In the Matter of the Adoption of A.D.B. (Minor Child): B.B. v. J.J. and S.J. (mem. dec.) ( 2019 )


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  • MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
    this Memorandum Decision shall not be                                               FILED
    regarded as precedent or cited before any                                    Dec 10 2019, 8:32 am
    court except for the purpose of establishing
    CLERK
    the defense of res judicata, collateral                                       Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    estoppel, or the law of the case.                                                  and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                  ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES
    Jennifer A. Joas                                        R. Patrick Magrath
    Madison, Indiana                                        Madison, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    In the Matter of the Adoption of                        December 10, 2019
    A.D.B. (Minor Child):                                   Court of Appeals Case No.
    19A-AD-1219
    Appeal from the Dearborn Circuit
    B.B.,                                                   Court
    Appellant-Respondent,                                   The Honorable James D. Humphrey,
    Judge
    v.
    Trial Court Cause No.
    15C01-1802-AD-1
    J.J. and S.J.,
    Appellees-Petitioners.
    Bailey, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019               Page 1 of 14
    Case Summary
    [1]   B.B. (“Mother”) challenges the trial court order granting J.J.’s and S.J.’s
    (“Adoptive Parents”) petition to adopt Mother’s child A.D.B. (“Child”)
    without Mother’s consent.
    [2]   We affirm.
    Issues
    [3]   Mother raises two issues on appeal which we restate as follows:
    1.        Whether Mother was properly served with the Notice of
    Adoption under Indiana Trial Rule 4.1(B) such that her
    consent to adoption was irrevocably implied under
    Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-18 when she failed to file a
    motion to contest the adoption by July 20, 2018.
    2.        Whether Mother’s consent to adoption was not required
    under Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-8 because she
    abandoned Child.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [4]   Mother and D.H. (“Father”)1 are the biological parents of Child, who was born
    on September 7, 2009. On Easter Sunday in 2014, when Child was four years
    old, Mother left her with Child’s maternal grandmother. After receiving reports
    1
    Father consented to the adoption and does not participate in this appeal.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 2 of 14
    regarding Child, the Lawrenceburg Police Department (“LPD”) went to
    maternal grandmother’s apartment complex and found Child in the parking lot,
    wearing only her underwear and covered in dirt and feces. LPD and the
    Department of Child Services (“DCS”) called S.J., Child’s maternal cousin, to
    inform her of Child’s condition and whereabouts. Adoptive Parents, who are
    married, then went to the maternal grandmother’s apartment complex and,
    with permission from DCS, took Child home with them. At that time, Child
    had scraped knees, feces caked in her underwear, sticks and leaves matted in
    her hair, and bleeding feet. J.J. described her as “feral” at that time, and noted
    that she was emotionally vulnerable, prone to fits of violence and hysterics, and
    frequently attempted to engage in self-harm. Tr. Vol. II at 36. Child urinated
    and defecated on Adoptive Parents’ floors, leading J.J. to believe Child did not
    “understand how to use indoor plumbing.” Id. at 37. J.J. believed that Child
    had been physically and sexually abused while in Mother’s care, based on
    Child’s statements to Adoptive Parents and her knowledge of “the male
    anatomy” at such a young age. Id. at 38.
    [5]   In June of 2014, S.J. became Child’s permanent guardian. Soon thereafter,
    Adoptive Parents obtained therapeutic services for Child. Those services
    included parent-child interactive therapy, individual counseling, and
    medication therapy. Initially, Child was diagnosed with reactive attachment
    disorder, but she was later diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and
    attention deficit hyperactive disorder. Adoptive Parents wished to enroll Child
    in a recommended behavioral occupational therapy program with psychology
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 3 of 14
    specialists at Cincinnati Children’s medical center but could not get those
    services covered by J.J.’s insurance until adoption was final.
    [6]   Adoptive Parents arranged for Mother to see Child on Mother’s Day in 2014.
