L.B. & another vs. CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT DEPARTMENT & others.
SJC-11892
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
October 5, 2015. - May 4, 2016.
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SJC-11892
L.B. & another1 vs. CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT DEPARTMENT & others.2
Suffolk. October 5, 2015. - May 4, 2016.
Present: Spina, Cordy, Botsford, Duffly, Lenk, & Hines, JJ.
Probate Court, Guardian. Due Process of Law, Assistance of counsel. Constitutional Law, Assistance of counsel. Practice, Civil, Assistance of counsel.
Civil action commenced in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk on May 6, 2015.
The case was reported by Botsford, J.
Laura Williams Gal (Christina L. Paradiso with her) for L.B. & another.
Norah E. Kane for the minor children of L.B.
Jo Ann Shotwell Kaplan, Assistant Attorney General, for Chief Justice of the Probate and Family Court Department.
Deborah W. Kirchwey for
Jamie Ann Sabino, Susan R. Elsen, Mary K. Ryan, & Melanie V. Woodward, for Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, Inc., & others, amici curiae, submitted a brief.
Andrew L. Cohen, Committee for Public Counsel Services, for Committee for Public Counsel Services, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
Susan M. Finegan, Sandra J. Badin, & Geoffrey A. Friedman, for S.D., amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
Richard M. Page, Jr., for Boston Bar Association, amicus curiae, joined in a brief.
SPINA, J. In Guardianship of V.V., 470 Mass. 590 (2015), we held that a parent whose minor child is the subject of a guardianship petition pursuant to
Procedural history. The plaintiffs, L.B. and C.L., are the mothers of minor children for whom guardians were appointed, in 2012 and 2013 respectively, pursuant to
minors under
The plaintiffs alleged in their complaint that the Chief Justice‘s policy, by limiting the right to counsel to proceedings for the initial appointment of guardians, contravened our decision in Guardianship of V.V. and violated their right to due process. A single justice of this court reserved and reported the plaintiffs’ complaint to the full court.3
Facts.4 As stated, the plaintiffs are the mothers of minor children for whom guardians were appointed pursuant to
c. 190B, § 5-206.5 Each guardianship proceeding began, and each appointment occurred, well before our decision in Guardianship of V.V., so it was not established at the time of those proceedings that parents whose minor children were the subject of guardianship petitions had a right to counsel. It appears that neither L.B. nor C.L. was represented by counsel at the time the guardians were appointed. The guardianship decree for each child specified
In December, 2014, L.B. filed three petitions in the trial court pursuant to
In February, 2015, C.L. filed a petition in the trial court seeking to modify the terms of her visitation with her child.9 She alleged, among other things, that she was living in a stable environment, had income, and was attending college, and that she had “done what has been asked of [her],” presumably by the terms
similar to the decrees for L.B.‘s children concerning removal or relocation of the child. The decree further specified certain days and times that C.L. would be permitted to visit with the child; that additional visits could occur by agreement of the parties; that the visitation would be unsupervised; and that there was to be no contact during the visits between the child and C.L.‘s boy friend.
of the guardianship and by the guardians. She requested more visitation,
In March, 2015, L.B. filed an application for the appointment of counsel to represent her in each of the three cases involving her, and C.L. similarly moved for appointment of counsel in the case involving her. By that time, we had decided Guardianship of V.V. and the Chief Justice had issued her memorandum indicating her position that the holding in that case did not extend to situations like L.B.‘s and C.L.‘s. Their requests for counsel were therefore denied. Consistent with the Chief Justice‘s stated policy, the judge in L.B.‘s cases denied her requests on the ground that a “petition for removal of [a] guardian does not qualify [for] appointment of parent‘s counsel,” and the judge in C.L.‘s case denied her motion because her pending petition to modify the guardianship was “not an initial petition” for appointment of a guardian. Shortly thereafter, they commenced this action in the county court.10
Discussion. 1. The holding in Guardianship of V.V. The plaintiffs maintain that our decision in Guardianship of V.V. already resolves the questions that are now before us. That is incorrect. That case involved a petition for the initial appointment of a guardian under
To support their argument, the plaintiffs rely on two excerpts from Guardianship of V.V. First, they cite a footnote near the
review otherwise. See Guardianship of V.V., 470 Mass. 590, 591-592 (2015); Care & Protection of Erin, 443 Mass. 567, 568 (2005), and cases cited.
