(Cite
as: 33 Kan.App.2d 894, 111 P.3d 651)
Court
of Appeals of Kansas.
In
the Matter of the ADOPTION OF B.G.J.
No.
91,997.
May
13, 2005.
Review
Granted Sept. 20, 2005.
**652
*894
Syllabus by the Court
1.
The
stated policy of the Indian Child Welfare Act, 25 U.S.C.
§ 1901
(2000) et
seq.,
is to establish federal criteria for the removal and placement
of Indian children and to give assistance to the various
Indian Nations in maintaining their culture and native identity **653
and in their operation of family and child welfare programs.
2.
The
Indian Child Welfare Act, 25 U.S.C. § 1903(1)(iv)
(2000), applies to adoption placements of Indian children.
3.
In
any adoptive placement of an Indian child under State law,
a preference shall be given, in
the absence of good cause to the contrary,
to a placement with (1) a member of the child's
extended family; (2)
other members of the Indian child's tribe; or
(3) other Indian families.
4.
The
federal guidelines interpreting the Indian Child Welfare Act suggest three
areas of concern that could qualify as good cause: (1)
the request of the biological parents or the child when
the child is of sufficient age; (2)
the extraordinary physical or emotional needs of the child, as
established by an expert witness; and
(3) the unavailability of suitable families for adoptive placement following
a diligent search for families meeting the preference criteria.
5.
The
use of the term ?good
cause,?
without further legislative definition in the Indian Child Welfare Act
was designed to provide state courts with some flexibility in
determining the proper placement of Indian children. Because
flexibility implies discretion, we employ an abuse of discretion standard
to review Indian Child Welfare Act adoption placements.
6.
Under
the facts of this case, where the relinquishing mother strongly
rejected her extended Indian family and nation and strongly preferred
the adopting parents who have no Indian heritage, the trial
court had sufficient good cause to not follow the adoption
placement preferences in the Indian Child Welfare Act.
*895
Margie J. Phelps, of Topeka, and Rachel I. Hockenbarger, of
Phelps-Chartered, of Topeka, for appellant Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation.
Martin
W. Bauer and Teresa L. Mah, of Martin, Pringle, Oliver,
Wallace & Bauer, L.L.P., of Wichita, and Michael J. Belfonte,
of Michael J. Belfonte, P.C., of Kansas City, Missouri, for
appellees adoptive parents.
Before
HILL, P.J., MARQUARDT and JOHNSON, JJ.
HILL,
J.
In
this case we are asked to decide if the district
court had sufficient cause to deviate from the adoption placement
preferences established in the Indian Child Welfare Act, 25 U.S.C.
§ 1901
(2000) et
seq.
While
it is true that the Act establishes adoption preferences, if
there is good cause, courts do not have to follow
them. Relying
primarily upon the relinquishing mother's strong rejection of her extended
Indian family and her equally strong preference for the adopting
parents, the trial court overruled the objections of the Prairie
Band Potawatomi Nation (Tribe) and granted the adoption of B.G.J.
to a non-Indian couple from Edmond, Oklahoma. Employing
an abuse of discretion standard, we hold that the trial
court had good cause to not follow the preferences set
out in the Act and, accordingly, affirm.
Background
Facts
B.G.J.
was born on June 4, 2003, in Topeka, Kansas. Her
mother is T.J., who is half Native American, and her
unknown father is African-American and has no known Indian heritage.
T.J.
and her other children are members of the Prairie Band
Potawatomi Nation. B.G.J.
is eligible for membership in the Tribe but has not
yet been enrolled. Neither
T.J. nor her children have ever lived on an Indian
reservation. They
have received some benefits from the Tribe, such as medical
and dental care, child care, school grants, a computer, housing
when needed, and financial help for utilities and food.
T.J.
kept her pregnancy confidential. The
day after B.G.J.'s birth, T.J. contacted Adoption of Babies and
Children, Inc. to begin the adoption process. The
adoption agency notified the Tribe of B.G.J.'s birth on June
5, 2003, by letter. In
the letter, the agency *896
stated that although T.J. had already selected a family to
adopt B.G.J., the agency would not place the child until
it determined whether the Tribe wished to intervene. During
the following several days, the Tribe informed the agency through
telephone calls that there were no prospective adoptive families**654
available at the time and there were only two foster
care options and one of them was a group home.
