Adoption of Leonard ( 2023 )


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    22-P-568                                             Appeals Court
    ADOPTION OF LEONARD.1
    No. 22-P-568.
    Barnstable.        February 6, 2023. - September 26, 2023.
    Present:    Henry, Shin, & Hodgens, JJ.
    Adoption, Dispensing with parent's consent. Minor, Adoption.
    Parent and Child, Dispensing with parent's consent to
    adoption. Indian Child Welfare Act. Evidence,
    Qualification of expert witness. Witness, Expert.
    Practice, Civil, Adoption. Department of Children &
    Families.
    Petition filed in the Barnstable County/Town of Plymouth
    Division of the Juvenile Court Department on March 22, 2017.
    The case was heard by James J. Torney, Jr., J.
    Lois M. Farmer for the mother.
    Richard A. Salcedo for Department of Children and Families.
    Natalie K. Hoppel for the child.
    HODGENS, J.    Following trial, a Juvenile Court judge
    concluded that the mother was unfit and terminated her parental
    1   A pseudonym.
    2
    rights with respect to her son, Leonard, who is an enrolled
    member of the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe.    See G. L. c. 119, § 26;
    G. L. c. 210, § 3.    On appeal, the mother raises two primary
    arguments:   (1) the evidence failed to support some of the
    judge's findings, and (2) the termination proceedings failed to
    comport with the requirements of the Indian Child Welfare Act of
    1978 (ICWA), 
    25 U.S.C. §§ 1901
     et seq.    While we conclude that
    the evidence supported the challenged findings, we vacate the
    decree and remand for further proceedings mandated by the ICWA.
    Background.    We summarize the facts found by the judge,
    supplemented by evidence from the record consistent with those
    findings.    The mother struggles with mental health issues
    including bipolar disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder
    (PTSD), anxiety, and depression.    Continuing through the time of
    trial, the mother has refused to take prescribed medications,
    has been "homeless her entire adult life," has "exhibited a
    pattern of leaving stable housing," and lives with family and
    friends, in the woods, or in her car.    She also has "a limited
    employment history" and receives Social Security income.      She
    has a criminal history that includes open cases of assault,
    assault on a family or household member, harassment, and
    breaking and entering with the intent to commit a felony.
    The Department of Children and Families (department) became
    involved with the mother and the child (born in 2013) in 2014,
    3
    when it received a report pursuant to G. L. c. 119, § 51A (51A
    report), alleging neglect of the child.    That report was
    unsubstantiated; however, the department substantiated four out
    of five 51A reports of suspected neglect filed from 2014 to
    2016.   The child was removed from the mother's care in March
    2017, following an incident during which the mother became
    disruptive at a hospital while giving birth to her second child.
    Neither the mother's second child nor her third child, born
    during the course of these proceedings, is a party to this
    appeal.
    A family action plan developed by the department outlined a
    number of tasks for the mother in order to work toward
    reunification with the child.   The mother's mental health
    struggles impeded the child's healthy development and
    contributed to the mother's housing instability.   The mother did
    not follow through with any of the tasks in the action plan
    apart from sporadic visits with the child.    In particular, she
    did not avail herself of necessary mental health services,
    failed to communicate consistently with the department, and
    missed "numerous" visits with the child.   On the occasions when
    she did visit, the mother "fail[ed] to demonstrate an
    understanding of [the child's] developmental level and needs."
    The department social worker assigned to the case attempted to
    assist the mother in filling out applications to access mental
    4
    health and housing services, but the mother often rebuffed her
    efforts.
    The child has "special needs that . . . require active
    engagement by his caretaker."   He is "delayed in the areas of
    adaptive and personal-social development."   He is in therapy and
    has been diagnosed with PTSD, attention deficit hyperactivity
    disorder, and generalized anxiety and adjustment disorder.     He
    also sees an occupational therapist "for concerns related to
    body awareness and personal boundaries as well as emotional
    regulation and attention and behavior issues."   His behavioral
    issues include being aggressive toward his peers, being
    particularly aggressive toward females, using inappropriate
    language, and making sexual gestures.
