Adoption of West ( 2020 )


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    19-P-388                                              Appeals Court
    ADOPTION OF WEST (and two companion cases1).
    No. 19-P-388.
    Hampden.       January 13, 2020. - March 27, 2020.
    Present:    Green, C.J., Massing, & Lemire, JJ.
    Department of Children & Families. Adoption, Dispensing with
    parent's consent, Visitation rights. Minor, Adoption,
    Visitation rights. Parent and Child, Adoption, Dispensing
    with parent's consent to adoption. Practice, Civil,
    Adoption.
    Petitions filed in the Hampden County Division of the
    Juvenile Court Department on August 26, 2013.
    The cases were heard by Rebekah J. Crampton Kamukala, J.
    John P. Dennis for the mother.
    Brian Pariser for Department of Children and Families.
    Kathleen Putney Towers for Brian & another.
    Sherrie Krasner for West.
    MASSING, J.       In this appeal from decrees terminating the
    mother's parental rights with respect to the three children, we
    1 Adoption of Brian and Adoption of Anna.      The children's
    names are pseudonyms.
    2
    address when and how a parent may assert a claim that the
    Department of Children and Families (department) failed to make
    reasonable efforts towards family reunification.       The mother's
    primary contention on appeal is that the department did not make
    sufficient services available to her in Spanish.       Concluding
    that the mother never asserted this specific claim during the
    course of the proceedings, and that the judge did not abuse her
    discretion in determining that the department's efforts were
    reasonable and that termination of the mother's parental rights
    was in the best interests of the three children, we affirm.
    Background.     We summarize the relevant facts as found by
    the Juvenile Court judge after seven days of trial, supplemented
    by uncontested evidence from the record.       The mother was born in
    Puerto Rico, is a native Spanish speaker, and requires an
    interpreter to understand English.       She has three children:
    West, Brian, and Anna.2      At the time of trial, West was eleven
    years old, Brian was seven years old, and Anna was four years
    old.       All three children have special needs, which at the time
    of trial were being addressed by their foster families with the
    assistance of counsellors and specialists.
    The mother met West's father and gave birth to West when
    2
    the mother and West's father were teenagers in Puerto Rico. The
    mother met the man who would become Brian and Anna's father in
    Puerto Rico and relocated with him to Massachusetts when West
    was an infant. The father of West and the father of Brian and
    Anna are not parties to this appeal.
    3
    The department first became involved with the mother in
    2009 after the mother walked into the local police station and
    alleged domestic violence by the father of Brian and Anna.      The
    department encountered the mother again in 2011 after receiving
    a G. L. c. 119, § 51A, report (51A report) alleging neglect of
    the children.   The department closed both cases after
    investigating and offering services to the mother.
    On August 25, 2013, a 51A report was filed alleging neglect
    of the children at the mother's apartment.   When police and
    social workers arrived they found the mother's friend Caroline
    Smith (a pseudonym), nine month old Anna, and signs of violence,
    including dried blood.   The mother, West, and Brian were absent;
    Smith did not know where they were.   Earlier that day, the
    mother had accused the children's babysitter of stealing drugs
    and money.   The mother and the babysitter argued, then the
    mother hit the babysitter in the face with a pistol.     The
    babysitter left the apartment and was transported by ambulance
    to Baystate Medical Center (Baystate), where she was treated for
    an orbital fracture of her eye.   The mother was charged with
    assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon and released
    on bail.   She was later convicted after a jury trial and
    received an eighteen-month suspended sentence.
    The department took custody of Anna and was informed that
    West and Brian might be in New York with their maternal
    4
    grandfather.    The following day, the department filed a care and
    protection petition on behalf of all three children.    The next
    day, the maternal grandmother delivered Brian to the emergency
    room at Baystate.    Brian had a broken leg and many bruises and
    required surgery.    Upon release from the hospital, he was placed
    in a foster home.
    The mother appeared for the seventy-two hour temporary
    custody hearing.    She stated that she was unsure of West's
    whereabouts.    Twenty minutes after a Juvenile Court judge told
    the mother that she would be held in custody until West
    appeared, a family friend delivered him to court.    The mother
    waived the temporary custody hearing, and all three children
    remained in the custody of the department.
