Martin Garcia Najera appeals a circuit court order approving a foster care plan recommending termination of his residual parental rights and adoption of his child. We dismiss the appeal as moot.
I.
In September 2004, the Chesapeake Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court (JDR court) approved a foster care plan recommending termination of Najera’s residual parental rights and adoption of his son, a child in the custody of the Chesapeake Division of Social Services (DSS) since his birth in July 2003. In a later proceeding, the same court granted DSS’s petition to terminate Najera’s residual parental rights concerning the child. For reasons indiscernible from the record, Najera appealed to the circuit court the JDR court’s decision to approve DSS’s foster care plan recommendations— but not the JDR court’s decision to terminate his residual parental rights. On de novo appeal of the foster care plan decision, the circuit court approved the plan and found DSS’s recommendations in the child’s best interest. The circuit court also found that Najera did not appeal the JDR court’s termination decision, and thus, that matter was not before the circuit court.
Najera appeals the circuit court order to us, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the recommendations made in the DSS foster care plan. Najera, however, does not contest the circuit court’s finding that he had not appealed the JDR court’s order terminating his residual parental rights. Najera represents that he intended to file an appeal of the termination decision, but concedes that no record of such an appeal exists.
II.
When a court terminates a parent’s residual rights, the “ties between the parent and child are severed forever, and the parent becomes a legal stranger to the child.”
C.S. v. Virginia Beach Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
It is not that simple, Najera argues. A successful challenge on appeal of the DSS plan for termination, Najera reasons, would enable him to collaterally attack as void the unappealed JDR termination order. We disagree. Whether a judicial order can be attacked as void “turns on the subtle, but crucial, difference between the power of a court to adjudicate a specified class of cases, commonly known as ‘subject matter jurisdiction,’ and the authority of a court to exercise that power in a particular case.”
De Avies v. De Avies,
In Code §§ 16.1-281 through 16.1-282.2, the legislature delegated power to JDR courts to review, approve, and disapprove DSS foster care plans. The authority to terminate residual parental rights comes from Code § 16.1-283. True, the termination decision must sequentially follow (as it did here) the filing of a foster care plan recommending termination.
See Strong v. Hampton Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
Consequently, nothing we could do in this appeal— even if we reversed outright the DSS foster care plan recommendations—would change the fact that Najera has no parental rights left to protect. In cases where, as here, “an event occurs which renders it impossible for this court, if it should decide the case in favor of the [appellant], to grant him any effectual relief whatever, the court will not proceed to a formal judgment but -will dismiss the appeal.”
Hankins v. Town of Virginia Beach,
In sum, the entry of a final, unappealed order terminating Najera’s residual parental rights has rendered moot the question whether DSS’s foster care plan should have recommended termination.
Dismissed.
