In the Matter of J.G., A Child in Need of Services, J.B., Father v. Indiana Department of Child Services (mem. dec.) ( 2020 )


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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 21 2020, 10:57 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                                   ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Lisa Diane Manning                                       Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
    Danville, Indiana                                        Attorney General of Indiana
    Robert J. Henke
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    In the Matter of J.G., A Child in                        December 21, 2020
    Need of Services,                                        Court of Appeals Case No.
    20A-JC-1319
    J.B., Father,
    Appeal from the
    Appellant-Respondent,                                    Jefferson Circuit Court
    v.                                               The Honorable
    Donald J. Mote, Judge
    Indiana Department of Child                              Trial Court Cause No.
    Services,                                                39C01-1611-JC-123
    Appellee-Petitioner.
    Kirsch, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020                 Page 1 of 30
    [1]   J.B. (Father) appeals from the juvenile court’s order adjudicating J.G. (“Child”)
    to be a child in need of services (“CHINS”). Father raises two issues for our
    review, which we restate as:
    I.      Whether the juvenile court abused its discretion in denying
    Father’s motion to dismiss because he asserts that his due
    process rights were violated when the fact-finding hearing
    was not held until several years after the petition was filed;
    and
    II.     Whether the juvenile court’s conclusion that Child should
    remain a CHINS as originally adjudicated because
    Father’s actions and inactions had seriously endangered
    Child, Child’s needs were unmet, and Child’s needs were
    unlikely to be met without State coercion was clearly
    erroneous.
    [2]   We affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [3]   Father and Mother met in Indiana at some point between 2013 and 2014. Tr.
    Vol. III at 74. At that time, they lived together for a few months, and Mother
    was “in and out” of the home.
    Id. at 75.
    Father moved to Massachusetts in
    2014, and Mother remained in Indiana.
    Id. Sometime in 2014,
    Father gave
    Mother a plane ticket, and she flew to Massachusetts to visit Father, at which
    time they conceived Child.
    Id. at 75-76.
    Mother returned to Indiana, and the
    relationship between Mother and Father ended.
    Id. at 77.
    Father later learned
    Mother was pregnant with Child, and he believed Child was his.
    Id. at 76, 78.
    However, Father chose to remain in Massachusetts because he saw “no
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 2 of 30
    significant reason to leave.”
    Id. at 78.
    He was not involved with Mother’s
    pregnancy with Child and was aware that Mother was “very unstable” due to
    her drug use, but he took no steps to address her drug use.
    Id. at 76-78. [4]
      Child was born on November 16, 2014.
    Id. at 63.
    Although Father was aware
    of Child’s birth, he was not present for it, did not sign a paternity affidavit, and
    did not file to establish legal paternity.
    Id. at 79, 81.
    On the day Child was
    born, Father posted on social media that “his son” was born, and included
    Child’s height and weight, and some pictures of Child.
    Id. at 133-34.
    Father
    claimed he sent money orders to Mother but that he later stopped because he
    thought he was “being taken advantage of.”
    Id. at 82. [5]
      On November 10, 2016, two years after Child’s birth, the Indiana Department
    of Child Services (“DCS”) removed Child from Mother’s care and, on
    November 15, 2016, filed a CHINS petition. Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 34, 45-47.
    In the CHINS petition, DCS alleged Child was a CHINS because of Mother’s
    substance use and because Father, who was only alleged to be Child’s father at
    that time, lived out of state and neither supported nor visited Child.
    Id. at 45- 46.
    On November 15, 2016, the juvenile court held an initial hearing, where
    DCS again alleged that Father was uninvolved and had never visited or
    supported Child. Tr. Vol. II at 5, 9. At the conclusion of the hearing, the
    juvenile court found that due to the emergency nature of the situation, no
    reasonable efforts could be made to prevent removal and that it was in the best
    interest of Child to be removed from the home environment and that remaining
    in the home would be contrary to the health and welfare of Child.
    Id. at 11.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 3 of 30
    [6]   DCS did not serve Father with a copy of the CHINS petition or notice of the
    hearing dates because his whereabouts were unknown, and there is no
    indication in the record that Father was served by publication. Appellant’s App.
    Vol. 2 at 45, 48, 49, 108, 174. When the CHINS case began, Father’s last
    known address was in North Vernon, Indiana, but he no longer lived there.
    Id. at 134-35, 184.
    DCS later learned from Mother that Father had moved to
    Maine.
    Id. at 54.
    DCS made a “PPS Investigation referral” in order to try to
    locate Father.
    Id. at 35. [7]
      On November 21, 2016, Father spoke with family case manager (“FCM”)
    Sawyer Beach (“FCM Beach”), and Father stated that he was interested in
    Child being placed with him; FCM Beach informed Father about the need for
    Father to establish paternity. Tr. Vol. II at 15; Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 76, 216.
    On November 29, 2016, FCM Ashley Shelton (“FCM Shelton”) called Father
    back and again advised him of Child’s detention and foster care placement and
    of the pending CHINS petition and discussed the importance of establishing
    paternity. Tr. Vol. III at 191-92.
    [8]   On January 10, 2017, the juvenile court held the CHINS fact-finding hearing, at
    which Mother, but not Father, was present. Tr. Vol. II at 13-18. The juvenile
    court adjudicated Child a CHINS finding:
    1. [Mother] is the biological mother of [Child].
    2. [Father] is the alleged biological father of [Child].
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 4 of 30
    3. Alleged father lives in Maine, has not established paternity,
    and neither supports nor visits the child.
    4. Mother admits that she has substance abuse issues, which
    prevent her from providing the necessities for Child, which
    endangers Child’s mental and physical welfare.
    Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 54. At the fact-finding hearing, the family case
    manager (“FCM”) reported that Father had not been in touch with DCS since
    November 2016. Tr. Vol. II at 16.
    [9]    On January 11, 2017, FCM Shelton again spoke to Father on the telephone,
    and they discussed his taking a paternity test. Tr. Vol. III at 192-93. Father
    stated that there was a fifty-dollar charge for a paternity test and wanted to
    know if DCS would pay for it.
    Id. at 192-94;
    Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 216.
    Because DCS was not paying for paternity tests at that time, FCM Shelton told
    Father that she would have to ask her supervisor to see if an exception could be
    made. Tr. Vol III at 194. When FCM Shelton attempted to reach Father again
    on January 18, 2017, his phone number was no longer in service. Id.;
    Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 216-17.
    [10]   On February 10, 2017, the juvenile court held the dispositional hearing, which
    Father did not attend.
    Id. at 19-24.
    At the hearing, DCS stated that Father was
    a presumed father because he had not established paternity.
    Id. at 21.
    DCS
    told the juvenile court that Father had been contacted but that he indicated that
    he “has no interest” in participating in services.
    Id. The juvenile court
    ordered
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 5 of 30
    Mother into services but also included Father as being required to participate in
    services. Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 92-95.
    [11]   In April and May of 2017, FCM Shelton sent letters to Father to establish
    contact with him and received no response from him.
    Id. at 217;
    Tr. Vol. III at
    194. In a letter sent on May 10, 2017, FCM Shelton told Father of an
    upcoming change in the FCM, but the letter was returned as undeliverable.
    Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 217; Tr. Vol. III at 194-95. From May 2017 through
    December 2017, the new FCM, Lisa Kiser (“FCM Kiser”), continued to send
    letters to Father, which were returned as undeliverable. Tr. Vol. III at 229.
    Because of this, on March 9, 2018, FCM Kiser submitted a new investigative
    referral to find Father but was never able to make contact with Father.
    Id. [12]
      Another FCM took the case over in December 2017, FCM Lydia Stepp (“FCM
    Stepp”), and performed another investigative referral.
    Id. On March 13,
    2018,
    FCM Stepp sent “letters to addresses listed for Father and called multiple
    family members to locate Father.” Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 217. On March 14,
    2018, over a year after DCS lost contact with Father, he responded to FCM
    Stepp and advised that he had not yet had DNA testing to establish paternity
    but told her he would like to do so.
    Id. A DNA screen
    was scheduled for May
    3, 2018.
    Id. at 217, 222. [13]
      On May 3, 2018, after a review hearing, the juvenile court found that between
    January 11, 2017 and March 2018 Father failed to maintain contact with DCS
    and did not attempt to be part of the case.
    Id. at 222.
    On June 26, 2018, Father
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 6 of 30
    appeared telephonically for a termination hearing that had been filed against
    him and Mother, but that was later dismissed and did not proceed further, and
    the juvenile court appointed Father legal counsel. Tr. Vol. III at 89-90. Since
    that time, Father appeared regularly by telephone or in person at hearings in the
    CHINS case.
    Id. at 90-91. [14]
      Father missed the scheduled DNA screen on May 3, 2018, but he later
    completed it on June 4, 2018. Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 245. The DNA screen
    confirmed he was Child’s father, and paternity was established in June 2018.
    Id. After contact with
    Father was re-established, DCS took steps for Father to
    have parenting time with Child. Tr. Vol. III at 236-37. In August 2018, Father
    began having supervised telephone calls with Child. Id.; Appellant’s App. Vol. 3
    at 13. While DCS had difficulty reaching Father by telephone after the first
    visit, weekly phone visits resumed with Father but were sporadic. Tr. Vol. II at
    116.
    [15]   On August 20, 2018, Father appeared by counsel in the CHINS case and
    moved for discovery, requesting the names of witnesses DCS intended to call
    “in the above cause including those witnesses [DCS] intends to call at the
    hearing of the above cause, and including all known or anticipated rebuttal
    witnesses.” Appellant’s App. Vol 2 at 248-49. The motion also moved for the
    discovery order to, “continue to and include the fact-finding hearing in this
    cause and continue until the completion of the case.”
    Id. at 249.
    The juvenile
    court granted the motion. Appellant’s App. Vol. 3 at 2.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 7 of 30
    [16]   A review hearing was held on November 1, 2018, at which the DCS progress
    report was entered into evidence.
    Id. at 17.
    The report stated, “[Father] has
    been given the opportunity to complete supervised telephone calls with Child . .
    . [and] had the opportunity to complete face-to-face parenting time with Child.”
    Id. at 13.
    It further stated, “[t]he visit supervisor has not had contact with
    Father since the face-to-face visit on 09/23/2018. The visit supervisor has
    continued to attempt contact each week to facilitate the phone calls.”
    Id. The report also
    advised that “FCM has not been able to contact [Father] by phone
    since 09/24/2018, [and] FCM has continued to attempt contact with [Father]
    with no success. FCM sent a letter to Father on 10/16/2018 to establish
    contact.”
    Id. [17]
      On February 14, 2019, a permanency hearing was held, and the juvenile court
    found that Father had not complied with Child’s case plan.
    Id. at 44-45.
    Father
    had missed several of his weekly supervised telephone visits with Child.
    Id. at 45.
    DCS had been trying to arrange a second face-to-face visit with Father and
    Child since September 24, 2018.
    Id. FCM Stepp attempted
    to contact Father
    on October 11 and October 16, 2018, by phone and letter, and heard back from
    him on October 19, 2018.
