In the Interest of W.N. and G.N., Minor Children ( 2022 )


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  •                       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 21-0476
    Filed January 12, 2022
    IN THE INTEREST OF W.N. and G.N.,
    Minor Children,
    C.B., Mother,
    Appellant,
    R.N., Father,
    Appellant,
    P.S. and K.S.,
    Intervenors.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Kimberly Ayotte,
    District Associate Judge.
    A mother and father separately appeal the termination of their parental
    rights to their children, and intervenors appeal an order on placement and
    guardianship.       AFFIRMED ON PARENTS’ APPEALS; REVERSED AND
    REMANDED ON INTERVENORS’ APPEAL.
    Cole Mayer of Macro & Kozlowski, L.L.P., West Des Moines, for appellant
    mother.
    Jami J. Hagemeier of Hagemeier Law, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant
    father.
    Andrea McGinn, Van Meter, for appellant intervenors.
    2
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Natalie Deerr, Assistant Attorney
    General, for appellee State.
    Kayla Stratton, Des Moines, attorney and guardian ad litem for minor
    children.
    Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and May, JJ.
    3
    VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge.
    The department of human services investigated allegations that parents of
    twenty-two- and ten-month-old children used methamphetamine while caring for
    them. The parents consented to the children’s removal and placement with the
    children’s maternal grandmother, and they did not contest their adjudication as
    children in need of assistance. The children remained in their grandmother’s home
    throughout the proceedings under a dispositional order granting the grandmother
    and her husband1 temporary legal custody, subject to department supervision.
    The State eventually filed a petition to terminate parental rights.     The
    grandparents moved to intervene during the termination hearing. They sought
    “continued placement of the children in their home.” The district court granted their
    motion. The court reasoned that, “should the court terminate parental rights,” the
    grandparents would “have no party to represent their position” on whether they
    were “suitable person[s]” to whom legal custody could be transferred. See 
    Iowa Code § 232.102
    (1)(a)(1) (2020). The court scheduled a separate hearing on the
    placement question.
    At that hearing, the grandparents asked the court to place the children with
    them as potential guardians or future adoptive parents. Following the hearings,
    the court terminated the parents’ rights and filed an “order on placement and
    guardianship” denying the grandparents’ request. The court ordered the children
    transferred to the custody and guardianship of the department for purposes of
    1   The parties referred to both as the children’s grandparents. We will do the same.
    4
    adoption. The parents and grandparents appealed. The supreme court granted a
    stay of the placement/guardianship ruling pending appeal.
    I.     Grounds for Termination
    The parents contend the State failed to prove the grounds for termination
    cited by the district court. We may affirm if any of the grounds are supported by
    clear and convincing evidence. In re D.W., 
    791 N.W.2d 703
    , 707 (Iowa 2010). We
    will focus on Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(h), which requires proof of several
    elements, including proof the children cannot be returned to parental custody.
    The district court determined the “return” element was satisfied “due to both
    parents’ unresolved substance use disorders, the parents’ ongoing need for mental
    health services, the parents’ need to address domestic violence in their continued
    relationship, and their need to demonstrate sustained sobriety.” On our de novo
    review, we agree with the court’s determination.
    The children remained out of their parents’ care for approximately fifteen
    months. Although the mother underwent substance-abuse treatment and
    abstained from methamphetamine use, she conceded she “relapsed” on alcohol
    as recently as a week before the termination hearing. She acknowledged she was
    not the person who could be present for the children twenty-four hours a day.
    The department case manager recommended termination of the mother’s
    parental rights, citing her failure to “follow through with any aftercare services,” her
    “continued” consumption of alcohol, and her continued relationship with the father
    despite concerns of domestic violence. In a report to the court, she recommended
    the parents “address through mental health therapy how the presence of violence
    in their relationship impact[ed] the children.”
    5
    The father also abused alcohol in violation of his probation agreement. He
    was jailed approximately sixty days before the termination hearing.                His
    incarceration prevented him from being available to the children.           The case
    manager recommended termination of his parental rights.
    We conclude neither parent could have the children returned to their
    custody at the time of the termination hearing as required by Iowa Code section
    232.116(1)(h)(4). The ground for termination was satisfied.
    II.    Best Interests
    The parents contend termination was not in the children’s best interests.
    See 
    Iowa Code § 232.116
    (2). The mother notes that she “parented the children
    appropriately when she had visits” and she was not the subject of “parenting
    concerns.” The father asserts the “children would not suffer detriment if they were
    returned to him.”
    As discussed, neither parent could safely care for the children at the time of
    the termination hearing.    We conclude termination was in the children’s best
    interests.
