IDHW v. Jane Doe (2022-36) ( 2023 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 50023
    In the Interest of: Jane Doe I,         )
    A Child Under Eighteen (18) Years of Age.
    )
    ----------------------------------------------------
    )
    STATE OF IDAHO, DEPARTMENT OF           )
    HEALTH AND WELFARE,                     )
    )                      Boise, December 2022 Term
    Petitioner-Respondent,               )
    )                      Opinion filed: March 2, 2023
    v.                                      )
    )                      Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk
    JANE DOE (2022-36),                     )
    )
    Respondent-Appellant.                )
    _______________________________________ )
    Appeal from the District Court of the Second Judicial District of the State of Idaho,
    Nez Perce County, Jay Gaskill, District Judge and Victoria Olds, Magistrate Judge.
    The decision of the district court is affirmed.
    Sarah A. McDowell-Lamont, Public Defender, Lewiston, for Appellant. Sarah A.
    McDowell-Lamont argued.
    Raúl R. Labrador, Idaho Attorney General, for Respondent. Briana Allen argued.
    Jones, Brower & Callery, PLLC, Lewiston, for Respondent GAL.
    _____________________
    BRODY, Justice
    This appeal addresses the district court’s jurisdiction to hear an appeal challenging the
    magistrate court’s decision to change the permanency goals in a Child Protective Act (“CPA”)
    proceeding.
    Jane Doe, a three-year-old child, has been in the custody of the Idaho Department of Health
    and Welfare (the “Department”) since late 2020. She was six days shy of her first birthday when
    the State removed her from the custody of her mother and placed her with a foster family. Her
    mother’s attempts to stick to a permanency plan have been inconsistent, and while for the majority
    of the life of this case the magistrate court held fast to a permanency goal of reunification, it
    modified that goal in the summer of 2022 so that termination of parental rights and adoption
    1
    became the primary goals for Jane and reunification became the concurrent goal.
    Mother filed a notice of appeal to the district court challenging the review hearing order in
    which the permanency goals were changed. She also filed a motion for permissive appeal
    requesting permission from the magistrate court to appeal to the district court. The magistrate court
    granted the motion. The district court dismissed the case and remanded it back to the magistrate
    court sua sponte after determining it did not have jurisdiction to hear the appeal. This appeal
    followed. We affirm the decision of the district court.
    I.      FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In December 2020, law enforcement officers in Lewiston, Idaho removed Jane Doe from
    Mother’s custody. When the officers intervened, Jane and her Mother were staying at a motel and
    Mother appeared to be having a “mental health situation,” after chopping up her hotel room
    mattress with a small hatchet because she believed people were calling out from under the bed.
    Since that time, Jane has primarily resided with the same foster family and has mostly thrived
    under their care. Mother, on the other hand, has struggled to show a consistent commitment to her
    treatment plan for the dual diagnosis of mental illness and substance abuse.
    Initially, the primary permanency goal was reunification of Mother and Jane, while the
    concurrent goals were termination of Mother’s parental rights and adoption within twenty-four
    months. However, in June 2022, about eighteen months after Jane was initially placed in shelter
    care, circumstances changed. The magistrate court, after conducting an evidentiary hearing, issued
    a review hearing order which changed the primary goals to termination of parental rights and
    adoption and made reunification a concurrent goal. The magistrate court’s decision was based on
    several factors: the inconsistency of Mother’s efforts to stick to her case plan, the fact that she had
    left a substance abuse treatment facility after completing only one phase of a four-phase program,
    purportedly to pursue a housing voucher but had yet to secure housing, that Mother remained
    unemployed, that Jane was thriving after nearly a year and a half in foster care, and reunification
    did not appear to be imminent.
    Following entry of the review hearing order, Mother filed a motion for permissive appeal
    with the magistrate court and a notice of appeal to the district court challenging the magistrate
    court’s finding that the Department had made reasonable efforts toward reunification and changing
    the case plan’s goals from reunification to termination of parental rights and adoption. Shortly
    thereafter, the magistrate court granted the permissive appeal to the district court.
