State of Utah, in the interest of S.F. and C.F., persons under eighteen years of age. K.F., Appellant, v. State of Utah, Appellee.
Case No. 20090484-CA
IN THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
January 12, 2012
2012 UT App 10
AMENDED OPINION
The Honorable Mary T. Noonan
Attorneys: Neil D. Skousen, Orem, for Appellant
Mark L. Shurtleff and John M. Peterson, Salt Lake City, for Appellee
Martha Pierce, Salt Lake City, Guardian ad Litem
Before Judges Orme, Roth, and Christiansen.
CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:
¶1 K.F. (Father) appeals the juvenile court order terminating his parental rights to his children, S.F. and C.F. (the Children). Father argues that in failing to comply with1 the Juvenile Court Act of 1996 after the Children were returned to the Division of Child and Family Services’ (DCFS) custody for the second time, the juvenile court exceeded its jurisdiction and violated his due process rights. See
BACKGROUND3
¶2 Father and H.F. (Mother), who is now deceased,4 are the biological parents of S.F., who was born in 2003, and C.F., who was born in 2006. The Children were placed in DCFS‘s protective custody on August 14, 2007. At a hearing on October 9, 2007, the parents stipulated to certain factual findings, thereby allowing the juvenile court to adjudicate the Children as neglected. Based upon this finding of neglect, the juvenile court ordered DCFS to continue its custody and guardianship of the Children in an out-of-home placement. Specifically, the court entered the following conclusions of law:
Pursuant to
Utah Code Ann. § [78A-6-105(25)(a) (2008)] , the [C]hildren are neglected in that [they] have been subjected to mistreatment . . . ; the [C]hildren lack proper parental care by reason of the fault or habits of [M]other and [Father]; [M]other and [Father] fail or refuse to provide the necessary or proper subsistence, education, medical care, or any other care necessary for the health, safety and well being of the [C]hildren; and the [C]hildren are at risk of being abused and/or neglected because another minor in the home has been abused and/or neglected.5
I. August 12, 2008 Permanency Hearing
¶4 At the August 12, 2008 permanency hearing, the juvenile court returned custody and guardianship of the Children to Father. The court found that Father, “substantially complied with the treatment plan, reunification of the [C]hildren [with Father] is probable, and extension of services is in the best interest of the [C]hildren.” The court further found, “[I]t is safe [and] appropriate to return [the C]hildren to . . . Father. . . Father has substantially complied with the service plan goals.” The court modified its
Dad, I am returning physical and legal custody to you today by court order. The responsibility that you have to the [c]ourt and to the kids remains in place to keep them safe, and to continue to work with the agency on . . . an in-home plan, because they‘ll be at home rather than out of home.
The court ordered DCFS to create a new service plan and scheduled a review hearing on November 7, 2008. The court also emphasized, “[W]hat we‘ll be looking for when next we‘re in court is [to] see how you‘re doing with the kids at home [and] to answer any questions that there might be under the new service plan ....” At the end of the hearing, the court added, “[On] November 7th we‘ll be back in court to check on everybody‘s progress, see how the school year is going, see how daycare is going, visitation and the like.” On September 25, 2008, Father agreed to a service plan that included ensuring that Mother would have only authorized contact with the Children and would not enter the family home.7
II. November 3, 2008 Hearing
¶5 Just one month after Father entered into the service plan on October 27, 2008, law enforcement officers responded to two separate incidents of domestic violence involving both parents at Father‘s home. On November 3, 2008, the juvenile court held a hearing on DCFS‘s October 30, 2008 Motion for Expedited Placement in Temporary Custody and Verified Petition for Expedited Custody. After receiving the responding officers’ testimonies, the court found that Father‘s
confrontation of [M]other was an inappropriate response. Given the history, [F]ather should have backed out of the home and called the police immediately and sought redress in that manner. Father should have kept the [C]hildren
completely protected, and his actions are not consistent with the protection of these [C]hildren.
¶6 As to the incident that occurred later on October 27, the court found that Father
told law enforcement that he had observed [M]other damaging his car and he confronted her. [F]ather again chose to confront [M]other about the damage to the car, subjecting the [C]hildren to exposure to further harmful violent behavior on the part of the parents. The [C]hildren were in the home during this incident. There was yelling between the parents.
