15 Conn. App. 455 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1988
The respondent father appeals from the judgment of the trial court terminating his parental rights. The respondent’s sole claim on appeal is that
The following facts, as found by the trial court, are relevant to this appeal. The respondent is the acknowledged father of two minor children, a daughter born on September 7,1981, and a second daughter born on May 23,1983. The respondent never married the children’s mother and discontinued his live-in relationship with her soon after the birth of his second daughter in 1983. The two girls were placed in foster care in early October, 1984, and were adjudicated uncared-for on December 20, 1984. The respondent was not a member of the household at the time of this adjudication, but was sent administrative review notices by the petitioner, the department of children and youth services (DCYS). On August 2, 1985, the petitioner filed petitions to terminate the parental rights of both the mother and the respondent.
A full trial was held before the court on various dates in January and February, 1987. By memorandum of decision issued June 2,1987, the court found that the petitioner had established, by clear and convincing evidence, grounds for the termination of parental rights in the children, and thereby ordered that such rights be terminated. Only the respondent father has appealed from the court’s judgment.
Although seven witnesses testified in the trial court, the respondent has provided us with the transcribed testimony of only three witnesses.
A claim of error cannot be predicated on an assumption that the trial court acted incorrectly. Long v. Loughlin, 171 Conn. 291, 292-93, 370 A.2d 925 (1976). Rather, we must assume that, absent evidence to the contrary, the trial court acted properly. Jacobsen v. Jacobsen, 177 Conn. 259, 263, 413 A.2d 854 (1979).
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
General Statutes § 17-43a (b) provides in pertinent part: “The superior court upon hearing and notice, as provided in sections 45-61d and 45-61f, may grant such petition if it finds, upon clear and convincing evidence, that the termination is in the best interest of the child and that ... (2) the parents of a child who has been found by the superior court to have been neglected or uncared for in a prior proceeding have failed to achieve such degree of personal rehabilitation as would encourage the belief that within a reasonable time, considering the age and needs of the child, they could assume a responsible position in the life of the child . . . .”
The most harmful of the respondent’s omissions is his failure to provide us with the testimony of the children’s foster mother upon which the trial court relied heavily in its decision that termination of the respondent’s parental rights was in the best interest of the children.