plaintiffs read too much into the footnote. It was meant only to explain that the presence of counsel on the petition to remove the guardian did not obviate the need to answer the question whether the mother was entitled to counsel on the petition for appointment of the guardian in the first place. Having counsel at one phase of a guardianship proceeding clearly does not suffice for due process purposes if the parent is also entitled to have counsel at another phase. The additional statement in the footnote, that “our concern regarding whether a parent is entitled to counsel applies to all proceedings related to guardianship,” was not a holding that the right to counsel does in fact apply to all such proceedings. It was a recognition that the important question whether a parent has a right to counsel applies equally to all phases of the proceedings.
The plaintiffs also rely on a sentence in which we said: “Because of the impact of a guardianship on the parent-child relationship, and the particular nature of the fundamental rights at stake, an indigent parent whose child is the subject of a guardianship proceeding is entitled to, and must be furnished with, counsel in the same manner as an indigent parent whose parental rights are at stake in a termination proceeding
parent is entitled to counsel applies to all proceedings related to guardianship.” Guardianship of V.V., 470 Mass. at 591 n.2.
or, similarly, in a care and protection proceeding.” Guardianship of V.V., 470 Mass. at 592-593. Read in context, that sentence refers only to the phase of the guardianship proceeding that was actually at issue in that case, namely, the initial petition to appoint a guardian. It was not intended as a holding with respect to other phases of a guardianship proceeding that were not at issue.
2. Due process claim. We next turn to the plaintiffs’ main claim, that due process requires the appointment of counsel for indigent parents who petition to remove guardians for their children or to modify the terms of the guardianships. The Chief Justice now acknowledges that counsel may be required constitutionally on a petition to remove a guardian; she argues, however, that the parent must first make a credible threshold showing of “substantial and relevant changed circumstances” since the guardian was appointed. She also argues that there is no right to counsel when a parent petitions only to modify the terms of the guardianship.
See Department of Pub. Welfare v. J.K.B., 379 Mass. 1, 3 (1979). “In determining what process is due . . . this court ‘must balance the interests of the individual affected, the risk of erroneous deprivation of those interests and the government‘s interest in the efficient and economic administration of its affairs.‘” Commonwealth v. Barboza, 387 Mass. 105, 112, cert. denied, 459 U.S. 1020 (1982), quoting Thompson v. Commonwealth, 386 Mass. 811, 817 (1982). See Care & Protection of Robert, 408 Mass. 52, 58-59 (1990). When balancing the interests, we bear in mind that “[t]he requirements of procedural due process are pragmatic and flexible, not rigid or hypertechnical.” Roe v. Attorney Gen., 434 Mass. 418, 427 (2001). Due process “calls for such procedural protections as the particular situation demands.” Id., quoting Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 481 (1972).
i. Individual interests. The interest of parents in their relationship with their children is substantial. “Our decisions, and those of the United States Supreme Court, leave no doubt that ‘[t]he rights to conceive and raise one‘s children’ are ‘essential . . . basic civil rights of man . . . far more precious . . . than property rights.‘” Department of Pub. Welfare v. J.K.B., 379 Mass. at 3, quoting Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 651 (1972). Fundamental rights and interests of parents are implicated not only at the stage when a
guardian is first appointed for a minor child, as in Guardianship of V.V., but also when a parent subsequently petitions to regain custody by removing the guardian.12 This is so because the appointment of a guardian only displaces the parent‘s rights and responsibilities for the duration of the guardianship
and protection case as “a readjudication” of initial custody order; “[a]s such, it implicates the same liberty interests that exist at an initial determination that a child is in need of care and protection. In a review and redetermination proceeding, the judge is deciding simply whether to maintain the separation of parent from child“).
ii. Risk of erroneous deprivation. The risk of erroneously adjudicating these fundamental rights and interests of parents is no less real at the guardian removal stage than at the appointment stage. Judges at both stages may be called on to make complex determinations that consider numerous factors regarding the child‘s best interest and the parent‘s fitness.13
Questions, often difficult ones, about the child‘s physical and psychological well-being must be answered; questions about a parent‘s mental and physical health, addictions, history of abuse or neglect, and the impact of these things on the parent‘s ability to meet the needs of
Additionally, as the plaintiffs and amici point out, judges hearing removal petitions may be called on to consider evidence, and make difficult determinations, on the child‘s bonding with the guardian during the guardianship, and the potential effect on the child of being removed from the guardian‘s care and returned to the parent‘s custody. See, e.g., Guardianship of Cheyenne, 77 Mass. App. Ct. 826, 830-831 (2010); Guardianship of Estelle, 70 Mass. App. Ct. 575, 581-582 (2007), and cases cited.
