(Cite
as: 353 Mont. 64, 218 P.3d 1213) |
Supreme
Court of Montana.
In
the Matter of J.M., A Youth in Need of Care.
No.
DA 09-0178.
Submitted
on Briefs Aug. 5, 2009.
Decided
Oct. 13, 2009.
**1214
For Appellant: Jim Wheelis, Chief Appellate Defender; Tammy A. Hinderman,
Assistant Appellate Defender, Helena, Montana.
For
Appellee: Hon. Steve Bullock, Montana Attorney General; Mark W. Mattioli,
Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana. John Parker, Cascade County
Attorney; Sarah Corbally, Deputy County Attorney, Great Falls,
Montana.
Justice
BRIAN MORRIS delivered the Opinion of the Court.
*65
? 1 D.M. appeals from an order of the Eighth Judicial District Court, Cascade
County, terminating her parental rights. We affirm.
?
2 We review the following issue on appeal:
?
3 Did
the District Court abuse its discretion by terminating D.M.'s parental rights,
based in part on its reliance on D.M.'s stipulation, where J.M. had not been
determined to be an Indian child for purposes of ICWA until after the
adjudication of J.M. as a youth in need of care?
FACTUAL
AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
?
4 D.M. has a decade long history with the Department of Health and Human
Services**1215
(Department), including multiple instances of drug abuse and involvement with
law enforcement. The courts have terminated D.M.'s parental rights to five other
children after she failed to follow previous treatment plans with respect to two
children and voluntarily relinquished her rights to three others following the
initiation of termination proceedings by the State.
1.
The Adjudication of J.M. as a ?Youth in Need of Care?
?
5 The Department removed J.M. from D.M.'s care at birth under emergency
circumstances and placed her at Benefis Hospital in Great Falls due to medical
conditions. The Department attempted to contact the Blackfeet Social Services to
seek culturally-appropriate placement options for J.M. on her release based on
the Department's belief that J.M. might be an Indian child for purposes of the
Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA).
?
6 The Department petitioned for adjudication of J.M. as a youth in need of care
and temporary legal custody on February 7, 2008, in response to alleged neglect
and ongoing drug abuse by D.M. The Department also cited the failure of prior
efforts to provide remedial services and rehabilitation programs to D.M. The
Department notified the Blackfeet Tribe of the proceeding and the possibility
that J.M. might be an Indian child. The Department based its belief that J.M.
might be a member of the Blackfeet Tribe on D.M.'s identification of three
possible putative fathers, including V.D., to whom D.M. was married at the time
of J.M.'s conception. D.M. and V.D. divorced before the Department initiated
these proceedings. Montana law presumes *66
J.M. to be the natural child of V.D., however, because she was born within 300
days of the termination of D.M.'s marriage to V.D. Section 40-6-105(a), MCA.
D.M.'s marriage to V.D. does not determine definitively J.M.'s status for
purposes of ICWA. We nevertheless note D.M.'s marital status as it prompted the
Department to notify the Blackfeet Tribe of J.M. as a possible Indian child. The
Department had not completed DNA testing of V.D. or the other surviving putative
father at the time of the petition.
?
7 The Department appeared at the adjudicatory hearing on May 13, 2008, with a
social worker and an ICWA expert who were prepared to testify on the need for
temporary legal custody of J.M. D.M. instead stipulated through counsel to the
adjudication of J.M. as a youth in need of care and temporary legal custody.
D.M. stipulated to granting temporary legal custody of J.M. to the Department
for a period of up to six months to allow D.M. to complete her court approved
treatment plan. Counsel for D.M. also recognized the potential application of
ICWA and waived testimony of the Department's ICWA expert.
?
8 The court adjudicated J.M. as a youth in need of care on May 15, 2008, and
granted the Department temporary legal custody. The court observed that the
Blackfeet Tribe had not indicated whether J.M. was an Indian child for purposes
of ICWA and noted D.M.'s stipulation pursuant to ? 41-3-434(1)-(2), MCA. The
court concluded that ?based on these facts and the stipulation of the Mother, a
legal basis exists for continued court and [D]epartment intervention.? The court
cited D.M.'s continuing substance abuse, the prior terminations of her parental
rights, and her stipulations in the instant case as clear and convincing
evidence in support of its adjudication and temporary custody
order.
2.
The Termination of D.M.'s Parental Rights
?