T.J.
opposed the Tribe providing any foster care for B.G.J. Obeying
her wishes, B.G.J. was placed by the adoption agency in
private foster care pending T.J.'s selection of a prospective adoptive
family.
T.J.
selected R.F. and L.F. from Edmond, Oklahoma, to adopt B.G.J.
from a selection of possible parents kept by the adoption
agency. R.F.
and L.F. had already completed home studies and were approved
as prospective adopting parents. They
are not Native American, but L.F. had worked with Native
American communities in a research capacity. Additionally,
L.F. had many Native American friends and colleagues.
District
Court Proceedings
The
adopting couple received physical custody of B.G.J. on June 24,
2003. The
next day, T.J. relinquished custody of B.G.J. to the agency
so R.F. and L.F. could adopt B.G.J. Subsequently, the parental
rights of B.G.J.'s unknown birth father were terminated.
Later,
on July 23, 2003, a member of the Tribe informed
the adoption agency there was a family available within the
Tribe to adopt B.G.J. According to this Tribe member, the
family had been available ?from
the beginning?;
this
contradicted what the agency had previously been told. The
agency stated that it never received information about this family.
The
district court granted the Tribe's motion to intervene. The
Tribe also filed a motion to transfer the case to
the tribal court and to dismiss the state court proceedings.
At
the same trial, the district court heard the adoption petition
as well as the Tribe's objection to the adoption. The
two issues tried were the suitability of petitioners, R.F. and
L.F., as adopting parents and whether petitioners could show good
cause to deviate from the Indian Child Welfare Act's placement
preferences. At
the hearing, T.J. asked the court *897
not to transfer the case to the tribal court. Further,
T.J. explained she was aware of the Indian Child Welfare
Act's placement preferences but did not want B.G.J. to be
raised by any member of her family or any Native
American. Therefore,
T.J. requested that the court deviate from the law's placement
preferences and allow petitioners to adopt B.G.J.
The
relinquishing parent, T.J., testified that she does not follow the
culture and customs of the Tribe, nor does she practice
the Drum Religion, the religion practiced by most of the
Tribe. But
she has participated in a tribal practice called a sweat
lodge on a couple of occasions. T.J.
testified she had considered but rejected a number of family
members as potential adoptive parents for B.G.J. T.J. stated she
had not wavered in her decision to relinquish B.G.J. and
place her with the petitioners. T.J.
believed it was in the best interest of B.G.J. to
be adopted by R.F. and L.F. and stated unequivocally that
if the court did not allow them to adopt B.G.J.,
she would take B.G.J. back and rear her outside the
practices and customs of the Tribe.
Then,
from the Tribe's point of view, a number of people
willing to adopt B.G.J. testified. Among
them was Robin Guerrero, T.J.'s niece and a member of
the Tribe. Guerrero
did not live on the reservation but was an employee
of the Tribe and was willing to raise B.G.J. in
the Tribe's heritage. Guerrero
had neither undergone an assessment by a social worker to
be approved as a potential adoptive parent, nor filed a
petition to adopt B.G.J.
Yvonne
Castro-Hoss, a cousin of T.J., testified she, too, was interested
in adopting B.G.J. Neither Castro-Hoss nor her husband are Native
American, but her husband works for the Tribe. Like
Guerrero, Castro-Hoss did not file a petition for adoption and
had not obtained an assessment by a social worker to
be approved as a potential adoptive parent.
Roberta
Guerrero, T.J.'s half sister and a member of the Tribe,
testified she wished to adopt B.G.J. and raise her in
the Tribe's heritage. Roberta
Guerrero was 50 years old, single, and earned a monthly
income of $600. Guerrero
had neither obtained an assessment by a social worker to
be approved as a potential adoptive parent, nor filed a
petition to adopt B.G.J.