With the complexity of the legal and factual issues comes an increased risk that a judge might incorrectly decide those issues, especially in the absence of counsel to present and defend the positions of the parent, and hence an increased risk that an unrepresented parent will suffer an erroneous deprivation of his or her rights. Cf. Department of Pub. Welfare v. J.K.B., 379 Mass. at 4 (noting complexity of issues in adjudicating petitions to dispense with consent to adoption as consideration in finding right to counsel). The presence of counsel for a parent will both help to protect the parent‘s rights and interests in this regard and assist a judge to ensure
accuracy and fairness in his or her adjudications. Id. (noting benefits of counsel both for parents and for judges).
iii. Government interests. Finally, we must consider the Commonwealth‘s interest in the efficient and economic operation of its affairs. Although the Commonwealth is not a party per se in a private guardianship proceeding under
pursue such a petition would therefore be unnecessary. See Roe v. Attorney Gen., 434 Mass. at 427, quoting Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 335 (1976) (referring to “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” [emphasis added]).
iv. Balancing of interests. The most pragmatic way to balance all three due process considerations -- the parental interests, the risk of erroneous adjudication of those interests, and the government interests -- is to require that counsel be made available for those petitions that present a colorable claim for removal, but not for petitions that are obviously meritless. Requiring a parent to make a modest yet meaningful preliminary showing that he or she has a colorable case for removal of the guardian, before counsel is appointed to prosecute such a petition, will help to guard against an unnecessary and irresponsible expenditure of State resources and, we hope, will discourage, and thereby help to keep the courts free of, patently meritless attempts at removal.
The Chief Justice contends that the parent should be required to make an initial showing that there have been “substantial and relevant changed circumstances” since the guardian was appointed. She analogizes to review and redetermination proceedings in care and protection cases, see
G. L. c. 119, § 26,15 and relies heavily on the analysis in Care & Protection of Erin, 443 Mass. at 570-572. This court held in that case that the ultimate burden of proof on review and redetermination is on the Department of Children and Families (then the Department of Social Services) (department) to prove that a parent remains unfit to further the best interests of the child and that the child, therefore, is still in need of care and protection. Id. at 572. The court also held that the parent petitioning for review and redetermination bears a preliminary burden to produce some credible evidence of
The Chief Justice‘s analogy is not perfect, but, as stated, we agree in general that there should be some threshold assessment of the claim for removal before the right to counsel materializes. We are concerned, however, that her formulation of what is required -- a demonstration of “substantial and
relevant changed circumstances”16 -- will set the bar too high for an unrepresented litigant before the right to counsel is triggered. “Substantial,” “relevant,” “material,” and “significant” all suggest that a parent‘s burden would be to show that circumstances have changed in a legally significant manner and to a legally cognizable degree. It would be unusual and potentially unfair to require a litigant unaided by counsel to make that kind of a legal demonstration before the right to counsel arises. A more appropriate threshold showing would be for the parent simply to satisfy the judge that he or she has a colorable or “meritorious” claim in the sense that it is worthy of being presented to and considered by the court. See General Motors Corp., petitioner, 344 Mass. 481, 482 (1962) (“A meritorious case is one that is worthy of presentation to a court, not one which is sure of success“). This is a lighter, less technical burden than the one proposed by the Chief Justice, and something that will be more manageable for an unrepresented litigant with fundamental liberty interests at stake. “Meritorious” is a familiar concept that has been
applied in a variety of circumstances.17 It is
In sum, we hold that when an indigent, unrepresented parent seeks, pursuant to
b. Modification petitions. Petitions to modify the terms of a guardianship, like petitions to remove a guardian and regain custody of a child, can also affect the fundamental rights and interests of a parent. A petition such as C.L.‘s,
which seeks a significant change in the terms of visitation based on changed circumstances since the appointment of the guardian, is such a case.18 Visitation, like custody, is at the core of a parent‘s relationship with a child; being physically present in a child‘s life, sharing time and experiences, and providing personal support are among the most intimate aspects of a parent-child relationship. For a parent who has lost (or willingly yielded) custody of a child temporarily to a guardian, visitation can be especially critical because it provides an opportunity to maintain a physical, emotional, and psychological bond with the child during the guardianship period, if that is in the child‘s best interest; and in cases where the parent aspires to regain custody at some point, it provides an opportunity to demonstrate the ability to properly care for the child. See generally L. Edwards, Reasonable Efforts: A Judicial Perspective, at 41-47 (2014); M. Smariga, American Bar Association Center on Children and the Law & ZERO TO THREE Policy Center, Visitation with Infants and Toddlers in Foster Care: What Judges and Attorneys Need to Know (2007).