    Mother said she was taking Child out for ice cream. Six hours later, Child was
    returned to Adoptive Parents by strangers who reported Mother had
    disappeared at a casino, leaving the Child behind. Shortly thereafter, Mother
    was charged, convicted and incarcerated for theft. The theft conviction was
    Mother’s seventh criminal conviction and her second felony conviction.
    [7]   When Mother was released from incarceration in March of 2015, Adoptive
    Parents provided her with a path to reunification with Child by arranging for
    her to work with Child’s therapists. Mother attended two appointments with
    Child’s therapist and then refused to follow through with additional
    appointments or recommendations. In July of 2015, Mother filed a motion to
    modify the guardianship orders. Adoptive Parents submitted into evidence at
    the guardianship proceedings a report from Child’s psychiatrist stating:
    [Child] is a 6-year-old biracial youngster whose behavior gives
    ample evidence of significant maternal neglect. There is
    substantial and ample indication that the biological mother never
    made any emotional attachment to [Child]. [Mother’s] behavior
    clearly indicates that she has a serious personality disorder that is
    not likely to change.
    My professional opinion is that [Child] should not have any form
    of contact with biological mother till she is at least 18 years of
    age and is able to make a mature decision about initiating any
    contact. Contact with her biological mother serves no purpose
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 4 of 14
    other than dredging up old painful memories and more acting out
    behavior.
    Ex. at 36.2 On January 28, 2016, based in part on the psychiatrist’s report, the
    guardianship court denied Mother’s request to modify the guardianship. The
    court ordered contact between Mother and Child “at the sole discretion” of S.J.
    Id. at 35.
    [8]   Following the guardianship court’s decision, Mother made no effort to contact
    Child or Adoptive Parents again. Since Mother’s Day of 2014, Mother has had
    no contact with Child. Since January of 2016, Mother has not tried to contact
    Child. Mother admitted that Adoptive Parents never told her she could not
    have contact with them or Child. Mother knew Adoptive Parents’ address,
    which has not changed since Child began living with Adoptive Parents, and
    Mother owned a car, so she had transportation available.
    [9]   During the period between April of 2014 and February of 2018, Mother was
    employed at various places, including McDonalds, Burger King, Dunkin
    Donuts, a garden center, Chipotle, Little Caesars, and two factories. Between
    April of 2014 and March of 2019, Mother also continued to receive child
    support from Father which totaled approximately $3,000.00. However, Mother
    2
    A copy of the report was also submitted into evidence, without objection, as Exhibit 5 at the April 2, 2019,
    final hearing on adoption. Tr. at 84
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019                  Page 5 of 14
    has not provided money, clothing, food, or other support for Child since Child
    began living with Adoptive Parents.
    [10]   Adoptive Parents enrolled Child in a private school, and paid for the same, in
    order to give Child the attention she needs as recommended by her counselor.
    Neither Adoptive Parent has a criminal history. Adoptive Parents have a home
    for Child, medical insurance for Child, and income to support Child. A Home
    Study completed by Protect Our Children, Inc. was submitted to the court and
    recommended approval of the adoption.
    [11]   On February 27, 2018, Adoptive Parents filed a petition to adopt Child. The
    petition alleged that Mother’s consent to the adoption was not required under
    Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-8(a). On June 18, 2018, after several failed
    attempts to serve Mother, Adoptive Parents served Mother with the Notice of
    Adoption and Petition for Adoption by the Sheriff’s department leaving a copy
    of the same at 7399 U.S. Highway 50, Lot 20, Aurora, Indiana. That address
    had been provided to S.J. by a family member, and it was the same address
    listed on a traffic ticket issued to and paid by Mother in May of 2018.
    [12]   On September 7, 2018, Adoptive Parents filed Father’s consent to the adoption.
    On December 5, 2018, Adoptive Parents filed a request for a final hearing in
    which they noted that Mother had been served by Sheriff on June 20 but failed
    to file a motion to contest the adoption, making her consent irrevocably implied
    under state law. Adoptive Parents’ request and the order setting the final
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 6 of 14
    hearing date for January 17, 2019, were mailed to Mother at the same Aurora,
    Indiana address.