**655
*898
Finally, Jennifer Herrera, T.J.'s sister and a member of the
Tribe, testified she would like to adopt B.G.J. Herrera was
married and had eight children living in her home. Herrera
followed some of the Tribe's rituals and was willing to
raise B.G.J. in the Tribe's heritage. Herrera
did not file a petition to adopt B.G.J. and had
not obtained an assessment to be approved as a potential
adoptive parent.
Given
T.J.'s decision to keep her pregnancy confidential, neither Guerrero nor
Herrera knew of T.J.'s pregnancy or B.G.J.'s birth until shortly
before the hearing.
District
Court Ruling
The
district court stated that although T.J. was one-half Native American
by blood, her lifestyle choices and practices were essentially that
of a non-Native American. Nevertheless,
the court determined the Indian Child Welfare Act applied to
the placement of B.G.J. despite T.J.'s desire for B.G.J. to
be reared in a non-Native American environment. Accordingly,
the court decided a finding of good cause was required
in order to deviate from the adoption placement preferences in
the Indian Child Welfare Act.
The
court ruled that the adopting parents, R.F. and L.F., as
the parties urging a deviation from the preferences, had the
burden to establish the existence of good cause for such
deviation. The
court decided they had satisfied their
burden. In
doing so, the court looked to guidelines issued by the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), which formulates factors relevant to
the determination of good cause, such as the request of
the biological parents, the extraordinary needs (physical or emotional) of
the child, and the unavailability of suitable families for adoptive
placement following a diligent search. See
44 Fed.Reg. 67,594 (1979). Further,
the court found the best interests of B.G.J. was a
relevant but not controlling factor in determining whether good cause
had been established.
After
concluding there was good cause to deviate from the law's
placement preferences, the court found petitioners were suitable to adopt
B.G.J. The child had obviously bonded with them, and it
was in B.G.J.'s best interest to be adopted by the
couple. The
court granted their petition for adoption.
*899
Issues on Appeal
The
Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation attacks the district court's decision in
two ways. It
claims errors of law and misinterpretation of the facts. The
Tribe offers four legal arguments. It
believes that the relinquishing mother's preferences should not negate the
placement preferences contained in the Indian Child Welfare Act; that
the court improperly shifted the burden from the adopting parents
to the Tribe to show the Act's preferences should be
followed; that
the court failed to require the adopting parents to show
they had made a diligent search for suitable Indian placement
options and, instead, erroneously compelled the Tribe to do so;
and,
finally, that the court incorrectly applied the ?best
interest of the child?
standard to the case. Next,
the Tribe contends that the court simply erred in finding
its placement options were unsuitable and that the evidence of
B.G.J.'s bonding with the adopting parents could be considered by
the court as evidence to overcome the placement preferences in
the Indian Child Welfare Act.
Because
the parties do not agree on the standard of review
we should employ, we begin with that point. Then
we will examine the Indian Child Welfare Act and analyze
the case within its rules, dealing with the claimed legal
issues first, followed by the fact interpretations.
Standard
of Review
Our research reveals that Kansas
appellate courts have not previously said what standard is to be applied
when reviewing a district court's finding of good cause to deviate from
the Indian Child Welfare Act's placement preferences. The
Tribe claims the district court's decision should be reviewed de novo.
The adopting parents argue that this court should review the
district court's decision with an abuse of discretion standard, citing
cases arising outside of this jurisdiction for support.
Indeed,
other jurisdictions have applied an abuse of discretion standard of
review to this issue. See,
e.g.,
Matter
of Adoption of F.H.,
**656
851 P.2d 1361, 1363 (Alaska 1993) (good cause determination within
court's discretion and will be reversed only if court abused
its discretion or if controlling factual findings clearly erroneous); *900
Matter
of Appeal in Maricopa County,
136 Ariz. 528, 534, 667 P.2d 228 (Ct.App.1983) (applying abuse
of discretion standard when reviewing the district court's deviation from
placement preferences); Adoption
of M,
66 Wash.App. 475, 482, 832 P.2d 518 (1992) (good cause
is a matter of discretion).
We
think the use of the term ?good
cause,?
without further legislative definition was designed to provide state courts
with some flexibility in determining the proper placement of Indian
children. Good
cause is a matter of discretion to be exercised in
light of many factors, including but not necessarily limited to
the best interest of the child, the wishes of the
biological parents, the suitability of the persons referred for placement,
the child's ties to the tribe, and the child's ability
to make any cultural adjustments necessitated by a particular placement.
