RE: Termination of Parental Rights of John (2011-23) Doe SUBSTITUTE , 153 Idaho 258 ( 2012 )


Menu:
  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 39464-2011
    IN THE MATTER OF THE                  )
    TERMINATION OF THE PARENTAL           )        Boise, March 2012 Term
    RIGHTS OF:                            )
    )        2012 Opinion No. 94
    JOHN (2011-23) DOE,                   )
    )        Filed: June 20, 2012
    Respondent-Appellant.             )
    )        Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    )
    )        SUBSTITUTE OPINION.
    )        THE COURT’S PRIOR
    )        OPINION FILED ON APRIL 26,
    )
    2012 IS HEREBY
    )
    )        WITHDRAWN.
    )
    )
    Appeal from the District Court of the Third Judicial District of the State of Idaho,
    in and for Canyon County. The Hon. Brian D. Lee, Magistrate Judge.
    The judgment of the magistrate court is reversed.
    Jayme Beaber; Coffel & Beaber, P.A.; Nampa; argued for appellant.
    Brent R. King, Deputy Attorney General, Caldwell, argued for respondent, Idaho
    Department of Health and Welfare.
    EISMANN, Justice.
    This is an appeal from a judgment terminating the parental rights of a Mexican citizen
    and resident whose child was born in the United States to a citizen of this country on the ground
    that he had abandoned the child. We reverse the judgment of the magistrate court and remand
    this case with directions to order the Department of Health and Welfare to promptly deliver the
    child to her father in Mexico.
    I.
    Factual Background.
    John Doe (Father) is a citizen of Mexico who entered the United States illegally in 2003.
    In mid-2007, he married Jane Doe (Mother) in Payette, Idaho. Father spoke Spanish and Mother
    spoke English, and they needed an interpreter to converse with each other. After they were
    married, Father was arrested in Ontario, Oregon, when he attempted to open a bank account with
    a false social security number. He served three months in jail in Vale, Oregon, and was then
    transferred to a jail in Portland to be held for deportation. He agreed to voluntarily leave the
    United States and did so, returning to his parents’ home in Salamanca, Guanajuato, Mexico.
    Mother also went to Mexico, but she returned to the United States after she became pregnant.
    Their child (Daughter) was born in the United States in November 2008. Mother also had a four-
    year-old son by another man. In March 2009, Father reentered the United States illegally in an
    attempt to be with his wife and Daughter, but he was caught in Arizona and returned to Mexico.
    In March, 2009, Mother was living in Middleton, Idaho, with her boyfriend, who had a
    son who was about seven years old. On March 26, 2009, Mother and her boyfriend took his son
    to the hospital regarding severe bruising on his head. Because Mother and her boyfriend gave
    conflicting accounts of how the boy was injured, the medical personnel notified law
    enforcement. The investigation disclosed Mother’s son had struck her boyfriend’s son several
    times with a hairbrush. On March 27, 2009, Daughter and the boyfriend’s son were taken into
    custody by law enforcement, and on the same day the county prosecuting attorney filed a petition
    under the Child Protective Act with respect to those children. The petition alleged that the name
    of Daughter’s father was unknown and that he was in Mexico at an unknown address.
    At the shelter care hearing held on March 31, 2009, Mother and her boyfriend stipulated
    that there was reasonable cause to believe that Daughter and boyfriend’s son were abused and
    neglected and were therefore within the purview of the Child Protective Act. The children were
    then ordered to remain in the custody of the Department of Health and Welfare until the
    adjudicatory hearing.
    On April 8, 2009, the prosecuting attorney filed an amended petition under the Child
    Protective Act. The amended petition added Mother’s son as a child within the purview of the
    Child Protection Act. It alleged that Daughter and boyfriend’s son were abused because Mother
    and her boyfriend should have known that Mother’s son was physically and sexually abusing
    2
    boyfriend’s son and failed to protect him and that Mother’s son was neglected because his
    parents were not providing him with necessary medical and behavioral treatment to prevent him
    from being a danger to others. There were no specific allegations that Daughter had been abused
    or neglected. The amended petition stated that the name and address of Daughter’s father were
    unknown. On April 24, 2009, the prosecutor filed a second amended petition which added
    Father’s name and his address in Mexico.
    On May 27, 2009, Mother and her boyfriend appeared in court for an adjudicatory
    hearing. They stipulated that Daughter and boyfriend’s son should remain in the protective
    custody of the Department. Pursuant to that stipulation, on June 3, 2009, the court entered a
    decree of protective supervision ordering that Daughter would be in the custody of the
    Department of Health and Welfare for an indeterminate period not to exceed her eighteenth
    birthday.
