Matter of T.H. C.D.F. , 2002 MT 293N ( 2002 )


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  •                                             No. 01-886
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    2002 MT 293N
    In Re the Matter of T.H. and C.D.F.,
    Youths in Need of Care.
    APPEAL FROM:           District Court of the Fourth Judicial District,
    In and for the County of Missoula,
    The Honorable John Larson, Judge presiding.
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Hon. Mike McGrath, Attorney General, Helena, Montana
    Christine Killgore-Lannan, Special Assistant Attorney General, Helena,
    Montana
    Fred Van Valkenburg, County Attorney; Leslie Halligan, Deputy County
    Attorney, Missoula, Montana
    For Respondents:
    (No Respondents' briefs filed)
    Submitted on Briefs: April 18, 2002
    Decided: December 12, 2002
    Filed:
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Justice Terry N. Trieweiler delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1     Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court
    1996 Internal Operating Rules, the following decision shall not be
    cited as precedent but shall be filed as a public document with the
    Clerk of the Supreme Court and shall be reported by case title,
    Supreme Court cause number, and result to the State Reporter
    Publishing Company and to West Group in the quarterly table of
    noncitable cases issued by this Court.
    ¶2     Child and Family Services Division (CFS) of the Department of Public Health &
    Human Services brought this action in District Court for the Fourth Judicial District in
    Missoula County to terminate the parental rights of D.H. (the natural mother of T.H. and
    C.D.F.), L.H. (the natural father of T.H.) and C.F. (the natural father of C.D.F.). The District
    Court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law, denying termination of L.H.'s parental
    rights and finding that CFS violated the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children
    (ICPC), § 41-4-101, MCA, and ordered CFS to pay fees resulting from the illegal placement.
    CFS appeals the District Court's order. During the briefing phase of this appeal, L.H.
    submitted a waiver of parental rights to T.H. We reverse the judgment of the District Court.
    ¶3     There are two issues that remain to be decided on appeal:
    ¶4     1.    Did the District Court err when it found that L.H. had not
    abandoned T.H.?
    ¶5     2.     Did the District Court err when it concluded that CFS
    violated the ICPC?
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    2
    ¶6   D.H. is the natural mother of the two children in this case,
    T.H. and C.D.F.      L.H. is the natural father of T.H., and C.F. is
    the natural father of C.D.F.
    ¶7   On March 6, 2000, D.H. and C.F. were arrested in Missoula for
    alleged possession of narcotics and drug paraphernalia.                 Police
    reports noted that drugs and paraphernalia, including syringes,
    were discovered in D.H.'s motel room and that T.H., who was six
    years old at that time, could access them.           Three days later, D.H.
    gave birth to C.D.F., who was born opiate-addicted.
    ¶8   On March 16, 2000, CFS petitioned the District Court for
    temporary    legal   custody     and   the   right   to   provide    emergency
    protective services for T.H. and C.D.F.               The court found the
    children in need of care, appointed a guardian ad litem for the
    children, appointed counsel for the parents, and set a show cause
    hearing before a special master for March 22, 2000. C.D.F. was
    placed with a foster family on March 20, 2000.            T.H. was initially
    placed in a foster home, but was relocated to Watson Children's
    Shelter after demonstrating behavioral problems.
    ¶9   At the show cause hearing, the Special Master learned that
    J.H., T.H.'s maternal aunt who lived in Washington, was planning to
    petition    for   guardianship    of   T.H.,   and   that   the     mother   had
    consented to J.H.'s guardianship and custody of T.H. in Washington.
    The court placed T.H. in the custody of her aunt.           CFS was ordered
    to continue its temporary investigative authority and to seek an
    expedited home study of the aunt in Washington.                J.H. filed a
    petition for guardianship of T.H. in a separate proceeding.             T.H.'s
    3
    mother stipulated to the guardianship and the petition was granted
    on April 10, 2000.   After being ordered to do so by the court, CFS
    initiated proceedings pursuant to the ICPC on May 9, 2000.
    ¶10   On July 20, 2000, CFS filed a report regarding the mother's
    and C.F.'s chemical dependency evaluations.      CFS requested the
    court to order a second chemical dependency evaluation, but no
    order to that effect was issued.