Adoption
of M,
66 Wash.App. at 482 n. 5, 832 P.2d 518. Because
flexibility implies discretion, we will employ an abuse of discretion
standard of review.
Judicial discretion is abused
only when no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the district
court. Varney
Business Services, Inc. v. Pottroff,
275 Kan. 20, 44, 59 P.3d 1003 (2002).
Indian
Child Welfare Act Fundamentals
There is no doubt that the Indian
Child Welfare Act applies to this case. Adoption placements
are included in 25 U.S.C. § 1903(1)(iv) (2000) as a type of
child custody proceeding within the purview of the law. See
also In re Adoption
of Baby Boy L., 231
Kan. 199, 207, 643 P.2d 168 (1982) (Indian Child Welfare Act applies to
child custody proceedings in Kansas involving an Indian child). 25
U.S.C. § 1903(4) defines ?Indian child? as unmarried person
under age 18 and is either (a) a member of an Indian tribe or (b) is eligible
for membership in Indian tribe and is the biological child of member of
Indian tribe. B.G.J. satisfies those requirements.
The stated policy of the Indian
Child Welfare Act is to establish federal criteria for the removal and
placement of Indian children and to give assistance to the various Indian
Nations in maintaining their culture and native identity and in their
operation of family and child welfare programs:
*901
?The
Congress hereby declares that it is the policy of this
Nation to protect the best interests of Indian children and
to promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and
families by the establishment of minimum Federal standards for the
removal of Indian children from their families and the placement
of such children in foster or adoptive homes which will
reflect the unique values of Indian culture, and by providing
for assistance to Indian tribes in the operation of child
and family service programs.?
25
U.S.C. § 1902
(2000).
This
policy has been clarified in guidelines adopted by the Bureau
of Indian Affairs in the Department of the Interior in
44 Fed.Reg. 67,584 (1979):
?Congress
through the Indian Child Welfare Act has expressed its clear
preference for keeping Indian children with their families, deferring to
tribal judgment on matters concerning the custody of tribal children,
and placing Indian children who must be removed from their
homes within their own families or Indian tribes. Proceedings
in state courts involving the custody of Indian children shall
follow strict procedures and meet stringent requirements to justify any
result in an individual case contrary to these preferences.?
44
Fed.Reg. 67,585-6 (1979).
That
policy is clearly followed in the Act's three Indian child
adoption placement preferences stated as the Indian family, the tribe,
or other Indians:
?In
any adoptive placement of an Indian child under State law,
a preference shall be given, in
the absence of good cause to the contrary,
to a placement with (1) a member of the child's
extended family; (2)
other members of the Indian child's tribe; or
(3) other Indian families.?
(Emphasis
added.) 25
U.S.C. § 1915(a)
(2000).
**657
The Act does not define good cause, but the guidelines suggest three areas
of concern that could qualify as good cause:
(1)
the
request of the biological parents or the child when the
child is of sufficient age;
(2)
the
extraordinary physical or emotional needs of the child, as established
by an expert witness; and
(3)
the
unavailability of suitable families for adoptive placement following a diligent
search for families meeting the preference criteria. 44
Fed.Reg. 67,594, F.3 (1979).
Analysis
After
correctly deciding that the Indian Child Welfare Act applied to
this adoption, the district court ruled that the adopting *902
parents had the burden to establish good cause to not
follow the Act's adoption preferences. The
guidelines require this. ?The
burden of establishing the existence of good cause not to
follow the order of preferences ...
shall be on the party urging that the preferences not
be followed.?
44
Fed.Reg. 67,594 F.3(b) (1979). The
court then focused on two of the three areas of
concerns set out in the guidelines as possible good cause,
the mother's strong rejection of her family and tribe and
the relative unsuitability of the four placement options presented by
the Tribe.