9 The Department petitioned for termination of D.M.'s parental rights in
November 2008, based on D.M.'s lack of progress with her court ordered treatment
plan. The Department submitted a Permanency Plan Report in January 2009,
reflecting the fact that J.M.'s paternity had been established, and that J.M.
was an Indian child for purposes of ICWA. The Department stated that a Blackfeet
Tribal Services representative would be invited to the Foster Care Review
Committee meeting scheduled for February 19, 2009.
**1216
? 10 The termination hearing commenced on December 16, 2008, and concluded
February 10, 2009. The Department presented evidence that D.M. had failed to
complete treatment and the fact of D.M. having been convicted of a DUI in July
of 2008. An ICWA expert from the Blackfeet Tribe testified that J.M. would be in
danger of serious *67
emotional or physical harm if she were returned to D.M.'s care.
?
11 The Blackfeet Tribe filed a notice of intention to intervene to monitor the
proceeding on February 16, 2009. The court issued an order granting the
Blackfeet Tribe's motion to intervene on February 24, 2009. The court filed its
order terminating D.M.'s parental rights on the following day.
STANDARD
OF REVIEW
[1][2]
? 12 We review a district court's decision to terminate parental rights to
determine whether the court abused its discretion. In
re F.M.,
2002 MT 180, ? 21, 311 Mont. 35, 53 P.3d 368. A trial court abuses its
discretion when it ?acts arbitrarily, without employment of conscientious
judgment, or exceeds the bounds of reason resulting in substantial injustice.?
In
re the Matter of A.G.,
2005 MT 81, ? 12, 326 Mont. 403, 109 P.3d 756. Where ICWA applies, we will
uphold a district court's termination of parental rights if a reasonable fact
finder could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that continued custody of the
child by the parent is likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage
to the child. In
the Matter of T.W.F.,
2009 MT 207, ? 18, 351 Mont. 233, 210 P.3d 174.
DISCUSSION
?
13 Did
the District Court abuse its discretion by terminating D.M.'s parental rights,
based in part on its reliance on D.M.'s stipulation, where J.M. had not been
determined to be an Indian child for purposes of ICWA until after the
adjudication of J.M. as a youth in need of care?
[3]
? 14 D.M. argues that the District Court violated 25 U.S.C. ? 1913 when it
accepted D.M.'s stipulation of J.M. as a youth in need of care without first
explaining the consequences and then obtaining her written consent. Section 1913
provides that a parent's consent to the foster care placement of a child or
termination of parental rights is invalid unless executed in writing and with
procedural safeguards designed to ensure that the parent understands the
consequences of her consent. 25 U.S.C. ? 1913(a). D.M. argues that the District
Court's failure to follow the requirements of ? 1913(a) invalidated the court's
adjudication of D.M. as a youth in need of care.
?
15 Whether ? 1913(a) applies to D.M. turns on the issue of whether the
proceedings were ?voluntary.? D.M. argues that ? 1913's failure to distinguish
between ?voluntary? and ?involuntary? proceedings supports her claim that ?
1913(a) applies to all voluntary ?acts of foster care placement or termination
of parental rights ... regardless of the *68
type of underlying procedure at issue.? Thus, D.M. argues that her consent to
adjudication and temporary placement triggered ? 1913 notwithstanding the
adversarial nature of the Department's petition.
?
16 D.M. argues against our adoption of the reasoning in a recent decision of the
Washington Court of Appeals that held that ? 1913(a) did not apply to an
involuntary custody proceeding. In
re Welfare of M.G.,
148 Wash.App. 781, 201 P.3d 354 (2009). The mother claimed that ? 1913(a)
applied to a dependency order to which she had agreed during the course of an
involuntary custody proceeding. The state had initiated the proceeding due to
the mother's drug addiction and inability to care for her child. M.G.,
201 P.3d at 358. The court declined to apply ? 1913 in situations where the
state had sought an involuntary placement of the child and the parent had been
represented by counsel. M.G.,
201 P.3d at 358.
?
17 D.M. correctly observes that ? 1913 does not distinguish on its face between
voluntary and involuntary proceedings. Section 1913 by its terms, however,
implicates voluntarily initiated termination or foster care
proceedings.**1217
It is intended ?to encourage parents to make appropriate placement of their
children when they are not confident of their own ability to parent? and are
without counsel. M.G.,
201 P.3d at 358. The lack of counsel highlights the informal nature of the
proceedings covered by ? 1913. D.M. did not approach the Department voluntarily
to give up custody as contemplated by ? 1913. D.M. appeared at the hearing with
her appointed counsel in light of the adversarial nature of the
proceedings.