    ¶11   On July 17, 2000, District Judge Ed McLean extended the
    guardianship of T.H. and on July 21, 2000, the District Court in
    this case ordered that the case before Judge McLean be consolidated
    with this case, with District Judge John Larson presiding over
    both.
    ¶12   On August 3, 2000, the court-appointed special advocate (CASA)
    reported that the mother and C.F. were again arrested on July 21,
    2000, for felony possession of drugs and    drug paraphernalia, and
    for fraudulently obtaining prescription medication.      The arrest
    resulted from a probationary search of their home which revealed
    several prescription bottles for narcotics, crushed or ground-up
    narcotic pills, and syringes.    At least one of the prescriptions
    was obtained with use of a pseudonym and the narcotics were clearly
    not used as prescribed.
    ¶13   On August 23, 2000, the District Court issued an order that
    extended CFS' legal custody of T.H. and C.D.F., and modified the
    father of C.D.F.'s treatment plan to permit him a second chemical
    dependency evaluation.     The court also approved CFS' proposed
    treatment plans for the mother and father of C.D.F.
    4
    ¶14   On September, 12, 2000, CFS notified the court that the mother
    and father of C.D.F. had been arrested on new drug-related charges
    and that neither completed their chemical dependency evaluations as
    required by the approved treatment plans.         The court again extended
    their treatment plans.
    ¶15   On November 28, 2000, the mother and father of C.D.F. withdrew
    from their outpatient chemical dependency treatment facilities and
    moved to Washington.       They represented that they would enroll in an
    inpatient facility in Seattle.       CFS directed the court's attention
    to the parts of the treatment plan that the mother and father of
    C.D.F. had failed to meet.       On January 16, 2001, the District Court
    ordered CFS to petition for the termination of each parent's
    parental   rights,   and    on   February   7,   2001,   CFS   petitioned   to
    terminate the parental rights of the mother and father of C.D.F. ,
    and father of T.H.
    ¶16   After commencement of the termination proceedings on or about
    February 8, 2001, CFS located the father of T.H. at Kitsap County
    Jail in Washington, where he was then incarcerated.            CFS served him
    with the petition to terminate his parental rights.                   He was
    released from jail on March 12, 2001, but did not appear at the
    hearing on the petition to terminate his parental rights on April
    23 and April 24, 2001, nor did he otherwise participate in these
    proceedings until this appeal.       CFS could not locate or personally
    serve the mother or father of C.D.F., and served the petition for
    termination of their parental rights by publication.                  At the
    hearing on the petition for termination, the mother and father of
    5
    C.D.F.   did    not    personally   appear.     All   three   parents    were
    represented by counsel at the hearing.
    ¶17   On August 2, 2001, and August 7, 2001, the District Court
    entered its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and orders in
    this case.     The court denied termination of the parental rights of
    the mother and father of C.D.F. for failure to comply with a
    treatment      plan,    but   did   terminate   their   rights   based     on
    abandonment.     The court denied termination of L.H.'s rights after
    concluding that CFS did not make "reasonable efforts" to contact
    L.H., provide a treatment plan for him, or otherwise encourage
    reunification.        Neither did the court find sufficient evidence of
    abandonment by L.H.        The court also found that CFS' placement of
    T.H. in Washington with her aunt violated the ICPC and ordered CFS
    to pay costs of the illegal placement.
    ¶18   During this appeal, no party filed a brief in opposition to
    CFS' opening brief or otherwise notified this Court of their
    position in this matter.       On April 3, 2002, L.H.'s attorney filed a
    "Notice to the Court," which stated that she had not filed a brief
    because she was expecting a waiver of parental rights from L.H.
    She stated that in the past "several weeks" she had sent three sets
    of documents to L.H., one that he apparently did not receive, one
    that he returned without signing, and the third that she submitted
    along with the Notice.        L.H.'s attorney informed this Court that
    L.H.'s signature on the waiver was not notarized because he has no
    photo identification, lives in a half-way house, and was unable to
    find a notary willing to notarize his signature.          L.H.'s attorney
    6
    further explained that she could not notarize L.H.'s signature
    because she did not witness his signature in person, but that the
    signature on the waiver appears to be his when compared to a
    previous letter signed by him.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶19   When reviewing a district court's termination of parental
    rights, we determine "whether the court's findings of fact are
    clearly erroneous and whether the court's conclusions of law are
    correct."    In re J.J., 
    2001 MT 131
    , ¶ 14, 
    305 Mont. 431
    , ¶ 14, 
    28 P.3d 1076
    , ¶ 14.       The court's findings of fact are clearly
    erroneous where they are not supported by substantial evidence,
    where the court misconstrues the effect of the evidence, or where
    review of the record convinces this Court that the District Court
    made a mistake.    J.J., ¶ 14.
