IN RE CHILD OF LACY H.
Docket: Pen-19-13
MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT
Decision: 2019 ME 110
Decided: July 11, 2019
2019 ME 110
Submitted On Briefs: May 30, 2019
Reporter of Decisions
Pаnel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.
[¶1] Lacy H. appeals from a judgment of the District Court (Bangor, Jordan, J.) terminating her parental rights to her child.1 She argues that the intervention of the Governor‘s office in the decision of the Department of Health and Human Services to cancel or delay her trial placement violated her due procеss and equal protection rights, and that the court erred and abused its discretion in determining that she was unfit and that the termination of her parental rights was in the child‘s best interest. We affirm the judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶2] The Department filed a child protection petition and a petition for an order of preliminary protection in February 2017, soon after the child was born. See
[¶3] In May 2017, the court (Jordan, J.) held a jeopardy hearing that the mother did not attend. See
[¶4] After an initial judicial review and permanency planning hearing held in October 2017, the court ordered the mother to participate in a diagnostic evaluation in November 2017. The сourt held another judicial review and permanency planning hearing the following month, ordering no change in custody.
[¶5] The Department petitioned for termination of the mother‘s parental rights in January 2018. The Department alleged that, after ten months, the mother had relapsed in her substance abuse; she had failed to attend and participate consistently in counseling, case management, anger management, and drug screens; and she remained under threat of extradition because of a lifetime warrant for her arrest in Georgia.
[¶7] The court held a trial on the termination petition over the course of three days in November 2018. It then entered a judgment granting the petition to terminate the mother‘s parental rights after reaching findings of fact by clear and convincing evidence.
The child was born premature. He was born drug affected due to the mother‘s consistent use of marijuana throughout her pregnancy.... The mother did very poorly as far as engaging in services and addressing the jeopardy issues for a substantial portion of the history of this case.
[A doctor] conducted a Court ordered diаgnostic evaluation for the mother. He concluded, and the Court hereby finds, that the mother‘s diagnosis is an Antisocial Personality Disorder. This diagnosis is very difficult to treat due to the person‘s irresponsibility, the tendency to fabricate, and difficulties being honest with a clinician. The prognosis for change with such a diagnosis is poor. The Court finds his report persuasive. The Court also finds that the mother has done very well, in structured supervised settings, in parenting her child (with a couple of exceptions). The mother can learn new cues from the child in that framework. However, left to her own dеvices when she would be on her own, she is likely to exhibit bad judgment in terms of the people she allows to care for her son, bad judgment in terms of the people with whom she establishes relationships in terms of their impact on her son, and her likelihood of having unstable living arrangements. The Court concludes that she is also likely to place her own needs and desires ahead of those of her child.
The Court finds that the testimony of other witnesses is consistent with [the evaluating doctor]‘s analysis. The mother told [the doctor] in one of her sessions, in either December 2017 or January 2018, that she had not used drugs for forty-one (41) months. . . . The Court notes that on December 11, 2017, she admitted to other witnesses that she had relapsed and used Xanax and Oxycontin. . . . Numerous incidents were related by unbiased professionals and others concerning remarks and conduct by the mother, which she then subsequеntly denied. Her account of being clean for forty-one months does not line up with any of the rest of the history she related regarding her life in Georgia, traveling the country and living on the streets, and eventually becoming pregnant and moving to Maine. However, she also told her therapist . . . thаt she had relapsed in December of 2017. She told him that she had been clean and sober for more than three years prior to that relapse. The Court finds that her accounts are
not credible regarding her maintenance of sobriety. The Court finds that after getting off to a slow start the mother has made a good faith effort to correct the underlying problems. The Court finds, however, that her late start has resulted in an inability for the Court to conclude at this time that jeopardy has been alleviated. The Court finds that her judgment regarding unsafe people is impaired and her ability to care for her child on her own is also unsafе. The Court finds by clear and convincing evidence that she is unable to rectify the problems that brought this case before the Court in a time reasonably calculated to meet the needs of the child. The Court additionally finds that the best interests of the child would be to terminate the parental rights of the mother and free him up for adoption. The above findings are all by clear and convincing evidence.