¶7 On a state-provided shelter order form entitled “Custody Hearing Findings and Order,” the court concluded, “[Father‘s] . . . actions, omissions, or habitual action create an environment that poses a threat to the child‘s health or safety . . . .” See
¶8 Father stipulated to the removal of the Children and stipulated to the majority of the facts DCFS presented in its Verified Petition for Expedited Custody and at the hearing. But Father contested the State‘s new factual allegations that relied on Mother‘s credibility, and he argued at the hearing that the court should not base any of its findings on Mother‘s version of the October 27 events. The court recognized that while “[n]ot every allegation in the petition has been addressed[] as an evidentiary matter,” “the parents’ conduct continue[d] to place the [C]hildren in danger” and, thus, it was appropriate to remove them from Father‘s custody. As to “[t]he rest of the factual
¶9 At the December 2, 2008 pretrial hearing, the court denied Father‘s request for oral argument on whether reunification could be extended because Father had not yet filed the required motion. But the court scheduled a hearing on December 8, 2008, in anticipation of Father‘s filing of a written motion for reunification services. Additionally, the court scheduled a trial on the State‘s Petition for Termination of Parental Rights, which the State had filed at the pretrial hearing. At the December 2 hearing, Father‘s counsel confirmed, “[M]y understanding is . . . that we [a]re going to have an opportunity to try to argue for reunification services prior to going forward with the [termination of parental rights].”
III. December 8, 2008 Hearing
¶10 In Father‘s Motion for Reunification Services and at the December 8, 2008 hearing, Father argued that reunification services were justified because, among other reasons, he recognized that he needed to place the Children‘s welfare and safety first and to obey the court‘s no-contact order with Mother. Father conceded that he violated the service plan, which was grounds for not offering reunification services. However, he urged the juvenile court to give him a second chance and to consider his positive accomplishments and the Children‘s best interests. Father stated, “In light of the [C]hildren‘s obvious strong bond to [me], it would be in the [C]hildren‘s best interests to order reunification services and to not terminate [my] parental rights.”9 According to Father, the Children‘s bond was demonstrated by the caseworker‘s opinion that “[t]he [C]hildren were very excited to see their father” at a supervised visit, “mak[ing] it very
¶11 The court inquired of Father whether he had taken any measures to dissolve his marriage, and Father‘s counsel responded that he did not believe anything had been filed. The court also questioned Father about his admitted shortcomings, and Father‘s counsel responded that one of Father‘s shortcomings was the October 27 domestic violence incident that occurred in front of S.F.
¶12 The court also inquired of Father and the State how many times it had previously adjudicated the Children as neglected. Father‘s counsel replied that it was at least once. The State responded that the court had adjudicated the Children as neglected by Father after they were removed in August 2007 and again after they were returned to DCFS‘s custody in November 2008. The State contended that no further adjudication was needed because the court had made factual findings that the majority of the State‘s allegations in its Verified Petition for Expedited Custody were supported by clear and convincing evidence.
¶13 Although acknowledging the Children‘s bond with Father, the court denied reunification services pursuant to
The bottom line is that the parents have a volatile relationship. The parents have behaved aggressively with one another and in the presence of the [C]hildren on more than one occasion. The parents remain married. The parents are apparently committed to that union. That union, by definition, puts the [C]hildren at risk.
[F]ather, it appears to the [c]ourt, is either unwilling or unable to give up that relationship, . . . nor does he indicate today that he intends to.
In addition, it is clear that [F]ather is either unwilling or unable to put the [C]hildren first. These [C]hildren are so young. They deserve permanency in a safe and appropriate family. The law allows, in fact requires, that this [c]ourt make every effort to [e]nsure that they grow up in a safe and appropriate home.
¶14 In denying further reunification services to Father, the court also considered that DCFS had already provided reunification services for one year, which included evaluations, individual and family counseling for Father and the Children, parenting classes, and visitation services for Father and the Children. Additionally, the court considered that the family had received protective supervision services between August and October 2008. The court concluded, “There are no additional services that can be pulled out of the hat at this point in time to address the concerns that remain rather static and rather constant across all the months that this [c]ourt has had jurisdiction.” At the end of the hearing, Father declined a pretrial hearing and mediation and stated that he instead “just want[ed] to go straight to trial.”
