J. B., Mother of: D. L., Minor Child v. Department of Children and Families , 158 So. 3d 653 ( 2014 )


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  •                                       IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
    J.B., MOTHER OF: D.L.,                NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
    MINOR CHILD,                          FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
    DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
    Appellant,
    CASE NO. 1D13-4346
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN
    AND FAMILIES,
    Appellee.
    _____________________________/
    Opinion filed October 7, 2014.
    An appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County.
    Karen A. Gievers, Judge.
    Mike Donovan of Legal Services of North Florida, Inc., Tallahassee, for Appellant.
    Dwight O. Slater, Appellate Counsel, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
    SWANSON, J.
    In this direct appeal from the final judgment terminating her parental rights,
    the mother, J.B., claims she was denied the effective assistance of counsel during
    the proceedings below. Because we conclude the mother cannot demonstrate on
    the face of the record that trial counsel was ineffective, we affirm. However, we
    certify two questions of great public importance regarding the proper standard for
    determining ineffective assistance of counsel claims as well as the procedure for
    raising such claims in termination cases.
    I.
    On March 14, 2011, the Department of Children and Families removed the
    child, D.L, from the mother’s custody based on allegations the mother was abusing
    illegal drugs, had been living in a “crack house” followed by a homeless shelter,
    and was currently in jail for violating her probation.      On April 1, 2011, the
    Department filed a dependency petition alleging the mother violated a safety plan,
    was unstable, allowed the child to frequent unsafe locations, and left the child with
    strangers at the homeless shelter. On June 22, 2011, the trial court adjudicated the
    child dependent based on the mother’s consent. On July 13, 2011, the trial court
    accepted a case plan with the goal of reunification.
    On February 10, 2012, the Department filed a petition for termination of
    parental rights. The petition alleged the mother abandoned the child by failing to
    provide for him financially or emotionally and failing to exercise her parental
    duties and responsibilities.   The petition further alleged the mother failed to
    substantially comply with the case plan within a nine-month time period in that she
    failed to complete an in-patient drug treatment program, complete a parenting
    course, follow all recommendations of a parenting evaluation, follow all
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    recommendations of a psychiatric evaluation, undergo random urinalysis and a hair
    follicle test, participate in a General Equivalency Diploma (GED) program,
    maintain stable housing, maintain verifiable income, and maintain contact with the
    dependency case manager.
    On July 18, 2013, the mother’s counsel filed a motion for continuance on the
    ground “[t]hat the purported father ha[d] yet to be tested.” The adjudicatory
    hearing was held the following day. After the trial court read the motion for
    continuance and heard argument from counsel, the following exchange ensued:
    THE COURT: [Counsel], your motion for
    continuance is denied. It was not timely. It is not proper
    in form. And it does not show good cause sufficient to
    override the statutory mandates regarding the child’s
    right to permanency.
    [MOTHER’S COUNSEL]: Yes, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: Do you want opening statements?
    [MOTHER’S COUNSEL]: No, Your Honor. I’m
    not prepared to go forward in that case. I was under the
    impression that things would have been different, but
    something changed.
    THE COURT: Well, regardless, we have been
    scheduled for this trial for quite a while. And the Court
    knows that you’re a competent attorney. Let’s go
    forward.
    ....
    If at some point, [counsel], after all this time to
    prepare for this trial, there’s a particular additional thing
    or person that you think you need to have put in evidence
    or call as a witness, you can go ahead and identify that
    for the record. The Court notes you didn’t file your—or
    send in your motion for continuance until—it’s signed on
    July 18th. Today is July 19th.
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    The Court is confident that as experienced and
    competent an attorney as you are, that you would have
    been ready to go forward and would have filed a motion
    for continuance a lot sooner if there were any particular
    inability on your part to be effective.
    After stating that he was “really exhausted” and that “the last few weeks ha[d]
    worn [him] down,” the mother’s counsel asserted in his opening statement that the
    mother had complied with most of her case plan and any failures by the mother
    were attributable to the Department, which failed to prepare the mother for life as
    an adult when the mother herself was a foster child in the Department’s custody.
    During the Department’s case-in-chief, Ashley Birdshaw, a child protective
    investigator, testified that she investigated allegations in the initial child abuse
    report in January 2011, determined that the mother did not have stable housing,
    learned from the mother that she had lived in a crack house in Gainesville before
    coming to Tallahassee, and had the child sheltered after the mother was arrested in
    March 2011. During the mother’s cross-examination, Birdshaw acknowledged
    knowing that the mother was a former foster child, but disagreed with the
    characterization of the mother’s counsel that Birdshaw “left a minor on the streets
    with a child.” The Department requested the trial court take judicial notice that the
    mother was born on October 15, 1992, establishing the mother was eighteen years
    old during Birdshaw’s investigation. The trial court denied the request after the
    mother’s counsel objected in the absence of the Department producing a copy of
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    the mother’s birth certificate. Later, the trial court received into evidence, without
    objection, the child’s birth certificate, which listed the mother’s date of birth as
    October 15, 1992.