    III.   Exceptions to Termination
    The parents contend the district court should have invoked exceptions to
    termination based on the district court’s placement of the children’s temporary
    custody with a relative and the closeness of the parent-child relationship. See 
    id.
    § 232.116(3)(a), (c). These exceptions are permissive. See In re M.W., 
    876 N.W.2d 212
    , 225 (Iowa 2016).
    The district court declined to apply either of the exceptions in light of “these
    children’s young age, their need for a long-term secure placement, their trauma
    6
    history, and their emotional failure to thrive.” On our de novo review, we find
    support for the court’s conclusion, and we affirm the court’s denial of the
    exceptions.
    IV.    Six-Month Extension
    The parents argue they should have been afforded a six-month extension
    to work toward reunification. See 
    Iowa Code § 232.104
    (2)(b). The department
    case manager opined the parents could not realistically accomplish reunification
    in a six-month period. She noted that the father “minimally engaged in services”
    and, although the mother was more participatory, she and the father lacked
    “insight” into the effect of their decisions on the children. On our de novo review,
    we agree a six-month extension of time to work toward reunification was not
    warranted.
    V.     Expert
    The father contends the district court should have granted his motion for an
    expert witness to “do a complete home study of the grandparents’ home.” In
    denying the motion, the district court found the grandparents participated “in a
    home study through the licensing agency” with which the department had a
    contract and the grandmother also participated “in a psychological evaluation.”
    The court concluded the proposed expert “would only serve to delay the court’s
    [permanency] determination,” which was “not in the children’s best interests.”
    On our de novo review, we find the record unclear on whether the
    department completed a home study. Department reports contain references to a
    “home study process” that was to have been initiated by the grandmother in June
    7
    2020 through the same service provider considering her application to adopt the
    children. But if a home study report was generated, the report is not in our record.
    That said, the existence of an established entity charged with conducting
    home studies supports the district court’s decision to deny the father’s request for
    an expert to provide the same service. As for the psychological evaluation of the
    grandmother, the department completed the evaluation, which is in our record and
    will be discussed in greater detail below. We conclude the district court did not
    abuse its discretion in denying the father’s motion for an expert. See In re S.D.,
    
    671 N.W.2d 522
    , 528 (Iowa Ct. App. 2003) (setting forth standard for reviewing
    motion to retain an expert).
    VI.      Removal from Grandparents—Placement/Guardianship
    Preliminarily,   we    address       the   standard    of    review     for
    placement/guardianship decisions. The State argues the appropriate standard is
    for an abuse of discretion. We disagree.
    The grandparents sought to intervene under the authority of Iowa Code
    chapter 232. They cited the permanency provision of Iowa Code section 232.104
    and the relative exception contained in section 232.116(3).2 There is no question
    that the placement decision fell under the purview of chapter 232.     Accordingly,
    we conclude our review is not for an abuse of discretion but is de novo. See In re
    P.L., 
    778 N.W.2d 33
    , 40 (Iowa 2010) (“[T]he proper standard of review for all
    termination decisions should be de novo.”). We turn to the merits.
    2   As will be discussed, we believe section 232.117(3) governs the decision.
    8
    Following termination of parental rights, Iowa Code chapter 232 authorizes
    a court to transfer guardianship and custody of a child to several persons or
    entities, including the department or “other relative [] or other suitable person.”
    
    Iowa Code § 232.117
    (3)(c). The supreme court considered the provision in In re
    A.S., 
    906 N.W.2d 467
    , 477 (Iowa 2018). There, the court rejected “the option of
    affirming termination of A.S.’s parental rights while remanding for transfer of the
    guardianship and custody of the child to a relative of the child.” A.S., 906 N.W.2d
    at 477. The court cited (1) the absence of a “statutory preference for placement
    with a relative,” (2) the recommendation of “[b]oth the [department] and the
    guardian ad litem” to place “the child in the guardianship and legal custody of the
    [department] so that the child [could] be adopted,” and (3) the principle that “a
    guardianship is not a legally preferable alternative to termination.” Id.
    The third ground on which the court relied in A.S. is the same ground cited
    by the district court in this case. Specifically, the court denied the grandparents’
    request “to be able to either adopt the children or have the children remain in their
    care by way of a guardianship” because “[t]ermination and adoption are the
    preferred methods of obtaining permanency for children who cannot be returned
    to a parental home,” citing In re B.T., 
    894 N.W.2d 29
    , 33–34 (Iowa Ct. App. 2017).