IV. January 8, 2009 Order To Lift the No-Contact Order
¶15 On December 22, 2008, Father moved the court to lift or modify the no-contact order between him and Mother, arguing that “he [would] be disadvantaged at trial if he [could] not work with [M]other . . . to improve their marital relationship generally, to attend couples counseling and other therapeutic settings, and attend church services together.” In recognition that this case was proceeding to the termination stage, Father also asserted that he was prepared to offer evidence at trial from his LDS bishop and an LDS Social Services therapist “to demonstrate the need to preserve the family relationship and to not terminate parental rights.” Neither the guardian ad litem (GAL)
V. Termination Trial
¶16 The case proceeded to a three-day trial on the termination of Father‘s and Mother‘s parental rights, which began February 3, 2009, and concluded March 3. At the close of the State‘s evidence, Father and Mother jointly moved the juvenile court for a directed verdict, arguing that the State had failed to meet its burden of showing that termination was in the Children‘s best interests. The court denied the motion and ultimately terminated Father‘s parental rights. The court found,
[F]ather fail[ed] to recognize [M]other‘s mental health issues and how these issues have negatively affected the [C]hildren or his relationship with [M]other. [F]ather testified that [M]other‘s mental health issues do not affect their relationship and further testified that [M]other has no mental health issues as of the date of trial. [F]ather clearly has chosen to stay with [M]other and continue their relationship even though this [c]ourt found that [M]other had failed to substantially comply with the DCFS service plan at [her] permanency trial in June 2008 and is still not in substantial compliance.
¶17 Additionally, the court found,
[F]rom the Spring of 2008 through the Autumn of 2008, there have been approximately eight . . . separate domestic violence incidents between the parents which have required police involvement. The [C]hildren have been present for some of these incidents and were aware of other incidents. The [c]ourt finds these domestic violence incidents severe in nature. . . . The parents fail to recognize the negative impact that these domestic violence incidents have on the [C]hildren or the risk to these [C]hildren as a result.
In August 2008, the [c]ourt made it very clear that there would be no contact between [M]other and the [C]hildren and [F]ather understood he had the duty to protect and enforce the [c]ourt‘s order. [F]ather committed to the [c]ourt that he would place the [C]hildren first; however, that commitment was extremely short lived. [F]ather failed to protect and willfully violated this [c]ourt‘s order a mere 12 weeks later. [F]ather willfully imposed his ideas over what, in fact, was safe for the [C]hildren and over the specific needs of the [C]hildren to be protected.
¶19 The court also found that the parents had violated the court‘s November 3, 2008 no-contact order.
[I]mmediately after [the November 3] hearing, the parents had contact and in fact, another domestic violence incident ensued. [M]other either jumped out of the car or was pushed by [F]ather, although law enforcement indicated after looking at the car, it would have been difficult for [F]ather to accomplish this. Again, the parents willfully chose to violate this [c]ourt‘s order. Again, [M]other chose to engage in this type of behavior and [F]ather chose to confront or deal with [M]other, rather than walking away from the car and seeking assistance from the police station, which was within walking distance. [F]ather testified that he felt there was no danger so he attempted to drive [with Mother in the car] to the police station, even though there had been [two] domestic violence incidents less than one week previous.
¶20 The court based its termination of Father‘s parental rights on the following grounds: first, Father neglected the Children, see
VI. Father‘s Rule 59 Motion and the Juvenile Court‘s Amendment of Prior Orders
¶21 On June 5, 2009, Father moved the juvenile court to order a new trial or to amend the order terminating his parental rights under rule 59 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure (rule 59 motion). See
¶22 After Father filed his rule 59 motion, the court amended two of its previous orders. On June 30, 2009, the court amended its May 27, 2009 Order on Reunification, retitling it “Amended Order on Reunification and Permanency Order” and adding a
[O]n December 8, 2008 at the disposition/permanency hearing, this [c]ourt found that reunification services were not appropriate to [F]ather. Specifically, this [c]ourt found that the static and constant issue in this case has been the volatile relationship between the parents. They have behaved aggressively with one another and in front of the [C]hildren. They remain married and that union places the [C]hildren at risk. [F]ather is unable or unwilling to give up that relationship nor does he intend to as of today‘s hearing. [F]ather is not able or not willing to put the [C]hildren and their needs first. The [C]hildren need permanency and a safe and appropriate environment. The appropriate goal at this time is adoption. The matter was set for trial on the State‘s Petition to Terminate Parental Rights.