?
18 Moreover, the Bureau of Indian Affairs titled its guidelines to ? 1913
?Voluntary Proceedings? and clearly distinguished the ? 1913 consent provisions
from the procedure and rules applicable to ?Involuntary Proceedings? to which ?
1912 applies. See
44 Fed.Reg. 67, 593 (1979) (BIA Guideline E). If ? 1913(a) were applied here,
the court's temporary placement of J.M. with the Department would be deemed
voluntary and revocable by D.M. This scenario makes no sense in light of D.M.'s
extensive history of drug abuse, and her failure to complete the most recent in
a series of court approved treatment plans. These circumstances prompted the
Department to initiate the adjudication. Allowing D.M. to characterize her
stipulation as a voluntary act triggering ? 1913 would ignore this
history.
?
19 We faced an analogous situation in In
re P.S.,
2006 MT 4, 330 Mont. 239, 127 P.3d 451. The Department had initiated termination
proceedings. The father, in an effort to forestall the involuntary termination
and its attendant consequences for future children, sought *69
to relinquish voluntarily his parental rights. P.S.,
? 8. An involuntary termination leads to a presumption in favor of termination
of parental rights to future children. P.S.,
? 8; ? 41-3-423(2)(e), MCA. This Court rejected the father's efforts on the
grounds that the termination statute, ? 41-3-609(1)(a), MCA, provides a court
with discretion whether to take into account a parent's attempt to relinquish
voluntarily when deciding whether to order involuntary termination. P.S.,
? 14. D.M. here, too, may not tip the statutory balance in her favor by seeking
to relinquish voluntarily her parental rights when faced with the prospect of
involuntary termination. Section 1913(a) has no application to the involuntary
termination proceedings initiated by the Department against D.M.
[4]
? 20 We turn now to the primary issue of whether the District Court abused its
discretion by relying, in part, on D.M.'s stipulation in the adjudication of
J.M. as a youth in need of care and its subsequent termination of D.M.'s
parental rights. Any involuntary proceeding triggers ICWA's procedural
safeguards ?where the court knows or has reason to know that an Indian child is
involved.? 25 U.S.C. ? 1912(a). The court must verify the child's status with
the Bureau of Indian Affairs or the child's tribe when it ?has reason to believe
that a child involved in a child custody proceeding is an Indian.? Guidelines
for State Courts; Indian Child Custody Proceedings B.1. (a) 44 Fed.Reg. 67, 586
(1979). In accordance with these guidelines, ICWA applies when a court has
reason to know that a child may be an Indian child. In
re T.J.H.,
2003 MT 352, ? 10, 318 Mont. 528, 81 P.3d 504. We have held previously that
?tribes have ultimate authority to decide who qualifies as an ?Indian child.? ?
A.G.,
? 14.
?
21 Where, as here, the Department had reason to believe that it might be dealing
with an Indian child, and in fact notified the tribe to that effect, we have
held that a district court abused its discretion when it failed to resolve
definitively the threshold question of whether the children at issue were
?Indian children? within the meaning of ICWA. A.G.,
? 15. We determined that the district court should have delayed final
adjudication pending a determination of the children's status once it had
initiated proceedings to discover the Indian status of the children.
A.G.,
? 16. The court instead unilaterally determined that the children were not
?Indian children? despite responses from the Tribes indicating that further
research was needed. A.G.,
? 5. The court also heard evidence from the mother and the children's
**1218
grandmother concerning the children's eligibility for tribal enrollment,
including a letter from the tribe indicating that it would intervene on
*70
the mother's behalf. A.G.,
? 7.
[5]
? 22 These facts distinguish this case from A.G.
First, D.M. stipulated to the youth in need of care adjudication and to the
treatment plan. A parent's valid stipulation under ? 41-3-434, MCA, can satisfy
the required findings for the adjudication of a youth in need of care even
absent an evidentiary hearing. In
re M.W.,
2001 MT 78, 305 Mont. 80, 23 P.3d 206; In
re M.B.,
2004 MT 304, 323 Mont. 468, 100 P.3d 1006. The District Court adjudicated J.M.
as a youth in need of care based on both D.M.'s stipulation and the record as a
whole.
?