Mother's
Strong Preference
The court correctly noted that
T.J. did not rear her other children to know and practice their Indian
heritage and indicated that T.J.'s preference was clear: she wanted
B.G.J. to be raised by petitioners and not by any family member or Native
American. T.J. was adamantly opposed to the Tribe's two foster
care options when preadoption placement was considered. Furthermore,
she feels so strongly about this that should the adopting couple not be
allowed to adopt B.G.J., T.J. has vowed to withdraw her voluntary relinquishment
of rights and consent to adopt B.G.J. and raise B.G.J. outside of her
Indian culture and without the teachings of the Tribe.
Both
the Indian Child Welfare Act and the BIA Guidelines approve
the desires of a relinquishing parent as a relevant factor
in a good cause determination. 25
U.S.C. § 1915(c)
stated: ?Where
appropriate, the preference of the Indian child or parent shall
be considered: Provided,
That where a consenting parent evidences a desire for anonymity,
the court or agency shall give weight to such desire
in applying the preferences.?
See
44 Fed.Reg. 67,594 F.3(a)(i) (1979).
The
Tribe's arguments to the contrary are not convincing. Many
of the learned articles mentioned in its brief focus on
involuntary removal of Indian children. This
is a voluntary proceeding. The
Tribe eloquently attempts to persuade us that to allow a
relinquishing mother's preference to control would thwart the fundamental policy
and purpose of the Indian Child Welfare Act. But, nonetheless,
Congress did give trial courts discretion and used a general
*903
undefined term ?good
cause?
so the courts could exercise that discretion where appropriate. The
guidelines, while not controlling, are persuasive. They
list a parent's request as the first consideration when deciding
good cause.
Furthermore,
we think it important to note that the Indian Child
Welfare Act permits the withdrawal of adoption consent. Indeed,
in voluntary proceedings for the termination of parental rights to
or the adoptive placement of an Indian child, the Act
allows a parent to withdraw his or her consent for
any reason prior to the entry of a final decree
of termination or adoption; in
such a situation, the child shall be returned to the
parent. 25
U.S.C. § 1913(c)
(2000). Therefore,
a determination by this court that the placement preferences of
the Indian Child Welfare Act must be adhered to would
not result in someone who satisfies those stated preferences raising
B.G.J.; rather
such a determination would only result in T.J. regaining custody
of B.G.J. whom she would then rear essentially as a
non-Native American.
Also,
we note that the Indian Child Welfare Act has careful
parental consent requirements. (All
of these steps were followed in this case.) Consent
to adopt, in order to be valid, can only be
signed at least 10 days after the birth of the
child and then only in front of a judge of
competent jurisdiction who certifies that the parent fully understood**658
the terms and consequences of signing the consent as told
them either in English or as interpreted into a native
language the parent understands. Even
then, the parent can withdraw consent at any time prior
to a final adoption order. Furthermore,
even after the final order has been entered, the consenting
parent can try to have it set aside upon showing
evidence of fraud or duress. 25
U.S.C. § 1913(a),
(c), and (d). We
think the inclusion of this provision in the Indian Child
Welfare Act means that the preferences of the parent are
of prime importance. The
district court was correct when it attached great importance to
T.J.'s strong preferences because that is what the Indian Child
Welfare Act requires.
Four
Placement Options
Regarding
the suitability of the prospective Indian placements, the court found
the evidence was neither clear nor convincing that *904
any of the four who testified were suitable for placement,
especially given T.J.'s strong opposition and the absence of social
assessments approving them as adoptive placements. The
trial court stated:
?[T.J.]
knew
her extended family long before her seventh child, [B.G.J.], was
born. When
she decided she could not rear the Child, she knew
the background and parenting skills of the members of her
extended family and she was adamant not to allow them
to have placement of the Child. Based
on the testimony of those proposed for placement of the
Child, the evidence was neither clear or convincing that Roberta
Guerrero, Robin Guerrero, Jennifer Herrera or Yvonne Castro-Hoss were suitable
to have placement of [B.G.J.]. Three of the four are
tribal members of [the Tribe]. They
do not live on the Tribe's reservation or regularly practice
[the Tribe's] heritage. Their
life-style and cultural practices appeared consistent with [T.J.'s].?
It
appears the court decided that these four options provided no
clear Indian alternatives as adoptive homes.