    DISCUSSION
    ISSUE 1
    ¶20   Did the District Court err when it found that L.H. had not
    abandoned T.H.?
    ¶21   This matter comes to this Court in an unusual procedural
    posture.    The District Court found and concluded that L.H. had not
    abandoned T.H.    The State, through CFS, appealed.    L.H. did not
    respond to the appeal but instead submitted a signed Waiver of
    Parental Rights, Relinquishment of Child and Consent to Adoption.
    The waiver was not notarized.
    ¶22   Section 42-2-408, MCA, sets forth the requirements for the
    valid execution of relinquishment and consent to adoption.   Section
    42-2-408(5), MCA, requires that "a relinquishment and consent to
    7
    adopt must be a separate instrument executed before a notary
    public."    L.H. does not fit within any noted exceptions to the
    notarization     requirement.          See   §   42-2-408(6),      MCA    (permits
    alternate method for members of the armed services and prisoners.)
    Nor does his attorney offer authority for departing from the
    statutory requirements.
    ¶23   Therefore we conclude that L.H.'s waiver is not conclusive but
    may be considered with other information in the record that L.H.
    has abandoned T.H.       Section 41-3-609(1), MCA, provides that a court
    may terminate the parent-child legal relationship where it finds
    that the parents have relinquished the child pursuant to the
    provisions in §§ 42-2-402 and 42-2-412, MCA, or where "the child
    has been abandoned by the parents . . . ."               Section 41-3-102(1),
    MCA, defines "abandoned" as "leaving a child under circumstances
    that make reasonable the belief that the parent does not intend to
    resume care of the child in the future . . . ." (Emphasis added).
    We conclude that the record clearly demonstrates that L.H. has
    abandoned   T.H.   and    that   the    District      Court's   finding    to   the
    contrary    is   clearly     erroneous.          He    has   not    meaningfully
    participated in these proceedings since he was personally served in
    February 2001; he has had limited telephonic contact with T.H. over
    the course of the proceedings, and has not otherwise fulfilled the
    parental role necessary for T.H.'s proper care; he has previously
    expressed a lack of interest in parenting T.H., unless the only
    other option was for T.H.'s mother to do so; and he has signed the
    written waiver submitted by his attorney in lieu of a brief.                    We,
    therefore, reverse that part of the District Court's judgment which
    8
    held that T.H. had not been abandoned by her father, L.H., and
    remand to the District Court for entry of judgment terminating
    L.H.'s parental rights.
    ¶24   In spite of L.H.'s waiver and relinquishment of his parental
    rights, CFS requests that this Court consider the remaining issues
    raised by its appeal.      CFS contends that the actions complained of
    are "capable of repetition, yet evading review."
    ¶25    Issues of mootness must be resolved prior to addressing the
    underlying dispute.       Grabow v. Montana High School Ass'n, 
    2000 MT 159
    , ¶ 14, 
    300 Mont. 227
    , ¶ 14, 
    3 P.3d 650
    , ¶ 14.            "A matter is
    moot when, due to an event or happening, the issue has ceased to
    exist and no longer presents an actual controversy.          A question is
    moot when the court cannot grant effective relief."              Shamrock
    Motors, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co., 
    1999 MT 21
    , ¶ 19, 
    293 Mont. 188
    , ¶
    19, 
    974 P.2d 1150
    , ¶ 19.
    ¶26   While there is no longer a controversy regarding several
    issues raised by CFS, we conclude that there remains a controversy
    regarding its alleged violation of the ICPC because it has been
    ordered to pay costs for doing so.        Therefore, we will address that
    one additional issue.
    ISSUE 2
    ¶27   Did the District Court err when it concluded that CFS violated
    the ICPC?