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    Before the parties submitted their briefs, the district court entered an order dismissing the
    appeal and remanding the case to the magistrate court after concluding that it lacked jurisdiction.
    Specifically, the district court found that the review hearing order did not meet the criteria for an
    appeal set forth in Idaho Code section 16-1625(1) and was not the proper subject of a permissive
    appeal because it did not constitute a “final judgment.” The district court subsequently denied a
    motion for reconsideration, acknowledging in a footnote that the conclusion it reached was
    contrary to a non-binding, unpublished Court of Appeals’ decision and that this case presented an
    important issue that needed to be addressed by this Court to bring clarity to appeal rights in CPA
    cases statewide.
    This appeal followed the district court’s decision. Both parties take the position that the
    district court erred when it dismissed Mother’s appeal, although they disagree as to which statutory
    subsection provides the correct procedural avenue for the appeal. Today, we hold the district court
    did not err when it dismissed Mother’s appeal because none of the statutory provisions at issue
    confer jurisdiction upon the district court to review the order changing permanency goals. We have
    also referred this matter to the Child Protection Committee to consider whether any changes should
    be made to the permissive appeal standard set forth in Idaho Appellate Rule 11.1(b)(2).
    II.     ANALYSIS
    A. The district court did not err when it dismissed Mother’s appeal because the review
    hearing order does not fall within the scope of reviewable orders under Idaho Code
    section 16-1625(1)(a)-(d).
    Both parties take the position that the district court erred when it dismissed Mother’s appeal
    due to lack of jurisdiction; they only disagree about the legal basis of jurisdiction. Whether a court
    lacks jurisdiction is a question of law that is freely reviewed by this Court. Doe v. Doe, 
    158 Idaho 614
    , 616, 
    349 P.3d 1205
    , 1207 (2015). Importantly, even if all parties to an action agree, they
    cannot confer or create subject matter jurisdiction upon a court if in fact it does not exist. Fairway
    Dev. Co. v. Bannock Cnty., 
    119 Idaho 121
    , 125, 
    804 P.2d 294
    , 298 (1990). Therefore,
    notwithstanding the parties’ agreement to the contrary, we hold the district court correctly
    dismissed Mother’s appeal due to lack of appellate jurisdiction.
    The Idaho Juvenile Rules govern the procedures that apply to CPA proceedings. I.J.R. 1.
    Juvenile Rule 49 governs appeals as a matter of right to the district court and incorporates the
    statutory appeal framework set forth in Idaho Code section 16-1625:
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    An aggrieved party may appeal to the district court those orders of the court
    in a C.P.A. action specified in I.C. § 16-1625. A party may also seek a permissive
    appeal to the Supreme Court pursuant to Idaho Appellate Rule 12.1.
    I.J.R. 49(a) (emphasis added).
    Section 16-1625 sets forth four separate orders or decrees that can be appealed to the
    district court as a matter of right:
    (1) An aggrieved party may appeal the following orders or decrees of the
    court to the district court, or may seek a direct permissive appeal to the supreme
    court as provided by rules adopted by the supreme court:
    (a) An adjudicatory decree entered pursuant to section 16-1619, Idaho
    Code;
    (b) Any order subsequent to the adjudicatory decree that vests legal custody
    of the child in the department or other authorized agency;
    (c) Any order subsequent to the adjudicatory decree that authorizes or
    mandates the department to cease reasonable efforts to make it possible to return
    the child to his home, including an order finding aggravated circumstances; or
    (d) An order of dismissal.
    I.C. § 16-1625(1)(a)-(d) (emphasis added). Mother contends that her appeal to the district court
    was proper under subsection (c), but the Department contends the appeal was proper under
    subsection (b). Given the parties’ respective positions, the question of whether the district court
    had jurisdiction to hear Mother’s appeal turns on whether a review hearing order is an order that
    “vests” legal custody of the child in the Department after an adjudicatory decree, or whether it
    authorizes or mandates the Department to cease reasonable efforts toward reunification. Because
    an order issued following a review hearing does none of these things, we hold the requirements of
    section 16-1625 have not been met and the district court correctly concluded it did not have
    appellate jurisdiction.
