DocketNumber: A168678
Judges: Armstrong, Shorr, Tookey
Filed Date: 3/20/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
*742Father appeals a permanency judgment in which the juvenile court changed the permanency plan for father's child from reunification to adoption. In two assignments of error, father challenges the merits of the juvenile court's decision, arguing that the juvenile court erred in ruling that "no compelling reason" existed to forgo implementing that plan. Specifically, father argues that DHS failed to prove that guardianship was not better suited to meet the child's needs, which included a need to maintain sibling relationships between the child and her half-siblings. See ORS 419B.498(2)(b)(B) (a compelling reason includes that "[a]nother permanent plan is better suited to meet the health and safety needs of the child or ward, including the need to preserve the child's or ward's sibling attachments and relationships"). After father filed his opening brief, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Dept. of Human Services v. S. J. M. ,
Father has now filed a memorandum of additional authorities that implicitly recognizes that the argument he made in his opening brief is no longer viable. However, he requests that we remand the case to the juvenile court in light of the new law announced in S. J. M. so that he has an opportunity to meet the burden described in that case. DHS responds that a remand in this case is not warranted.
As we stated in S. J. K. , "a significant change in the law may, at times, counsel in favor of a remand in order to ensure that a party has a fair opportunity to litigate a case *576under the correct legal standards."
Affirmed.