This certiorari action tests the legality of a juvenile court’s ruling on the constitutionality of the statute governing emergency removal orders, Iowa Code section 232,78 (1997). Because we are convinced that the certiorari plaintiff cannot successfully assail the statute on Fourth Amendments grounds, nor does the statutory scheme violate the due process clauses of either the United States or Iowa Constitutions, we vacate a contrary decision of the court of appeals and annul the writ.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
Underlying the constitutional issues presented here was a case involving Felicia, a young mother, and Michael, her infant son. When the child was three months old, the Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS) filed a written ex parte application with the juvenile court to remove Michael from the custody of his mother. The application gave the following reasons for removal:
Two older siblings have been removed [and] parental rights terminated. The mother has a history of mental illness [and] is not medication] compliant. She is not able to care for her children. Michael is on an apnea monitor subsequent to an apnea episode during which he stopped breathing. The mother has not been compliant w[ith] VNS [Visiting Nurse Services] [and] has missed at least one medical appointment for the child.
The application also asserted that immediate removal was necessary to avoid imminent danger to the child’s life or health, reasonable cause existed to believe that asking Felicia for consent to remove the child would cause her to take flight, and there was insufficient time to file a child in
The application was evidently accompanied by an unreported conversation between the DHS child protection worker and the issuing judge prior to the grant of the application. Based on the information received, the court issued an ex parte removal order pursuant to Iowa Code section 232.78, which provided:
1. The juvenile court may enter an ex parte order directing a peace officer or a juvenile court officer to take custody of a child before or after the filing of a petition under this chapter provided all of the following apply:
a. The person responsible for the care of the child is absent, or though present, was asked and refused to consent to the removal of the child and was informed of an intent to apply for an order under this section, or there is reasonable cause to believe that a request for consent would further endanger the child, or there is reasonable cause to believe that a request for consent will cause the parent, guardian, or legal custodian to take flight with the child.
b. It appears that the child’s immediate removal is necessary to avoid imminent danger to the child’s life or health.
c. There is not enough time to file a petition and hold a hearing under section 232.95. 1
The court’s order placed Michael in the temporary legal custody of the DHS pending a post-removal hearing. Peace officers directed to take custody of Michael were unable to locate him or Felicia over the weekend; the child was not removed from his mother’s custody until the following Monday morning. That same day a CINA petition was filed. The petition alleged that Michael was a child in need of assistance because of Felicia’s failure to “exercise a reasonable degree of care in supervising” him, see Iowa Code § 232.2(6)(c)(2), and Felicia’s “mental capacity or condition,” which prevented her from caring for Michael. See Iowa Code § 232.2(6)(n). DHS filed a child abuse report the same day, documenting Felicia’s lack of parenting skills.
The removal hearing, scheduled in conformity with Iowa Rule of Juvenile Procedure 4.6, 2 was continued by agreement of the parties, and combined with the adjudication hearing on the CINA petition. Meanwhile, Felicia moved to Texas. She eventually stipulated to the CINA adjudication but reserved the right to contest Michael’s initial removal. In that connection, her counsel filed the document that is the subject of these proceedings — a “Motion to Review Removal Application by Same Standard as Search Warrants.” The court reserved its ruling on the motion. A dispositional order was entered in the CINA case and, based on Felicia’s abandonment of the child, the case proceeded toward termination.
After the CINA case, but before the termination hearing, the juvenile court ruled on Felicia’s motion. It rejected Felicia’s constitutional claim that removal ap
Felicia appealed both the court’s ruling on the motion as well as the decree terminating her parental rights that followed shortly thereafter. Termination of her parental rights was affirmed in an unpublished opinion by our court of appeals.
See In re M.L.,
No. 99-0362,
The court of appeals sustained the writ in part, and annulled it in part. Finding emergency removals under section 232.78 are subject to the Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment, it sustained that part of the writ which alleged the juvenile court acted illegally by not requiring an application for such order to be made on oath or affirmation. The court annulled the writ, however, to the extent it sought a finding that the juvenile court acted illegally when it held the underlying facts supporting the application need not be reduced to writing.
Both Felicia and the State sought further review. We granted their petitions, and the case is now before us.
II. Scope of Review.
Certiorari is a procedure used to test whether a court has exceeded its jurisdiction or otherwise acted illegally.
Wyciskalla v. Iowa Dist. Ct.,
Because statutes enjoy a strong presumption of constitutionality, a party mounting such a challenge may prevail “only upon proof that the act clearly infringes constitutional rights and then only if every reasonable basis for support is negated.”
Seeman v. Iowa Dep’t of Hu
III. Issues on Appeal.
A. Applicability of Warrant Clause. We are confronted with a threshold question concerning Felicia’s assertion of a Fourth Amendment claim contesting Michael’s removal. 4 The State readily concedes that Felicia’s relationship with Michael is a constitutionally protected liberty interest secured by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. It insists, however, that Felicia can claim no legitimate expectation of privacy rooted in the Fourth Amendment because she was not personally subjected to search or seizure. Nor has she brought this suit in a representative capacity on behalf of her son. Throughout these proceedings Michael has been represented by a guardian ad litem who has advocated removal and opposed Felicia’s position.
The Fourth Amendment provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
The United States Supreme Court has long held that the right to be protected from unreasonable searches and seizures is a personal one and cannot be asserted vicariously.
Minnesota v. Carter,
Felicia asserts that the State violated her Fourth ■ Amendment right to be free from an unreasonable search and seizure when authorities removed Michael pursuant to an ex parte order issued on the basis of facts given without oath or affirmation, some of which were not reduced to writing. The amendment’s language clearly provides, however, that people shall be secure in their “persons, houses, papers, and effects.” Although Felicia argues— with substantial justification — that a child is more precious than houses, papers or effects, we are aware of no court that has applied the Fourth Amendment to redress the interest that Felicia claims for herself in these circumstances.
