In re A.M., Juvenile
No. 2019-139
Supreme Court of Vermont
October Term, 2019
2019 VT 79
Katherine A. Hayes, J.
On Appeal from Superior Court, Windham Unit, Family Division. Adele V. Pastor, Barnard, for Appellant Mother. Kerry A. McDonald-Cady, Windham County Deputy State’s Attorney, Brattleboro, for Appellee. PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Robinson and Eaton, JJ., and Tomasi, Supr. J., and Burgess, J. (Ret.), Specially Assigned.
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under
¶ 1. ROBINSON, J. Mother appeals the family division’s disposition order transferring custody of her six-year-old daughter A.M. to father, who lives in Colorado. Specifically, mother argues the court erred in directing mother to pay for 75% of the costs of transporting the child back and forth to Vermont for contact with mother. We agree and reverse.
¶ 2. The following facts are derived from the court’s disposition order. A.M. was born in November 2012. Mother and father were then married and living in Colorado. In October 2013, the parties separated and mother returned with A.M. to Vermont to live with mother’s parents. Father filed for
¶ 3. In February 2018, the Department for Childrеn and Families (DCF) filed a petition alleging that A.M. was a child in need of care or supervision (CHINS) due to mother’s heroin use and statements that she might kill herself and A.M. In May 2018, mother stipulated to the merits of the CHINS petition. In July 2018 DCF filed a disposition case plan recommending that custody of A.M. be discharged to father with mother having reasonable and appropriate parent-child contact. Later that month, the court held an on-the-record conference with the court in Yuma County, Colorado, where father resides. The Colorado court ceded jurisdiction over custody issues relating to A.M. to Vermont.
¶ 4. DCF received a positive report about father’s home from Colorado’s Department of Human Services in June 2018. DCF subsequently placed A.M. with father in Colorado, where she continues to reside. She has visited mother and maternal grandparents for vacations.
¶ 5. A contested disposition hearing was held over three days in October and Decembеr 2018 and January 2019. In a written order issued in March 2019, the court found that although mother had made progress toward sobriety, it was in A.M.’s best interests to transfer custody to father. It ordered that mother was entitled to the same parent-child contact that the parents’ divorce decree gave to father. However, for equitable reasons, it found that mother should bear the majority of the costs related to transporting A.M. to Vermont for visits. Specifically, the court found that father was paying for most of A.M.’s food, clothing, health care, and recreational and educational needs; mother had chosen to relocate to Vermont; and mother’s inability to care for A.M. had led to the change in custody. The court therefore directed mother to pay at least 75% of the transportation costs required to transport A.M. to and from Vermont for parent-child contact with mother.
¶ 6. The court acknowledged that there was no pending petition for modification of parental rights and responsibilities in Vermont or Colorado, and that it was effectively modifying the Colorado divorce decree. However, it concluded that its order was consistent with the Colorado court’s relinquishment of jurisdiction over modification issues under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act,
¶ 7. On appeal, mother’s sole challenge is to the portion of the court’s orders directing her to pay 75% of the costs for A.M.’s visits tо Vermont. She concedes that the Vermont court had jurisdiction to transfer custody to father and establish parent-child contact for mother under
¶ 8. Whether the court had authority to issue an order allocating the costs of travel for parent-child contact to the noncustodial
¶ 9. We agree with the parties that the family division lacked authority to make such an order here. A CHINS case is a legislatively created proceeding in which the family division of the superior court is vested with special and limited statutory powers.
¶ 10. When a child has been adjudicated CHINS, the court must hold a disposition hearing and issue a disposition order.
¶ 11. Section 5319 governs parent-сhild contact in CHINS proceedings. Subsection (b) states that the court “may determine the reasonable frequency and duration of parent-child contact and may set such conditions for parent-child contact as are in the сhild’s best interests including whether parent-child contact should be unsupervised or supervised. The Court may allocate the costs of supervised visitation.” Neither subsection (b) nor any other part of § 5319 authorizes the court to allocatе transportation costs for unsupervised visitation.2
¶ 12. There is authority for the court to make a child-support order in a CHINS proceeding, but only when the child is in DCF custody. Section 5116 of Title 33, which deals with costs and expenses for the care of children in CHINS proceedings, provides that the family court “may, in any order of disposition under the juvenile judicial proceedings chapters, make and enforce by levy and execution an order of child support to be paid by thе parent of the child.”
¶ 13. In sum, the CHINS statute does not explicitly authorize the court to allocate the costs of unsupervised parent-child contact between a custodial parent and a noncustodial parent or to allocate travel costs when the court transfers custody to a noncustodial parent at disposition. The fact that the family division has unlimited authority to award or modify child supрort in divorce, parentage, and other types of proceedings does not mean that it may do so in a CHINS proceeding. See In re M.C.P., 153 Vt. 275, 302, 571 A.2d 627, 642 (1989) (“Generally, unless statutory authority for a particular procedure, the [juvenile] court does not have the power to employ it.“).
¶ 14. Moreover, the authority is not inherent in the overall statutory scheme for CHINS proceedings. Although the family division has jurisdiction over both CHINS and child-support proceedings,
¶ 15. Because we find no statutory authority for the court to make a financial award of this type in a CHINS proceeding, we reverse the court’s final disposition order insofar as it purports to allocate 75% of the costs of transporting A.M. for visits to mother. We remand for the court to issue new disposition and parental rights and responsibilities orders without that provision.3
The orders on appeal are reversed and the matter is remanded for the court to issue new disposition and parental rights and responsibilities orders consistent with this decision.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