23 Second, the Department notified the Blackfeet Tribe in this case of the
proceedings at an early stage. The Court in A.G.,
by contrast, terminated the mother's parental rights before the Tribe had made a
final determination of the child's status. The record indicates that the
Department attempted to work with Blackfeet Social Services to find a
culturally-appropriate placement for J.M. in anticipation of her release from
the hospital. These actions reflect the Department's belief that J.M. qualified
as an Indian child for purposes of ICWA. The District Court's order adjudicating
J.M. as a youth in need of care reflects that D.M. stipulated that ICWA applied
and that D.M. ?waived the testimony of the ICWA expert who was in court.? The
record further reflects that the Department had invited a tribal representative
to the permanency plan hearing. A qualified ICWA expert testified at the
termination hearing that ?continued custody of the Youth by the Mother would
likely result in serious emotional or physical damage to the child.? Finally,
the Blackfeet Tribe gave notice of its intention to exercise its right of
intervention under 25 U.S.C. ? 1911(c) to ?monitor the custody proceeding.? The
Blackfeet Tribe tellingly has not interceded on D.M.'s behalf or objected to the
termination of her parental rights.
?
24 The District Court complied with ICWA in finding by clear and convincing
evidence that J.M. was a youth in need of care. The court found beyond a
reasonable doubt-also as required by ICWA-that J.M.'s physical, mental, and
emotional best interests would be served by termination of the parent-child
legal relationship. The fact that the court accepted D.M.'s stipulation to the
adjudication of J.M. as a youth in need of care before it had definitively
established J.M.'s Indian status does not invalidate the proceedings. The
District Court did not abuse its discretion when it terminated D.M.'s parental
rights.
?
25 Affirmed.
We
Concur: MIKE McGRATH, PATRICIA O. COTTER and JOHN WARNER, JJ.*71
Justice JAMES C. NELSON concurs.
?
26 I concur in the result of the Court's Opinion and for much of what is said
therein. I do not agree, however, with the discussion that at the time the
Blackfeet Tribe was first notified, the paternity of J.M. was yet to be decided.
V.D. was one of J.M.'s putative fathers. As D.M. points out, however, she was
married to V.D. at the time of J.M.'s conception. The District Court even
referred to V.D. as the birth father. As noted in the Opinion, ? 40-6-105(1)(a),
MCA, provides that a person is presumed to be the natural father of a child if
the person and the child's natural mother are or have been married to each other
and the child is born during the marriage or within 300 days after the marriage
is terminated. See
In
re Marriage of K.E.V.,
267 Mont. 323, 329, 883 P.2d 1246, 1250 (1994). Applying this statute, as the
trial court was required to do, V.D. should have been presumed to be the natural
father of J.M. And, since V.D. was an Indian, J.M. was, likewise, an Indian
child for ICWA purposes at the time the Department of Health and Human Services
became involved in this case.
?
27 Additionally, and without going into the detail that appellate counsel did, I
agree that the law was not entirely followed in this **1219
case. I have joined the Court's Opinion, but perhaps, for the wrong reason.
Quite simply, given D.M.'s dismal track record and the unlikelihood that she
will ever be able to parent J.M., I simply cannot find a good reason to send
this case back to the District Court for further proceedings. I do not believe
that would be in J.M.'s best interest when the likely outcome would be exactly
the same. Moreover, given J.M.'s Indian status, her tribe had substantial input
and involvement throughout this case. Therefore, the spirit, if not the letter,
of ICWA was followed. Though my decision is, admittedly, result-oriented, that
is not to say that I disagree with appellate counsel's arguments on
appeal.
?
28 Finally, with regard to appellate counsel, in my view, she wrote excellent,
thoroughly researched briefs on appeal, and she zealously and professionally
represented her client. For that, unfortunately, she was sharply criticized by
the State in its appellate brief. Over several pages, the State took her to task
for her
very
unfair decision to renege on the stipulation and waiver of OSPD counsel [Office
of State Public Defender] below....
...
Furthermore,
it is patently unfair for the OSPD (Appellate Defender) to attack as plain error
a stipulation an OSPD lawyer *72
made below. It is unfair to Judge Neill and it [is] also unfair to J.M. and her
foster parents.... The Appellate Defender's decision to renege on its
stipulation also does not promote Indian cultural or tribal
interests....
[Trial
counsel's] stipulation, which was made before Indian child status was
ascertained, should be honored by the Appellate Defender. At the very least, the
district court ... cannot be accused of plain error....
State's
counsel also accused the OSPD of pursuing a trial strategy of not making
objections so that the error can then be raised under a plain error argument on
appeal-thus causing delay in child abuse cases, discouraging the OSPD from
training its lawyers to raise timely objections, and being unfair to the trial
judge. I could not disagree more with the State's comments.
