Curtis O'Ferrell Smalls, II v. Curtis O'Ferrell Smalls, Sr. and Sarah Lee Smalls ( 2018 )


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  •                                               COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Humphreys, Decker and Russell
    Argued by teleconference
    UNPUBLISHED
    CURTIS O’FERRELL SMALLS, II
    v.     Record No. 0132-18-4
    CURTIS O’FERRELL SMALLS, SR.
    AND SARAH LEE SMALLS                                         MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    JUDGE ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS
    CURTIS O’FERRELL SMALLS, II                                        DECEMBER 4, 2018
    v.     Record No. 0531-18-4
    CURTIS O’FERRELL SMALLS, SR.
    AND SARAH LEE SMALLS
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY
    Brett A. Kassabian, Judge
    John B. Jacob, Jr., for appellant.
    Robert H. Klima for appellee.
    Curtis O’Ferrell Smalls, II (“father”), appeals the January 11, 2018 final order of
    adoption issued by the Circuit Court of Fairfax County (“circuit court”), arguing that the circuit
    court erred by ruling that the circuit judge could fairly preside over the proceeding and need not
    recuse himself and that the circuit court erred in applying Code § 63.2-1205, which father argues
    is unconstitutional. Father also separately appeals the March 16, 2018 circuit court decision
    denying father’s motion to stay the January 11, 2018 final order of adoption.1
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    1
    Because these appeals are related and involve the same parties, we have consolidated
    them for oral argument and decision.
    I. Background
    On September 6, 2016, father’s parents, Curtis Smalls, Sr. and Sarah Smalls
    (“grandparents”), petitioned the circuit court for the adoption of father’s three children, E.S.,
    R.S., and C.S. Father is currently incarcerated and has been incarcerated a number of times since
    1994 for writing bad checks. As a result, his children have resided primarily with grandparents.
    On January 8, 2018, a hearing was held regarding the adoption. At this hearing, father
    was questioned by the circuit court regarding an emergency motion he filed, apparently against
    the wishes of his counsel. Among other concerns, this emergency motion questioned the circuit
    court judge’s ability to preside over the current petition, claiming that the judge was biased
    against father because he had presided over a criminal case several years preceding the hearing
    in which father was the defendant. The circuit judge stated that he had no recollection of father’s
    previous case until it was brought to his attention by the emergency motion and that he had no
    question that he could be fair and impartial in the present matter. The circuit court thus denied
    father’s emergency motion.
    Two of father’s three children testified at the hearing. E.S. testified that she has no
    relationship with her father and that she favors the adoption. Likewise, R.S. testified that he was
    angry with his father because of his incarceration and that he is in favor of the adoption.
    During the hearing, father made a motion to strike the evidence on the grounds that the
    pertinent statute governing adoption, Code § 63.2-1205, does not account for the due process
    rights of the parent and is thus unconstitutional. The circuit court denied this motion as well.
    Father testified following the denial of this motion, describing his relationship with his children
    and his motivations for contesting the adoption. Following father’s testimony, the circuit court
    took the matter under advisement until January 11, 2018.
    -2-
    On January 11, 2018, the circuit court held that father’s testimony was not credible and
    that he was exaggerating his degree of contact with his children. Further, the circuit court held
    that father’s withholding of consent for the adoption was detrimental to the interests of the
    children and granted the adoption petition. Father appealed this decision to this Court.2
    On March 2, 2018, father sought to stay the January 11, 2018 final order of adoption on
    the grounds that father had previously been granted visitation rights by the Fairfax County
    Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court and wished to exercise those rights prior to the
    adoption. Grandparents argued, pursuant to Rule 1:1, that father’s motion to stay should be
    denied because it was filed after the allotted twenty-one days following the final order of
    adoption. The circuit court denied father’s motion, citing Rule 1:1 as well as the specific facts of
    the case, including the fact that father cannot exercise his visitation rights, as he is currently
    incarcerated, and the interests of the parties and children in finality. Father separately appealed
    this decision to this Court.3
    II. Analysis
    The question of whether a judge should recuse himself is a discretionary action and is
    thus reviewed for an abuse of that discretion. See Terrell v. Commonwealth, 
    12 Va. App. 285
    ,
    293 (1991). “The essence of any discretionary determination is the exercise of judgment. Only
    when the record does not fairly support the circuit court’s exercise of its judgment will we say
    that an abuse of discretion has occurred.” Hawthorne v. VanMarter, 
    279 Va. 566
    , 577 (2010).
