STATE OF UTAH, IN THE INTEREST OF A.W. AND A.W., PERSONS UNDER EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE. A.W., Appellant, v. STATE OF UTAH, Appellee.
No. 20180150-CA
THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
November 23, 2018
2018 UT App 217
Fourth District Juvenile Court, American Fork Department. The Honorable Suchada P. Bazzelle. No. 1127762.
Sean D. Reyes, Carol L.C. Verdoia, and John M. Peterson, Attorneys for Appellee
Martha Pierce, Guardian ad Litem
JUDGE DIANA HAGEN authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and DAVID N. MORTENSEN concurred.
HAGEN, Judge:
¶1 The Utah Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS) removed Child and her younger sister from their parent‘s home following a domestic violence incident and reports of sexual abuse perpetrated by the appellant, their father (Father). After an investigation, the State filed criminal charges against Father and DCFS filed a child welfare petition in juvenile court. The juvenile court found that Father had sexually abused Child but nonetheless ordered reunification services on the
¶2 Father argues that the juvenile court erred in terminating his parental rights for various reasons. First, Father contends that the court violated his due process rights by delaying reunification services while his criminal charges were still pending and by considering facts not in evidence when deciding to terminate his parental rights. Because Father failed to preserve these arguments below, we decline to consider their merits.
¶3 Next, Father argues that the court erred in determining that DCFS made reasonable efforts to provide him with reunification services and in finding that he was an unfit or incompetent parent. Father has failed to demonstrate that either of these determinations was against the clear weight of the evidence. Accordingly, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶4 In March 2016, Child reported to an extended family member that Father had performed oral sex on her when she was eight years old. Child also disclosed that her mother (Mother) told her to keep it a secret. After Child‘s statement was reported to the police, DCFS immediately removed Child and her younger sister from Mother and Father‘s care. The State also filed criminal charges against Father based on Child‘s report.
¶6 Father admitted that he remembered touching his daughter sexually after taking two sleeping pills, but he maintained that he did not recall performing oral sex on her. Based on Child‘s report and Father‘s admission, the court found that Child was abused and that there was a presumption against reunification. Despite the presumption against reunification, the court followed DCFS‘s recommendation and ordered that Father participate in reunification services and undergo testing to determine his treatment needs. The court also set the primary goal for Child and her younger sister as returning to their parents’ care. To accomplish this goal, the court ordered that DCFS develop a child and family plan that stated the duties of the parties in working toward reunification and permanency. At a hearing in May 2016, at which Father was present with counsel, the juvenile court received a completed plan from DCFS, reviewed the plan with the parties, and ordered Father and Mother to comply with it.
¶7 At the same hearing, the court found that DCFS “had made reasonable efforts to finalize the child and family plan and move the children toward permanency, and services offered by the Division have been reasonable.” Father did not object to the court‘s findings. The order also adopted the child and family plan, ordered compliance with it, and directed Father to complete a parental fitness and psycho-sexual evaluation and comply with any evaluation recommendations. In addition, the
¶8 In June 2016, DCFS successfully moved for a court order granting temporary guardianship of Child and her younger sister to their maternal grandparents. In August 2016, DCFS submitted a progress report to the juvenile court acknowledging that Father had completed substance abuse and psycho-sexual evaluations and requesting that the child and family plan adopt the recommendations from both treatment evaluations. During a hearing at which both Mother and Father were present, the court ordered that the child and family plan be amended in accordance with DCFS‘s request and made a finding that DCFS had made reasonable efforts to “finalize the child[ren‘s] service plan and its permanency goal.” Father did not object. The updated child and family plan ordered Father to complete a domestic violence assessment, update DCFS about his substance abuse treatment and testing, provide updates to DCFS and the juvenile court about his ongoing criminal case regarding Child‘s sexual abuse, and complete services recommended in his psycho-sexual and substance abuse evaluations.
¶9 Father‘s substance abuse evaluation recommended that he participate in outpatient treatment, abstain from the use of alcohol and drugs, and attend a recovery skills group. Father‘s psycho-sexual evaluation recommended further treatment to address Father‘s sexual abuse of Child. The evaluator specifically recommended that Father complete his outpatient substance abuse treatment program, “begin addressing the actual incident of sexually inappropriate behavior,” and submit to random drug testing. The evaluation also stated that the evaluator should be informed if Father was eventually convicted of a sex crime so that he could update his recommendations.
¶11 Additionally, the juvenile court ordered that Father submit to random drug testing at least eight times per month. In March 2017, DCFS requested and the court ordered that Father‘s testing be increased to two or three times per week. Following a hearing held the same month, the court expressed concern in a written order about “[F]ather‘s [urine analysis] compliance issues.” Thereafter, the juvenile court terminated all other reunification services but ordered Father to continue drug and alcohol testing.
