[¶1] Crystal G. appeals from a judgment entered by the District Court (Skowhegan, Benson, J. ) terminating her parental rights to four of her children pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(A)(1)(a) and (B)(2)(a), (b)(i)-(ii), (iv) (2017).
A. Recusal
[¶2] Contrary to the mother's contention that her counsel was per se ineffective in failing to move for the trial judge's recusal in the termination case because he also oversaw the domestic violence docket
[¶3] As an initial matter, before the mother testified at the hearing her counsel did move for the judge to recuse on the ground that evidence the court heard in the termination proceeding might prejudice her in her criminal case. The court declined to recuse based on evidence it had not yet heard, ruling that if recusal were required at all it would be required in the criminal matter, not the child protective matter. See Atwood ,
*270[¶4] In any event, we have recognized that "rulings against a litigant or knowledge gained by a judge in a prior or related court proceeding, including impressions of a litigant's personal history or credibility, are not sufficient grounds to recuse a judge in a subsequent matter." In re Nadeau ,
B. Factual Findings
[¶5] The mother next asserts that her counsel was ineffective in failing to move for further findings because (1) the court's findings, largely adopting those proposed by the Department, demonstrate that it did not exercise independent judgment in making its findings; and (2) certain of the court's findings were not supported by the record.
[¶6] We have said that "[a]lthough a verbatim adoption of the language of a proposed order or an adoption absent material change is disfavored because it would suggest that the court has not applied its independent judgment in making its findings and conclusions, courts may properly request and consider proposed orders from parties in crafting an order." In re Zoey H. ,
[¶7] Here, the court requested and received proposed findings from both parties. Although the court adopted most of the Department's proposed findings verbatim, we are satisfied that the alterations in the court's termination order-most significantly the credibility determinations it made concerning particular witnesses and the mother herself-demonstrate "that the judgment is the result of the application of independent judicial thought to the process of making fact-findings and conclusions." In re Zoey H. ,
[¶8] The mother also contends that her hearing counsel was ineffective in failing to challenge certain findings the court made that were unsupported by the record. She does not argue that the evidence as a whole was otherwise insufficient to support the court's judgment-stating that "[s]ufficiency of the evidence isn't the point"-but rather highlights the unsupported *271findings as an indication that her counsel was ineffective in failing to contest them and that the court failed to exercise independent scrutiny when it accepted them. If the court adopted some findings without record support, the mother reasons, then all of its findings are called into question.
[¶9] Here, contrary to the mother's contention, the findings that she identifies have some record support; beyond that, the weight to be accorded them was within the province of the trial court as fact-finder.
C. Credibility Determination
[¶10] Finally, the mother argues that the trial court made an adverse credibility determination concerning one of her witnesses after taking improper judicial notice of two other child protective cases in which the witness had been involved. When the Department requested that the court judicially notice the unrelated matters at the hearing-a request to which the mother did not object-the court gave no indication that it would do so; its termination judgment did not list the matters among those that it was noticing, and we therefore conclude that the court did not rely on that evidence in support of its termination determination, see M.R. Civ. P. 52(a) ; and the judgment did not discuss the witness, either favorably or unfavorably. Consequently, there is no error on this record. See In re Child of Kaysean M. ,
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
The fathers of the children had their parental rights terminated by separate judgments. The fathers of three of the children did not appeal, and the appeal of the father of the fourth child is proceeding separately.
A 2015 report prepared for the Judicial Branch explained that "[i]n Maine, domestic violence dockets are scheduled separately from traditional judicial hearings. The model includes a consistent judge focusing on the perpetrators' compliance with conditions of probation, including participation in a Batterer Intervention Program, fulfilling child support responsibilities, and engaging in ancillary services such as substance abuse treatment." Hornby Zeller Assocs., Inc., Domestic Violence Docket, Process and Recidivism Report at i (Sept. 22, 2015), Me. Judicial Branch website/Reports (last visited Jan. 23, 2019).
The mother does not assert that the trial judge harbored an actual prejudice against her, only that these circumstances unavoidably gave the appearance that the judge might not be impartial.
The mother has filed the affidavit required before we will review the existing record to see if it supports a prima facie claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. See In re Tyrel L. ,
The mother faults two substantive, detailed findings that were apparently drawn from the Department's termination petitions. Although she is correct in asserting that neither has record support for all of its details, their essence is supported. Concerning the court's finding regarding the mother's medication management compliance, the caseworker testified that a note in the Department's file indicated that the provider had requested that the mother report to him within six weeks due to a positive screen, and the caseworker did not believe that she had done so. Concerning a finding that in November 2017 the mother was arrested "following a domestic violence incident where she was found to have been the perpetrator"-which could be read to mean that the law enforcement officer reached that conclusion, leading to the mother's arrest-the guardian ad litem's report referenced the incident and the mother admitted that it occurred, although she denied that she was the aggressor. See In re Child of Troy C. ,