    Bethanie Milford, the dependency case manager, testified the mother failed
    to substantially comply with her case plan tasks, which included completing the
    Sisters in Sobriety program. Milford further testified that she called the program
    and was told the mother was not in compliance and “just left.”              Although
    conceding the mother was good for the most part in her visitation with the child
    when she was not incarcerated, Milford testified the mother disappeared in
    December 2012 or January 2013 and that she got a call from the mother’s former
    foster parents that the mother had been arrested for prostitution in Georgia.
    Milford also testified that the mother currently lived at a halfway house after
    getting out of jail and that the director indicated children were not allowed to be
    there. During Milford’s testimony, the trial court took judicial notice of several
    previous judicial reviews without objection.
    Dr. Carole Oseroff, a board-certified child and adolescent psychologist,
    testified she first came into contact with the mother when she was twelve years old
    and performed two psychological assessments and two parenting assessments of
    the mother in the period from 2005 to 2012. Dr. Oseroff diagnosed the mother,
    whose intellectual function fell squarely in the average range, with attention
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    deficit-hyperactivity disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and antisocial
    personality disorder with features of borderline personality disorder. She
    concluded it was unlikely that the mother would be able to make the changes
    necessary to safely reunify her with the child in the near future and that strong
    consideration needed to be given to termination of the mother’s parental rights. On
    cross-examination, Dr. Oseroff conceded the Department did not effectively treat
    the mother’s issues while she was a child in foster care.
    Cloteal Tanner, the child’s therapist, testified that she noticed the child
    stopped progressing in therapy and his behavior changed after the child’s foster
    mother reported that the child had resumed visitations with his mother. The child’s
    foster mother testified she and her husband were interested in adopting the child,
    who became upset and had nightmares after seeing the mother. Stephanie Morse,
    the child’s guardian ad litem, testified the child had developed a parent-child
    relationship with his foster parents, the mother was unable to give the child the
    stability and permanence he needed, and she recommended the termination of the
    mother’s parental rights. A copy of Morse’s report, which had been received by all
    the parties, was provided to the court without objection.
    At the conclusion of the Department’s case, the mother’s counsel did not
    move for a judgment of dismissal. During the mother’s case, the Department
    objected to the mother presenting testimony from her former foster parents because
    6
    the mother’s counsel never filed a witness list. The mother’s counsel replied that
    he had not filed a witness list because he was under the impression that the
    Department had consented to continue the case. The court overruled the objection
    and allowed both witnesses to testify. Although the mother submitted her own
    witness list identifying Cassie Hemmick and Lorie Asifor as additional witnesses,
    the mother indicated that Asifor could be excused. The mother’s counsel then
    indicated he advised the mother that it was not in her best interest to call Hemmick
    as a witness. After discussing the matter further with her counsel, the mother
    agreed not to call Hemmick. The mother’s counsel then called Sharon Ross-
    Donaldson, who was the mother’s therapist. Finally, the mother testified on her
    own behalf. During cross-examination, the mother testified she was never asked if
    any family members could care for the child and told the case manager that family
    members were available. The mother’s counsel did not pursue this further on
    redirect examination.
    During closing arguments, the mother’s counsel again argued the mother’s
    problems stemmed from the Department’s own failure to effectively help her while
    she was a child in foster care. Counsel then argued the Department did not provide
    a qualified case manager for the mother, who had mental health issues, as required
    by chapter 39, Florida Statutes. When the court asked counsel for the applicable
    statute, counsel responded that he did not have a statute book with him. The trial
    7
    court then provided one to counsel, who responded, “Of course, I may be so—I’m
    so tired, I may be doing everything, again, wrong, but I believe that that is—” The
    Department’s counsel attempted to assist the mother’s counsel in finding the
    statute. After the trial court called a recess so that counsel could review the statute
    suggested by the Department’s counsel, the mother’s counsel stated, “Yes. The
    statute she has pointed to is not the one I was thinking of. It may have changed.
    I’ve been doing this so dadgum long, I’ve been at this—put in 80 hours this week
    already, I can’t think straight, so I withdraw that part of it.”