¶12 In April 2017, DCFS petitioned for termination of Father‘s parental rights, alleging that he had “failed to remedy the circumstances that caused the [c]hildren to be removed from his care.” Specifically, DCFS alleged that Father‘s criminal charges had not been resolved, leaving his ability to provide care and stability for his children in question; his compliance with drug testing was “inconsistent“; he had failed to release information about his progress in therapy and domestic violence treatment to DCFS; and he had not obtained independent housing. The petition also stated that Child and her younger sister had “thrived in the care of their grandparents.” As a result, DCFS contended that it was “strictly necessary and in the best interests of the children” to terminate Father‘s parental rights.
¶13 Before the trial on termination of Father‘s parental rights, Father pled guilty to child abuse recklessly causing serious physical injury, a third degree felony. The district court placed
¶14 At Father‘s termination trial in September and October 2017, the State presented testimony from Child‘s therapist, Father‘s psycho-sexual evaluator, Child‘s maternal grandmother, and the DCFS permanency worker assigned to Father‘s case. Child‘s therapist testified that he had witnessed “nothing but
¶15 Father‘s psycho-sexual evaluator testified that he had reinterpreted the results of Father‘s initial tests after he was notified that Father pled guilty to the criminal charges that arose out of Father‘s sexual abuse of Child. The evaluator explained that, because some of his results “came up defensive,” which may have indicated that Father had been dishonest, Father‘s admission that he had sexually abused Child gave additional meaning to Father‘s test results.
¶16 The DCFS permanency worker testified that since March 2016 Father had participated in only two individual counseling sessions to address his sexual abuse of Child. The permanency worker further testified that Father had not provided any proof that he engaged in individual therapy sessions to address “sexual appropriateness” as ordered by the court in the November 2016 hearing. When she called the counseling service to obtain the records for DCFS, it confirmed that Father had attended only two individual sessions. In addition, she explained that DCFS was notified the day before trial that Father had only completed his domestic violence training a few weeks before the termination trial.
¶17 Father testified on his own behalf and presented the testimony of his mother, sister, and substance abuse counselor. Father testified that he completed substance abuse counseling and domestic violence treatment, but he admitted that he did not complete therapy sessions to specifically address his sexual abuse of Child. Father also recalled attending four domestic violence counseling sessions between April and August 2016 and attending only one additional individual treatment session, despite recommendations that he attend more. Father once again
¶18 At the conclusion of the termination trial, the juvenile court determined that Father was “an unfit or incompetent parent.” In support of this determination, the court found that Father‘s delay in participating in domestic violence treatment “left insufficient time for him to demonstrate that he ha[d] internalized and implemented the treatment and met the objective of the Child and Family Plan,” that Father‘s “compliance with court-ordered [drug and alcohol] testing was inconsistent,” that Father “willfully decided not to comply” with his testing obligations, and that Father participated “in one individual counseling session to address his sexual abuse of [Child].”
¶19 In addition, the court found that Father‘s extensive defense at trial of “his lack of progress in treating the sexual abuse issue” was “without merit.” Specifically, the court rejected Father‘s assertions that he had complied with each of the court‘s treatment orders and that his substance abuse and domestic violence treatment adequately addressed his sexual abuse of Child. The court remained unconvinced, in the absence of expert testimony, that Father‘s consumption of drugs and alcohol was the sole cause of Child‘s sexual abuse. But assuming it was, the court reasoned that Father was “solely responsible for having
¶20 Finally, after concluding that “DCFS made reasonable efforts toward [Father] to pursue a goal of reunification” and that Father “was given ample information, support[,] and communication from DCFS to achieve the objectives of the Child and Family Plan,” the court terminated Father‘s parental rights and awarded temporary guardianship and custody to the children‘s maternal grandparents, pending adoption.4
¶21 Father appeals.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
¶22 Father argues that the juvenile court committed four errors in terminating his parental rights. First, Father contends that the juvenile court erred by failing to maintain the
¶23 Father‘s third contention is that the evidence did not support the juvenile court‘s finding that DCFS had made reasonable efforts to provide him with reunification services. Juvenile courts are afforded “wide latitude of discretion as to the judgments [they] arrive[] at.” In re K.F., 2009 UT 4, ¶ 18, 201 P.3d 985 (quotation simplified). As such, “[w]e apply a clearly erroneous standard in determining whether the juvenile court‘s findings are based upon sufficient evidence.” Id. “A finding of fact is clearly erroneous only when, in light of the evidence supporting the finding, it is against the clear weight of the evidence.” In re K.K., 2017 UT App 58, ¶ 2, 397 P.3d 745 (per curiam).
¶24 Finally, Father contends that the juvenile court‘s grounds for terminating his parental rights were against the clear weight of the evidence. When considering whether to overturn a juvenile court‘s decision to terminate parental rights, “we review
ANALYSIS
I. Father‘s Due Process Claims
¶25 Father‘s first two claims of error—that the juvenile court improperly delayed his case pending the resolution of the criminal charges against him and that it improperly considered evidence outside of the record—fail for lack of preservation. “Under our adversarial system, the parties have the duty to identify legal issues and bring arguments before an impartial tribunal[.]” State v. Johnson, 2017 UT 76, ¶ 14, 416 P.3d 443. “When a party fails to raise and argue an issue in the [court below], it has failed to preserve the issue, and an appellate court will not typically reach that issue absent a valid exception to preservation.” Id. ¶ 15. Furthermore, even if a legal argument was adequately preserved in the court below or an exception to preservation applies, a party must provide a “citation to the record showing that the issue was preserved for review[] or a statement of grounds for seeking review of an issue not preserved.”
