STATE OF UTAH, IN THE INTEREST OF A.R. AND M.R., PERSONS UNDER EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE. J.S.R., Appellant, v. STATE OF UTAH, Appellee.
No. 20160330-CA
THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
August 17, 2017
2017 UT App 154
Third District Juvenile Court, Salt Lake Department; The Honorable Mark W. May; No. 1108329; Colleen K. Coebergh, Attorney for Appellant; Sean D. Reyes and John M. Peterson, Attorneys for Appellee; Martha Pierce, Guardian ad Litem
TOOMEY, Judge:
¶1 J.S.R. (Father) appeals the juvenile court‘s order terminating his parental rights. We reverse.
BACKGROUND
¶2 A.R. and M.R., born in March 2008 and June 2009, respectively, are the children of C.S. (Mother) and Father.1 In December 2014, the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS) filed a verified petition alleging that the children were “abused, neglected and/or dependent.” The petition alleged there was a domestic disturbance between Father and Mother and that Father was arrested for violating a protective order between him and Mother. It also alleged Mother was using methamphetamine, sometimes in the children‘s presence. At a shelter hearing during which both parents were present and represented by counsel, the juvenile court gave DCFS temporary legal and physical custody of the children.
¶3 An adjudication hearing took place in January 2015. Father was incarcerated at that time but was transported to the hearing. The juvenile court determined that Father had been arrested for violating a protective order between himself and Mother. It also determined that the children were dependent2 as to Father and neglected3 as to Mother and gave custody of the children to DCFS. It also ordered DCFS to create a plan to address the children‘s needs.
But at this point I‘m not ordering the Division to go out and set up services at the prison, because I‘m not going to find that that‘s reasonable. So the Division will provide reasonable services, meaning that to the extent that [Father] can take those services . . . at the prison, [Father] should avail [himself] of those opportunities.
When [Father] get[s] out [he] need[s] to immediately contact the Division, and then the Division will have to expedite placement in some sort of domestic violence/anger management.
The court stated that any contact the children had with Father should be approved by their therapist and concluded, “So that will be the treatment plan for [Father]. That‘s what you‘ll have to put in writing and make sure he has a copy of it.”
¶5 The court‘s conclusion regarding reunification services is further memorialized in a disposition order (the Disposition Order). The court found that services would not be detrimental to the children, that there were no reasonable services DCFS could provide to Father while he was in prison, that it was “reasonable to expedite services for [Father] if he contacts [DCFS]” upon his release from prison, that Father should avail himself of services offered at the prison, and that the child and family plan for Father should be amended to include classes
¶6 The State filed a verified petition for termination of parental rights as to both parents in September 2015. With respect to Father, the petition stated he was currently incarcerated and listed his criminal convictions. It acknowledged that the court had “ordered DCFS to provide reasonable reunification services” for him, but urged the court to conclude that DCFS had provided reasonable reunification services for Father and to terminate his parental rights on several grounds. The matter proceeded to trial beginning in December 2015 and intermittently continued over eleven days through April 2016.
¶7 Father was released from prison on January 5, 2016, between the first and second days of trial. He contacted a DCFS caseworker the next day.
¶8 During trial, the caseworker testified she was aware that reunification services had been ordered for Father. She explained she had provided supervised visitation with the children but stated she had not contacted Father‘s parole officer, had not investigated his living situation, had not inquired about which classes Father had taken, and did not know whether he had participated in domestic violence assessments. She testified she had not provided a service plan to Father, and indeed, that a plan had not yet been drafted. The State then asked the court to determine that both parents had received reasonable reunification services. Both the guardian ad litem and the court expressed “grave concerns about whether the State . . . met the first requirement of reasonable efforts concerning [Father].” The court decided to postpone that determination and stated, “[U]ntil [the court] determine[s] otherwise, [the court will] have the Division continue to provide services” to both parents.