    We have no quarrel with the focus on permanency and adoption. But, in
    our view, the grandparents’ request to retain custody of the children advanced both
    goals. The grandmother testified that if the parents could not be “Mom and Dad,”
    she was “going to be here to look after the babies.”           The State’s attorney
    specifically asked her, “if the Court terminates [parental] rights and the [children]
    remain with you, are you committed to giving the [children] a forever home?” The
    9
    grandmother responded, “Yes, I am.” The attorney then asked, “Would you be
    willing to adopt them?” She responded, “Yes.”       The grandmother testified she
    had investigated the process for getting licensed to adopt and already “sent [in]
    their fingerprints.” In her words, “Everything’s all done . . . . Everything’s been
    sent off and we’re waiting.” The grandfather similarly testified he would “move
    Heaven and earth for” the children and he would do “[a]nything to keep the
    [children].” He expressed a desire to give them “some structure in their lives, some
    well-being, someplace that they [could] call permanent.” He opined, “[I]t would
    make me very happy to adopt them.” In short, the grandparents were willing to
    fulfill the twin goals of permanency and adoption. Cf. A.S., 906 N.W.2d at 478
    (noting grandparents did not testify).
    The grandparents also had the ability to fulfill those goals. Their home was
    the only stable home the children knew. As the district court acknowledged, both
    children were attached to their grandparents and thrived in their care. The court
    found “[t]he children enjoy a loving relationship with” the grandparents—the
    younger child shared “a particularly close relationship with her grandfather” and
    the older child enjoyed “a close relationship with her grandmother.” The court
    further found the children “made gains in their development and growth while in”
    the grandparents’ home. And the court found the grandmother “participated in the
    children’s therapy as expected.”
    Until shortly before the termination hearing, the department conceded as
    much.     In a report filed three months before the termination hearing, the
    department characterized the placement as a “strength” and stated the children
    were “doing well in this placement.” In contrast to the case manager’s later
    10
    suggestion that the grandmother refused to enroll the older child in daycare and
    educational services, the report stated the decision to delay those services was
    made by a service provider who believed the older child could not be placed in
    daycare until she developed better communication skills.
    Those skills improved in the grandmother’s care. The department reported
    that the older child had enhanced “communication and behaviors” and reported
    that the grandmother agreed to have the child participate in Head Start. Finally, it
    was undisputed that, at the time of the termination hearing, the child was at the
    same level as her peers in all subjects except math.
    A service provider who met with the grandparents at their home testified the
    children’s basic needs, developmental needs, and medical needs were being met.
    She described the grandparents as “very interactive and nurturing towards the”
    children. She stated the bond between the younger child and the grandfather was
    strong and he was a “positive role model.” She testified to the grandmother’s ability
    to discern whether the children’s mother and father were sober and stated, “that
    shows protective capacities.”    Although she conceded there had been strain
    between the grandmother and mother, she testified that, more recently, the two
    discussed “wanting to work as a team” for the sake of the children. She noted that
    they had “increased conversations,” sometimes simply to chat. She opined “their
    relationship ha[d] definitely improved throughout this case.” Cf. In re W.M., 
    957 N.W.2d 305
    , 315 (Iowa 2021) (denying request for guardianship after concluding
    the mother and grandmother lacked a close, conflict-free relationship warranting
    creation of a guardianship); A.S., 906 N.W.2d at 478 (noting “there was physical
    and verbal aggression in the grandparents’ household”).         When asked if the
    11
    children’s parents and grandparents were the most important people in the
    children’s lives, she responded, “Absolutely.” She had no reservations with having
    the children remain in the care of their grandparents.
    Another service provider who provided mental-health therapy to the children
    testified she worked with the older child to “utilize her secure relationships in order
    to know the boundaries for strangers.” The secure relationships included “her
    grandparents.” The provider also worked with the younger child “to provide an
    increased level of attunement between her caregivers and herself.” She described
    the children’s “adverse child experience” scores and stated none of the scores
    were attributable to the grandparents. She agreed that removing the children from
    their grandparents could have a lasting effect on their relationships into adulthood.
    The person who conducted a psychosocial evaluation of the grandmother
    testified the grandmother “was pretty clear that she was fighting for her
    grandchildren, and that it was very important to her.” She said the grandparents
    “together [were] trying to do what they c[ould] to provide the best for the children.”