    Following his removal from the mother's custody in March
    2017, the child was placed in multiple foster homes.   Since
    August 2017, the child has been living in a tribal kinship
    foster home.   The foster mother is a maternal second cousin.
    The foster mother enrolled him in a program that provides
    special needs services, arranged for corrective surgery related
    to a congenital abnormality, and cares for his physical,
    emotional, behavioral, and educational needs.    Both the child
    and the foster mother are members of the Mashpee Wampanoag
    tribe, and the child attends an indigenous language immersion
    school as well as an after-school program.   He is "comfortable
    5
    and thriving" in the foster mother's home and has "bonded to
    her."
    Due to the mother's lack of progress with her action plan
    tasks, the department in July 2018 changed its goal from
    reunification with the mother to a permanent guardianship with
    the foster mother and sought termination of the mother's
    parental rights.   After a trial where the judge found the mother
    unfit and terminated her parental rights, the parties filed a
    joint motion to vacate the decree because the expert witness
    presented by the department failed to meet the requirements of
    the ICWA.   The judge allowed the motion.    Following a second
    trial that included forty-four exhibits and testimony from the
    mother, the department social worker, the foster mother, and a
    different expert witness on Native American cultures, the judge
    issued a decree terminating the mother's parental rights on
    November 8, 2021, and the mother appealed.
    Discussion.    "To terminate parental rights to a child and
    to dispense with parental consent to adoption, a judge must find
    by clear and convincing evidence, based on subsidiary findings
    proved by at least a fair preponderance of evidence, that the
    parent is unfit to care for the child and that termination is in
    the child's best interests."   Adoption of Xarina, 
    93 Mass. App. Ct. 800
    , 802 (2018), quoting Adoption of Jacques, 
    82 Mass. App. Ct. 601
    , 606 (2012).   When, as here, a child is a member of an
    6
    Indian tribe, Federal law imposes additional requirements before
    parental rights may be terminated.    Two of those requirements
    are at issue here.     First, the judge must determine that "active
    efforts have been made to provide remedial services and
    rehabilitative programs designed to prevent the breakup of the
    Indian family and that these efforts have proved unsuccessful."
    
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (d).    Second, the judge must make an additional
    "determination, supported by evidence beyond a reasonable doubt,
    including testimony of qualified expert witnesses, that the
    continued custody of the child by the parent or Indian custodian
    is likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage to
    the child."   
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (f).   We do not disturb a judge's
    decision terminating parental rights unless the findings of fact
    are "clearly erroneous" or "there is a clear error of law or
    abuse of discretion."    Adoption of Ilona, 
    459 Mass. 53
    , 59
    (2011).
    Unfitness.   The mother contends that the judge erred by
    finding that she exhibited a "persistent lack of stable and
    appropriate housing" despite evidence showing that she had
    stable housing from March to September 2017.    We disagree.     The
    evidence clearly supported the judge's finding of the mother's
    persistent homelessness, which is a "proper consideration[] in
    an unfitness determination," when coupled with the mother's
    refusal to avail herself of available housing.     Adoption of
    7
    Virgil, 
    93 Mass. App. Ct. 298
    , 303 (2018).    By her own admission
    at trial, the mother had been homeless "all [her] life before
    and after [she] had kids."   She testified that she "stay[s] with
    friends and family, sometimes in [her] vehicle."    The record
    also showed that the mother had a history of abandoning housing
    arrangements:   in the summer of 2016, she abandoned housing in a
    New Bedford shelter; in September 2017, she abandoned tribe-
    provided housing on Cape Cod; in December 2017, she abandoned
    housing in a shelter in Springfield; and in June 2019, she
    abandoned housing in Chatham.   The mother also testified that
    she did not have a place to live if the child were returned to
    her custody.    In assessing the mother's fitness, the judge
    properly considered this evidence of the mother's history of
    abandoning housing and was not required to give "undue weight"
    to a fleeting period of housing stability.    Care & Protection of
    Lillith, 
    61 Mass. App. Ct. 132
    , 136 (2004).    See Adoption of
    Anton, 
    72 Mass. App. Ct. 667
    , 676 (2008) ("inability to secure
    'adequate stable housing'" properly considered [citation
    omitted]).