    Id. FCM Stepp also
    attempted to contact Father on
    November 16, November 19, and November 26, 2018.
    Id. DCS was trying
    to
    arrange to fly Father to Indiana to have another face-to-face visit, but Father
    needed a “valid ID in order to board the plane,” which he did not have.
    Id. The juvenile court
    found that “[r]eunification of the child is being unnecessarily
    delayed due to Father’s failure to comply with DCS’s request.”
    Id. At the Court
    of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 8 of 30
    May 16, 2019 review hearing, questions remained as to whether Father had
    valid identification, and he had still not had another face-to-face visit with Child
    since September 2018.
    Id. at 69.
    The report stated that Father “would really
    like to travel to Indiana to see [Child] but he still is waiting for information
    about outstanding warrants here in Indiana.”
    Id. Father was still
    having
    supervised video calls with Child, and thus had partially complied with Child’s
    case plan.
    Id. at 70. [18]
      On June 20, 2019, Father filed a motion for a trial home visit and for Child’s
    placement with him.
    Id. at 77-79.
    He stated that he “currently has seven (7)
    other children living in his care in Maine.”
    Id. at 78.
    Father acknowledged in
    the motion that he “has now been a part of the CHINS case since August 2018”
    but stated that he had not yet had a CHINS fact-finding hearing.
    Id. The juvenile court
    set Father’s motion for hearing on July 18, 2019, but it was
    continued to August 15, 2019 on Father’s motion.
    Id. at 80-82. [19]
      After the August 15, 2019 hearing, the juvenile court found, among other
    findings, that Father “hasn’t taken up the offer to either let DCS bring [Child]
    to him or DCS pay for him to visit [Child] here. It has been one year since
    [Child] and [F]ather had met.”
    Id. at 97.
    The juvenile court further found that
    Father “does partially participate with supervised video phone calls twice per
    week. But [the] visit supervisor maintains that it is very hard to get ahold [sic]
    of him and really some weeks he is unable to reach [Father.]”
    Id. A permanency plan
    was adopted for Child to be reunified with Father or Mother,
    and a fact-finding hearing was set for August 23, 2019.
    Id. at 97-98.
    DCS filed
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 9 of 30
    a motion to continue the fact-finding hearing and stated that the parties were in
    agreement as to the continuance, and the juvenile court granted the motion,
    resetting the hearing to September 27, 2019.
    Id. at 99, 101.
    On September 17,
    2019, DCS filed another motion to continue the fact-finding hearing, and the
    juvenile court reset the hearing for December 13, 2019.
    Id. at 106. [20]
      On August 26, 2019, the juvenile court ordered DCS to make a referral for
    Child to have a diagnostic evaluation with Stacey Cornett (“Cornett”) at
    Community Mental Health Center, to help the court make “its determination of
    Father’s motion for a trial home visit, which is currently set for hearing
    September 27, 2019.”
    Id. at 102.
    On October 7, 2019, Cornett completed the
    clinical assessment of Child. Tr. Vol. III at 205. Completion of the assessment
    was delayed because Cornett had to reach out to Father several times before he
    replied; he contacted her on October 7, the date she completed the assessment.
    Id. at 205, 211-12.
    In her assessment, Cornett noted that it was conducted in
    order to “determine if there were any clinical conditions relevant to [Child]’s
    functioning, to assess the relationship status between himself and his foster
    mother, in particular, and to then assess the relationship status between he and
    [Father].”
    Id. at 207.
    Cornett concluded that Child had a strong attachment
    with his foster family.
    Id. at 208.
    In her initial assessment, Cornett was not
    able to observe interaction between Father and Child and spoke with Father via
    telephone, noting that he “showed a desire to be connected to . . . Child and
    good intentions towards him.”
    Id. Court of Appeals
    of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 10 of 30
    [21]   On December 13, 2019, Father’s attorney requested a continuance of the fact-
    finding hearing, in part to review the assessment. Tr. Vol. III at 45, 46. DCS
    agreed to the continuance, and the juvenile court set the CHINS fact-finding for
    February 3, 2020.
    Id. at 48.
    Father’s attorney agreed to the hearing date.
    Id. at 49.
    On February 1, 2020, Father filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the
    CHINS fact-finding hearing was not timely under Indiana Code section 31-34-
    11-1 and that he was never properly served with notice of the proceedings.
    Appellant’s App. Vol. 4 at 55-56.
    [22]   On February 3, 2020, the juvenile court held the combined CHINS fact-finding
    hearing and hearing on Father’s motion for Child’s placement and motion to
    dismiss. Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 27. At the hearing, Father testified that he
    lived in Maine with his girlfriend and their combined six children. Tr. Vol. III at
    63-64. He stated he had lived in the same house for about two-and-a-half years.
    Id. at 63.
    Father stated that he worked approximately fifty hours a week but
    had previously collected workers’ compensation when he could not work due to
    an injury.
    Id. at 67-68.
    Evidence was also presented of Father’s criminal
    history, which included a 2005 conviction for robbery as a Class C Felony, in
    which he twice violated the terms of his probation.
    Id. at 70-72.
    On August 6,
    2010, a petition for a protection order was filed against and granted against
    Father, due to domestic or family violence and stalking. Ex. Vol. 26-31, 35-38.
    Father also had numerous traffic charges and convictions for driving while
    suspended and other infractions.
    Id. at 8-25.
    At the time of the CHINS fact-
    finding hearing, Father had an active warrant for failing to appear for trial in
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 11 of 30
    another case. Tr. Vol. III at 102. Father testified he knew about the warrant,
    but did not worry about being arrested, and did not consider the warrant a
    barrier to his relationship with Child.