?
29 In the first place, appellate counsel has no moral, legal or ethical
obligation to roll over and play dead for the convenience of the District Court
or the State when she finds in the record legitimate appellate issues-regardless
that her client's OSPD trial attorney might have been part of the problem.
Indeed, Montana Rule of Professional Conduct (M.R.P.C.) 1.1 demands that an
attorney provide competent representation to a client-that is, representation
which encompasses legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness and preparation.
Appellate counsel provided her client with competent representation on appeal in
this case within that definition. Moreover, appellate counsel advocated for her
client within the parameters of M.R.P.C. 3.1, 3.3 and 3.4. I can find no basis
for the State's criticism here. Secondly, it is the litigants in our system of
justice that are entitled to due process and to fundamental fairness, not the
trial judge. Indeed, the trial judge is supposed to make sure that each litigant
is accorded procedural and substantive due process and that the law is followed.
And, finally, instead of railing on the OSPD, the Attorney General's training
people might take the occasional opportunity to remind prosecutors of what this
Court said in State
ex rel. Fletcher v. Dist. Court,
260 Mont. 410, 415, 859 P.2d 992, 995 (1993). Specifically,
[t]he
prosecutor's role is a unique one within the criminal justice system. Though the
[county] attorney must diligently discharge the duty of prosecuting individuals
accused of criminal conduct, the prosecutor may not seek victory at the expense
of the defendant's constitutional rights. Thus, the prosecution is obligated to
respect the defendant's right to a fair and impartial trial in compliance with
due process of law. Moreover, the *73
prosecutor may not bring criminal charges against an **1220
individual unless supported by probable cause, and, once charges are instituted,
must reveal to the court any information which negates the existence of probable
cause....
[T]he
role of the prosecutor ... [is not] simply a specialized version of the duty of
any attorney not to overstep the bounds of permissible advocacy.... In all his
activities, his duties are conditioned by the fact that he is the representative
not of any ordinary party to a controversy, but of a sovereignty whose
obligation to govern impartially is as compelling as its obligation to govern at
all.... Thus, the prosecutor must execute the duties of his representative
office diligently and fairly, avoiding even the appearance of impropriety that
might reflect poorly on the state. [Internal quotations and citations
omitted.]
While
I do not excuse mistakes and sloppy work by the OSPD, I also do not excuse the
prosecutor taking advantage of that where the fundamental constitutional rights
of parents and the best interests of abused and neglected children are involved.
Given the prosecutor's unique obligations as described above and, presumably,
greater expertise, trial courts might be dissuaded from heading down the wrong
path if the county attorney gave the judge a heads-up warning.
?
30 I appreciate the sort of well-written, well-researched, and well-argued
briefs that appellate counsel filed in this case. That she did not prevail is
more a function of a losing cause; not for her lack of diligence or admirable
effort.
?
31 Quote-worthy, too, is appellate counsel's response in her reply brief to the
State's criticism. She stated:
Finally,
the Department's insinuation that ?OSPD? intentionally fails to train trial
counsel as part of an agency-wide strategy to gain a tactical advantage on
appeal is preposterous.FN1
Appellate counsel for the mother has an obligation to zealously represent the
mother and to raise on her behalf nonfrivolous appellate issues, including
claims of plain error by the trial court and ineffective assistance of trial
counsel. Appellate counsel does not have the same obligation to ensure the
system is ?fair? to the district court judge, the child, or the child's foster
parents. Moreover, the idea that it is somehow ?unfair? to expect district
*74
court judges to follow the law is absurd. People make mistakes, even district
court judges. It is appellate counsel's job to ensure those mistakes are
presented to this Court for review, and it is this Court's job to review them,
if circumstances warrant. When the law is plain, the district court nonetheless
makes a decision in contravention of that law, and that decision compromises the
integrity of the judicial process and affects the mother's fundamental right to
parent, appellate counsel has the duty to raise the issue before this Court on
appeal, regardless of what trial counsel's position below may have been. The
mother contends this is the case here and urges the Court to exercise its
inherent power to review these important issues now. [Internal citations
omitted.]
FN1.
As Appellate Counsel also notes, given OSPD's record on appeals in abuse and
neglect proceedings since its inception three years ago, had OSPD enacted such a
system-wide strategy, it could fairly be deemed a failure at this
point.
I
agree.
?
32 With those caveats, I concur.