¶23 The court denied the portion of Father‘s rule 59 motion that was grounded on rule 59(a)(1) because Father failed to file an affidavit, as required by the rule. See
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
¶24 Father appeals the juvenile court‘s orders terminating reunification services, denying his directed verdict motion, terminating his parental rights, and denying his rule 59 motion. Father‘s central argument on appeal is that, in failing to hold statutorily-mandated child welfare proceedings, the juvenile court exceeded its subject matter jurisdiction and violated his due process rights. Much of Father‘s due process argument relies on his contention that the Children‘s return to DCFS‘s custody in November 2008 required the juvenile court to adjudicate the Children again in order to obtain jurisdiction over the Children. “Whether a parent has been afforded adequate due process is a question of law, reviewed for correctness.” In re A.H., 2004 UT App 39, ¶ 8, 86 P.3d 745 (internal quotation marks omitted). In addition to resolving the issue of the adequacy of the process provided to Father, we must determine whether the juvenile court had subject matter jurisdiction, which we also review for correctness. See In re K.F., 2009 UT 4, ¶ 18, 201 P.3d 985. Likewise, any interpretation of the Juvenile Court Act is a question of law, reviewed for correctness. See In re J.H., 2006 UT App 205, ¶ 5, 138 P.3d 70.
¶25 Father also argues that there was insufficient evidence to support terminating his parental rights. “Whether a parent‘s rights should be terminated presents a mixed question of law and fact.” In re B.R., 2007 UT 82, ¶ 12, 171 P.3d 435. Termination decisions “rely heavily on the juvenile court‘s assessment and weighing of the facts in any given case. Because of the factually intense nature of such an inquiry, the juvenile court‘s decision should be afforded a high degree of deference.” Id. “Thus, in order to overturn the juvenile court‘s decision the result must be against the clear weight of the evidence or leave the appellate court with a firm and definite conviction that a mistake has been made.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
ANALYSIS
I. This Court Has Jurisdiction To Consider Father‘s Appeal
¶26 As a preliminary matter, we address the GAL‘s contention that this court does not have jurisdiction to hear Father‘s appeal concerning any issue other than the sufficiency of the evidence issue arising from the termination trial. The Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure allow a party to “appeal from all final orders and judgments.”
¶27 In child welfare proceedings such as these, a final order “is one that ends the current juvenile proceedings, leaving no question open for further judicial action.” In re M.W., 2000 UT 79, ¶ 25, 12 P.3d 80 (internal quotation marks omitted). But here, none of the court‘s interim determinations or its alleged failure to hold required proceedings that Father claims violated his due process rights resulted in the issuance of any final, appealable orders. From the point that the court restored custody of the Children to DCFS in November 2008 until it terminated Father‘s parental rights, the juvenile court made only interim determinations regarding the Children. Specifically, as we explain in greater detail below, the November 3 hearing was not adjudicatory. See In re S.A.K., 2003 UT App 87, ¶ 13, 67 P.3d 1037 (explaining that an adjudication order is one example of a final, appealable order in a juvenile proceeding). Likewise, the court‘s determination on December 8 denying Father continued reunification services did not result in the entry of a final permanency order. See In re A.F., 2007 UT 69, ¶¶ 6-7 (discussing instances when a permanency hearing results in a final order and concluding that “[t]he order terminating reunification services and changing the permanency goal left the Child‘s status unchanged and unresolved and therefore was not a final determination of the Mother‘s rights or the Child‘s status“).
II. The Juvenile Court Had Continuing Jurisdiction and Father‘s Due Process Rights Were Not Violated
¶29 Father complains that in failing to strictly comply with the statutory process set forth in the Juvenile Court Act, the juvenile court exceeded its subject matter jurisdiction and violated his due process rights. Utah law clearly establishes that parents have a fundamental liberty interest in their children, protected under the due process clause. See
¶30 We determine that, although the juvenile court could have more clearly articulated for the parties where they were in the proceedings, the court properly followed the statutory child welfare proceedings after the Children were returned to DCFS‘s custody for the second time and provided Father with sufficient notice of the issues and the appropriate opportunity to argue that his parental rights should not be terminated. Thus, we cannot say that the juvenile court exceeded its subject matter jurisdiction or violated Father‘s due process rights.