    1. Custody vests with the Department at the time an adjudicatory decree is
    issued, not when the permanency goals change.
    To initiate a CPA proceeding, the Department must create and file a petition with the
    magistrate court. I.C. § 16-1610(1). Within thirty days of filing the petition, the court must set an
    adjudicatory hearing to determine whether it has jurisdiction over the child under Idaho Code
    section 16-1603. I.C. § 16-1619(1). If the magistrate court determines that it has jurisdiction over
    the child, it can either place the child under protective supervision of the Department (which means
    the child can remain in the home subject to Department oversight) or “vest” legal custody of the
    4
    child in the Department or another authorized agency. I.C. § 16-1619(5). An adjudicatory decree
    which vests custody of the child in the Department is an appealable order under Idaho Code section
    16-1625(1)(a).
    Section 16-1625(1)(b), the provision the Department contends gives the district court
    appellate jurisdiction in this case, exists because custody of a child involved in a CPA proceeding
    is not necessarily static. For example, at the time the adjudicatory decree is entered the magistrate
    court may make the decision to allow a child to remain in the home subject to the Department’s
    protective supervision. Certainly, the parent has the right to challenge the entry of that decree under
    subsection 16-1625(1)(a). However, if protective supervision fails and the child is taken into the
    State’s custody, another hearing must take place and the magistrate court must once again make
    the decision whether to “vest” custody of the child in the Department. I.C. § 16-1623(4)-(5). If the
    magistrate court makes that decision, such an order would be appealable under section 16-
    1625(1)(b).
    In this case, the magistrate court had already “vested” legal custody of Jane in the
    Department when it entered the adjudicatory decree on February 16, 2020. The adjudicatory decree
    stated: “The child is placed in the legal custody of IDHW.” Mother had the right to challenge the
    entry of that decree under Idaho Code section 16-1625(1)(a) but did not do so. Jane has remained
    in the Department’s custody pursuant to that decree ever since. The review hearing order did not
    result in a change of custody, and thus, did not “vest” custody in the Department because it already
    had custody. The order merely recited “[t]he child is currently in the custody of IDHW, and it is
    in the best interest of the children [sic] to remain in the custody of IDHW.”
    Because there is no basis to hold that custody vested at a time other than when the
    adjudicatory decree was initially entered in this case, the review hearing order is not an order that
    vests legal custody of Jane in the Department. Thus, we conclude that section 16-1625(1)(b) does
    not provide the district court with appellate jurisdiction.
    2. A change in permanency goals does not authorize or mandate the
    Department to cease reasonable efforts toward reunification.
    Idaho Code section 16-1625(1)(c) provides that any party may appeal from “any order
    subsequent to the adjudicatory decree that authorizes or mandates the Department to cease
    reasonable efforts to make it possible to return the child to his home. . . .” I.C. § 16-1625(1)(c).
    Consistent with the district court’s findings, the Department contends that because the Department
    5
    did not request and the magistrate court did not authorize a suspension of reunification efforts,
    Idaho Code section 16-1625(1)(c) does not apply. Mother argues that the change in permanency
    goals effectively authorizes and mandates that the Department cease its reasonable reunification
    efforts and that, because the change in permanency goals allows the State to start the process of
    terminating her parental rights under section 16-1624(3), the appeal to the district court was
    allowed under section 16-1625(1)(c).
    While the practical impact of the change of reunification goals is to focus the Department’s
    efforts on adoption rather than reunification, nothing in the magistrate court’s order authorizes or
    mandates that the Department stop working toward the concurrent goal of reunification. In fact,
    the transcript from the review hearing shows that the magistrate court wanted visitation to continue
    for Mother and Jane and that reunification would remain a concurrent goal of the plan.
