Appellant, A.S., sought to intervene in the dispositional phase of a child-in-need-of-assistance (CINA) proceeding concerning her granddaughter, A.G. The grandmother appeals the juvenile court’s denial of her application to intervene. We reverse.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
A.G. was born drug-affected on January 14, 1996. Three weeks later on February 7, 1996, the juvenile court temporarily removed A.G. from her parents’ custody and placed her in a foster home. See Iowa Code § 232.95 (1995). A.G.’s parents approved of the placement and the court’s order granting them supervised visitation.
Prior to A.G.’s removal from her parents’ custody, A.G.’s maternal grandmother, A.S., had given A.G. and A.G.’s mother physical and financial assistance in an effort to provide for A.G.’s needs. The grandmother was also involved in A.G.’s care during the time A.G. was hospitalized shortly before A.G.’s removal.
On the same day A.G. was taken from her parents and placed in foster care, the grandmother filed an application for intervention and custody in juvenile court in the hope that she would receive temporary custody of A.G. Nine days later, the juvenile court orally denied the grandmother’s motion and confirmed A.G.’s placement in the custody of the Iowa Department of Human Services (Department). A written order denying the application followed on March 16, 1996. The court stated that “although the prospective intervenor may have an interest in this proceeding, it does not rise to a legal right to intervene and the fact that the family relationship should be maintained, is in and of itself insufficient to allow intervention.” The court did, however, order the Department to investigate the family and home of the *402 grandmother to determine whether visitation would be in the best interest of the child and whether the grandmother’s home would be a suitable placement for the child.
Between the court’s oral order denying intervention and its subsequent written order, the grandmother sought permission from the juvenile court to allow her to petition the district court for grandparent visitation.
See
Iowa Code §§ 282.3(2) (district court may have concurrent jurisdiction upon approval by juvenile court), 598.35 (district court may order grandparent visitation under specified circumstances);
In re K.R.,
On March 18, 1996, the grandmother renewed her application for intervention, hoping to intervene before a disposition was reached in the CINA proceeding. She requested permission to intervene “at the first appropriate stage” in the proceedings and in no event later than the dispositional hearing. The grandmother did not seek to intervene in the adjudicatory stage. See id. § 232.96 (at the adjudicatory hearing the court decides whether the child is in need of assistance).
On April 5, 1996, the juvenile court adjudicated A.G. a child in need of assistance and set the dispositional hearing for May 15, 1996. The court also heard the grandmother’s renewed motion to intervene. The court denied the motion saying,
it is not the Court’s understanding of the ease law of the state of Iowa that the dispositional hearing is an appropriate time to intervene in a child in need of assistance case since the statutes are very clear that this court’s duty is to reunite the child with her parents, and the Court does not believe intervention is then appropriate, and only in the most unusual child in need of assistance would the Court find a petition to intervene appropriate_
The juvenile court disposed of the grandmother’s request for visitation by leaving that decision to the discretion of the Department.
The case proceeded to disposition at which time the child was placed in the custody of relatives of the child’s father who were licensed foster parents. The parties agree the grandmother’s requests for custody and visitation were not considered on their merits at the dispositional hearing. As of the date of appeal, the grandmother has had no visitation with her granddaughter. The grandmother has appealed.
The grandmother argues on appeal that (1) the trial court erred in ruling as a matter of law that a grandparent may not intervene in the dispositional phase of a CINA proceeding, (2) the juvenile court abused its discretion by denying her an opportunity to intervene, and (3) the juvenile court abused its discretion by denying her a forum in which to litigate and obtain grandparent visitation pursuant to Iowa Code section 598.35.
The State, A.G.’s guardian ad litem, and A.G.’s father argue that the juvenile court did not rule as a matter of law that grandparents may not intervene in the dispositional phase of a CINA proceeding. Rather, they assert, the juvenile court properly exercised its discretion in denying the grandmother’s application for intervention. For the reasons which follow, we reverse.
II. Right of Intervention in CINA Dispo-sitional Hearings.
The rules of civil procedure do not automatically apply to juvenile proceedings.
In re J.R.,
III. Legal Principles Governing Intervention.
Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 75 provides for intervention by right:
Any person interested in the subject matter of the litigation, or the success of either party to the action, or against both parties, may intervene at any time before trial begins, by joining with plaintiff or defendant or claiming adversely to both.
Iowa R. Civ. P. 75 (emphasis added). Although rule 75 gives a clear right of intervention to a party interested in the litigation, we have said the district court is “accorded a certain amount of discretion to deny intervention in proper cases.”