    Id. at 102-03. [23]
      Father testified that, although he knew about Mother’s pregnancy and that
    there was a possibility that he was the father, he did not take steps to establish
    paternity until he was contacted by DCS in November 2016 when Child was
    two years old.
    Id. at 78, 81.
    Father also testified that he never believed that the
    CHINS proceedings as they pertained to him were necessary and that there was
    no need for services for him.
    Id. at 93.
    He further stated that, although he held
    those beliefs, he never objected to the prior CHINS adjudication, nor did he
    ever previously request a fact-finding hearing be held.
    Id. at 93-94.
    At time of
    the CHINS fact-finding hearing, Father had only three face-to-face visits with
    Child since his birth in 2014.
    Id. at 98.
    The first took place in September 2018
    when Father drove to Indiana.
    Id. The second occurred
    when DCS paid for
    Father’s airfare and hotel accommodations in October 2019.
    Id. at 98-99.
    This
    visit was delayed for four months because Father was unable or unwilling to get
    a valid identification to board the plane.
    Id. at 100-01.
    The third occurred in
    November 2019.
    Id. at 98-99.
    The record showed that on November 11, 2019,
    Father appeared in person at a review hearing, and the juvenile court instructed
    Father to submit to a drug screen immediately following the hearing.
    Id. at 39- 40, 104.
    However, Father left the courthouse and never submitted to the
    ordered drug screen.
    Id. at 238-40.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 12 of 30
    [24]   FCM Stepp testified that, when she first had contact with Father in March
    2018, fourteen months had passed since DCS had last had contact with Father
    and that delay had a profound effect on the CHINS case and where it stood at
    the time of the fact-finding hearing because often CHINS case are closed in that
    amount of time.
    Id. at 230-32.
    She also testified that it took three months from
    the date she was able to establish contact with Father to have the DNA test
    completed, and the delay was in part due to Father’s lack of communication
    with DCS.
    Id. at 233-34.
    FCM Stepp stated that communication issues
    continued after paternity was proven due to Father’s phone running out of
    minutes or the lack of service at his home.
    Id. at 235-36.
    She further stated
    that, in order for Father to be able to have placement of Child with him, Father
    would need to understand the long-term effects that Child would have from
    being in foster care and how to deal with Child’s separation and trauma of
    detention.
    Id. at 241-42. [25]
      Cornett testified about what Father would have to do in terms of services and
    the likelihood that Child would have difficulties in facilitating a bond between
    Father and Child.
    Id. at 214-15.
    Cornett also testified that it was her belief that
    a parent’s absence from a child’s life in the first years of the child’s life would
    play a role in the lack of a bond between them because that is how the
    attachment relationship develops.
    Id. at 215.
    She stated further that when a
    child has lived with someone for an extended period of time and has a secure
    attachment with them, as Child does, the child will experience trauma and grief
    when separation occurs and in Child’s case, there are other considerations
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 13 of 30
    including, foster sibling relationships, extended family, and community ties.
    Id. at 217.
    Cornett opined that Child was “behind the eight ball in the fact that he
    would be grieving and has [a] well-established understanding of his relationship
    with his foster parent” and that “because of his cognitive ability, moving into
    preschool and school age years, he understands things at a much more
    complicated level . . . what families are, what loss is, where people are across
    time and space, . . .so it’s more complicated for an older child to manage all of
    that.”
    Id. at 224.
    [26] 
      In addition, Father was underestimating Child’s weaknesses of entering into a
    caregiver relationship with Father, and Cornett agreed that Father did not
    realize that it would “be very challenging and potentially detrimental to Child.”
    Id. Cornett testified that
    Child would need a “plethora” of services to address
    detaching him from the foster home and attaching him to Father.
    Id. at 220, 221.
    Due to the length of time from Child’s removal and placement in foster
    care and moving towards reunification, it made it “absolutely” a more
    complicated issue to address Child’s needs.
    Id. at 223-24.
    Based on this, she
    recommended a process of reunification that would slowly orientate Child to
    placement with Father and that it be done in a controlled manner with services
    available.
    Id. at 227.
    [27] 
      Child’s court appointed special advocate Harriet Hoffman (“CASA Hoffman”)
    agreed and testified that Father’s consistent pattern throughout the case was to
    be difficult to contact and to keep involved in the case. Tr. Vol. IV at 27. She
    stated that Father’s lack of engagement with her was frustrating because it was
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 14 of 30
    her job to gather information in the case, and she was forced to seek out that
    information from other sources.
    Id. at 20.
    CASA Hoffman also testified that
    she believed that Child would suffer trauma from being separated from foster
    placement and also from Mother if Child were to be placed with Father in
    Maine.
    Id. at 23. [28]
      On April 8, 2020, the juvenile court issued an order determining that Child
    would remain a CHINS as originally adjudicated and denying both Father’s
    motion to dismiss and for Child’s placement. Appellant’s App. Vol. 4 at 132-50.
    The juvenile court found that, since Child’s removal in 2016, he has been
    placed in a foster home, and has developed a strong attachment with his foster
    family.
    Id. at 139.
    The trial court further found that because of this, if that
    relationship were to suddenly terminate, Child would experience “significant
    trauma and grief for the loss of his foster parents and of his mother who
    continues her relationship with Child.”
    Id. at 140.
    The trial court also found
    that Child needed ongoing services and meetings with Father to reduce the
    trauma Child will suffer when moving from the care of the foster family to
    Father.