    We also discern no error in the judge's finding that the
    mother's untreated mental health issues endangered the child.
    The mother contends there was no nexus between her mental health
    issues and her ability to parent, but the record shows
    otherwise.   The mental health issues cannot be viewed in
    8
    isolation.   As the judge found, "persistent lack of stable and
    appropriate housing, untreated mental health issues, and limited
    insight into [the child's] needs" coalesced to endanger the
    child.   The record showed that the mother had mental health
    issues including bipolar disorder, PTSD, anxiety, and
    depression, but refused to take prescribed medications.     On
    March 22, 2017, the incident occurred resulting in the mother
    losing custody of the child.   While in active labor with her
    second child, the mother came to the hospital with the child and
    became disruptive.   The mother argued with hospital staff and
    threatened to leave against medical advice.   Based on this
    incident, the department supported allegations of neglect
    against the mother due to, untreated mental health issues.       See
    Adoption of Xarissa, 
    99 Mass. App. Ct. 610
    , 617 (2021) ("judge
    reasonably concluded that the mother's failure to address her
    mental health concerns properly perpetuated the issues that
    brought the child into the department's custody").
    Relying on Care & Protection of Bruce, 
    44 Mass. App. Ct. 758
    , 764 (1998), the mother contends that the department's
    service plan amounted to the heavy-handed ultimatum, "no
    medication, no child."   To the contrary, the department
    presented a comprehensive action plan that included specific
    tasks tailored to the mother's mental health issues:    submitting
    to a "full scale" psychological evaluation, signing releases for
    9
    the department's access to psychological records, engaging in
    mental health treatment, taking all prescribed medications, and
    notifying the department of her medications.   According to the
    testimony of the department social worker, the mother failed to
    complete any of the tasks and remained "emotionally unstable."
    The social worker also testified that the Department of Mental
    Health had "offered [the mother] a bed," but she declined.
    These untreated mental health issues also hindered the
    mother's ability to address the needs of the child.   "When
    assessing parental fitness, it is not enough to state that a
    parent is mentally impaired, rather there must be a showing that
    the condition affects the parent's ability to care for the
    child."   Adoption of Quentin, 
    424 Mass. 882
    , 888 (1997).
    According to the department social worker's testimony, the child
    had special needs, including "diagnosed disorders" of his own,
    that required a "stable" parent to be actively engaged in his
    psychological, emotional, and educational care.   That social
    worker, with five years of experience in working with this
    family, testified that the mother "has not obtained or followed
    through in terms of getting any kind of stability in her life."
    Although the judge could have elaborated further, we conclude
    that he properly considered the nexus between the mother's
    untreated mental health issues and her "capacity to assume
    parental responsibility."   Adoption of Frederick, 
    405 Mass. 1
    , 9
    10
    (1989).    See Adoption of Quentin, 
    supra
     (nexus shown where
    "mother's mental deficiencies impaired her ability to protect
    and care for the children"); Adoption of Jacob, 
    99 Mass. App. Ct. 258
    , 265 (2021) (nexus shown where mother's "failure to
    address her numerous mental health issues" interfered with her
    parental responsibilities).
    Based on the foregoing, the challenged findings of fact are
    amply supported by the record.     Especially in light of the
    mother's pattern of leaving stable housing and her untreated
    mental health issues that coincided with neglect of the child,
    the judge did not "need [to] wait for disaster to happen but
    [could] rely upon past patterns of parental neglect or
    misconduct in determining current or future fitness."     Adoption
    of Virgil, 93 Mass. App. Ct. at 301.     The findings of fact are
    not "clearly erroneous," and we discern no "clear error of law
    or abuse of discretion" in the judge's unfitness determination.
    Adoption of Ilona, 
    459 Mass. at 59
    .
    ICWA.     The mother challenges the judge's application of the
    ICWA.     She contends that the department failed to demonstrate
    that "active efforts" were made to prevent the breakup of the
    Indian family and failed to demonstrate that the child would
    suffer "serious emotional or physical damage" in her custody.
    
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (d),(f).