    ¶28   The District Court concluded that CFS violated the ICPC, § 41-
    4-101, MCA, when it participated in the placement of T.H. in
    Washington   with   her    aunt   prior   to   notifying   Washington   and
    complying with their placement laws.           The District Court, in its
    9
    Order, ¶ 6, stated that "[t]he placement of [T.H.] violated Article
    III, §4 of the conditions for placement of ICPC set forth at § 41-
    4-101, et. seq., MCA (1999)."       In ¶ 9 of its Order, the District
    Court ordered that "[t]he Court's Order of 3/22/00 in this cause as
    well as in Cause No. DG-00-40 which authorizes the placement in
    violation of ICPC is hereby invalidated and declared void."                  The
    court further ordered in ¶ 11 that "[a]s a consequence of the
    illegal   placement,    Montana   CFS     shall   bear   all     necessary   and
    appropriate costs which may be caused or result from that illegal
    placement."
    ¶29   CFS contends that the District Court erred because CFS was not
    responsible for the transfer of T.H. to her aunt in Washington, and
    that if there was any violation of the ICPC, it was the District
    Court that ordered the illegal placement.            CFS contends that it
    should    not   be   held   financially    responsible     for    the   illegal
    placement.      CFS also contends that the placement itself was not a
    placement within the provisions of the ICPC, and was therefore
    entirely legal.
    ¶30   The ICPC provides that "sending agencies" (such as CFS) shall
    not send or place a child into another state without complying with
    the requirements of the ICPC, which include providing prior notice
    to public authorities in the receiving state.            See § 41-4-101, Art.
    III, MCA.    It is not disputed that T.H. was moved to Washington to
    live with her aunt prior to compliance with the ICPC.              Article VIII
    of the ICPC, however, provides:
    This compact shall not apply to:
    (1) the sending or bringing of a child into a receiving
    state by his parent, stepparent, grandparent, adult
    10
    brother or sister, adult uncle or aunt, or his guardian
    and leaving the child with any such relative or nonagency
    guardian in the receiving state . . . . [Emphasis added.]
    Section 41-4-101, MCA.               In its order on March 22, 2000, Brenda
    Desmond, a special master for the District Court ordered:
    [T.H.] shall be placed with [J.H.], her maternal aunt,
    pending further order of this Court.    By this Order,
    [J.H.] shall have authority to transport [T.H.] to
    Washington State; and shall have full authority to make
    all necessary medical, educational, financial and any
    other decisions necessary to provide for the care and
    welfare of [T.H.].
    The record shows that T.H. left the children's center with her aunt
    shortly after this order, moved with her aunt to Washington, and
    her aunt was appointed guardian shortly after on April 10, 2000.
    Based on these facts, we conclude that the District Court erred
    when it concluded that CFS violated the ICPC.                             The District Court–
    not CFS–authorized T.H.'s placement with her aunt and the ICPC
    restriction relied on to sanction CFS does not apply when children
    go to another state to live with an adult aunt.                                 The placement of
    T.H.   with       her   aunt      was   consistent–not             inconsistent–with               the
    authority that the District Court relied upon when it held that an
    ICPC violation had occurred.                  It states: "[p]lacements genuinely
    made between close relatives of the child are clearly outside the
    purview of the ICPC."             SECRETARIAT      TO THE   ASSOCIATION   OF    ADMINISTRATORS   OF THE
    INTERSTATE COMPACT      ON THE   PLACEMENT    OF   CHILDREN, THE INTERSTATE COMPACT              ON THE
    PLACEMENT   OF   CHILDREN: A MANUAL     AND   INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE         FOR   JUVENILE   AND   FAMILY
    COURT JUDGES 268 (1998).             Therefore, we reverse that part of the
    District Court's conclusions of law and order that concluded CFS
    violated the ICPC and imposed costs against CFS for that violation.
    11
    ¶31   This case is remanded to the District Court for entry of
    judgment consistent with this Opinion.
    /S/ TERRY N. TRIEWEILER
    We Concur:
    /S/ KARLA M. GRAY
    /S/ JAMES C. NELSON
    /S/ PATRICIA COTTER
    /S/ JIM RICE
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 01-886

Citation Numbers: 2002 MT 293N

Filed Date: 12/12/2002

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/28/2017