    Id. [29]
      The juvenile court found that the
    significance of Father’s criminal history to the Court’s ruling here
    is that he is not unfamiliar with court proceedings in Indiana and
    the importance of communication. A phone call from a
    caseworker with [DCS] that you may be the father of a child who
    is in foster care because the mother is battling drug addiction is
    not something to put on the back burner. A “wait and see”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 15 of 30
    approach can have significant, and life-changing consequences.
    It certainly has in this case.
    Id. at 139.
    Based on Cornett’s testimony and report, the juvenile court found
    that, “The only way Child can safely be transitioned from foster placement to
    Father’s care is in a controlled scenario with significant therapeutic services in
    place to address Child’s grief of detachment and stress of a new parent.”
    Id. at 141. [30]
      On June 11, 2020, the juvenile court held the dispositional hearing. Tr. Vol. IV
    at 44-67. On July 6, 2020, the juvenile court issued its written decree, which
    required among other things, that Father establish paternity, provide Child a
    stable and safe environment, and attend “individual counseling services to
    prepare for Child to be placed with him and to gain an understanding of
    childhood trauma.” Appellant’s App. Vol. 4 at 195-98. Father now appeals.
    Discussion and Decision
    I.      Due Process
    [31]   Due process requires “‘the opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in
    a meaningful manner.’” In re K.D., 
    962 N.E.2d 1249
    , 1257 (Ind. 2012) (quoting
    Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 333 (1976)). Indiana courts have previously
    stated that the process due in a termination of parental rights action turns on
    balancing three Mathews factors: (1) the private interests affected by the
    proceeding; (2) the risk of error created by the State’s chosen procedure; and (3)
    the countervailing governmental interest supporting use of the challenged
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 16 of 30
    procedure.
    Id. (citing In re
    C.G., 
    954 N.E.2d 910
    , 917 (2011)). Our Supreme
    Court has held that these same factors apply to a due process analysis of a
    CHINS adjudication.
    Id. Ultimately, the resulting
    balance of those factors
    must provide “the opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a
    meaningful manner.” In re L.C., 
    23 N.E.3d 37
    , 40 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015), trans.
    denied.
    [32]   Father argues that he was denied his right to due process because the juvenile
    court failed to conduct a fact-finding hearing until 1,174 days after the filing of a
    CHINS petition and 692 days after Father voluntarily engaged in services. He
    contends that he was never served with a copy of the CHINS petition, filed on
    November 15, 2016, nor given an opportunity to appear for the initial hearing
    held the same day. Father further asserts that even if his absence from the case
    for the first year justified the court proceeding to a fact-finding hearing as to
    allegations against Mother in his absence, the juvenile court erred when it did
    not conduct a timely fact-finding hearing after Father reengaged in the case.
    When DCS was able to locate him in March 2018, Father maintains that he
    immediately began to engage in services to reunify with Child, but that he was
    denied an opportunity for a fact-finding hearing for another 692 days, which
    was a violation of his right to due process.
    [33]   Indiana Code section 31-32-2-3 applies to CHINS proceedings and provides, in
    pertinent part, that during:
    (1) Proceedings to determine whether a child is a child in need of
    services [or]
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 17 of 30
    (2) Proceedings to determine whether the parent, guardian, or
    custodian of a child should participate in a program of care,
    treatment, or rehabilitation for the child
    ....
    (b) A parent, guardian, or custodian is entitled:
    (1) to cross-examine witnesses;
    (2) to obtain witnesses or tangible evidence by compulsory
    process; and
    (3) to introduce evidence on behalf of the parent, guardian, or
    custodian.
    [34]   Father initially contends that his right to due process was violated because he
    was not served with a copy of the CHINS petition and because he was not
    given an opportunity to appear for the initial hearing. However, the evidence
    showed that, at the time of the CHINS petition, Father was only alleged to be
    the father of Child as he had yet to take a DNA test, he lived out of state, and
    he had neither supported nor visited Child. Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 45-46.
    DCS did not serve Father with a copy of the CHINS petition or notice of the
    hearing dates because his whereabouts were unknown, and he no longer lived
    at his last known address.
    Id. at 45, 48, 49, 108, 134-35, 174, 184.
    On the same
    date that the CHINS petition was filed, the juvenile court held an initial
    hearing, where DCS again alleged that Father was uninvolved in Child’s life
    and had never visited or supported Child. Tr. Vol. II at 5, 9. DCS was initially
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 18 of 30
    able to make contact with Father on November 21, 2016 after locating him in
    Maine and advised him of Child’s detention and foster care placement, of the
    pending CHINS petition, and about the need for him to establish paternity; on
    November 29, 2016, he was again advised of the importance of establishing
    paternity. Tr. Vol. II at 15, 191-92; Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 76, 216. Thereafter,
    Father failed to maintain contact with DCS and to establish paternity, and
    when DCS attempted to contact him, his phone number was no longer in
    service and letters were returned as undeliverable. Tr. Vol III at 194-95, 229;
    Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 216-17. We conclude that there was no due process
    violation in not serving Father with the CHINS petition and in not allowing
    him an opportunity to appear for the initial hearing because, at that time, he
    was only alleged to be the father of Child and his whereabouts were unknown.
    [35]   Father next argues that it was a violation of his due process rights to not
    conduct his fact-finding hearing until February 3, 2020. Father relies on In re
    S.A., 
    15 N.E.3d 602
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2014), clarified on reh’g, 
    27 N.E.3d 287
    (Ind.
    Ct. App. 2015), trans. denied, in his contention that his right to due process was
    violated because of the delay in conducting his fact-finding hearing. In S.A., the
    trial court had already determined the Child’s CHINS status based solely on
    Mother’s admission of the allegations -- notwithstanding the fact that Father
    was involved in the case and had denied the allegations contained in the
    CHINS petition -- and later held a fact-finding hearing as to Father.