    11
    Congress enacted the ICWA in response to "the separation of
    large numbers of Indian children from their families and tribes
    through adoption or foster care placement, usually in non-Indian
    homes."   Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians v. Holyfield, 
    490 U.S. 30
    , 32 (1989).     The ICWA is designed "to protect the best
    interests of Indian children and to promote the stability and
    security of Indian tribes and families by the establishment of
    minimum Federal standards for the removal of Indian children
    from their families."    
    25 U.S.C. § 1902
    .   "The act thus serves
    to protect not only the interests of the child and the parents,
    but of the tribe as a whole."    Adoption of Arnold, 
    50 Mass. App. Ct. 743
    , 748 (2001).    Congress authorized the Secretary of the
    Interior to "promulgate such rules and regulations as may be
    necessary to carry out the provisions" of the ICWA.     
    25 U.S.C. § 1952
    .
    Active efforts.     The pertinent Federal regulation defines
    "active efforts" as
    "affirmative, active, thorough, and timely efforts intended
    primarily to maintain or reunite an Indian child with his
    or her family. Where an agency is involved in the child-
    custody proceeding, active efforts must involve assisting
    the parent or parents or Indian custodian through the steps
    of a case plan and with accessing or developing the
    resources necessary to satisfy the case plan."
    
    25 C.F.R. § 23.2
    .
    The judge concluded that the department had made active
    efforts by facilitating visits with the mother, making referrals
    12
    to service providers, assisting the mother in locating housing,
    and locating the mother in the community when she became
    unavailable.   He further concluded that these efforts proved
    unsuccessful because the mother was unwilling or unable to
    cooperate with the department.     We discern no error.
    The record provides ample support for the judge's findings
    and conclusions on this point.     The department developed a
    family action plan with the stated goal of reunification.       The
    plan included specific tasks for the mother designed to
    strengthen the familial bond:     engaging in parenting classes,
    attending scheduled child visits, participating in parenting
    activities, and preparing a household budget.     Apart from
    sporadic visits with the child, the mother did not complete any
    tasks on the action plan.   The department "repeatedly" offered
    to help the mother, but she "didn't engage" with the department.
    According to the social worker, the department went "above and
    beyond" its usual role to try and help the mother.        The
    department repeatedly tried to "reengage" the mother and address
    the action plan to no avail.     The social worker "repeatedly"
    called the mother and left messages and searched for her in the
    community in places "where she might be staying."     The
    department tried to help the mother complete an application for
    assistance from the Department of Mental Health, but the mother
    declined to cooperate.   The department worked with three ICWA
    13
    caseworkers for the Wampanoag tribe as well as the foster mother
    and the child.    The department developed a visitation schedule
    between the mother and the child.     Following the COVID-19
    pandemic, the department tried to develop another visitation
    schedule, but the mother "would not respond."    Such evidence
    provided strong support for the judge's conclusion that the
    department engaged in "active efforts" to provide remedial
    services and rehabilitative programs designed to prevent the
    breakup of the child's family.     
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (d).
    Qualified expert witness.      Before the mother's parental
    rights could be terminated, the ICWA required the department to
    present expert testimony showing that "custody of the child by
    the parent or Indian custodian is likely to result in serious
    emotional or physical damage to the child."     
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (f).     The social worker "regularly assigned to the Indian
    child may not serve as a qualified expert witness."       
    25 C.F.R. § 23.122
    (c).    Testimony may come "from one or more experts."        
    25 C.F.R. § 23.121
    (b).    See Guidelines for State Courts; Indian
    Child Custody Proceedings, 
    44 Fed. Reg. 67,584
    , 67,593 (1979).
    The mother contends that the expert presented by the department
    was not qualified under 
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (f) to testify about the
    likelihood of "serious emotional or physical damage to the
    child."   We agree.
