[¶ 1] N.B., the grandmother of L.R., appeals from an order of the District Court (Belfast, Worth, J.) denying her motion for kinship placement pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4005-E(2) (2018). Because the appeal is interlocutory and is barred by 22 M.R.S. § 4006 (2013), we dismiss the appeal.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 2] N.B. is L.R.’s maternal grandmother. N.B. is also the legal guardian of L.R.’s mother, C.R., who suffers from several mental illnesses and has borderline intellectual functioning. Following L.R.’s birth in April 2012, N.B. assisted C.R. in caring for the child but soon became concerned that C.R. was not consistently taking her medication and was making inappropriate choices concerning L.R.’s care. N.B. notified the Department of Health and Human Services of her concerns, and L.R. was placed in foster care in June 2012 when she was two months old.
[¶ 3] N.B. filed a motion for intervenor status, which was granted in June 2012. The Department initially provided N.B. with four hours of visitation with L.R. per week but gradually decreased visits to one hour of weekly supervised visitation. Jeopardy orders were entered against both of L.R.’s parents in November 2012.
[¶ 4] In December 2012, N.B. filed a motion pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4005-E(2) requesting that L.R. be placed with her. A placement hearing was held over two days in July and August 2013. The court heard testimony from several witnesses concerning L.R.’s attachment to her foster mother, L.R.’s attachment to N.B., N.B.’s relationship with C.R., and the emotional problems L.R. experienced following visits with N.B. The court issued a decision in August 2013 in which it denied N.B.’s motion for kinship placement, concluding that it was not in L.R.’s best interest to be placed with N.B. N.B. filed a motion to reconsider, which the court denied in October 2013. N.B. then filed her notice of appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
[¶ 5] “All appeals in child protective eases except those specifically authorized by 22 M.R.S.[] § 4006 are interlocutory appeals.” In re Kristy Y.,
[¶ 6] The effect of section 4006 is that there is no statutory right to appeal from an interlocutory order in a child-protective case. In re Dustin C.,
[¶7] N.B. argues that we may reach the merits of an interlocutory appeal in a child-protective case if one of the traditional exceptions to the final judgment rule applies. In certain situations implicating constitutional rights, we have considered arguments that an interlocutory appeal in a child-protective case falls within one of the judicially created exceptions to the final judgment rule. For instance, we considered a father’s challenge to the constitutionality of the summary preliminary hearing process in child-protective cases and determined that the statutory procedure did not violate due process. In re Kristy Y.,
[¶ 8] In In re Bailey M., we accepted a mother’s argument that the death-knell exception applied to her appeal from an order denying her motion to open her termination-of-parental-rights proceedings to the public after one of her children died under suspicious circumstances while in foster care.
[¶ 9] Because the final judgment rule is a judicially created prudential rule, we may fashion exceptions to it. Moshe Myerowitz, D.C., P.A. v. Howard,
[t]he appellate jurisdiction of the Law Court and its power to review cases[] are entirely and exclusively those plainly conferred by statute. The right of appeal is not a constitutional one; nor does it arise under the common law; it is purely statutory. The Legislature, in granting a right to appeal in certain cases, may restrict, limit or otherwise condition its availability as it sees fit.
In re Dustin C.,
The entry is:
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
. We note that N.B.’s appeal would be barred by the final judgment rule even absent the application of section 4006. Although N.B. asserts that we should reach the merits of her appeal pursuant to the death-knell exception, that exception is only available "when substantial rights of a party will be irreparably lost if review is delayed until final judgment.” Liberty v. Bennett,