    Id. at 606- 07.
    This court held that by adjudicating the Child as a CHINS prior to Father’s
    fact-finding hearing, the trial court deprived Father of a meaningful opportunity
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 19 of 30
    to be heard.
    Id. at 609.
    However, on rehearing this court clarified that the
    opinion stands for the proposition that “[w]hen the [CHINS] adjudication can
    involve both parents at the same time, it should involve both parents at the same
    time so there is one adjudication as to all facts pertaining to the entire 
    matter.” 27 N.E.3d at 292
    (emphasis in original). If multiple hearings are unavoidable,
    then the trial court should, if at all possible, refrain from adjudicating the child a
    CHINS until evidence has been heard from both parents.
    Id. at 292-93.
    And if
    an adjudication is unavoidable before evidence has been heard from the second
    parent, then the trial court must give meaningful consideration to the evidence
    provided by the second parent in determining whether the child remains a
    CHINS.
    Id. at 293. [36]
      However, Father’s reliance on S.A. is misplaced. Here, the juvenile court
    followed the procedure set out in the S.A. opinion on rehearing. Multiple
    hearings were unavoidable in the present case because of the emergency nature
    of the situation of Mother’s drug use and lack of other caregivers for Child and
    because Father had not yet established paternity and his whereabouts were
    unknown. Further, the initial CHINS adjudication was also unavoidable
    because Mother wished to admit the allegations, and at that time, paternity had
    still not been proven, and DCS was unable to make contact with Father.
    According to S.A., Father was later given the opportunity for a fact-finding
    hearing, and the juvenile court gave meaningful consideration to the evidence
    provided by Father in its determination as to whether Child remained a
    CHINS.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 20 of 30
    [37]   Moreover, after DCS was able to re-establish contact with Father in March
    2018, he was appointed counsel, who zealously represented his interest, and he
    became involved in the CHINS case. Indeed, on August 20, 2018, his counsel
    moved for discovery in an anticipated CHINS fact-finding hearing, but it was
    not until about a year later, on June 20, 2019, that Father filed a motion stating,
    among other things, that he had not yet had a CHINS fact-finding hearing.
    Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 244-50; Appellant’s App. Vol. 3 at 78. Soon after, the
    juvenile court set the fact-finding hearing for August 23, 2019. Appellant’s App.
    Vol. 3 at 98. However, after several continuances agreed on or otherwise not
    objected to by the parties, including Father, the fact-finding hearing was held on
    February 3, 2020.
    Id. at 99, 101, 106, 107, 137;
    Tr. Vol. III at 45-49.
    [38]   By seeking continuances or otherwise not objecting to any of the continuances,
    Father invited any alleged error in any further delays in the fact-finding, and
    relief is not available to Father. The invited-error doctrine is based on the
    doctrine of estoppel and forbids a party from taking advantage of an error that
    she commits, invites, or which is the natural consequence of her own neglect or
    misconduct. In re J.C., 
    142 N.E.3d 427
    , 432 (Ind. 2020) (citing Durden v. State,
    
    99 N.E.3d 645
    , 651 (Ind. 2018)). Where a party invites the error, he cannot
    take advantage of that error.
    Id. (citing Witte v.
    Mundy ex rel. Mundy, 
    820 N.E.2d 128
    , 134 (Ind. 2005)). In short, invited error is not reversible error.
    Id. (citing Booher v.
    State, 
    773 N.E.2d 814
    , 822 (Ind. 2002); C.T. v. Marion Cnty.
    Dep’t of Child Servs., 
    896 N.E.2d 571
    , 588 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008), trans. denied).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 21 of 30
    [39]   Even under the Mathews analysis, Father’s due process rights were not violated.
    The risk of error created by the juvenile court not conducting a fact-finding
    hearing soon after he became involved in the case was minimal given that he
    was provided numerous opportunities to continue to move forward toward
    reunification with Child throughout the case and was not denied any
    opportunity to be heard at a reasonable time or place. Further, it is undisputed
    that Father was provided with a fact-finding hearing and the opportunity to
    present evidence and challenge that Child was a CHINS. The record shows
    that Father received all rights contemplated under Indiana Code section 31-32-
    2-3. Due process embodies a requirement of “fundamental fairness.” In re D.P.,
    
    27 N.E.3d 1162
    , 1166 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015). We, therefore, conclude that there
    is nothing in the record to suggest that Father was not provided the process due
    him and deprived of fundamental fairness before the juvenile court determined
    that Child should remain a CHINS as previously adjudicated and issued its
    dispositional order. Father has failed to carry his burden of showing that his
    due process rights were violated.
    II.     CHINS Adjudication
    [40]   CHINS proceedings are civil actions, and therefore, it must be proven by a
    preponderance of the evidence that a child is a CHINS as defined by statute. In
    re L.C., 
    23 N.E.3d 37
    , 39 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015) (citing In re N.E., 
    919 N.E.2d 102
    , 105 (Ind. 2010)), trans. denied. When we review a CHINS determination,
    we neither reweigh the evidence nor judge the credibility of the witnesses.
    Id. We consider only
    the evidence that supports the juvenile court’s decision and
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 22 of 30
    the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom.
    Id. at 39-40.
    Where the trial court
    issues findings of fact and conclusions thereon, we apply a two-tiered standard
    of review. In re R.P., 
    949 N.E.2d 395
    , 400 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). We consider
    first whether the evidence supports the findings and then whether the findings
    support the judgment.