In re B.B.M.,
“One is ‘interested’ under rule 75 if one has a
legal right
that the proceeding will
directly
affect.”
1
In re B.B.M.,
We review the denial of a motion to intervene for correction of errors at law, giving some deference to the district court’s discretion.
In re B.B.M.,
IV. Propriety of Intervention by Grandmother.
Although intervention in a CINA case has not previously been before us, we have evaluated a grandparent’s right to intervene in the dispositional phase of an involuntary termination-of-parental-rights proceeding under Iowa Code section 232.117.
See In re J.R.,
If the court terminates the parental rights of the child’s parents, the court shall transfer the guardianship and custody of the child to one of the following:
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c. A relative or other suitable person. We held that because section 232.117(3)(c) gave grandparents, as relatives, a legal right to be considered for guardianship and custody, they possessed a sufficient legal interest in the outcome of an involuntary termination-of-parental-rights proceeding to allow intervention. Id. at 752; accord In re Chad, 318 *404 N.W.2d 213, 216 (Iowa 1982) (statute allowing “relative or other suitable person” to be considered for a custodian in termination-of-parental-rights case confers a legal interest sufficient to satisfy test for intervention). We see no basis to distinguish this termination case from the CINA case before us.
A statutory right to be considered for custody also exists in the dispositional phase of a CINA proceeding. Under section 232.102(l)(a), a grandparent may be considered for custody of the child in need of assistance:
1. After a dispositional hearing the court may enter an order transferring the legal custody of the child to one of the following for purposes of placement:
a. A relative or other suitable person. As a “relative,” a grandparent enjoys a statutory “legal right” to be considered for custody in the dispositional phase of a CINA proceeding. Therefore, the grandmother here has a clear, statutorily-created interest in the outcome of the CINA dispositional hearing. Consequently, she has a right to intervene under rule 75. To the extent the juvenile court held that intervention was inappropriate as a matter of law, the court erred.
V. Discretion to Deny Intervention.
The State argues the trial court merely exercised its discretion to deny intervention in a proper case.
See DeVoss,
We think a district court may also exercise its discretion in deciding who is a “relative” within the contemplation of section 232.102(l)(a). The term “relative” could conceivably be so broadly defined that any person with any genealogical connection to the child could intervene. Thus, a district court must consider the degree of the biological connection together with all other circumstances in deciding whether the person seeking to intervene is a “relative” and therefore, has a sufficient interest under rule 75.
Although we agree that there is room for discretion in deciding who is a “relative” under section 232.102(l)(a), we cannot defer to the juvenile court’s exercise of discretion in the present case. We find no support for the conclusion A.G.’s grandmother does not qualify as a “relative” under section 232.102(l)(a). Grandparent status signifies such a close biological relationship with a child that it alone qualifies a person as a “relative” within the meaning of section 232.102(l)(a). Therefore, we hold A.G.’s grandmother should have been allowed to intervene in the dispositional phase of this CINA proceeding. The juvenile court erred in not permitting intervention.
In reaching this conclusion, we have considered the State’s argument that grandparents should not be allowed to intervene in a CINA dispositional hearing until the parent-child relationship is severed, because a grandparent’s rights to the child are derivative of the parent’s rights.
See In re A.C.,
VI. Conclusion.
Iowa Code section 232.102(l)(a) allows the juvenile court to consider placing a child in need of assistance in the custody of a “relative or other suitable person.” This statutory provision gives A.S., as A.G.’s grandmother, a “legal interest” in the outcome of the dispositional hearing. Moreover, this interest would be directly affected by the court’s decision on custody in the CINA proceeding. Therefore, under rule 75 A.S. had a right to intervene, leaving no room for a discretionary denial of intervention by the juvenile court.
The juvenile court erred in denying A.S.’s petition to intervene in the dispositional phase of the CINA proceeding involving her granddaughter. Although we hold A.S. should be allowed to intervene, we express no opinion on her suitability to serve as guardian or custodian of her granddaughter.
Our decision that A.S. should be allowed to intervene makes it unnecessary to consider her third assignment of error regarding her desire for a forum to litigate her visitation rights. As an intervenor, A.S. will now have an opportunity to address visitation issues upon remand. This case is reversed and remanded to the juvenile court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. One is also "interested” under rule 75 if he or she has "a legal liability which will be directly enlarged or diminished by the judgment or decree" in the pending action.
In re J.R.,