A. The Juvenile Court Did Not Surrender Its Subject Matter Jurisdiction When It Restored Legal Custody to Father in August 2008.
¶31 The parties do not dispute that the juvenile court‘s exclusive, original subject matter jurisdiction in this case began with the October 9, 2007 adjudication, at which the parents stipulated to the court‘s findings supporting its conclusion that the Children were neglected. See generally
¶32 Father argues, and we agree, that the court intended to return permanent, legal custody to him and not to merely provide a trial home placement in August 2008. Cf.
¶33 We conclude that although the court returned legal custody to Father in August 2008, the court retained subject matter jurisdiction and its dispositional authority over the Children. Returning custody of the Children to Father did not amend the legal status of the Children as neglected. Importantly, once a child has been adjudicated as neglected, the juvenile court has continuing jurisdiction over the child until he or she turns twenty-one, unless it terminates its jurisdiction by “order of the court.” See id.
¶34 Thus, as long as the juvenile court does not dismiss the case or terminate jurisdiction, the court retains dispositional authority over the Children because there has been an initial legal determination that those Children are abused, neglected, or dependent. See
¶35 Despite returning the Children to Father‘s legal custody at the August 2008 permanency hearing, the court continued its authority and jurisdiction over the Children, and the Children‘s return to Father‘s legal custody did not alter their status as neglected. This is clear from the court‘s order, which anticipated continued protective supervision services by DCFS. As part of those continued services and consistent with the court‘s statements at the hearing, Father entered into a service plan on or about September 25, 2008. This new plan included responsibilities for Father such as ensuring that Mother have only authorized contact with the Children and that Mother not have unauthorized entry into the family home. The court also scheduled a review hearing in ninety days to check the status of the protective supervision services it had ordered.
¶36 At the anticipated review hearing, if Father had complied with the service plan, the court may have finally disposed of the case and terminated its jurisdiction. See, e.g., In re A.H., 2009 UT App 232, ¶¶ 2-3, 217 P.3d 278 (explaining that the juvenile court retained jurisdiction while DCFS provided protective supervision and completed the reports to release the children from the court‘s jurisdiction); In re P.F.B., 2008 UT App 271, ¶ 3, 191 P.3d 49 (reviewing a case in which the juvenile court retained jurisdiction until it terminated DCFS‘s protective supervision services and the guardian ad litem‘s services). However, Father did not comply with the service plan. And because the court did not affirmatively renounce its jurisdiction or enter any ruling incompatible with its continuing authority, it clearly retained jurisdiction over the Children.
B. The Child Welfare Proceedings Did Not Start Over When the Court Returned the Children To DCFS‘s Custody in November 2008.
¶37 Father argues that any time a child is removed from a parent‘s legal custody, the Juvenile Court Act requires the juvenile court to adjudicate that child as to neglect, abuse, or dependency regardless of whether the court has previously done so. As such, he argues that parents with legal custody are entitled to the full procedural protections under the Juvenile Court Act at the time of any removal regardless of whether the juvenile court has ongoing jurisdiction.
¶39 Based upon the factual findings in its original order, it appears that the juvenile court incorrectly intended that the child welfare proceedings start over in this case in November 2008. However, we determine that the court was not required to restart the neglect proceedings in the particular circumstances of this case. Consequently, Father was not denied his due process rights. We will first explain our conclusion that because the court retained its jurisdiction, and therefore its dispositional authority over the Children, the Juvenile Court Act did not require the court to restart the proceedings. As part of that discussion, we will also address why Father was not entitled to another adjudication hearing, renewed reunification services, or another permanency hearing.
1. The Juvenile Court‘s Dispositional Authority
¶40 Father contends that the court never adjudicated the Children again after they were “removed” in November 2008 and that the November 3 hearing was a shelter hearing, as opposed to an adjudication hearing. In support of this proposition, Father relies on the fact that on October 30, 2008, the State filed the necessary petition to commence child welfare proceedings, see
¶41 Although the court restored legal custody to Father in August 2008, as discussed above, the juvenile court did not amend the Children‘s status as neglected and did not surrender its jurisdiction over the family. See generally id.