The mother timely appealed. See
II. DISCUSSION
[¶8] The mother argues that (A) the court erred in terminating her parental rights because her rights of due process and equal protection of the law were violated when the Governor‘s office interceded to prevent or delay the trial placement of the child with her in May 2018, and (B) the court erred and abused its discretion in finding parental unfitness and determining that termination of the mother‘s parental rights was in the child‘s best interest.
A. Due Process and Equal Protection
[¶9] The mother argues that the interruption of the plan for a trial placement deprived her of a fundamentally fair process and was discriminatory as demonstrated by Governor Paul LePage‘s public statements concerning people with gang-related histories entering Maine from other states. At the terminаtion hearing, the mother argued to the trial court that a trial placement should have happened in May 2018, but she did not argue that entering a judgment terminating her parental rights after that placement decision would violate her rights of due process or equal protection. Because the constitutional issue has been raised for the first time on appeal, we review the due process and equal protection issues for obvious error. See In re Child of Kaysean M., 2018 ME 156, ¶ 8, 197 A.3d 525. Obvious error is error that is “seriously prejudicial error tending to produce a manifest injustice.” Id. (quotation marks omitted).
[¶10] The Governor is the head of the Executive Branch of government in Maine. See
[¶11] The involvement of the Governor or the Commissioner in a child protection matter does not, therefore, violate Maine statutory law or the Maine Constitution. Thus, the question is not whether the Governor, Commissioner, or other Executive Branch actors in the Department have been involved in а case; the question is whether the particular actions taken interfered
[¶12] In the matter before us, there is no evidence of precisely what actions or suggestions the Governor made to the Department concerning the trial placement. Although the anticipated trial placement did not occur as scheduled, the decision not to implement a trial placement in May 2018 was communicated in the context of a family team meeting that, by design, provided an opportunity to adjust the trajectory of rehabilitation and reunification efforts. Throughout the proceedings, the mother was represented by counsel. See
[¶13] At the termination hearing, the court was presented with evidence that the caseworker believed that a trial placement would not have been safe for the child as of May 2018, that visits in less restrictive environments had proved detrimental to the child, and that the diagnostic evaluation, which had been completed before the trial placement was scheduled to begin, underscored the safety concerns of the caseworker. The record discloses that there was a disagreement within the Department about whether to attempt a trial placemеnt, and a decision was made by the Department, with undefined input from the Governor, not to attempt the trial placement in May 2018.
[¶14] The evidence of a disagreement among the Executive Branch decisionmakers did not require the court to conclude that the Governor or any оther Executive Branch actor either (1) acted arbitrarily2 or in a way that deprived the mother of fundamental fairness,3 see
[¶15] Based on the evidence presented at the termination hearing, held six
own. The court found that she was not—even with the additional services afforded up to the time of trial—able to protect the child from the jеopardy identified by the court a year and a half earlier. On these facts, the court did not commit obvious error—or any error of fact or law, whether constitutional or statutory in dimension—when it entered its judgment seven months after the Department‘s decision on the trial placemеnt.
B. Finding of Unfitness and Determination of Best Interest
[¶16] Based on the court‘s findings of fact, which are supported by the evidentiary record, the court did not err in its ultimate finding that, despite her recent efforts, the mother remains unable to protect the child from jeopardy and those circumstances are unlikely to change within a time thаt is reasonably calculated to meet the child‘s needs. See
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Ezra A.R. Willey, Esq., Willey Law Offices, Bangor, for appellant mother
Aaron M. Frey, Attorney General, and Hunter C. Umphrey, Asst. Atty. Gen., Office of the Attorney General, Augusta, for appellee Department of Health and Human Services
Bangor District Court docket number PC-2017-20
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY
Notes
First, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government‘s interest, including the function involved and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.”
In re Kristy Y., 2000 ME 98, ¶ 6, 752 A.2d 166 (quoting Balian v. Bd. of Licensure in Medicine, 1999 ME 8, ¶ 10, 722 A.2d 364).