    “In reviewing an exercise of discretion, we do not substitute our judgment for that of the trial
    court. Rather, we consider only whether the record fairly supports the trial court’s action.” Beck
    v. Commonwealth, 
    253 Va. 373
    , 385 (1997).
    2
    Record No. 0132-18-4.
    3
    Record No. 0531-18-4.
    -3-
    An abuse of discretion . . . can occur in three principal ways: when
    a relevant factor that should have been given significant weight is
    not considered; when an irrelevant or improper factor is considered
    and given significant weight; and when all proper factors, and no
    improper ones, are considered, but the court, in weighing those
    factors, commits a clear error of judgment.
    Landrum v. Chippenham & Johnston-Willis Hosps., Inc., 
    282 Va. 346
    , 352 (2011) (quoting Kern
    v. TXO Prod. Corp., 
    738 F.2d 968
    , 970 (8th Cir. 1984)).
    Additionally, the question of bias on the part of a judge raises constitutional due process
    considerations, but these considerations mandate recusal “only where the judge has ‘a direct,
    personal, substantial, pecuniary interest’ in the outcome of a case.” Welsh v. Commonwealth, 
    14 Va. App. 300
    , 314 (1992) (quoting Ward v. Village of Monroeville, 
    409 U.S. 57
    , 60 (1972)).
    Matters of personal bias thus “would seem generally to be matters merely of legislative
    discretion.” 
    Id. (quoting Aetna
    Life Ins. Co. v. Lavoie, 
    475 U.S. 813
    , 821 (1986)). “In Virginia,
    whether a trial judge should recuse himself or herself is measured by whether he or she harbors
    ‘such bias or prejudice as would deny the defendant a fair trial,’ and is a matter left to the
    reasonable discretion of the trial court.” 
    Id. at 315
    (quoting Justus v. Commonwealth, 
    222 Va. 667
    , 673 (1981)).
    Father points to nothing in the record that would support a conclusion of such bias on the
    part of the circuit court judge, rather he simply argues that the circuit court erred in failing to
    recuse because it did not “conduct a thorough examination” of what occurred during the circuit
    court’s previous criminal case involving father. Father cites no authority requiring such an
    analysis. Indeed, as the circuit court judge did not recall the previous criminal proceeding, the
    effect of any “thorough review” of the previous proceeding suggested by father is, ironically, the
    potential creation of exactly the possibility of the bias which father sought to prevent.
    Regardless, beyond his bare assertion that bias must have resulted from the circuit judge
    presiding over a prior case involving father, there is no evidence in the record before us
    -4-
    suggesting bias that would necessitate recusal under Virginia law, the Canons of Judicial
    Conduct, nor under the narrower constitutional test. Father’s argument essentially is that he need
    only make such an assertion and the burden then shifts to the judge to rebut it through an
    evidentiary hearing. Aside from the obvious fact that it would be both absurd and logistically
    impractical to presume bias and require automatic recusal of a judge whenever a party appears in
    any subsequent proceeding before the same judge, it was father’s burden as the moving party to
    present actual evidence supporting his argument of bias or prejudice on the part of the circuit
    judge such that he could not fairly decide the issues. In the absence of such evidence, the circuit
    court judge did not abuse his discretion in declining to recuse himself from this case.
    Father’s contention that the circuit court violated his Fourteenth Amendment due process
    rights by applying Code § 63.2-1205 requires a de novo review of the circuit court’s judgment.
    See Farrell v. Warren Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    59 Va. App. 375
    , 401 (2012). Code § 63.2-1205
    provides the process for determining, where a birth parent’s required consent to an adoption is
    withheld, whether the withholding of such consent is contrary to the best interests of the child,
    and therefore unnecessary. Code § 63.2-1205 mandates that the court shall consider several
    factors in this assessment, including
    the birth parent(s)’ efforts to obtain or maintain legal and physical
    custody of the child; whether the birth parent(s) are currently
    willing and able to assume full custody of the child; whether the
    birth parent(s)’ efforts to assert parental rights were thwarted by
    other people; the birth parent(s)’ ability to care for the child; the
    age of the child; the quality of any previous relationship between
    the birth parent(s) and the child and between the birth parent(s) and
    any other minor children; the duration and suitability of the child’s
    present custodial environment; and the effect of a change of
    physical custody on the child.