¶42 Several circumstances in these child welfare proceedings collided to create a situation where the juvenile court retained jurisdiction over the Children even though it had restored legal custody to Father, instead of implementing a trial home placement in August 2008. Importantly, however, the court continued DCFS‘s protective supervision services and did not terminate its own jurisdiction. When Father then proceeded to violate the court‘s order and service plan during the narrow window of time in which he had regained custody, the court had continuing jurisdiction to make further decisions regarding the best interests of the Children.
¶43 In a different set of circumstances—for example, if in August 2008 the court had implemented a trial home placement for Father rather than restoring his legal custody, and Father then violated the service plan and engaged in domestic violence in front of the Children—the parties and the court would have unquestionably picked up where they left off in the child welfare proceedings, moving ahead to a change of physical custody and termination trial. Or, if Father had abided by the service plan until the court had terminated child supervision services and its jurisdiction, and only then had engaged in domestic violence in front of the Children, the situation would be entirely
different. In such a case, where the court has terminated its jurisdiction, the Juvenile Court Act procedures would begin anew. After taking the Children into protective custody, the State would file a petition introducing new allegations of neglect pursuant to¶44 However, under the circumstances of this case—where Father violated the court‘s order and service plan, the Children‘s adjudicated status as neglected was unchanged and the court retained its jurisdiction, which allowed it to make dispositional decisions regarding the Children‘s custody—the State was only required to file a motion for change of custody seeking return of the Children to DCFS‘s custody, which is a simple dispositional matter within the court‘s continuing jurisdiction. See
¶45 The Utah Rules of Juvenile Procedure define a “disposition” as “any order of the court, after adjudication, pursuant to Section 78A-6-117.”
¶46 It is unclear from the record what child welfare proceeding the court conducted at the November 3 hearing.12 It is also unclear why the State filed a petition pursuant to
¶47 On October 30, 2008, the State clearly indicated in its verified petition that it sought a return of custody of the Children to DCFS, and the court clearly so ordered. As such, the November 3 hearing appears to have been a nonmandatory, dispositional, evidentiary hearing that resulted in a change of custody from Father to DCFS. See
¶48 In sum, because the court did not terminate its jurisdiction after legal custody of the Children was returned to Father and because the court did not alter the Children‘s status as neglected, it was not required to restart the child welfare proceedings. The court was therefore also not required to hold a shelter hearing and readjudicate the Children as to neglect when it returned custody of the Children to DCFS. Although the parties and the court may have been confused about the nature of the hearing and although the court may have misconstrued this proceeding as either a shelter hearing or an adjudication, the court properly considered the domestic violence incidents in late October 2008 and determined that there was substantial risk that Father might endanger the Children if they remained in his custody. Based on this information, the court properly exercised its dispositional authority in returning the Children to DCFS‘s custody.
2. Reunification Services
¶49 Father argues that the court violated his due process rights by not ordering reunification services for another year because the child welfare proceedings started anew when the Children were returned to DCFS‘s custody in November 2008. Father contends that the phrase, “reunification services may not exceed 12 months from the date that the minor was initially removed,” see
¶50 We agree with the juvenile court‘s determination that Father had already received a full year of reunification services and was not entitled to additional reunification services upon the Children‘s return to DCFS‘s custody in November 2008. As we have already discussed, the child welfare proceedings do not start over every time a child‘s custody is changed. Additionally, the juvenile court has discretion to deny reunification services. See
3. Permanency Hearing
¶51 Father argues that the court denied him due process by failing to grant him a mandatory permanency hearing. See generally
¶52 Assuming that the State had not filed its petition for termination of Father‘s parental rights on December 2, 2008, because of the court‘s dispositional change of custody following the October 2008 incidents, the court should have held another permanency hearing to determine a final plan for the Children. See
¶53 We need not characterize the December 8 hearing as either a dispositional hearing or a permanency hearing because, as stated, the State filed its petition for termination on December 2, and on the same day, the court scheduled the termination trial.13
III. Sufficient Evidence Supported the Court‘s Termination of Father‘s Parental Rights
¶54 Father also appeals from the juvenile court‘s denial of his rule 41(b) motion made after the State concluded its case-in-chief at the termination trial. His argument there and on appeal is essentially a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the termination of his parental rights, including the juvenile court‘s conclusion that termination was in the Children‘s best interests.