    After the children were removed, the mother engaged in
    services and complied with the department's plan to work towards
    family reunification.    In February 2015, the department
    determined that while the mother had completed only some of her
    service plan tasks, she was moving in a positive direction.     In
    May 2015, the department recognized the mother's compliance with
    the service plan, including her attending individual therapy
    sessions, and developed a reunification plan for the mother and
    the children.
    In the summer of 2015, the department reunited the mother
    with all three children.    Within a few months, however, the
    5
    mother stopped engaging in services and began neglecting the
    children.   In September 2015, the department removed all three
    children and placed them in foster homes again after a 51A
    report was filed alleging that Brian had arrived at school with
    a burn mark on his back, reporting that West had burned the
    letter "A" on him with the mother's cigarette lighter while she
    was outside smoking.   The 51A report also stated that the mother
    had disciplined West with a belt, that she missed school
    meetings for the children, and that she left the children
    unsupervised.
    The department's goal remained reunification of the
    children with the mother.   The department designed service plans
    to help the mother reach this goal, but the mother did not fully
    engage with the services offered.    She attended visits with the
    children twice a month but was often late.    One of the service
    plan tasks required the mother to bring snacks and prepare age-
    appropriate activities for her visits with the children.     When
    the visits were held in the social worker's office, the mother
    did not engage with the children but instead let them play with
    her cell phone or tablet computer.    The visits were moved to the
    Children's Museum, but the mother still had difficulty
    interacting with the children.   Although she completed parenting
    classes, her primary means of discipline appeared to be corporal
    punishment.
    6
    The department made substantial efforts to provide the
    mother with mental health care; we discuss these efforts in
    detail below.   In March 2016, the department changed its goal
    from reunification to adoption as the mother did not appear to
    be addressing the issues necessary for reunification.   After a
    trial that began in February 2017 and concluded in late July,
    the judge found the mother was currently unfit, was likely to
    continue to be unfit into the indefinite future to a near
    certitude, and that it was in the best interests of the children
    to terminate the parental rights of the mother.   The judge
    ordered that the children should have at least one visit per
    year with the mother, so long as the department, or each child's
    adoptive parent or guardian, agreed it was in the best interests
    of the child.
    Discussion.    The mother's central claim on appeal is that
    the department failed to make reasonable efforts to reunify her
    with her children because it failed to provide her with Spanish-
    speaking service providers.   As discussed below, the mother did
    not raise this claim at any point in the proceedings when the
    department could meaningfully address it or the judge could
    properly evaluate it.   In addition, the mother asserts that we
    should reverse the judge's decision to terminate her parental
    rights because it was based on the clearly erroneous finding
    that she abandoned the children, and that the judge abused her
    7
    discretion by declining to order postadoption visits with Brian
    and Anna.
    1.   Reasonable efforts.   The department is "required to
    make reasonable efforts to strengthen and encourage the
    integrity of the family before proceeding with an action
    designed to sever family ties."   Adoption of Lenore, 55 Mass.
    App. Ct. 275, 278 (2002).   Indeed, the department in its
    regulations "recognizes the special concerns of linguistic and
    cultural minorities in the Commonwealth," and requires both that
    its social workers be fluent in a language their clients
    understand and "that both the services it provides directly and
    those it provides through providers or contracts are culturally
    sensitive to the various minority groups in the client
    population."   110 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.06 (2008).
    Judges are required to assess the department's reasonable
    efforts at various junctures during a case when the department
    takes or retains custody of children:   at emergency custody
    hearings, at seventy-two hour temporary custody hearings,
    annually thereafter, and before terminating parental rights.
    See Care & Protection of Walt, 
    478 Mass. 212
    , 219-224 (2017);
    Adoption of Ilona, 
    459 Mass. 53
    , 60 (2011); G. L. c. 119, § 29C.
    A judge's determination that the department made reasonable
    efforts will not be reversed unless clearly erroneous.      Adoption
    of 
    Ilona, supra
    at 61-62.   "However, even where the department
    8
    has failed to meet this obligation, a trial judge must still
    rule in the child's best interest."
    Id. at 61.
      See G. L.
    c. 119, § 29C ("A determination by the court that reasonable
    efforts were not made shall not preclude the court from making
    any appropriate order conducive to the child's best interest").