The
Tribe challenges the district court's finding that the proffered placement
options that satisfied the Act's placement preferences were unsuitable, particularly
taking issue with the court's reliance on T.J.'s rejection of
those placement options. Further,
the Tribe contends the district court improperly placed the burden
upon the Tribe, rather than petitioners, to make a diligent
search for suitable placement options. For
support, the Tribe cites the district court's statement that the
Tribe failed to offer suitable placements for B.G.J.
The
Tribe's characterization of the district court's actions as burden shifting,
is erroneous. The
court properly placed the burden upon petitioners to prove the
existence of good cause to deviate from the Indian Child
Welfare Act's placement preferences. Almost
immediately following B.G.J.'s birth, petitioners, through the agency, made an
inquiry to the Tribe regarding whether potential placements existed; the
Tribe responded that no prospective adoptive families were available. T.J.
was adamantly opposed to the Tribe's two foster care options.
More
than a month later, the Tribe informed the agency that
it had a family available to adopt B.G.J., but the
Tribe never provided information regarding this family
to the agency. We
find no incorrect shifting of the burden of proof *905
here. The
adoption agency worked with the Tribe, but its efforts were
unsuccessful.
At
the hearing, the Tribe presented four individuals who wished to
adopt B.G.J. These individuals had little prior knowledge of B.G.J.
due to T.J.'s desire for confidentiality. Presumably,
this explains the absence of social assessments regarding these potential
placements. Nevertheless,
T.J. remained steadfastly opposed to any of these placements. Further,
the district court characterized these potential placements as not providing
a distinctive Native American environment for B.G.J., which is the
heart of the Act.
The
district court's determination that suitable placement options satisfying the Act's
preferences were unavailable is supported by the record. We
think the court correctly followed the spirit of the Indian
Child Welfare Act as well as the letter of the
law. The
court examined the evidence offered by the four placements in
light of a **659
possible Indian heritage for B.G.J. and found the four placements
not significantly different than the relinquishing parent, T.J. Obviously, with
a newborn infant there are no ties to the tribe
that will be broken and no cultural changes to be
made as mentioned in Adoption
of M.
We find no abuse of discretion here.
Bonding
With Adopting Parents
The
trial court acknowledged the bond between B.G.J. and the adopting
parents, with whom she has been living since shortly after
her birth in 2003. The
court considered that as evidence of what was in B.G.J.'s
best interest. The
court made clear, however, that the best interest consideration was
only part of its good cause determination; it
was not the controlling factor. We
think similarly, that the court's consideration of the bond between
B.G.J. and petitioners was appropriate. See
F.H.,
851 P.2d at 1365 (strong bond between child and prospective
adoptive parents was proper factor for district court to consider
in making good cause determination). We
find no error here.
Existing
Indian Family Doctrine Not Followed
The
Tribe makes an extensive argument against the existing Indian family
doctrine, which was first established in In
re Adoption *906
of Baby Boy L.,
231 Kan. 199, 643 P.2d 168, and recently reiterated in
In
re J.J.G.,
32 Kan.App.2d 448, 452-53, 83 P.3d 1264 (2004). In
Baby
Boy L.,
our Supreme Court held that the purpose of the Indian
Child Welfare Act ?was
not to dictate that an illegitimate infant who has never
been a member of an Indian home or culture, and
probably never would be, should be removed from its primary
cultural heritage and placed in an Indian environment over the
express objections of its non-Indian mother.?
231
Kan. at 206, 643 P.2d 168.
But the Tribe acknowledges the
district court did not use this doctrine to find the Act inapplicable
to this case. Indeed, the court found the Indian Child Welfare
Act applied but that good cause existed not to follow its placement preferences.
Really, the Tribe simply urges this court to reject the doctrine.
This we cannot do as this court is duty bound to follow Kansas
Supreme Court precedent in the absence of some indication that the court
is departing from its previous position. See Pruter
v. Larned State Hospital,
28 Kan.App.2d 302, 312, 16 P.3d 975 (2000), aff'd
271 Kan. 865, 26 P.3d 666 (2001). We decline the invitation
to reject the doctrine because it was not used in this case.
Affirmed.
|