    On June 3, 2009, Father spoke by telephone from Mexico with the Department’s
    caseworker assigned to this case. He told her that he would like to be involved in Daughter’s life
    and to be reunited with Mother and her son. He also said he would like Mother to begin the
    process that would allow him to come into the United States lawfully. The caseworker asked if
    he would like to take part in the Department’s upcoming meeting to make a plan regarding
    Daughter, and Father stated that he would be available by telephone. That meeting was held the
    following day, and Father participated by telephone. The Department’s purpose for the meeting
    was to arrive at a plan to reunify Daughter with Mother, the parent from whom Daughter was
    taken.      Because Daughter had not been taken from Father, there was at that point no
    consideration of having her live with him. During that meeting, Father stated that he wanted
    Daughter returned to Mother so they could all be a family.
    On June 16, 2009, Mother signed the case plan setting forth what she was required to do
    in order for Daughter to return to Mother’s home. Although Idaho Code section 16-1621(3)
    states, “The plan shall state with specificity the role of the department toward each parent”
    (emphasis added), Father was not named as a participant in the plan, and the plan did not specify
    any role of the Department toward him. Father was not represented by counsel, nor had he even
    been made a party to the proceedings.
    Father maintained monthly telephone contact with the caseworker to keep apprised of
    how Mother was progressing with the case plan. During the telephone conversation with the
    3
    caseworker in July 2009, Father stated that Mother had not called him for about two weeks and
    that she may be upset because he learned that she was living with another man. He added that
    she had not been honest with him and wondered if she is still serious about their relationship. He
    also stated that he was very concerned about Daughter’s welfare and would like to have some
    kind of contact with her. The caseworker responded that she would send him some pictures of
    daughter. The caseworker did so, but he did not receive them.
    During the telephone conversation with the caseworker in August 2009, Father stated that
    he had talked with Mother over the telephone and she updated him on her progress. When he
    talked with the caseworker in September 2009, he stated that Mother had called him and was
    upset. He asked the caseworker if Mother was following the case plan and whether Daughter
    would be going home soon. The caseworker said there was no definite time period. During the
    November telephone conversation, the caseworker told Father that Daughter had been given a
    birthday party on her first birthday and was doing well. The caseworker also said that she would
    be working to allow Mother to have visitation with Daughter in Mother’s home. In a report to
    the court filed on September 23, 2009, the caseworker wrote: “This worker has been able to
    speak with [Father] regarding his daughter. [He] would like to have [Daughter] sent to Mexico if
    [Mother] is not able to work the case plan and reunite with his daughter.”
    In February 2010, the caseworker informed Father that Mother was not doing what she
    was supposed to under her case plan, and the caseworker discussed placing Daughter with
    Father. He said he needed some help in order to keep his daughter, and the caseworker provided
    him with information to contact a person at the Mexican consulate in Boise. Father was to obtain
    a home study from the local office of Desarrollo Integral de la Familia (DIF), the Mexican
    equivalent to the Department. Father tried several times to contact the person, but was not able
    to talk with him until May 2010.
    The next conversation between Father and the caseworker was in June 2010, because the
    caseworker had been on maternity leave. Father stated he had spoken to the person at the
    consulate, but that person stated he would have to talk with the caseworker. In July 2010, the
    DIF worker came to Father’s home to conduct an investigation in order to prepare the home
    study.
    4
    On July 27, 2010, the prosecuting attorney filed a petition seeking to terminate Father’s
    and Mother’s parental rights in Daughter. 1 Attached to the petition was a report to the court
    dated July 23, 2010. In that report, the caseworker stated the following regarding Father:
    “[Father] lives in Mexico he was deported from the United States before [Daughter] was born.
    This worker speaks with [Father] over the phone monthly regarding how [Daughter] is doing in
    the foster home. [Father] is interested in having [Daughter] live with him if [Mother] is unable
    to reunify with [Daughter].” Nevertheless, the caseworker recommended that Father’s parental
    rights be terminated because he “has waited to contact the Mexican Consulate until the month of
    June 2010.” The report also noted that the foster mother, who was a Department employee, and
    the foster father were willing to provide Daughter with a permanent home.
    In August, the Department’s caseworker told Father she would present the home study to
    the court if it was received in time. On September 15, 2010, the Mexican consulate emailed the
    report to the caseworker. The report stated that Father was financially, emotionally, physically,
    and mentally able to provide for Daughter, that his home would be a suitable placement for
    Daughter, and that DIF would provide services to Father if Daughter were placed with him.