¶10 After considering the briefing from Father‘s counsel, the State, and the guardian ad litem, the juvenile court issued a written order (the March Order) stating that the court “did not order reunification services for [Father].” The trial concluded in April 2016. The court determined Father was an unfit parent, that he had neglected his children “by exposing them to domestic violence,” and had made only token efforts to support them. The court terminated Father‘s parental rights, concluding termination was in the children‘s best interests. Father appeals.
ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶11 Father raises several issues on appeal. First, during the course of trial, the children‘s foster mother testified to several hearsay statements the children made to her, and Father challenges the constitutionality of the statute under which those hearsay statements were admitted.4 Second, Father contends the
ANALYSIS
¶13 Father contends the juvenile court erred in interpreting its prior order. He asserts the court‘s Disposition Order stated that reunification services were ordered for Father, and he argues every participant understood “that the Court had ordered reunification services.” He further argues the March Order, which stated that reunification services had never been ordered, prejudiced his case. We begin by examining the March Order in greater depth.
I. Additional Background
¶14 The court‘s March Order stated that during trial, “[t]here ha[d] been discussions and confusion about whether reunification services were ordered for [Father].” This order then summarized the court‘s reasoning behind the prior Disposition Order. At the time of the disposition hearing, In re A.T., 2013 UT App 184, 307 P.3d 672, rev‘d, 2015 UT 41, 353 P.3d 131, was controlling authority. That case stated a juvenile court was
So the Division will provide reasonable services, meaning to the extent that you can take those services . . . out at the prison, you should avail yourself of those opportunities. . . . When you get out you need to immediately contact the Division and then the Division will have to expedite placement in some sort of domestic violence/anger management.
(Internal quotation marks omitted.)
¶15 The March Order provided this interpretation of the “confusing statement“:
The court‘s intended meaning was that it was not ordering the Division to provide reunification services to the father while he was in prison; the father should avail himself of any services he could while incarcerated; and when the father was released from prison, the Division should help him get into domestic violence and anger management classes.
2. Based on the Father‘s expected 10 month incarceration, there are not services that are reasonable that The Division of Child and Family Services can provide the father at this time. The 10 months remaining on the father‘s sentence pose a problem and an impediment to reasonable services.
3. The Division of Child and Family Services does not offer any services in the prison.
4. When he gets out of prison, it is reasonable to expedite services for him if he contacts The Division of Child and Family Services.
5. There may be services or classes that are offered by the prison that the father could avail himself of. If there are, the father should avail himself of those services.
6. The child and family plan for the father should be amended to include the father attending any classes in domestic violence, anger management or parenting that are available to him in prison.
¶17 The March Order concluded by stating, “At no time during the [Disposition Hearing] did the court state that reunification services were ordered for the father. The court did not order reunification services for the father.” Alternatively, the court concluded that reunification services “are a gratuity provided to parents by the Legislature” and “because there is no fundamental right to receive services, the decision to provide or
II. Abuse of Discretion
¶18 The juvenile court abused its discretion in interpreting its prior Disposition Order. The plain language of both the Disposition Order and the March Order contradict the court‘s ultimate conclusion that services were not ordered for Father.
¶19 In the Disposition Order, the court stated that based on Father‘s incarceration, there were “no services that are reasonable that [DCFS] can provide the father at this time.” (Emphasis added.) It then stated, “When he gets out of prison, it is reasonable to expedite services for him if he contacts [DCFS].” (Emphasis added.) The plain language of these statements reveals that the court did not expect DCFS to provide services for Father while he was in prison, because such services would not be reasonable. But the court further explained it was reasonable for DCFS to expedite services for Father once he was released. This indicates the court ordered expedited services for Father once he made contact with DCFS after his release.