Numerous federal courts have recognized parents’ rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to vindicate — in a representative capacity — the constitutional interests of their children whose removal from their custody was accomplished without warrant, court order or, in some cases, any finding of probable cause. These cases uniformly recognize that the seized children, not their parents, have privacy interests protected by the Fourth Amendment.
See, e.g., Wooley v. City of Baton Rouge,
We are aware of only one case implying a contrary view,
J.B. v. Washington County,
We are convinced that the case before us fits none of the cases rooted in the Fourth Amendment. Felicia makes no claim that the court’s removal order, issued in accordance with Iowa Code section 232.78, resulted in a search or seizure of her person or property. And, unlike the many cases cited above, she does not purport to urge Michael’s Fourth Amendment interest in a representative capacity. Their interests are simply not the same. The juvenile court, therefore, did not err when it rejected her challenge to section 232.78 on Fourth Amendment grounds.
B. Due process analysis. There are two separate components of Felicia’s due process claim. First, she seems to allege that Fourteenth Amendment due process specifically incorporates the Fourth Amendment, thereby requiring any application for an ex parte removal order to be made in writing on oath or affirmation. Second, she claims these safeguards are required by Fourteenth Amendment procedural due process. The State, conceding Felicia’s liberty interest in her relationship with her son, argues that the pre- and post-removal procedures contained in the juvenile code provide sufficient safeguards to comport with both federal and state due process requirements. We agree.
Both the United States and Iowa Constitutions provide that “no person shall
Here the private interest at stake is Felicia’s parental relationship with Michael. The United States Supreme Court has consistently recognized that a parent’s “care, custody, and control” of a child is a fundamental liberty interest given the greatest possible protection.
Troxel v. Granville,
The Supreme Court has also recognized that a parent’s right to the care and custody of a child is reciprocated by the child’s liberty interest in familial association, likewise protected by the Due Process Clause.
See Lehr v. Robertson,
Turning to the second prong of the due process inquiry, we must ask what process is due these particular liberty interests. That determination turns on a balancing of the three factors articulated in
Mathews:
(1) The private interest that will be affected by the State’s actions; (2) the State’s interest; and (3) the risk that the current procedure will lead to an erroneous deprivation of the interests at stake and the probable value, if any, of additional or different procedural safeguards.
See In re A.M.H.,
Given the fundamental liberty interests implicated by the disruption of a parent-child relationship, two additional factors become important: the degree of deprivation and the deprivation’s possible length.
See Mathews,
Turning to the State's interest, it bears the heavy responsibility of “ ‘assuring] that every child within its borders receives proper care and treatment...
In re
Our analysis of these competing interests ultimately turns on balancing the risk of error in the procedures already built into section 232.78’s removal process'with the probable value of additional safeguards. Felicia contends that the potential for error in the current procedures is high. She asserts that, to pass constitutional muster, the facts which form the basis for issuing a removal order must be given on oath or affirmation, and in writing, to counter those risks.
Felicia rightly asserts that an oath or affirmation requirement would “create an incentive for the truth.” It is also true, as Felicia suggests, that a writing requirement would provide a record from which to review the issuing judge’s actions. Requiring either procedure in this case, she argues, may have lessened the likelihood of exaggeration or improper influence that she perceives to be at the heart of the removal order at issue.
The purported need for these additional requirements, however, must be weighed against the fact that ex parte removal orders are not, in and of themselves, reviewed. While the court is statutorily obligated to hold a hearing following the removal, the purpose of the hearing is limited to a determination of whether removal should continue. Iowa Code § 232.95(1);
In re A.M.H.,
Of course the fact that an ex parte removal order is not reviewed necessarily increases the worth of testimony given under oath or affirmation. Requiring that information to be given on oath or affirmation would indeed discourage exaggeration or outright lies. It would also pose little additional burden, assuming the applicant would already be presenting the information to the judge. However, the record before us contains no proof that either this DHS worker or DHS workers in general furnish false or misleading information as the basis for ex parte orders. And while the DHS worker would likely be a witness in the post-removal hearing, the purpose of that hearing is to elicit facts concerning the need for
continued
placement, not to challenge the propriety of the initial re
On balance, we cannot say that the protections in place in section 232.78 deprive litigants, such as Felicia, of due process. Given the emergency nature of temporary removal applications, a reasonably prompt post-removal hearing meets the twin goals of protecting the child’s safety while preserving the parent’s liberty interest. The legislature could reasonably err on the side of less formality where the safety of children is at issue. Moreover, it is not unreasonable for the legislature to entrust to juvenile judges the important task of weighing the credibility of applicants for emergency orders affecting our state’s most vulnerable citizens.
In sum, we have no basis to find section 232.78 unconstitutional on its face. We therefore concur in the juvenile court’s judgment in this matter and annul the writ of certiorari.
WRIT ANNULLED.
Notes
. In 1998, the legislature amended section 232.78. See 1998 Iowa Acts ch. 1190, §§ 4-6. Subsection (l)(d) now provides that "[l]he application for the [ex parte removal] order [must] include[ ] a statement of the facts to support the findings specified in paragraphs 'a', 'b', and 'c'." Iowa Code § 232.78(l)(d) (1999).
. The rule provides that "[w]henever a child has been removed pursuant to Iowa Code section 232.78 ... a hearing under Iowa Code section 232.95 shall be held within ten days.... ” Iowa R. Juv. P. 4.6.
. Although counsel urged the writing requirement as a constitutional imperative, the requirement actually derives from statute. See Iowa Code § 808.3.
. Unless otherwise noted, references to the federal constitution apply equally to the corresponding provisions of the Iowa Constitution.