    On August 9, 2013, the trial court entered a final judgment terminating
    parental rights. Specifically, the court found by clear and convincing evidence that
    the mother abandoned and neglected the child by failing to substantially comply
    with her case plan tasks during the child’s foster placement. In addition, the court
    found that termination was the least restrictive means of protecting the child from
    harm. Finally, the court found by clear and convincing evidence that it was in the
    manifest best interest of the child to terminate parental rights.         This appeal
    followed.
    II.
    Florida’s constitutional due process clause creates a right to appointed
    counsel in proceedings that may result in the termination of parental rights. In
    Interest of D.B., 
    385 So. 2d 83
    , 90-91 (Fla. 1980); E.T. v. State, Dep’t of Children
    8
    & Families, 
    930 So. 2d 721
    , 725 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006). The constitutional right to
    counsel in termination proceedings implicitly requires the effective assistance of
    counsel. In re E.K., 
    33 So. 3d 125
    , 127 (Fla. 2d DCA 2010); 
    E.T., 930 So. 2d at 726
    . Any attack on the effectiveness of counsel in termination proceedings must
    come in the form of a direct appeal or an authorized post-trial motion. 
    Id. at 728.
    However, a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel cannot be raised for the first
    time on appeal unless counsel’s ineffectiveness is apparent on the face of the
    record. 
    E.K., 33 So. 3d at 125
    ; L.H. v. Dep’t of Children & Families, 
    995 So. 2d 583
    , 584-85 (Fla. 5th DCA 2008). In the only Florida appellate decision to address
    the standard applicable to ineffective assistance of counsel claims in proceedings
    that may result in the termination of parental rights, we adopted the criminal
    standard of ineffective assistance of counsel announced in Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    (1984). L.W. v. Dep’t of Children & Families, 
    812 So. 2d
    551, 556 (Fla. 1st DCA 2002).             Although L.W. involved dependency
    proceedings and was disapproved of on other grounds by our supreme court in S.B.
    v. Dep’t of Children & Families, 
    851 So. 2d 689
    (Fla. 2003), we adhere to our
    prior decision by holding the Strickland standard applies to claims of ineffective
    assistance of counsel in termination proceedings.      Thus, in order to establish
    ineffective assistance of counsel, the parent must establish that counsel’s
    performance was deficient and prejudiced the parent, i.e., there is a reasonable
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    probability that parental rights would not have been terminated absent counsel’s
    deficient performance.
    For the first time on appeal, the mother claims she was denied the effective
    assistance of counsel during the proceedings to terminate her parental rights.
    Specifically, she claims her counsel was ineffective for (1) filing an untimely
    motion for a continuance to investigate prospective fathers; (2) admitting he was
    exhausted and not prepared to go forward during opening statements; (3)
    erroneously believing the mother was still a minor when the child was sheltered;
    (4) allowing the introduction of hearsay in the form of previous judicial reviews
    and testimony concerning the mother leaving a sobriety program and being
    arrested for prostitution in Georgia, the child not being allowed to live with the
    mother at a halfway house, and the child’s behavior changing after he resumed
    visitation with the mother; (5) failing to file a witness list and opposing the mother
    calling a witness on the ground it was not in the mother’s best interest; (6) failure
    to cross-examine the guardian ad litem or object to the guardian’s report on
    timeliness and hearsay grounds; (7) failing to move for a judgment of dismissal at
    the conclusion of the Department’s case; (8) failing to pursue on redirect
    examination the mother’s claim that a relative placement was available for the
    child; (9) misleading the court during closing argument that the Department did not
    provide a qualified case manager for the mother, who had mental health issues; and
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    (10) failing to object to the trial court’s failure to inform the mother of the
    availability of advocacy services under section 39.502, Florida Statutes (2011).