    The CPA contemplates both a primary and concurrent goal and expressly addresses when
    the Department may cease efforts toward reunification. First, in section 16-1621, the Act provides
    that at the initial case plan hearing, a permanency plan must include both a reunification goal and
    a concurrent goal, along with plans to accomplish both. I.C. § 16-1621(3)(d). Section 16-1621
    further explains that the “concurrent plan” shall address all placement options, address advantages
    and disadvantages of those options, and identify actions to implement the option among other
    requirements. Moreover, section 16-1621(d)(6) requires that once a case plan is approved by the
    court and entered as an order, that order shall “require the department to simultaneously take steps
    to accomplish the goal of reunification and the concurrent permanency goal.” I.C. § 16-1621(d)(6)
    (emphasis added).
    Next, section 16-1622 provides that upon an annual review hearing, permanency plans can
    have both primary and concurrent goals. I.C. § 16-1622(2)(a). It goes on to clarify that the “court
    may authorize the department to suspend further efforts to reunify the child with the child’s parent,
    pending further order of the court, when a permanency plan is approved by the court and the
    permanency plan does not include a permanency goal of reunification.” I.C. § 16-1622(2)(k).
    Section 16-1624(6) of the CPA provides that the “court may authorize the department to suspend
    further efforts to reunify the child with the child’s parent, pending further order of the court, when
    a petition to terminate parental rights has been filed with regard to the child.” I.C. § 16-1624(6).
    In this matter, the case plan for Mother complied with section 16-1621(d)(6) because it
    included both a primary and concurrent goal and a plan for both of them with steps towards both
    6
    goals to be taken simultaneously. While a petition to terminate parental rights was filed by the
    Department after entry of the review hearing order, nowhere in that petition or in this case has the
    magistrate court authorized the Department to suspend further efforts to reunify in response to that
    petition. Because the review hearing order does not authorize or mandate the Department to cease
    reasonable efforts toward reunification, we hold that section 16-1625(c) does not apply, and the
    district court correctly determined that it was without appellate jurisdiction.
    B. Mother’s due process rights are not violated by a lack of immediate appellate review.
    Mother contends that a lack of viable appeal rights is an affront to her due process rights
    under the United States Constitution. She argues: “Mother, like all parents, [has] the fundamental
    right to the care, custody and control of her child. That fundamental right is effectively taken away
    when the permanency goals are changed from reunification to termination and adoption.”
    (Citations omitted.) Mother’s claim sweeps too broadly.
    To begin, Mother’s claim that there are no appeal rights when a permanency goal is
    changed from reunification to termination and adoption reflects the appeals process established by
    the legislature. As explained, there is a right to appeal if the magistrate court enters an order
    authorizing or mandating the Department to stop reunification efforts. At no time did the
    magistrate court enter such an order in this case. In fact, the transcript from the review hearing
    revealed the magistrate court continued to encourage Mother to comply with the case plan and
    work toward reunification:
    Every conversation we’ve had… [Mother] was saying it was really hard and
    that she questioned whether she should stay [in the program]. And now we have --
    although we have proof of some sobriety, we still have proof of instability, ongoing
    instability. Things are taking a lot longer than they should and continual prompting
    and hand holding by the attorney and the Department and CASA to help [Mother],
    because we all want her to be successful. Did everything we could to encourage her
    to stay at [the program]. But, in my opinion, as of the April hearing, she had already
    decided she was going to leave and talked herself into it. And I -- after all the effort
    to get you into a long-term program where you would, after Phase 1, then be
    phasing into overnight visits, it was very disappointing, and I was very saddened
    by it.
    [It] was pretty tough on you, no doubt, saying, nope, we’re not going to do
    that until you get into another phase because you need to get past this first phase.
    We need to get you longer in the program, trying to provide that motivation. Now
    we have a housing voucher that hasn’t been filled out, hasn’t been completed
    because there were barriers there. We have the person you’re living with who hasn't
    bothered to call the landlord back to give you a good reference. And that was June
    14th when you applied. So that’s over two weeks. We have -- we kind of had to
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    drag you back into treatment, which recommended intensive outpatient three times
    a week. I know that you can succeed, but you have this resistance to fully wanting
    to stick with the case plan.