    Id. We will set
    aside the trial court’s findings and
    conclusions only if they are clearly erroneous and a review of the record leaves
    us firmly convinced that a mistake has been made.
    Id. “Findings are clearly
    erroneous only when the record contains no evidence to support them either
    directly or by inference.” K.B. v. Ind. Dep’t of Child Servs., 
    24 N.E.3d 997
    , 1001-
    02 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015) (citation omitted). “A judgment is clearly erroneous if
    it relies on an incorrect legal standard.”
    Id. at 1002. [41]
      Father argues that the juvenile court erred when it found that Child was a
    CHINS. He claims that the CHINS adjudication was not based on his actions
    or inactions but instead upon the harm that removal from foster care would
    cause Child and on Father’s unwillingness to move with Mother to Indiana
    during her pregnancy. Father contends that these reasons do not support a
    CHINS adjudication, and DCS failed to present any evidence that Child’s
    needs are unmet and unlikely to be met without the coercive intervention of the
    court. Father asserts that he completed all services requested by DCS at the
    time of the fact-finding hearing and had visited with Child several times over
    nearly two years before the CHINS adjudication. He further maintains that the
    harm caused by DCS’s unwillingness to remove Child from foster care and
    place Child with Father should not provide the basis for a CHINS
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 23 of 30
    determination. He argues that DCS’s continued requirements and delayed due
    process for Father resulted in Child remaining in foster placement for over three
    years before he had an opportunity to be heard on the CHINS allegations and
    the potential trauma caused by removing Child from foster placement was
    caused by this delay.
    [42]   DCS had the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Child
    was a CHINS. Ind. Code § 31-34-12-3. Indiana Code sections 31-34-1-1
    through 11 specify the elements of the CHINS definition that the State must
    prove:
    (1) the child is under the age of 18;
    (2) one or more particular set or sets of circumstances set forth in
    the statute exists; and
    (3) the care, treatment, or rehabilitation needed to address those
    circumstances is unlikely to be provided or accepted without the
    coercive intervention of the court.
    In re 
    N.E., 919 N.E.2d at 105
    . Here, the juvenile court adjudicated Child to be a
    CHINS pursuant to Indiana Code section 31-34-1-1,1 which provides:
    1
    Indiana Code section 31-34-1-1 was amended in 2019, to include the following under subdivision (1): “(A)
    when the parent, guardian, or custodian is financially able to do so; or (B) due to the failure, refusal, or
    inability of the parent, guardian, or custodian to seek financial or other reasonable means to do so . . . .”
    This amendment does not have any effect on the outcome of this appeal.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020               Page 24 of 30
    A child is a child in need of services if before the child becomes
    eighteen (18) years of age:
    (1) the child’s physical or mental condition is seriously impaired
    or seriously endangered as a result of the inability, refusal, or
    neglect of the child’s parent, guardian, or custodian to supply the
    child with necessary food, clothing, shelter, medical care,
    education, or supervision; and
    (2) the child needs care, treatment, or rehabilitation that:
    (A) the child is not receiving; and
    (B) is unlikely to be provided or accepted without the coercive
    intervention of the court.
    [43]   Therefore, this statute requires “three basic elements: that the parent’s actions
    or inactions have seriously endangered the child, that the child’s needs are
    unmet, and . . . that those needs are unlikely to be met without State coercion.”
    In re S.D., 
    2 N.E.3d 1283
    , 1287 (Ind. 2014).
    [44]   Father does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support any of the
    other findings by the juvenile court. As Father does not challenge any of the
    remaining findings of facts by the juvenile court, these unchallenged facts stand
    as proven. See In re B.R., 
    875 N.E.2d 369
    , 373 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007) (failure to
    challenge findings by the trial court resulted in waiver of the argument that the
    findings were clearly erroneous), trans. denied; McMaster v. McMaster, 
    681 N.E.2d 744
    , 747 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997) (when father failed to challenge specific findings,
    court accepted them as true).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 25 of 30
    [45]   “Although the acts or omissions of one or both parents can cause a condition
    that creates the need for court intervention, the CHINS designation focuses on
    the condition of the children rather than on an act or omission of the parent(s).”
    In re K.P.G., 
    99 N.E.3d 677
    , 682 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018) (citing In re 
    N.E., 919 N.E.2d at 105
    ), trans. denied. Therefore, “despite a ‘certain implication of
    parental fault in many CHINS adjudications, the truth of the matter is that a
    CHINS adjudication is simply that -- a determination that a child is in need of
    services.’”
    Id. (quoting In re
    N.E., 919 N.E.2d at 105
    ).
    [46]   Here, from the time Child was born in November 2014 and until the time of the
    CHINS factfinding finding hearing in February 2020, Father only had three
    face-to-face visitations with Child, with the first happening in September 2018,
    and the next two occurring in October and November 2019. Tr. Vol. III at 98-
    99. Therefore, Father saw Child face-to-face for the first time just before Child
    turned four years old and the not again until Child was five years old. While
    supervised visitations via video for Father with Child occurred, they did not
    begin until August 2018, and even then, up until around the fall of 2019, Father
    was inconsistent in his participation. Appellant’s App. Vol. 3 at 13, 44-45, 97.
    Father’s failure to fully participate in these visitations shows a lack of
    commitment to do what was required to maintain his relationship with Child.