    [13]   On January 14, Mother filed a letter requesting a continuance of the final
    hearing and an opportunity to contest the adoption. The letter referred to the
    December 5 request for final hearing and stated that Mother “had absolutely no
    knowledge of this adoption until [she] just read [the request for hearing] late last
    week.” App. Vol. II at 48. Mother denied that she was ever served on June 20,
    2018.
    [14]   On January 16, Adoptive Parents filed, by counsel, an objection to Mother’s
    motion for a continuance. The objection stated that, in addition to service by
    Sheriff on June 20, 2018: “Pursuant to Rule 4.1(B) of the Indiana Rules of Trial
    Procedure, counsel for the Petitioners mailed a copy of the Verified Petition and
    the Notice of the Adoption to [B.B.] at 7399 U.S. Highway 50, Lot 20, Aurora,
    Indiana 47001 on the 26th day of June, 2018.” Id. at 51. The objection was not
    in the form of an affidavit, nor was it otherwise verified. On January 17,
    Adoptive Parents and their counsel appeared but Mother did not. Counsel for
    Adoptive Parents noted the service by Sheriff on June 20 and stated to the court
    that he “personally sent a mailed copy of the notice of adoption as well as the
    verified petition” to the same Aurora, Indiana address on June 26, 2018, and
    that those documents were not returned to him as undeliverable. Tr. at 5. The
    trial court did not take evidence at that time; rather, it granted Mother’s request
    for a continuance and set the matter for a pretrial hearing on January 25, and a
    final hearing on March 1.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 7 of 14
    [15]   Mother filed a request to continue the January 25 pretrial hearing and the court
    denied that request. On January 25, the court held the pretrial hearing and
    Mother failed to appear. On January 30, on its own motion, the trial court
    appointed counsel for Mother and “direct[ed]” Mother to contact her counsel at
    the provided telephone number within five business days. App. Vol. II at 62.
    The trial court granted Mother’s additional request for a continuance of the
    final hearing and rescheduled the same for March 15. On March 14, Mother’s
    counsel filed another request for a continuance of the final hearing because she
    had “just met with her client on March 13.” Id. at 65.
    [16]   On March 15, the court held a hearing on all pending motions. All parties and
    their counsel were at the hearing. The court denied Mother’s request for a
    continuance and proceeded to the final hearing at which J.J. testified. The
    hearing was continued to April 2, 2019, and all parties appeared with counsel at
    that hearing. S.J. testified and Mother testified. At the recommenced hearing
    on April 4, Mother’s counsel appeared but Mother did not. Adoptive Parents
    testified again. In an order dated April 4, the trial court held that Mother’s
    consent was irrevocably implied under Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-18(b)(1)
    and, in the alternative, not required under Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-8 for
    several reasons, including Mother’s abandonment of Child. In an order dated
    April 12, the court held that Mother’s motion to contest the adoption was
    denied. On April 29, the court completed the final hearing on the adoption
    petition and issued the Decree of Adoption.
    [17]   Mother now appeals.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 8 of 14
    Discussion and Decision
    Standard of Review
    [18]   Our standard of review of a trial court’s ruling in an adoption proceeding is
    well-settled.
    [W]e will not disturb that ruling unless the evidence leads to only
    one conclusion and the trial court reached the opposite
    conclusion. In re Adoption of H.N.P.G., 
    878 N.E.2d 900
     (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2008), trans. denied. We will not reweigh the evidence, but
    rather, we will examine the evidence most favorable to the trial
    court’s decision together with all reasonable inferences to be
    drawn therefrom. 
    Id.
     We will affirm if sufficient evidence exists
    to sustain the decision. In re Adoption of M.A.S., 
    815 N.E.2d 216
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2004). The trial court’s decision is presumed to be
    correct and it is the appellant’s burden to overcome that
    presumption. 
    Id.
    B.M. v. J.R. and M.R. (“In re Adoption of K.M.”), 
    31 N.E.3d 533
    , 536 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2015).