    14
    The department offered a member of the Peoria Indian Tribe
    of Oklahoma as its expert.   The witness's educational background
    included a bachelor's degree in economics (modified by Native
    American studies) as well as a law degree.    The witness
    explained that her modified undergraduate degree was similar to,
    but not designated as, a minor in Native American studies
    because at the time of her degree the college had a Native
    American studies program rather than a department.    She has been
    a member of the Indian Child Welfare Association since 2008 and
    received training through that organization on the ICWA.     She
    has practiced law in Massachusetts since 1999 and is certified
    to take care and protection cases.    Her work experience includes
    roles as a court investigator, educational advocate, and
    guardian ad litem.   She has presented training programs on the
    ICWA for members of the local bar and previously qualified to
    testify as a "Native American expert" in Massachusetts courts in
    "Indian child welfare cases."    She has no experience working
    with the Wampanoag tribe.
    Based on these qualifications, the department moved at
    trial to qualify the witness "as an expert in native American
    cultures and traditions."    The mother indicated that she had no
    objection.   Near the conclusion of the witness's direct
    testimony, the department asked whether the child would suffer
    serious emotional or physical damage if returned to the mother.
    15
    The witness replied that it was "a really difficult question,"
    but based on her "reading of what has occurred over the past
    four years," her opinion was that the mother was "still
    unstable" and that it would cause the child "serious emotional
    damage" if he were returned to the mother.    At this point, the
    mother objected on the ground that "[t]his is an expert in ICWA
    affairs, not an expert in child psychology."     The judge
    overruled the objection.
    A trial judge has "wide discretion" when deciding whether
    to qualify an expert witness, and such decision "will be
    reversed only where it constitutes an abuse of discretion or
    other error of law."    Commonwealth v. Javier, 
    481 Mass. 268
    , 285
    (2019), quoting Commonwealth v. Frangipane, 
    433 Mass. 527
    , 533
    (2001).   "The crucial issue is whether the witness has
    sufficient 'education, training, experience and familiarity'
    with the subject matter of the testimony" (citation omitted).
    Letch v. Daniels, 
    401 Mass. 65
    , 68 (1987).     See Mass. G. Evid.
    § 702 note (2023).     "[A] judge's discretion can be abused when
    an expert witness is permitted to testify to matters beyond an
    area of expertise or competence."    Frangipane, 
    supra.
    In the present case, the expert's testimony lacked the
    requisite foundation about her ability to predict the likelihood
    of harm to the child.     In cases in which 
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (f)
    applies, an expert witness (or expert witnesses) "must be
    16
    qualified to testify regarding whether the child's continued
    custody by the parent or Indian custodian is likely to result in
    serious emotional or physical damage to the child and should be
    qualified to testify as to the prevailing social and cultural
    standards of the Indian child's Tribe" (emphasis added).    
    25 C.F.R. § 23.122
    (a).    Neither the governing statute nor
    regulations provide any exception when, as here, a child is
    placed with another member of the same tribe.    Such mandated,
    specialized expertise on the issue of emotional or physical harm
    requires more than showing that the witness has knowledge and
    experience in economics, Native American studies, law, the ICWA,
    care and protection cases, and the customs of the Peoria Indian
    Tribe of Oklahoma.    See Oliver N. v. State, 
    444 P.3d 171
    , 179-
    180 (Alaska 2019) (while experts were qualified to testify to
    tribal customs and standards and had backgrounds involving ICWA,
    they lacked sufficient expertise to opine on likelihood of harm
    to child if returned to parent's custody).
    To qualify as an expert on that issue, the witness must be
    capable of testifying to "a causal relationship between the
    particular conditions in the home and the likelihood that
    continued custody of the child will result in serious emotional
    or physical damage to the particular child."    
    25 C.F.R. § 23.121
    (c).   See 
    25 C.F.R. § 23.121
    (d) ("evidence that shows
    only the existence of community or family poverty, isolation,
    17
    single parenthood, custodian age, crowded or inadequate housing,
    substance abuse, or nonconforming social behavior does not by
    itself constitute" sufficient evidence to terminate parental
    rights under ICWA).     While the statute and regulations do not
    specify what type of background is needed for a witness to so
    qualify, courts that have considered the question have uniformly
    concluded, based on the legislative history of the ICWA and
    guidelines issued by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, that
    expertise beyond the qualifications of a "normal" social worker
    is required.     See, e.g., Eva H. v. State, Dep't of Health &
    Social Servs., Office of Children's Servs., 
    436 P.3d 1050
    , 1054-
    1055 (Alaska 2019), overruled on other grounds by State v.