    So, I’m going to change the goal because I do not see compelling
    circumstances. I saw it when you were at [the program]. I saw a light at the end of
    the tunnel. I don’t see it at this point. Maybe two years down the road, but this child
    needs permanency one way or the other long before that. In other words, there has
    been progress, but not substantial progress. And I see this latest -- the latest progress
    as some, but not substantial. A setback, really, is what I see it as. And there’s
    nothing you can do about your medical condition, [Mother]. I hope that that turns
    out for you. I wish the best for you on that. But I’ve got to change the permanency
    goal to [termination of parental rights] with adoption.
    Reunification efforts remain a secondary goal, the concurrent goal, because
    we want to still encourage you to continue to work hard and get that housing and
    get your medical taken care of, continue in treatment, continue to have those
    negative UAs and work on long-term stability.
    In addition, as the Idaho Court of Appeals has explained, there are multiple stages at which
    a parent may challenge the Department’s failure to make reasonable efforts to reunify:
    The Department’s reasonable efforts, and a magistrate court’s findings
    regarding reasonable efforts, are subject to appellate review. There is a statutory
    right to appeal at several points during the pendency of the child protection
    proceeding. I.C. § 16-1625(1). An aggrieved parent may appeal an adjudicatory
    decree, any order subsequent to the adjudicatory decree that vests legal custody in
    the Department, and any order subsequent to the adjudicatory decree that authorizes
    or mandates the Department to cease reasonable efforts. Id. Although Doe
    acknowledges that review of reasonable efforts is provided for in the child
    protection case pursuant to I.C. § 16-1625(1), she does not explain why this review
    does not satisfy due process. It appears Doe’s argument is instead premised on a
    preference for review of reasonable efforts following termination rather than from
    the appealable orders entered following proceedings during the child protection
    case in which reasonable efforts are required. This preference does not, however,
    implicate due process. Moreover, it is contrary to the statutory scheme enacted by
    the legislature.
    Matter of Doe I, 
    166 Idaho 357
    , 360–61, 
    458 P.3d 226
    , 229–30 (Ct. App. 2020). Like the mother
    in Matter of Doe I, Mother has not explained why the statutory framework that is provided in Idaho
    Code section 16-1625(1) does not satisfy the process she is due.
    Finally, and perhaps most importantly, we recently rejected the same type of due process
    argument Mother makes here because even if the Department moves forward with a petition to
    terminate Mother’s parental rights, it must prove the basis for termination by clear and convincing
    evidence:
    8
    Here, the parents stipulated to jurisdiction under the CPA and the court placed the
    children in the Department's legal custody. Thereafter, the Department had the
    statutory authority to petition for termination. I.C. § 16-1624(1). Once the
    Department petitioned to terminate Mother's parental rights, the Department still
    had to prove the statutory basis for termination by clear and convincing evidence.
    I.C. § 16-2005. Thus, her due process rights were protected. Accordingly, Mother
    fails to present a compelling argument for why a lack of immediate appellate
    recourse for a court's determination of the Department's reasonable efforts impacts
    her due process rights for termination of parental rights.
    Matter of Doe I, 
    164 Idaho 883
    , 890, 
    436 P.3d 1232
    , 1239 (2019).
    On a final note, Mother has requested “guidance” from this Court on the issue of whether
    Mother had a right to pursue a permissive appeal to this Court under Idaho Juvenile Rule 49 and
    Idaho Appellate Rules 11.1 and 12.1. Because no motion for a permissive appeal to this Court was
    filed and Mother has not pursued any contention that the district court had jurisdiction to undertake
    a permissive appeal, we decline to issue what would be, in effect, an advisory opinion under the
    guise of “guidance.” However, we will refer this question to the Child Protection Committee for
    further study because in reviewing Rules 11.1(b)(2) and 12.1(a)(2), we noted that the “final
    judgment” language used in those rules does not appear to be consistent with the language used in
    Idaho Juvenile Rule 49 and Idaho Code section 16-1625(1).
    III.    CONCLUSION
    Based on the foregoing, we affirm the district court’s decision to dismiss the appeal and
    remand the case with instructions to remand to the magistrate court for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    Chief Justice BEVAN, and Justices STEGNER, MOELLER and ZAHN, CONCUR.
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