    Implied Consent
    [19]   Mother challenges the trial court’s conclusion that her consent to the adoption
    was implied under state law. Generally, a petition to adoption a child may only
    be granted if the living biological parents have executed their written consent to
    the adoption. 
    Ind. Code § 31-19-9-1
    (a). However, there are several statutory
    exceptions to the written consent requirement. One such exception is where the
    parent’s consent is irrevocably implied. Under Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-
    18(b), a parent’s consent to adoption is “irrevocably implied” when the parent
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 9 of 14
    “fails to file a motion to contest the adoption … not later than thirty (30) days
    after service of notice” of the adoption. Under those circumstances, the parent
    loses “the right of action and the adoption may not be challenged.” In re
    Adoption of K.M., 31 N.E.3d at 538.
    [20]   The thirty-day time limit to contest adoption is triggered by service of the
    adoption notice. Service of process is governed by the Indiana Trial Rules.
    Pursuant to Trial Rules 4.1(A)(3) and 4.12(A), one of the ways to make service
    on an individual is by having the sheriff “leav[e] a copy of the summons and
    complaint at [the] dwelling house or usual place of abode” of the person to be
    served. Proof of such service must be made by return delivered to the trial court
    clerk. Ind. Trial Rule 4.15(A). When service is made in that manner, “the
    person making the service also shall send by first class mail a copy of the
    summons and the complaint to the last known address of the person being
    served, and this fact shall be shown upon the return.” T.R. 4.15(B).
    Technically insufficient service under Trial Rule 4.1(B) may nevertheless be
    sufficient under Trial Rule 4.15(F) if the service is “reasonably calculated to
    inform the person to be served that an action has been instituted against him.”
    See also, LePore v. Norwest Bank Ind., N.A., 
    860 N.E.2d 632
    , 636 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2007) (holding, when there is not “a complete lack of compliance with T.R.
    4.1(B)” and there is proof of “substantial compliance,” service may be sufficient
    pursuant to Rule 4.15(F)); Joslyn v. State, 
    942 N.E.2d 809
    , 812 (Ind. 2011)
    (holding failure to prove service by mail under Trial Rule 4.1(B) did not render
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 10 of 14
    service insufficient where the person to be served admitted he had received
    actual notice by service delivered by a state agent to his home).
    [21]   Here, unlike the situations in the above-cited cases, Mother contends that she
    did not receive notice of the adoption action until sometime in January of 2018.
    She denies that she received the June 20 service by sheriff and that she received
    service purportedly mailed by Adoptive Parents’ counsel on June 26. She notes
    that Adoptive Parents failed to comply with Rule 4.1(B) because they allege
    that mailed service was done by their attorney, not the sheriff who left the
    documents at her dwelling, as the Rule requires.3 However, we could overlook
    that technical defect in service if there was any evidence that the Adoptive
    Parents’ attorney had served Mother by mail – i.e., if there was evidence of
    “substantial compliance” with Trial Rule 4.1(B). See LePore. 
    860 N.E.2d at 636
    .
    However, unlike the situation in LePore, there is no such evidence in this case.
    The record does not contain a filed return of service or even a certificate of
    service done by the attorney. There is no affidavit or other verified document
    under which anyone swears to the truth of facts showing service by mail. The
    unverified contention in the Adoptive Parents’ January 16 objection to the
    continuance and their attorney’s unsworn statement to the court at the January
    17 hearing are not “evidence.” See Gajdos v. State, 
    462 N.E.2d 1017
    , 1021 (Ind.
    1984); see also Indiana Rule of Evidence 603 (“Before testifying, a witness must
    3
    Mom also notes the sheriff’s return did not state that the sheriff had made service by first class mail, as
    required by the rule. T.R. 4.1(B).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019                   Page 11 of 14
    give an oath or affirmation to testify truthfully. It must be in a form designed to
    impress that duty on the witness’s conscience.”). And, unlike the case in Joslyn,
    Mother does not admit that she received actual service by sheriff.