    Cissy, 
    513 P.3d 999
     (2022); Matter of M.F., 
    290 Kan. 142
    , 153-
    154 (2010).    For example, courts have qualified witnesses as
    experts in this area where they had "substantial education in
    social work or psychology and direct experience with counseling,
    therapy, or conducting psychological assessments."     Eva H.,
    
    supra at 1057
    .    See M.F., 
    supra
     at 154-155 (citing cases).
    The witness here lacked any comparable experience.      Her
    testimony failed to illuminate how her background and experience
    would help the trier of fact to understand the causal
    relationship between the conditions in the home and the
    likelihood of serious emotional or physical damage to the child.
    See Eva H., 436 P.3d at 1058 (witness with long experience as
    18
    attorney and guardian ad litem, but with no training in social
    work, psychology, or counselling, not qualified to testify about
    emotional or physical harm).   Contrast Walker E. v. State, Dep't
    of Health & Social Servs., Office of Children's Servs., 
    480 P.3d 598
    , 610 (Alaska 2021) (concluding, under plain error review
    applicable to unpreserved objections, that expert was qualified
    because her "long experience as a caseworker would naturally
    have involved assessing likelihood of harm"); Matter of Candace
    A., 
    332 P.3d 578
    , 586 (Alaska 2014) (witnesses qualified where
    both had "substantial education" in social work, one worked as
    supervisor at child welfare agency overseeing hundreds of cases,
    and other had lengthy work history as mental health clinician).
    Even in the absence of such specific Federal requirements,
    we conclude that the witness's experience and training did not
    provide a sufficient foundation for "the subject matter of the
    testimony," that being the likelihood of harm to the child if he
    were returned to the mother's custody.   Letch, 
    401 Mass. at 68
    .
    See Commonwealth v. Rintala, 
    488 Mass. 421
    , 437 n.29 (2021)
    ("That [witness] had worked in the paint industry for twenty
    years and was involved with the design and production of the
    paint at issue here does not mean that he was qualified as an
    expert witness on any topic related to paint"); Frangipane, 
    433 Mass. at 535
     ("judge's qualification of the witness in the field
    of child abuse in no way extended to a qualification in the area
    19
    of the neurological or medical functioning of the brain");
    Timmons v. Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth., 
    412 Mass. 646
    , 649
    (1992) ("Although the expert was qualified to offer his opinion
    on the plaintiff's inability to work paid police details and to
    teach self-defense classes, the expert was not qualified to
    testify on the issue of the permanency of the plaintiff's
    injuries").    This is not a situation where a "generally
    qualified" expert in a particular discipline is allowed to
    testify about a discrete question of knowledge in a
    "subspecialty."    Commonwealth v. Mahoney, 
    406 Mass. 843
    , 852
    (1990).    See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Crouse, 
    447 Mass. 558
    , 569
    (2006) (expert in cause and origin of fire permitted to opine
    about "delay between fire ignition and alarm activation");
    Letch, 
    supra
     ("medical expert need not be a specialist in the
    area concerned").    As a gatekeeper, a judge "must be satisfied
    that the witness offered for this purpose has an expertise with
    regard to the subject of inquiry."    W.G. Young, J.R. Pollets, &
    C. Poreda, Evidence § 702.8 at 811-812 (3d ed. 2023).       That
    expertise, regarding the likelihood of harm to the child if he
    were returned to the mother's custody, was not present in this
    case.     Because the witness did not explain how her background
    and experience would enable her to predict the likelihood of
    harm under 
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (f), we must vacate the decree
    terminating the mother's parental rights.
    20
    Conclusion.   We vacate the decree and remand the matter for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.   On remand the
    judge may in his discretion take additional evidence on the
    issues of the mother's current unfitness and the best interests
    of the child.   Given the disposition of this case, we need not
    address the mother's challenge to the posttermination visitation
    order.
    So ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 22-P-568

Filed Date: 9/26/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/26/2023