¶20 The court attempted to clarify its determination in the March Order, but its clarification also reveals that at least some services were ordered for Father. At the disposition hearing, the court stated that DCFS “will provide reasonable services,” that Father should avail himself of classes offered at the prison, and that DCFS would help expedite placement in domestic violence or anger management classes upon his release. In the March Order, the court interpreted this statement to mean the court “was not ordering [DCFS] to provide reunification services to the father while he was in prison; . . . and when the father was released from prison, [DCFS] should help him get into domestic violence and anger management classes.” (Emphases added.) Similar to the statements in the Disposition Order, these statements demonstrate that some services were in fact ordered
¶21 The March Order attempts to clarify any confusion over whether reunification services were ordered. But both the court‘s interpretation of its oral statements at the disposition hearing and the written Disposition Order conflict with the March Order‘s ultimate conclusion that the court “did not order reunification services for the father.”
¶22 Next, the authority on which the court relied during the disposition hearing suggests the court ordered some services for Father. The March Order indicated that the juvenile court relied on In re A.T., 2013 UT App 184, 307 P.3d 672, rev‘d, 2015 UT 41, 353 P.3d 131, in determining whether reunification services were appropriate. That case, which the court notes was the controlling authority at the time, “requires the juvenile court to order reasonable services to [an incarcerated parent] unless it makes an actual determination that those services would be detrimental to the [c]hildren.”5 See id. ¶ 12 (noting that
¶23 Under section 312, the juvenile court focused on a two-part analysis: whether services would be detrimental to the
¶24 We also note that until February 2016, five days into the termination trial and a full year after the disposition hearing, all parties understood the Disposition Order to mean that the court had ordered reunification services for Father. The court stated at the disposition hearing that “the Division will provide reasonable services, meaning that to the extent that [Father] can take those services . . . at the prison, [he] should avail [himself] of those opportunities” and that once he was released from prison, “the Division will have to expedite placement in some sort of domestic violence/anger management.” In the Disposition Order, the court concluded that when Father “gets out of prison, it is reasonable to expedite services for him if he contacts [DCFS].” The disposition hearing minutes reflect that the court “order[ed] DCFS to provide reasonable reunification services for the father and children.”
¶25 In its petition to terminate parental rights, the State acknowledged that the court had ordered reunification services, and in his reply, Father confirmed that DCFS was ordered to provide reasonable reunification services. In fact, one of Father‘s defenses at trial rested on the fact that the court had ordered
¶26 Furthermore, in the March Order, the court indicated that there “have been discussions and confusion about whether reunification services were ordered” for Father. But in reviewing the transcripts, it seems the discussions and confusion were not in regard to whether services had been ordered, but instead, involved what services would be reasonable given Father‘s situation.
¶27 The discussion surrounding services first arose when the State requested a court ruling on whether “services were either extended or whether the Court finds them appropriate.” The State‘s main contention was that Father should not be able to request a service plan from DCFS where the twelve-month statutory period for reunification services had already expired.6
¶28 The court noted that “at this point, no service plan has ever been drafted, no services have ever been ordered; [the Disposition Order] was an order that [was prospective]: When [Father] gets out, expedite this.” But the main issue with which the court seemed concerned was whether the State should have to provide services considering the timing of Father‘s release from prison and the passing of the statutory deadline for services.
¶30 The discussion that preceded the briefing and the briefing itself demonstrate the court was trying to discern what services should be offered to Father given the timing issues. There is an important difference between (1) whether services were actually ordered and (2) what services would be reasonable to offer under the circumstances. The discussion revolved around the latter issue, and the former issue—whether services were originally ordered—was not raised until the State‘s briefing was submitted.
¶31 Finally, it is troubling that the confusion surrounding reunification services manifested itself only after it became clear the State‘s case was in jeopardy. During cross-examination of the DCFS caseworker, Father‘s counsel revealed that the State had undertaken minimal effort to provide services to Father. Both the court and the guardian ad litem expressed “grave concerns about whether the State . . . met the first requirement of reasonable efforts concerning [Father].” The court asked the
¶32 Under Utah law, if a court orders the State to provide reunification services, it must determine that the State made reasonable efforts to provide those services before it can terminate parental rights. See
CONCLUSION
¶34 Because the juvenile court abused its discretion in interpreting its prior order, we reverse and remand this case for a new trial.