    Here, before making the termination decision, the judge
    specifically found that the department made reasonable efforts
    to reunite the children with the mother.     The judge did not
    address the department's alleged failure to provide services in
    Spanish because the mother never raised the issue.
    "It is well-established that a parent must raise a claim of
    inadequate services in a timely manner."     Adoption of Daisy, 
    77 Mass. App. Ct. 768
    , 781 (2010), S.C., 
    460 Mass. 72
    (2011).       The
    parent should assert the claim "either when the parenting plan
    is adopted, when [s]he receives those services, or shortly
    thereafter."     Adoption of Gregory, 
    434 Mass. 117
    , 124 (2001).
    Raising the issue at an early stage in the proceedings allows
    the department to remedy the inadequate services, which in turn
    fosters a greater chance of family reunification.     A parent
    cannot raise a claim of inadequate services for the first time
    on appeal, as the department would not have had the opportunity
    to address it.
    A parent has many avenues available to raise a claim of
    inadequate services.     A parent may pursue her claim by
    9
    requesting an administrative fair hearing or rejecting the
    service plan and filing a grievance.    See Adoption of 
    Gregory, 434 Mass. at 124
    , citing 110 Code Mass. Regs. §§ 6.07, 10.05,
    10.06, 10.37, 10.39 (1998).3    A claim of inadequate services can
    be raised by a so-called "abuse of discretion" motion.     See
    Adoption of 
    Daisy, 77 Mass. App. Ct. at 781
    (mother filed motion
    claiming that department had abused its discretion by failing to
    secure specific services).     Counsel for a parent may raise
    issues of inadequate services prior to trial, such as during a
    pretrial conference.   See Adoption of Gregory, supra at 124-125.
    These methods put the department on notice that its efforts may
    be inadequate, allow the department an opportunity to remedy any
    problems, and permit the department to defend its efforts at
    trial.
    Here, the mother contends that she raised her claim of
    inadequate services in a timely manner because she discussed it
    with her psychological evaluator and raised it in her proposed
    findings of fact and conclusions of law submitted after the
    trial, and that it was a "theme that ran through the life of the
    case."   Adoption of Chad, 
    94 Mass. App. Ct. 828
    , 839 n.20
    3 In appropriate circumstances, a parent may bring an
    independent action alleging inadequate services. See Adoption
    of 
    Gregory, 434 Mass. at 124
    (noting that father could have
    filed action for discrimination under Americans with
    Disabilities Act).
    10
    (2019).     We are not persuaded that the mother put the department
    or the judge on notice of her current claim of inadequate
    services.
    The mother bases her current reasonable efforts claim on
    the trial testimony of psychologist Brian Rachmaciej, Ed.D.
    Throughout its contact with the mother, the department
    recognized that she had mental health issues and the department
    periodically assigned Rachmaciej to evaluate her psychological
    functioning.    The mother and Rachmaciej had a good rapport
    because he spoke Spanish and was knowledgeable about her
    cultural background.     She told Rachmaciej that she had
    difficulties finding Spanish-speaking therapists.     Rachmaciej
    testified that in general families in western Massachusetts
    "with very specific linguistic and cultural differences have a
    much more difficult time obtaining services in the appropriate
    language or by a clinician with training in their own unique
    cultural frameworks," and that there is "an extreme lack of
    psychiatrists," even for "populations that don't require
    linguistic, specialized or culturally specialized" services.       In
    2016, Rachmaciej recommended a partial hospitalization program,
    weekly therapy, and referral to a psychiatrist for medication.
    The trial judge found all of the above to be true.
    But while the mother confided to Rachmaciej that she was
    having difficulty finding Spanish-speaking therapists in her
    11
    vicinity, there is no evidence in the record that Rachmaciej or
    the mother conveyed this information to the department.
    Rachmaciej's role was to assess the mother's psychological
    functioning and make recommendations for treatment; he did not
    have a supervisory role in the implementation of her service
    plan.   He testified that on one occasion he took a more active
    role, advocating to the mother's social worker that she needed
    the partial hospitalization program, a recommendation with which
    the mother's regular therapist initially disagreed.     Contrary to
    the mother's current claim, however, Rachmaciej believed that
    this program had "culturally sensitive linguistically
    appropriate providers on site."   Even though Rachmaciej's
    testimony touched on the availability of mental health services
    for Spanish speakers, the mother did not raise the issue in
    argument at trial.