    Father argues that Code § 63.2-1205 is inherently unconstitutional because these factors
    do not include “proof of harm” in father’s continuing his relationship with the children. This
    omission, according to father, ignores the fundamental rights of the parent, which he asserts must
    -5-
    be considered per Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    (1982). Father does not develop his “proof
    of harm” contention beyond this merely conclusory statement.
    In addressing the constitutional validity of Code § 63.2-1205, our Supreme Court has
    noted that “best interests of the child” is a phrase more often used in custody determinations,
    requiring a “much more demanding” definition in the adoption context in light of the
    constitutional parental rights in question. See Copeland v. Todd, 
    282 Va. 183
    , 197 (2011), cert.
    denied, 
    132 S. Ct. 1918
    (2012). Despite acknowledging this higher bar, our Supreme Court held
    that “the Virginia Code’s adoption statutes meet constitutional due process scrutiny because they
    encompass far more than mere consideration of the child’s best interests as defined in cases
    involving a contest between natural parents.” 
    Id. at 200.
    Father’s brief argument, consisting of a
    single paragraph that does not address Copeland, amounts to an unsubstantiated assertion that
    Code § 63.2-1205 is unconstitutional.
    Concerning the circuit court’s denial of father’s motion to stay the January 11, 2018 final
    order, Rule 1:1 mandates that “[a]ll final judgments, orders, and decrees, irrespective of terms of
    court, shall remain under the control of the trial court and subject to be modified, vacated, or
    suspended for twenty-one days after the date of entry, and no longer.” Father concedes that the
    twenty-one-day period provided in Rule 1:1 had elapsed, but contends that a stay does not
    modify, vacate or suspend the adoption order, and is therefore an action not contemplated by
    Rule 1:1.4 Father derives this argument from Davidson v. Commonwealth, 
    246 Va. 168
    (1993),
    a capital murder case, where our Supreme Court reversed a trial court’s determination that it did
    not have jurisdiction to grant a stay of execution on a motion made outside the twenty-one-day
    window. 
    Id. at 171.
    Our Supreme Court held that because a stay merely postpones when a
    4
    Because we decide this issue based upon the application of Rule 1:1, we need not
    address the jurisdiction and authority of the circuit court to issue a stay of the final order while
    the case was on appeal to this Court.
    -6-
    judgment is executed, it does not modify, vacate, or suspend an order as contemplated under
    Rule 1:1. 
    Id. Our Supreme
    Court based its decision in Davidson, at least partly, on the grounds
    that the order which set Davidson’s execution date “was not a final order because it was not a
    disposition of the whole subject before the court in Davidson’s case.” 
    Id. The entry
    of a final
    order of adoption, by contrast, “divest[s] [the birth parents] of all legal rights and obligations in
    respect to the child.” Code § 63.2-1215. Such an order can only be characterized as a final
    order, one which “disposes of the whole subject, gives all the relief contemplated, provides with
    reasonable completeness for giving effect to the sentence, and leaves nothing to be done in the
    cause save to superintend ministerially the execution of the order.” Daniels v. Truck & Equip.
    Corp., 
    205 Va. 579
    , 585 (1964) (quoting March’t & Taylor v. Mathews Co., 
    139 Va. 723
    , 734
    (1924).
    Adoption and capital punishment both represent unique situations where underlying
    moral concerns may counsel conflicting interpretations of finality. In the case of adoption, it is
    certain that finality is the ultimate aim of the proceeding, so as to avoid suspending children
    between claimants. This statutory desire for finality in adoption proceedings is evident in Code
    § 63.2-1216, which states that after six months have passed the validity of a final order of
    adoption cannot be attacked in any proceeding for any reason. Code § 63.2-1216 is not
    applicable here as father did appeal within the six-month window, but it serves to highlight the
    finality the General Assembly intends adoption proceedings to have.
    Additionally, the circuit court did note that it had substantive reasons for denying the
    motion as well; namely the fact that father cannot exercise his visitation rights because he is
    currently incarcerated, and the interests of the parties in finality. At present, allowing father to
    exercise his visitation rights in person appears to be an impossibility. Father expects his
    incarceration to end in April 2019. The practical effect of granting his stay would have been to
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    leave the children in legal limbo for over a year, a prospect the circuit court quite reasonably
    rejected. Father’s desire to exercise his rights is thus doubly frustrated, by physical impossibility
    imposed by his incarceration and the current desire of his children not to participate.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
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