STATE v. BENNETT
Supreme Court of Utah
2016 UT 56 | 1032
Conclusion
¶43 The trial court erred in refusing to consider Mr. Bennett‘s second request for counsel. It also erred in granting summary judgment because issues of fact remain as to whether Mr. Bennett‘s Fifth Amendment rights were violated by the requirement that he comply with the BCCC program. There are genuine disputes of material facts as to whether the questions posed to Mr. Bennett bore a risk of incrimination and whether the circumstances in which those questions were posed constituted compulsion. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the trial court and remand for further proceedings.
IN RE E.K.S., a person under the age of eighteen.
No. 20150435
Supreme Court of Utah.
Filed December 6, 2016
2016 UT 56 | 1033
Mark H. Tanner, Orangeville, for appellees Sean D. Reyes, Att‘y Gen., Bridget K. Romano, Ass‘t Att‘y Gen., Salt Lake City, for amicus Office of the Utah Attorney General, Virginia Ward, Salt Lake City, for amicus Journey of Hope, Inc.
Chief Justice Durrant authored the opinion of the court, in which Associate Chief Justice Lee, Justice Durham, Justice Himonas, and Justice Pearce joined.
On Certification from the Utah Court of Appeals
Chief Justice Durrant, opinion of the Court:
Introduction
¶1 A mother whose parental rights to her daughter wеre terminated challenges on multiple constitutional grounds the statutory scheme that provides appointed counsel for indigent parents in state-initiated parental termination proceedings while denying such counsel for indigent parents in privately initiated proceedings. C.B.S. (Mother), after having her parental rights terminated in a proceeding where she was unrepresented by counsel, argues that the statutory scheme at issue is unconstitutional as a violation of federal due process and that due process required she be аppointed counsel during the termination proceedings. We hold that while the statutory scheme is not facially unconstitutional, the court erred in relying on it to deny Mother‘s request for counsel. We accordingly reverse in part and remand for further proceedings.
Background
¶2 On August 3, 2014, Mother gave birth to her daughter, E.K.S. At the time, Mother was on probation and faced additional incarceration for probation violations and additional criminal activities. After giving birth to
¶3 The juvenile court, by way of an order on February 27, 2015, advised Mother that she had a right to counsel, but that “a public defender is not available as this is a private petition.” The court‘s decision was apparently based on
¶4 During the termination proceedings at the juvenile court, Mother was unrepresented by counsel. The court denied Mother‘s requests for continuances on the day of the trial, though it specifically addressed only the first request. At the end of the proceeding, the juvenile court found by clear and convincing evidence that Mother was unfit as a parent and had failed to make more than token efforts to become fit. The court also determined that the best interests of E.K.S. supported placement with Adoptive Parents. Accordingly, the juvenile court terminated Mother‘s parental rights and awarded custody of E.K.S. to Adoptive Parents. Mother appealed, and the court of appeals certified the case to us.
Standard of Review
¶5 The central questions in this case concern the constitutionality of
Analysis
¶6 Mother raises both a facial and an as-applied challenge to
I. All Termination Proceedings Involve Sufficient State Action to Trigger Constitutional Protections
¶7 Adoptive Parents argue that “it is not clear that the United States Supreme Court would consider the termination of parеntal rights in a privately initiated action the degree of state action that inculcates Fourteenth Amendment protections.” This argument goes to whether the constitutional provisions cited by Mother even apply to this case because it was a private party—and not the State—that sought termination of Mother‘s parental rights. Without state action, they argue, the protections of the Constitution do not apply.7
¶8 Both we and the federal Supreme Court have made clear that there is sufficient state action in privately initiated parental termination proceedings to trigger constitutional protections. In Swayne v. L.D.S Social Services,8 we stated that “[a] parent‘s rights may only be . . . terminated through the power of the state. When a private party facilitates a mother‘s relinquishment [of a child], . . . the party becomes a state actor if it also effectuates the state‘s termination [of parental rights].”9 Similarly, the United States Supreme Court in M.L.B. v. S.L.J.10 held that the case “involv[ed] the State‘s authority to sever permanently a parent-child bond,” despite the fact it was a private party who initiated the termination proceedings.11 Thе Court noted that regardless of the initiating party, “the challenged state action remains essentially the same: [the mother] resists the imposition of an official decree extinguishing, as no power other than the State can, her parent-child relationships.”12 As this caselaw makes clear, because parental rights can be terminated only by the state through a judicial order, all termination proceedings involve state action sufficient to trigger constitutional protections.