    [22]   There is no evidence to sustain the trial court’s finding that, after the service by
    sheriff, “the attorney for the Petitioners mailed a copy of the Notice of
    Adoption and the Verified Petition for Adoption to the same address via U.S.
    Mail as required by Trial Rule 4.1(B).” App. Vol. II at 85. Thus, there was
    insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s conclusion that Mother’s
    consent was irrevocably implied when she failed to file a motion to contest the
    adoption by July 20, 2018, i.e., thirty days after service by sheriff. However, as
    we discuss below, we affirm the trial court judgment because the trial court
    correctly held, in the alternative, that Mother’s consent was not required under
    Indiana law.
    Consent Not Required
    [23]   Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-8(a) contains additional exceptions to the
    requirement that a biological parent provide written consent to an adoption.
    Under that statute, consent to adoption is not required from parents in any one
    of the circumstances listed in subsections (1) through (12). Here, the trial court
    concluded that Mother’s consent to the adoption was not required under several
    of the listed circumstances. However, because the statute is written in the
    disjunctive, “each of the subsections provides an independent ground for
    dispensing with consent.” R.S.P. v. S.S. (“In re Adoption of J.T.A.”), 988 N.E.2d
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 12 of 14
    1250, 1254 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013), trans. denied. Although we agree with the trial
    court that there may have been sufficient evidence to conclude that Mother’s
    consent was not required under subsections (a)(2)(A) (failure to communicate
    for at least one year), (a)(2)(B) (failure to provide support for at least one year),
    and (a)(11) (parent unfit and dispensing with consent in child’s best interests),
    we decide only that Mother’s consent was not required because she abandoned
    Child under subsection (a)(1).
    [24]   Consent of a parent is not required if she has abandoned or deserted the child
    for at least six months immediately preceding the date of the filing of the
    petition for adoption. I.C. § 31-19-9-8(a)(1). “If a parent has made only token
    efforts to support or to communicate with the child the court may declare the
    child abandoned by the parent.” I.C. § 31-19-9-8(b). Abandonment is defined
    as “any conduct by the parent which evinces an intent or settled purpose to
    forgo all parental duties and to relinquish all parental claims to the child.” In re
    Adoption of J.T.A., 988 N.E.2d at 1254 (citation and quotation omitted). Thus,
    in Williams v. Townsend, for example, we held that an occasional letter or card
    sent to a child from an incarcerated parent together with one telephone
    conversation with the child was “token communication” that the trial court
    properly disregarded when it determined the parent had abandoned child. 
    629 N.E.2d 252
    , 254 (Ind. Ct. App. 1994).
    [25]   Here, Mother did not even engage in token communication with Child in the
    four years before the Adoptive Parents filed their petition in February of 2018.
    Mother had no contact whatsoever with Child since she left the Child to the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 13 of 14
    care of strangers on Mother’s Day of 2014. And, even if we conclude that
    Mother’s January 2016 motion to modify the guardianship evinced an intent to
    assert her parental claims to Child, Mother made no attempt to contact Child in
    the over two years since her motion was denied. There is no evidence that
    Mother was prevented by either the courts or Adoptive Parents from having
    contact or communication with Child, and Mother admitted as much. Further,
    the evidence established that Mother, who had a car for transportation, knew
    where Child was living such that she could have gone to that address or at least
    sent some type of correspondence to that address. She did neither. There was
    sufficient evidence to sustain the trial court’s decision that Mother’s consent to
    the adoption was not required because she abandoned Child for at least the six
    months prior to the adoption petition.
    Conclusion
    [26]   There was insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s conclusion that
    Mother’s consent was irrevocably implied under Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-
    18. However, there was sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s
    alternative holding that, even if Mother’s consent was not implied, her consent
    was not necessary because she abandoned Child for at least six months prior to
    the filing of the adoption petition. I.C. § 31-19-9-8(a)(1). Therefore, we affirm.
    [27]   Affirmed.
    Kirsch, J., and Mathias, J., concur.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-AD-1219 | December 10, 2019   Page 14 of 14