For these reasons, and considering the due process factors discussed above, we hold that an indigent parent who petitions to modify the terms of a guardianship by seeking a substantial
3. Other issues. The plaintiffs and amici raise a host of additional issues that go well beyond the issues raised by the plaintiffs’ complaint. For example, the plaintiffs argue, in addition to their due process claim, that they have a right to counsel based on equal protection principles; they also ask us to “issue a directive” definitively resolving certain questions concerning the burden of proof and the elements of proof on petitions to remove a guardian under
These matters are not properly before us, and we therefore decline to address them. Some of these questions will undoubtedly need to be resolved in future cases where they are properly raised and preserved in the trial court and fully briefed on appeal,19 and where the records for deciding them are fully developed. Others might appropriately be addressed by court rules and policies established by the Probate and Family Court or by amendments to the governing statutes.
4. Development of court rules and policies. Our decision in Guardianship of V.V., decided approximately fifteen months ago, recognized a parent‘s due process right to counsel in guardianship of minor cases where none previously existed, on the initial petition for appointment of a guardian. The Probate and Family Court has taken a number of steps since then to implement that right. Our decision today establishes a right to counsel beyond that, on a parent‘s petition to remove a guardian and regain custody of the child or to modify the guardianship in order to make a significant change in visitation. Recognizing
that additional steps will be needed to implement these rights, we offer a
a. The Probate and Family Court can facilitate the process for unrepresented parents by creating forms that will help the parent to articulate -- in plain, nonlegal terms -- the reasons why he or she believes the guardian should be removed or the visitation modified, and the facts on which he or she relies to support that claim. Forms that promote a clear and sufficiently detailed statement from the parent will also help judges to evaluate whether the parent has stated a meritorious claim as we have described that term, such that the parent may have an attorney if he or she would like one.21
b. We leave it to the Probate and Family Court to consider in the first instance whether an indigent, unrepresented parent must actually file a pro se petition to remove the guardian or
modify the guardianship before an attorney is appointed. Another approach might be for the parent to be allowed first to apply for counsel, and be required to state on an application for counsel form the meritorious reasons why he or she is seeking removal or modification. The judge would then be in a position to assess whether appointment of counsel is called for before the actual petition is filed. The Probate and Family Court is better equipped than this court to weigh the pros and cons of each approach initially. It would appear that either approach provides due process.
c.
guidelines and presumptions would not be binding, since the statute appears to permit the filing of a removal or modification petition at any time, each case is different, and counsel should always be appointed for a meritorious case, but they may help to create realistic expectations for unrepresented parents as to how often, at most, they should file.22
d. In deciding both Guardianship of V.V. and this case, we have found it useful to draw certain comparisons between the guardianship process under
e. Although we do not decide the question of a child‘s constitutional right to counsel in this case, we note the provisions of
or someone on his behalf requests appointment of counsel; or if the court determines at any time in the proceeding that the interests of the ward . . . are or may be inadequately represented, the court shall appoint an attorney to represent the person.” Id. The court may also appoint a “guardian ad litem . . . to investigate the condition of the ward . . . and make appropriate recommendations to the court.”
due process right to counsel, and to be so informed, provided the parent presents a meritorious claim for modification.
So ordered.
Notes
In addition, the single justice indicated in her reservation and report that the children and guardians in the underlying cases could be heard on the question whether they have standing to address the issue of appointment of counsel for the parents. The guardians have not submitted briefs. Both plaintiffs’ children have submitted briefs arguing that they do have standing on that issue (although they take different positions on the substantive merits of the issue). No party or amicus argues otherwise, so we shall assume without deciding that the children do have standing, and, accordingly, we consider their arguments on the issue as well.