    The mother contends that she raised her claim in her
    proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, filed
    approximately four months after the trial ended.   This was too
    late to raise the issue for the first time.   As the trial had
    already ended, the department had no opportunity to modify its
    efforts to promote a greater chance of family reunification, or
    to put on evidence that it had actually made reasonable efforts
    to address the perceived issue, and the judge did not have an
    opportunity to evaluate the claim.   The mother relies on a
    12
    footnote in Adoption of Uday, 
    91 Mass. App. Ct. 51
    , 53 n.4
    (2017), for the proposition that a reasonable efforts claim can
    be asserted for the first time in posttrial proposed findings
    and rulings.    Her reliance is misplaced.   That footnote quoted a
    trial judge who had raised the issue of reasonable efforts sua
    sponte, noting that the father did not address the issue in his
    proposed findings and rulings and stating that "the issue has
    not [been] actively litigated or framed from review."
    Id. To be
    sure, addressing an issue in proposed findings and rulings is
    usually a good indication that the issue was raised at trial --
    but it is not an acceptable avenue for raising an issue that was
    never addressed at trial.
    In any case, the mother did not raise the issue in her
    proposed findings and rulings.    She did make references to
    Rachmaciej's testimony, which the trial judge incorporated in
    her findings.    But as to reasonable efforts, the mother's
    proposed findings focused on the summer of 2015, when the
    children were returned to her, asserting in general terms that
    the social worker's efforts on her behalf were not as good as
    they had been before, that the service plan tasks "were very
    difficult to fulfill," and that the social worker did not make
    her a therapy referral until November 2016.     The judge rejected
    this suggestion, finding instead that the mother "worked hard
    with services in 2015" until her children were returned to her,
    13
    but "within a few months of their return, [the m]other stopped
    meeting with providers for herself and her children."
    The record also belies the mother's claim.     The department
    provided the mother with Spanish-language services throughout
    the case, including providing her with a Spanish-speaking social
    worker, writing service plans in Spanish and English, having her
    evaluated by a Spanish-speaking psychologist, and referring the
    mother to Spanish-speaking therapists.    After the children were
    removed for the second time, the mother's Spanish-speaking
    social worker made a series of referrals, four in all, to
    Spanish-speaking therapists.    The social worker first referred
    the mother to West Central Family and Counseling (West Central)
    in November or December 2015.   After the mother failed to
    respond to requests to set up appointments, West Central closed
    her case.   In late January or early February 2016, the social
    worker referred her to River Valley Counseling Center (River
    Valley), but she did not appear for the initial intake
    appointment.   Sometime during the spring in 2016, the social
    worker referred her to River Valley again, and the mother
    inconsistently attended therapy there for three or four months.
    When her therapist at River Valley left to work at the Holyoke
    Health Center, the mother declined to follow her therapist there
    because she did not like the facility.    In December 2016, the
    mother was referred to a therapist who could meet with the
    14
    mother in her home; she was seeing this therapist at the time of
    trial.   The department more than reasonably accommodated the
    mother's needs; "heroic or extraordinary measures, however
    desirable they may at least abstractly be, are not required."
    Adoption of 
    Lenore, 55 Mass. App. Ct. at 278
    .
    Finally, in a citation to supplemental authority submitted
    after oral argument, the mother referred us to a footnote in
    another case, in which we rejected the department's assertion
    that a reasonable efforts claim had been waived because it was a
    "theme that ran through the life of the case."    Adoption of
    
    Chad, 94 Mass. App. Ct. at 839
    n.20.    In that case, the record
    raised serious concerns about the mother's mental capacity, but
    the termination trial did not explore whether available outside
    support could have assisted her in caring for the special needs
    of her children.
    Id. at 839,
    842.    In the present case, the
    failure to provide services in Spanish was neither a theme of
    the case nor supported by the record.    The mother has failed to
    show that the judge's finding of reasonable efforts was clearly
    erroneous.