¶55 “When termination proceedings are initiated under the [Juvenile Court] Act, the court must make two distinct findings supported by clear and convincing evidence before a person‘s parental rights can be properly terminated.” In re adoption of T.H., 2007 UT App 341, ¶ 11, 171 P.3d 480. First, the juvenile court must establish the existence of any one of the grounds in section 78A-6-507(1). See
A. Grounds for Termination
¶56 Father challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for each ground on which the juvenile court based its decision to terminate his parental rights: Father‘s neglect, see
¶57 Because the juvenile court “is in an advantaged position with respect to the parties and the witnesses” and because the juvenile court‘s decisions “rely heavily on the juvenile court‘s assessment and weighing of the facts,” we “afford[ its decision] . . . a high degree of deference.” In re B.R., 2007 UT 82, ¶ 12, 171 P.3d 435 (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, “[w]hen a foundation for the court‘s decision exists in the evidence, [we] may not engage in a reweighing of the evidence.” Id. “Thus, in order to overturn the juvenile court‘s decision the result must be against the clear weight of the evidence or leave the appellate court with a firm and definite conviction that a mistake has been made.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
¶58 The court found that Father failed to recognize Mother‘s mental health issues and the negative effects they have on the Children, including causing instability and volatility throughout this case; that Father chose to stay with Mother in spite of her failure to comply with the DCFS service plan; that in 2008, eight separate and severe domestic violence incidents requiring police involvement occurred between Father and Mother; and that Father continued to engage in contact with Mother in spite of the no-contact order and in spite of the negative effect the domestic violence incidents had on the Children. The court found that Father chose his wife over the Children, as indicated by the violent contact between Father and Mother in late October 2008, by the contact between Father and Mother following the November 3 hearing where the court had ordered the parents to avoid contact with each other, and by Father‘s Motion To Lift or
¶59 Rather than challenging these findings, Father urges us to reweigh the evidence, which we will not do. See In re B.R., 2007 UT 82, ¶ 12. The court recognized Father‘s evidence of improvements and nonetheless determined that the other evidence of his neglect outweighed any progress he had made. We conclude that the juvenile court considered all of the facts Father disputes and that its decision was not against the clear weight of the evidence. Thus, we conclude that the evidence sufficiently supports the juvenile court‘s termination of Father‘s parental rights based upon Father‘s neglect and unfitness or incompetency. See
B. Best Interests of the Children
¶60 Finally, Father argues that insufficient evidence supported the juvenile court‘s determination that termination of his parental rights was in the Children‘s best
¶61 In spite of these findings, Father specifically challenges the court‘s rejection of the testimony of his and Mother‘s marriage therapist that it was in the Children‘s best interests to remain in custody with Father. The court gave little weight to the marriage therapist‘s opinion because she had not conducted counseling with the Children, or with the Children and Father, and she had not conducted any bonding assessment of
¶62 Based upon the factual findings, the juvenile court appropriately considered “the physical, mental, or emotional condition and needs of the child[ren],” see
CONCLUSION
¶63 Although the juvenile court permanently restored legal custody to Father, it retained jurisdiction and dispositional authority over the Children. When the Children were returned to DCFS‘s custody only a few months later in November 2008, the juvenile court did not need to adjudicate the Children again. The clock did not start over for additional reunification services. Father received the due process to which he was entitled. These proceedings presented a unique situation to the parties and to the court. Ultimately, because the court had jurisdiction over the Children in November 2008, the proceedings essentially resumed, ensuring the Juvenile Court Act‘s policy that the Children would not “be placed in a ‘legal limbo’ for an unwarranted time period.” See In re S.C., 1999 UT App 251, ¶ 10, 987 P.2d 611 (citation omitted). We also cannot say that the juvenile court‘s determinations that Father neglected the Children and was
¶64 Affirmed.
Michele M. Christiansen, Judge
¶65 WE CONCUR:
Gregory K. Orme, Judge
Stephen L. Roth, Judge
Notes
[I]f it‘s in the best interests of the [C]hildren on the reunification issue the [c]ourt should use its discretion to give [Father] one last chance to demonstrate that he can protect the [C]hildren . . . because in my view of the statute and this case if the [c]ourt does not order the [S]tate to offer reunification services, then of course we‘re on a track for termination of parental rights.