¶26 Here, Father raises his constitutional claims for the first time on appeal and makes no argument that an exception to preservation applies. In fact, Father argued in his opening brief that his constitutional claims “were not required to be preserved.”5 To the contrary, it is well established that Utah
¶27 Accordingly, we decline to address Father‘s due process claims.
II. “Reasonable Efforts” Finding
¶28 Father next claims that the juvenile court‘s finding that DCFS made reasonable efforts to provide him with reunification services “is against the clear weight of the evidence.” Specifically, Father argues that DCFS failed to provide his psycho-sexual evaluator with information that would have impacted the evaluator‘s recommendations. As a result, he contends that he was afforded an inadequate opportunity to comply with the recommendations in the addendum to his psycho-sexual evaluation and that DCFS deprived him of “reasonable visitation” with his daughters. We reject these arguments and affirm the juvenile court‘s finding that DCFS made reasonable efforts to provide Father with reunification services.
¶29 When reunification services are ordered, the juvenile court must find that DCFS made “reasonable efforts” to provide
¶30 Here, without acknowledging that the juvenile court ordered reunification services in a case in which there was a statutory presumption against doing so, see
¶31 Father also ignores the several times in the record in which the juvenile court made an unchallenged periodic
¶32 Furthermore, although Father accurately asserts that the addendum was not provided to him until after reunification services were terminated, he fails to show how he was prejudiced by this timing. The juvenile court did not consider the addendum to the evaluation in determining that Father had failed to participate in reunification services and comply with previous treatment recommendations. As Father acknowledges, the court considered the addendum only to determine “what [was] needed to fully rehabilitate [Father] in light of his criminal conviction” for the purpose of deciding what was in the children‘s best interests going forward.
¶33 As to Father‘s argument that DCFS failed to provide him with reasonable visitation, both Child‘s therapist and the DCFS permanency worker testified at trial that visitation was dependent on what Child and her treatment providers decided was in her best interest. From the outset of his juvenile court case, Father‘s visitation with Child was limited due to his admitted sexual abuse of Child.7 And although the juvenile court
¶34 In sum, Father has failed to identify anywhere in the record that shows DCFS failed to make reasonable efforts to provide him with reunification services and, accordingly, we affirm the juvenile court‘s findings.
III. Grounds for Termination
¶35 Finally, Father contends that the grounds cited by the juvenile court in terminating his parental rights are against the clear weight of the evidence. Under
¶36 The juvenile court terminated Father‘s parental rights on two bases—that Father is an unfit or incompetent parent and
¶37 We need not consider the juvenile court‘s alternative ground for termination because there was sufficient evidence to support the finding that Father was an unfit or incompetent parent.
¶38 Nevertheless, Father argues that while his “prior conduct did constitute prima facie evidence of [his] unfitness,” he “could demonstrate parental fitness” because he complied with reunification services and the juvenile court‘s orders. This argument ignores the juvenile court‘s specific finding that “[a]s of the date of the trial, [Father‘s] sexual abuse of [Child was] almost entirely untreated on his part.” The court ordered Father to complete therapy to specifically address his sexually abusive behavior and “sexual appropriateness.” Father does not dispute that he attended only one or two therapy sessions that specifically addressed sexual appropriateness. Instead, Father contends that his substance abuse treatment adequately addressed the sexual abuse because he would not have sexually abused Child if he had not been intoxicated. But Father‘s attendance of substance abuse therapy does not excuse his failure to complete “sexual appropriateness” therapy as the juvenile court expressly ordered. Furthermore, Father‘s entire
¶39 Overall, the record supports the juvenile court‘s finding that Father‘s behavior demonstrated a “remarkably passive attitude toward his reunification services.” Not only did Father fail to comply with the court‘s order for drug and alcohol testing and order for individual sex abuse therapy, but Father also delayed participating in other services until just before his termination trial. For example, the court ordered Father to receive and comply with a domestic violence evaluation in early 2016. Father did not begin domestic violence treatment until nearly a year later and did not complete it until a few weeks before his termination trial. The record shows that Father had many opportunities to meaningfully participate in reunification services and demonstrate his fitness and successful parental adjustment from the outset of the juvenile court proceedings but failed to do so. As such, the evidence supports a finding that Father was an unfit parent because he sexually abused Child and because he failed to adequately remedy the circumstances that led to that abuse.
CONCLUSION
¶40 Because Father failed to preserve his claim that the juvenile court violated his due process rights and has not demonstrated that an exception to the preservation rule applies, we decline to address his constitutional arguments. We reject Father‘s other arguments and affirm the juvenile court‘s determinations that DCFS made reasonable efforts to provide reunification services and that Father‘s sexual abuse of Child
HAGEN, Judge