    2.   Finding of unfitness.   "To terminate parental rights to
    a child, the judge must find, by clear and convincing evidence,
    that the parent is unfit and that the child's 'best interests
    will be served by terminating the legal relation between parent
    and child.'"   Adoption of Luc, 
    484 Mass. 139
    , 144 (2020),
    15
    quoting Adoption of 
    Ilona, 459 Mass. at 59
    .   "We give
    substantial deference to the judge's findings of fact and
    decision, and will reverse only 'where the findings of fact are
    clearly erroneous or where there is a clear error of law or
    abuse of discretion.'"   Adoption of 
    Luc, supra
    , quoting Adoption
    of 
    Ilona, supra
    .
    The mother argues that the judge erroneously determined she
    was unfit because she abandoned the children, which resulted in
    the termination of her parental rights.   Under G. L. c. 210,
    § 3 (c), judges must consider fourteen nonexclusive statutory
    factors, "to the extent they are relevant, when determining
    whether the child's best interests require dispensing with the
    parent's consent to adoption."   Adoption of Zoltan, 71 Mass.
    App. Ct. 185, 195 n.14 (2008).   The judge found that the mother
    "often left her children . . . with unqualified babysitters, or
    alone for a short time when the oldest child . . . was . . .
    eight years old."   The judge listed this finding under the first
    statutory factor, "the child has been abandoned."   G. L. c. 210,
    § 3 (c) (i).   Although the finding was factually accurate, as a
    matter of law it does not amount to having "abandoned" the
    children, which is specifically defined by statute as "being
    left without any provision for support and without any person
    responsible to maintain care, custody and control because the
    whereabouts of the person responsible therefor is unknown and
    16
    reasonable efforts to locate the person have been unsuccessful."
    G. L. c. 210, § 3 (c).   See Adoption of Posy, 
    94 Mass. App. Ct. 748
    , 753 (2019).   This factual finding would have been more
    aptly categorized as evidence of "neglect," the second statutory
    factor.   See G. L. c. 210, § 3 (c) (ii).   Indeed, under the
    second factor, the judge found, among other things, that the
    mother "was neglectful of the children leaving them alone at
    times."   The judge's error in classifying the evidence of
    neglect as evidence of abandonment did not undermine her
    ultimate conclusion that the mother was an unfit parent and
    likely to remain so.
    3.    Postadoption contact.   The judge ordered that the
    children "should have at least one visit per year with their
    [m]other, . . . as long as it is in the best interests of each
    child as determined by the [d]epartment . . . while in the
    custody of the [d]epartment, and to be determined by each
    child's adoptive parent or guardian when in their custody."     The
    mother argues that this order, which effectively leaves
    visitation in the discretion of the department and the adoptive
    parents, contains "nothing but boilerplate language," is
    contrary to the children's wishes, and is not in their best
    interests.
    The decision to order posttermination or postadoption
    visits is left to the judge's discretion.   See Adoption of John,
    17
    
    53 Mass. App. Ct. 431
    , 439 (2001).   "An order for postadoption
    visitation is not warranted in the absence of a finding that a
    significant bond exists between the child and a biological
    parent and 'that continued contact is currently in the best
    interests of the child.'"
    Id., quoting Adoption
    of Vito, 
    431 Mass. 550
    , 563-564 (2000).
    The children argue, through counsel, that the order is
    appropriate and supported by the evidence and the judge's
    findings, specifically, that West expressed a desire to limit
    visits to once per year, that Brian feared the mother would hit
    him and Anna, that the mother came to visits unprepared, that
    she did not interact appropriately with the children, and that
    the preadoptive parents were alert to the children's needs.     We
    agree.   "When a trial judge decides not to order visitation,
    . . . [s]he is not required to make extensive findings if [s]he
    has already made specific and detailed findings regarding the
    child's best interests and the determination of parental
    unfitness."   Adoption of 
    John, 53 Mass. App. Ct. at 439
    .
    Contrast Adoption of Oren, 
    96 Mass. App. Ct. 842
    , 849 (2020)
    (remanding for findings where "despite evidence that visitation
    would be in the child's best interests," judge gave no
    explanation for decision not to order postadoption visitation).
    Decrees affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 19-P-388

Filed Date: 3/27/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021