484 N.E.2d 40 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1985
L.J.F., the juvenile in this case, is a runaway. In 1982, when she was fourteen, she ran away from home three times and then ran away from a voluntary placement at Phoenix House and a detention at Carmel-ite Home for Girls.
In January 1983 a CHINS petiticn was filed and in May she was determined to be a child in need of services. See IC 31-6-4-18.5. However, she continued to run away from various placements. On November 15, 1988 the juvenile judge found her in contempt,
At the November 21 hearing LJ.F.'s father was present. He was ordered to repay the welfare department the full cost of LJ.F.'s care at Excelsior Home (which apparently totals more than $2,000 per month) at the rate of $100 per month.
This appeal first challenges the propriety of the reimbursement order entered November 21st.
The version of IC 31-6-4-18 in effect at the time of the hearing,
*41 "(a) The cost, of any services ordered by the juvenile court for any child or his parent, guardian, or custodian, and the cost of returning a child under IC 31-6-10 shall be paid by the county and the county council shall provide sufficient funds to meet the court's requirements.
(b) The parent or guardian of the estate of a child adjudicated a delinquent child or a child in need of services is responsible for any services ordered by the court unless:
(1) Re is unable to pay for them;
(2) payment would force an unreasonable hardship on the family; or
(8) justice would not be served by ordering payment.
(c) The parent or guardian of the estate of any child returned to Indiana under the interstate compact on juveniles (IC 31-6-10) shall reimburse the county for all costs involved in returning the child, whether or not the child has been adjudicated a delinquent child or a child in need of services.
(d) At the dispositional hearing or any other hearing to consider modification of a dispositional decree, the juvenile court may determine the ability of a parent or guardian of the estate, to pay for service-es provided to himself or his child.
(e) The juvenile court shall require the parent or guardian of the estate to reimburse the county in a manner that will cause the least hardship." (our emphasis)
Clearly the language of the statute requires the county to pay the cost of service-es ordered by the court. Subsection (b) then provides that the parent or guardian of the estate will be "financially responsible" for those expenditures UNLESS one of three determinations excuses that responsibility, in whole or in part.
Equally clearly, subsection (d) contemplates a hearing to determine reimbursement issues. See also IC 31-6-4-18.5(e)(3) recognizing, inter alia the right to controvert allegations concerning financial responsibility. At such hearings the burden of proof is a preponderance of the evidence, IC 31-6-7-13, and the Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure apply. IC 81-6-7-1.
Instead the hearing of November 21st commenced with the referee advising LJ.F.'s father that he was responsible for repaying the entire cost of placing L.J.F. at Excelsior.
The procedures employed at the reimbursement hearing were clearly contrary to law. The orders of November 21, 1983 are reversed.
Unfortunately the same defects exist concerning the hearing of November 15, 1983.
The matters to be considered at a dispositional hearing are set forth in IC 31-6-4-16, including a requirement that the court enter findings of fact and specify its reasons for the action taken. IC 31-6-7-16 authorizes the modification of disposi-tional decrees, but IC 31-6-4-19 requires the court in considering a modification to follow IC 34-6-7-16. The court did not follow these procedures in determining to change LJ.F.'s placement, and its order of November 15 must also be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.
. This was error. W.M. v. State (1982), Ind.App., 437 N.E.2d 1028.
. The section was again amended slightly in 1984.
. Indeed, at the end of the November 15 hearing the judge announced, "I will order a full reimbursement versus parents."
. If LJ.F. remained at Excelsior a year, the father would be obligated for more than twenty years at this figure.
. We recognize these may have arisen from the court's apparent inawareness of W.M. v. State (1982), Ind.App., 437 N.E.2d 1028, and the belief that it could treat the matter as a contempt proceeding.