    See Lang v. Starke Cnty. Office of Family & Children, 
    861 N.E.2d 366
    , 372 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2007) (stating that, in the context of termination, the failure to exercise the
    right to visit one’s children demonstrates a lack of commitment to complete the
    actions necessary to preserve the parent-child relationship), trans. denied.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 26 of 30
    [47]   Father chose to absent himself from Child’s life, and the juvenile court did not
    find Father’s reasons explaining his lack of involvement credible. Appellant’s
    App. Vol. 4 at 136. The juvenile court found, considering all of Father’s
    involvement in the court system, that receiving a “phone call from a caseworker
    with the Department of Child Services that you may be the father of a child
    who is in foster care because the mother is battling drug addiction is not
    something to put on the back burner” and that delaying action in such a
    situation can have significant, and life-changing consequences, as it has in the
    present case.
    Id. at 139.
    Therefore, Father’s failure to reach out and to stay in
    communication with DCS was unreasonable and proved a great detriment to
    Child.
    [48]   The evidence showed that Child was attached to his foster family and that
    removing Child from the foster family abruptly would cause trauma to Child
    and that time and services were needed to facilitate a bond between Father and
    Child. Cornett testified that it was her belief that a parent’s absence from a
    child’s life in the first years of the child’s life would play a role in the lack of a
    bond between them because that is how the attachment relationship develops.
    Tr. Vol. III at 215. She stated further that, because Child had lived with his
    foster family for an extended period of time and had a secure attachment with
    them, Child will experience trauma and grief if separated from the foster family.
    Id. at 217.
    Cornett opined that Child’s separation from foster family would be
    more complicated because of the length of time he had lived with them and his
    older age.
    Id. at 224.
    Additionally, Cornett testified that Father was
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 27 of 30
    underestimating Child’s weaknesses of entering into a caregiver relationship
    with him and that he did not realize that it would “be very challenging and
    potentially detrimental to Child.”
    Id. Cornett testified that
    Child would need a
    “plethora” of services to address detaching him from the foster home and
    attaching him to Father.
    Id. at 220, 221.
    Based on this, she recommended a
    process of reunification that would slowly orientate Child to placement with
    Father and that was done in a controlled manner with services available.
    Id. at 227.
    However, Father told Cornett that services were not necessary, and he
    indicated that he thought that Child would adjust adequately and disagreed that
    it would likely be very challenging and potentially detrimental.
    Id. at 224.
    Father’s position posed a threat of harm to Child’s well-being.
    [49]   A CHINS adjudication is a determination that a child is in need of services. In
    re 
    K.P.G., 99 N.E.3d at 682
    . Indeed, a child’s safety and well-being are the
    foremost considerations in a CHINS case. In re 
    N.E., 919 N.E.2d at 106
    (“[T]he purpose of a CHINS adjudication is to protect children, not punish
    parents”). The evidence, here, shows that removing Child from his foster
    placement abruptly and placing him with Father would result in trauma for
    Child due to the strong attachment he had to the foster family and the length of
    time Child has been placed with the family. The evidence also showed that
    Child would require significant services to lessen this trauma and allow for the
    transition to occur. Further, the evidence demonstrated that Father did not
    appreciate or understand the need for these services or the trauma that could
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 28 of 30
    occur by abruptly removing Child from the foster family and placing him with
    Father, with whom he did not have a strong bond.
    [50]   Father relies on In re D.B., 
    43 N.E.3d 599
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2015), trans. denied, as
    support for his argument that the juvenile court erred in its CHINS
    adjudication. He contends that D.B. supports his position that he was merely
    an absent parent, which alone does not support the CHINS adjudication.
    However, we find D.B. to be distinguishable from the present case. A panel of
    this court reversed the trial court in D.B. and found insufficient evidence to
    support the CHINS adjudication, holding that while the father was absent from
    the child’s life up until the time the mother was murdered, DCS offered no
    proof that the father was unfit, only that he was absent.
    Id. at 606.
    Unlike
    Father in this case, the father in D.B. was involved in the pregnancy, he was
    there for the child’s birth, executed a paternity affidavit, and participated in
    caring for the child for at least four months until the mother moved to
    Indianapolis.
    Id. at 601-02.
    Although the father was absent from the child’s life
    for almost a year, almost immediately after being contacted by DCS, he became
    involved in the CHINS proceedings.
    Id. [51]
      Here, Father knew Mother was pregnant with Child when she returned to
    Indiana or shortly thereafter and chose to remain in Massachusetts because he
    saw “no significant reason to leave.” Tr. Vol. III at 78. Further, despite
    concerns Mother suffered from a serious drug addiction, Father did nothing to
    help Mother or Child before or after Child’s birth. Father also did not seek
    paternity immediately, and when DCS suggested he do so, Father balked at
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 29 of 30
    paying the fifty dollars to have the DNA test completed. Father then ceased
    communication with DCS, leaving DCS with no phone number or address to
    reach him, for over one full year while Mother continued to abuse
    methamphetamine and Child remained in foster placement. We, therefore,
    find D.B. is distinguishable from this case and not controlling in the outcome
    here.
    [52]   The CHINS statutes do not require that a trial court wait until a tragedy occurs
    to a child before intervening. In re C.K., 
    70 N.E.3d 359
    , 364 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2016), trans. denied. We, therefore, conclude that sufficient evidence was
    presented at the fact-finding hearing to establish that Father was unable or
    refused to supply Child with necessary food, clothing, shelter, medical care,
    education, or supervision, and Child’s physical or mental condition was
    seriously impaired or seriously endangered as a result and that Child needed
    care, treatment, or rehabilitation that he was not receiving and was unlikely to
    be provided without the coercive intervention of the court. See Ind. Code § 31-
    34-1-1. The juvenile court did not err in concluding that Child should remain a
    CHINS as originally adjudicated.
    [53]   Affirmed.
    Bradford, C.J., and May, J., concur.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-JC-1319 | December 21, 2020   Page 30 of 30