¶9 Having established that constitutional protections arе implicated in termination proceedings, we turn to a discussion of the constitutionality of
II. The Juvenile Court Erred by Concluding that Section 78A-6-1111(2) Prohibited It from Considering Whether to Appoint Counsel for Mother
¶10 As we discuss below, although we hold that Mother‘s facial attack on the statute fails, we ultimately conclude that the juvenile court erred in its determination that
A. Under Lassiter v. Department of Social Services, Due Process Requires a Case-by-Case Analysis of Three Factors
¶11 All parties agree that the juvenile court had a duty under Lassiter v. Department of Social Services to determine whether Mother was entitled to appointed counsel. In Lassiter, the North Carolina Durham County Department of Social Services (Deрartment) sought to terminate Ms. Lassiter‘s parental rights because she was incarcerated for twenty-five to forty years, had neglected her child, and had not shown any indication that she was interested in or working toward reunification with her child.14 After a hearing, in which Ms. Lassiter was unrepresented by counsel, the trial court found she had willfully “failed to maintain concern or responsibility for the welfare of the minor” and that “it was in the best interests of the minor” to have Ms. Lassiter‘s parental rights terminated.15 Ms. Lassiter appealed, arguing “that, because she was indigent, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment entitled her to the assistance of counsel, and that the trial court had therefore erred in not requiring the State to provide counsel for her.”16 After several levels of appeal, the Supreme Court granted certiorari to consider Ms. Lassiter‘s due process argument.17
¶12 After reviewing its due process precedent, the Court stated that “an indigent‘s right to appointed counsel . . . has been recognized to exist only where the litigant may lose his physical liberty if he loses the litigation.”18 The Court thus cоncluded there is a “presumption that an indigent litigant has a right to appointed counsel only when, if he loses, he may be deprived of his physical liberty.”19 Despite this conclusion, the Court held there may be some parental rights termination proceedings—proceedings that bear no risk of deprivation of physical liberty—where the circumstances of the case rebut the presumption that counsel is required to be appointed only when there is a risk of incarceration.20 In such circumstances, when the presumption is overcomе, the Court held that due process requires that counsel be appointed.
¶13 In order to determine whether the presumption is overcome, the Court described three relevant factors that must be balanced: “the private interests as stake, the government‘s interest, and the risk that the procedures used will lead to erroneous decisions.”21 Courts “must balance these elements against each other, and then set their net weight in the scales against the presumption that there is a right to appointed counsel only where the indigent, if he is unsucсessful, may lose his personal freedom.”22 The Court held that if “the parent‘s interests were at their strongest, the State‘s interests were at their weakest, and the risks of error were at their peak,” the presumption against the appointment of counsel in non-criminal proceedings could be overcome and the party would be entitled to court-appointed coun-
¶14 With this due process framework in mind, we turn now to our discussion of Mother‘s federal due process arguments, which center in Lassiter‘s case-by-case balancing analysis. We first discuss Mother‘s argument that
B. Section 78A-6-1111(2) Is Not Facially Unconstitutional
¶15 Mother argues that the plain language of
¶16 Section 78A-6-1111 applies to “any action in juvenile court.”30 At the time Mother requested counsel,31 subsection (2) of that section read as follows: “Counsel appointed by the court may not provide representation as court-appointed counsel for a parent or legal guardian in any action initiated by, or in any proceeding to modify court orders in a proceeding initiated by, a private party.” Mother argues that
¶17 Accepting for purposes of this appeal that
¶18 In order to succeed in a facial challenge to
¶19 Indeed, even if we were to narrowly interpret
¶20 Of course, our conclusion that
C. The Juvenile Court Erred by Relying on Section 78A-6-1111(2) to Deny Counsel Without Considering Mother‘s Circumstances
¶21 As discussed above, although we reject Mother‘s argument that
¶22 The juvenile court‘s explanation for its denial of Mother‘s request for counsel was simply that “a public defender is not available as this is a private petition.” This conclusion is mistaken. The Supreme Court held in Lassiter that counsel may be required to be appointed as a matter of due process in some parental termination cases,40 and this holding applies equally to both privately and state-initiated termination proceedings.41 The mere fact that the petition was initiated by a private party does not obviate the constitutional guarantees of due process.
¶23 The juvenile court‘s erroneous conclusion appears to have been based on
¶24 The court‘s error in this regard precludes further analysis by this court. Because the court seemed to treat
Conclusion
¶25 We reaffirm today that privately initiated parental termination proceedings involve sufficient state action to trigger constitutional protections. And although we reject Mother‘s facial challenge to