    While she characterized placement of the children with the grandmother as “risky,”
    the concerns she enumerated were undercut by the grandmother’s actions in the
    year preceding termination. The grandmother’s age of fifty-five, for example, did
    not prevent her from serving as caretaker for these two children as well as the four
    children of another daughter. And the grandfather’s health issues did not prevent
    him from working full-time to support the family and helping with the children. His
    full-time employment with retirement benefits should have alleviated the
    evaluator’s concerns with the grandmother’s “financial fragility.”         As for the
    grandparents’ ability to keep up with the needs of the children, the grandmother
    12
    cared for them all day, took them to scheduled appointments, and facilitated
    services and visits within the home, facts acknowledged by the department
    throughout the proceedings. Finally, there was scant if any indication that the
    grandmother’s pace of learning cited by the evaluator prevented her from
    understanding the children’s needs or translated into safety concerns for the
    children.   The example cited by the evaluator—the grandmother’s failure to
    recognize the older child’s anxiety when a stuffed animal she was playing with
    tipped over—is hardly indicative of sustained parenting deficiencies. Nor is the
    grandmother’s initial reluctance to refer the child to another specialist—a referral
    the evaluator conceded the grandmother agreed to after the nature of the
    evaluation was explained. It is worth noting that the grandmother was keenly
    attuned to the older child’s need for speech therapy and she facilitated services to
    address the need. As a result of the grandmother’s attention, the length of the
    older child’s sentences improved significantly over the placement period. As for
    the younger child, the evaluator conceded she “lit up like a Christmas tree” on
    seeing her grandfather. Cf. A.S., 906 N.W.2d at 478 (noting the child “at age two
    [was] too young to express a preference”).
    We are left with the grandfather’s criminal history. The grandfather testified
    he served three-and-a-half years in prison for second-degree sex abuse and
    second-degree burglary convictions arising out of crimes committed in 1979 when
    he was nineteen years old. The sex abuse charge arose from an attempted
    robbery of an adult woman.       During the attempt, the grandfather incidentally
    touched and grabbed the fully clothed woman in a public place. The grandfather
    said he never saw the woman before and he was also fully clothed at the time.
    13
    The State did not dispute the father’s rendition of the circumstances leading
    to the sex abuse charge.3 And, although the State resisted the grandparents’
    request to retain the children, as did the guardian ad litem, the department had no
    qualms about placing the children in the grandfather’s home following the
    children’s removal and expressed no concern with his treatment of the children or
    the grandmother.
    The district court also discounted the conviction in the placement decision.
    The court explained that while “[a] forcible felony is a barrier to DHS or any private
    agency approving an adoptive home study . . . the court may waive any
    investigation and report required given that [the grandfather] is related within the
    fourth degree of consanguinity to the person to be adopted. See 
    Iowa Code § 600.8
    (12).[4]” The court stated, “If [the grandfather’s] 1979 conviction was the
    only issue present regarding the children’s placement, the court may have
    considered that outcome.” Ultimately, the court declined to waive an investigation
    and report under section 600.8(12) because of the State’s concerns with the
    grandmother’s caretaking abilities. As discussed, those concerns were overblown.
    3 The grandfather also testified to a 1994 simple misdemeanor domestic abuse
    conviction involving his former wife. For purposes of placement, the district court
    focused on the felony sex abuse conviction.
    4 That provision states:
    Any investigation and report required under subsection 1 may be
    waived by the juvenile court or court if the adoption petitioner is
    related within the fourth degree of consanguinity to the person to be
    adopted. However, if an adoption petitioner discloses a criminal
    conviction or deferred judgment for an offense other than a simple
    misdemeanor or founded child abuse report pursuant to section
    600.5, the petitioner shall notify the court of the inclusion of this
    information in the petition prior to the final adoption hearing, and the
    court shall make a specific ruling regarding whether to waive any
    investigation or report required under subsection 1.
    14
    On our de novo review, we conclude the grandparents were the only stable
    influence in the children’s lives and uprooting them at this critical juncture would
    result in another adverse childhood experience.
    We reverse the placement/guardianship decision and remand for waiver of
    the placement investigation and report pursuant to Iowa Code section 600.8(12)
    and for consideration of the grandparents as adoptive parents or, alternatively, for
    appointment of the grandparents as guardians pursuant to Iowa Code section
    232D.201(1).    We recognize the creation of a guardianship will require the
    guardians to file annual reports that “shall not be waived by the court.” See 
    id.
    § 232D.501(1); cf. A.S., 906 N.W.2d at 478 (citing the reporting requirement as
    grounds for denying grandparents’ request for a guardianship). But, in our view,
    this is a small price to pay for the children’s near and long-term stability.
    AFFIRMED ON PARENTS’ APPEALS; REVERSED AND REMANDED
    ON INTERVENORS’ APPEAL.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 21-0476

Filed Date: 1/12/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2022