    Although we are concerned the trial court chose to go forward with the
    adjudicatory hearing despite the repeated protestations of the mother’s counsel that
    he was exhausted and not prepared to proceed with the hearing, we agree with the
    Department that the mother cannot demonstrate counsel’s ineffectiveness under the
    Strickland standard. Specifically, the face of the record fails to show that (1) good
    cause existed for a continuance to investigate prospective fathers, which was not
    material to the allegations against the mother; (2) the mother was prejudiced by her
    counsel’s opening statement, which appeared to reflect a tactical strategy to
    convince the court that the mother’s failures were attributable to the Department;
    (3) the mother was prejudiced by counsel’s belief that the mother was a minor in
    March 2011 when, in fact, she turned eighteen four months earlier; (4) no tactical
    explanation existed for counsel’s failure to object to the admission of hearsay
    evidence, much of which was cumulative to other nonhearsay evidence; (5) the
    mother was prejudiced by counsel’s failure to file a witness list, which did not
    prevent the mother from calling her witnesses, or by counsel’s opposition to calling
    one particular witness, who the mother agreed to drop after further discussing the
    matter with counsel; (6) no tactical explanation existed for counsel’s failure to
    cross-examine the guardian ad litem or object to her report, portions of which were
    11
    favorable to the mother; (7) counsel could have successfully argued in favor of a
    motion for judgment of dismissal; (8) a specific relative placement was available
    for the child; (9) the mother was prejudiced by her counsel’s closing argument,
    which reiterated that the mother’s failures were attributable to the Department; or
    (10) the mother was prejudiced by the failure to inform her of advocacy services
    where the mother consented to the dependency adjudication and failed to avail
    herself of the services offered by the Department. In short, the mother has failed to
    establish that “the ineffectiveness is obvious on the face of the appellate record, the
    prejudice caused by the conduct is indisputable, and a tactical explanation for the
    conduct is inconceivable.” Corzo v. State, 
    806 So. 2d 642
    , 645 (Fla. 2d DCA
    2002).
    III.
    Notwithstanding our decision to affirm, we join our sister courts in
    expressing concern regarding the lack of any effective procedure for raising
    ineffective assistance of counsel claims in termination proceedings where the
    alleged ineffectiveness is not apparent on the face of the record. See E.K., 
    33 So. 3d
    at 127; 
    L.H., 995 So. 2d at 584-85
    ; 
    E.T., 930 So. 2d at 728-29
    . In most cases,
    the record is not sufficiently developed to establish ineffective assistance claims on
    direct appeal, and our rules do not contain procedures for remanding to the trial
    court for additional factfinding. See E.K., 
    33 So. 3d
    at 127-28; 
    L.H., 995 So. 2d at 12
    584-85; 
    E.T., 930 So. 2d at 728
    n. 4. To the extent such claims could be raised
    before the trial court in a timely motion for rehearing pursuant to Florida Rule of
    Juvenile Procedure 8.265, it is very unlikely trial counsel would file a motion
    challenging his or her own effectiveness. Moreover, attempts to raise ineffective
    assistance claims in a motion for relief from judgment pursuant to Florida Rule of
    Juvenile Procedure 8.270 have been rejected as not authorized by the rule. E.K.,
    
    33 So. 3d
    at 126-27. Finally, the possibility of raising such claims in a petition for
    writ of habeas corpus has been rejected by the Fourth District Court of Appeal.
    
    E.T., 930 So. 2d at 727-29
    . At oral argument in this case, both parties agreed that
    habeas corpus would be too time-consuming to be an effective mechanism for
    collaterally attacking the effective assistance of counsel in termination
    proceedings.
    Therefore, it would appear that a new procedural mechanism is required.
    One commentator has suggested the adoption of a rule similar to Florida Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 3.800(b)(2), which permits a defendant to file a motion to
    correct sentencing error in the trial court at any time before the filing of the
    defendant’s initial brief on appeal. Anthony C. Musto, Potato, Potahto: Whether
    Ineffective Assistance or Due Process, an Effective Rule is Overdue in
    Termination of Parental Rights Cases in Florida, 21 St. Thomas L. Rev. 231, 249-
    50 (2009). If such a rule was adopted in termination proceedings, it would allow
    13
    the parent’s appellate counsel to file a motion alleging ineffective assistance of
    counsel in the trial court before the filing of the initial brief on appeal. This would
    give the trial court an opportunity to rule on the motion and conduct an evidentiary
    hearing, if necessary, thereby creating a sufficient record for appellate review.
    Since rulemaking is not this court’s constitutional prerogative, we urge our
    supreme court to address this important matter through the exercise of its
    rulemaking power.
    IV.
    In conclusion, we affirm the termination of the mother’s parental rights, but
    certify the following questions to be of great public importance:
    I. IS THE CRIMINAL STANDARD OF INEFFECTIVE
    ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL ANNOUNCED IN
    STRICKLAND V. WASHINGTON APPLICABLE TO
    CLAIMS OF INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF
    COUNSEL IN PROCEEDINGS INVOLVING THE
    TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS?
    II. IS ANY PROCEDURE AVAILABLE FOLLOWING
    THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO
    RAISE CLAIMS OF INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF
    COUNSEL THAT ARE NOT APPARENT ON THE
    FACE OF THE RECORD?
    AFFIRMED; QUESTIONS CERTIFIED.
    ROBERTS and MARSTILLER, JJ., CONCUR.
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