed to take parenting classes despite having the opportunity to
    do so while incarcerated; the putative father failed to complete other portions of his
    case plan; the putative father failed to take the requisite steps to prove to the court
    that he wanted the child in his care; the putative father is in need of substance abuse
    rehabilitation; and the putative father has no clear plans for supporting the child. The
    juvenile court also found that J. M. had been with the same foster care family since
    his birth and further found that “based on the testimony that this mother is putting the
    confines his appellate argument and request for relief to seeking reversal of the
    September 1 Order and not the October 2 Order. Therefore, we will consider any
    argument regarding the October 2 Order to be abandoned and will instead confine our
    review to the September 1 Order. Consequently, we will not consider the evidence
    from the September 22 hearing, as such evidence was not available to the juvenile
    court when it issued its September 1 Order.
    3
    See OCGA § 19-7-24 (“It is the joint and several duty of each parent of a
    child born out of wedlock to provide for the maintenance, protection, and education
    of the child until the child reaches the age of 18 or becomes emancipated, except to
    the extent that the duty of one parent is otherwise or further defined by court order.”).
    7
    child’s best interest before her own in that the mother believes that the foster parents
    have been this child’s parents.” Based on these findings, the juvenile court denied the
    petition, concluding that although the putative father did not abandon his opportunity
    interest in the child, legitimation would not be in the child’s best interests.
    1. On appeal, the putative father asserts that the juvenile court erred in finding
    that he had the opportunity to take parenting classes while incarcerated, as no
    evidence was presented at the hearing on whether such classes were available. And,
    indeed, we found no such testimony in our review of the April 27 hearing, although
    the juvenile court judge may have had independent knowledge of the classes offered
    at the jail. But even discounting that finding, we conclude that the juvenile court’s
    remaining findings are supported by clear evidence, and that evidence is sufficient to
    support the trial court’s denial of the legitimation petition.
    2. The putative father also asserts that the juvenile court erred in basing his
    ruling on a determination of whether he was fit to assume immediate custody of J. M.
    because the father was not seeking custody and the determination of custody is
    separate from that of legitimation. However, the best interests analysis as codified
    under OCGA § 15-11-26 includes consideration of:
    8
    (1) [t]he physical safety and welfare of such child, including food,
    shelter, health, and clothing;
    (2) [t]he love, affection, bonding, and emotional ties existing between
    such child and each parent or person available to care for such child;
    ****
    (4) [s]uch child’s need for permanence, including such child’s need for
    stability and continuity of relationships with his or her parent . . . and
    any other person who has provided significant care to such child;
    (5) [s]uch child’s sense of attachments, including his or her sense of
    security and familiarity, and continuity of affection for such child;
    (6) [t]he capacity and disposition of each parent or person available to
    care for such child to give him or her love, affection, and guidance and
    to continue the education and rearing of such child;
    (7) [t]he home environment of each parent or person available to care for
    such child considering the promotion of such child’s nurturance and
    safety rather than superficial or material factors;
    (8) [t]he stability of the family unit and the presence or absence of
    support systems within the community to benefit such child;
    ****
    9
    (13) [t]he least disruptive placement alternative for such child;
    ****
    (17) [t]he preferences of the persons available to care for such child;
    ****
    (19) [a]ny recommendation by a court appointed custody evaluator or
    guardian ad litem; and
    (20) [a]ny other factors considered by the court to be relevant and proper
    to its determination
    Although as part of the best interests analysis the juvenile court considered the
    putative father’s interest in caring for J. M., his ability to support the child if placed
    in his care, and the child’s current placement, we find that the consideration of such
    factors was proper under OCGA § 15-11-26 and did not constitute an abuse of
    discretion.
    10
    Therefore, we cannot say that the juvenile court abused its discretion in
    denying the putative father’s petition to legitimate J. M.4 See Neill, 320 Ga. App. at
    827 (2).
    Judgment affirmed. Miller, P. J., and McFadden, J., concur.
    4
    In fact, the putative father’s appellate counsel stated at the September 22,
    2015 hearing on the motion to vacate, that she chose to file a motion to vacate instead
    of an application for discretionary appeal following entry of the September 1 Order,
    because her review of the transcript from the April 27 hearing revealed that “there
    just weren’t any reversible errors that jumped out at me” and that she “could not find
    that the Court had made a mistake.”
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A16A0612

Citation Numbers: 337 Ga. App. 811, 788 S.E.2d 888

Judges: McMillian, Miller, McFadden

Filed Date: 7/7/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024