    The termination hearing was held on September 29, 2010.                           At that hearing, the
    Department did not present the DIF report to the court. The caseworker testified that she
    disregarded the report because the Department had decided to terminate Father’s parental rights.
    Thus, default was entered against Father, even though he had clearly not been properly served
    with process regarding the termination proceedings. On August 31, 2010, the prosecutor had
    obtained from the clerk of the court an order stating that Father’s last known address was in
    Mexico and that he could be served by publication in a newspaper that had general circulation in
    Canyon County, Idaho. Obviously, service by publication in Canyon County was not intended to
    give Father any notice of the termination proceedings. On November 2, 2010, the court entered
    a judgment terminating Father’s parental rights in Daughter. A judgment was also entered
    terminating Mother’s parental rights.
    Father ultimately obtained counsel and on February 24, 2011, his attorney filed a motion
    to set aside the default judgment. The prosecuting attorney resisted the motion, but after a
    hearing the magistrate court entered an order setting aside the judgment on the ground that there
    1
    The petition also sought to terminate the parental rights of Mother in her son and the parental rights of her son’s
    father, who was in prison.
    5
    was no proper service. The matter was then tried on July 6 and 27, 2011. On December 7, 2011,
    the court entered a decree holding that Father had abandoned Daughter, that it would be in her
    best interests to remain in Idaho, and that Father’s parental rights were terminated. Father then
    timely appealed.
    II.
    Are the Court’s Findings Supported by Substantial and Competent Evidence?
    A court may grant a petition to terminate a parent-child relationship if the parent has
    abandoned the child and termination of the parental rights is in the child’s best interests. I.C. §
    16-2005(1)(a).     “ ‘Abandoned’ means the parent has willfully failed to maintain a normal
    parental relationship including, but not limited to, reasonable support or regular personal
    contact.” Idaho Code section 16-2002(5). “Failure of the parent to maintain this relationship
    without just cause for a period of one (1) year shall constitute prima facie evidence of
    abandonment under this section . . . .”       Id.       “No universally applicable ‘normal parental
    relationship’ exists; whether such relationship exists depends on the circumstances of each case.”
    In re Adoption of Doe, 
    143 Idaho 188
    , 191, 
    141 P.3d 1057
    , 1060 (2006).
    “The petitioner holds and retains the burden of persuasion to show that abandonment has
    occurred. This includes a showing that the defendant parent is without just cause for not
    maintaining a normal relationship with the child.” Id. at 192, 141 P.3d at 1061. Whether a
    matter has been proved by clear and convincing evidence is primarily a matter for the trial court.
    Hogg v. Wolske, 
    142 Idaho 549
    , 554, 
    130 P.3d 1087
    , 1092 (2006). “On appeal, the appellate
    court does not reweigh the evidence to determine if it was clear and convincing.” Dep’t. of
    Health and Welfare v. Doe, 
    149 Idaho 207
    , 210, 
    233 P.3d 138
    , 141 (2010). “Substantial and
    competent evidence is relevant evidence that a reasonable mind might accept to support a
    conclusion.” Anderson v. Harper’s, Inc., 
    143 Idaho 193
    , 195, 
    141 P.3d 1062
    , 1064 (2006).
    Abandonment. “[T]he willful failure to maintain a normal parental relationship can be
    based upon either the failure to pay reasonable support, or the failure to have regular personal
    contact, or some other failure.” Doe I v. Doe II, 
    148 Idaho 713
    , 715, 
    228 P.3d 980
    , 982 (2010).
    The magistrate found that Father had abandoned Daughter because he had failed to pay support
    and had failed to have regular personal contact with Daughter.
    6
    The magistrate court found that Father “made no attempt to establish a relationship by the
    means that were available to him. [He] sent no letters, cards or gifts to [Daughter] through her
    custodian, IDHW [Idaho Department of Health and Welfare], despite the fact that he knew
    IDHW was capable of translating and delivering any such letter, card or gift to [Daughter].”
    This finding by the magistrate is clearly erroneous. In fact, it is absurd.
    Mother left Mexico when she was pregnant. Father was a citizen of Mexico and the
    uncontradicted evidence was that he could not have come legally into the United States without
    Mother filing the appropriate documents to petition on his behalf. Mother did not do so. After
    Father was caught entering America illegally in 2009, he was barred from even petitioning to
    enter the country for ten years. 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(9)(C)(i). When Daughter was ordered into the
    protective custody of the Department, she was seven months old. Having someone read letters to
    her from Father would not in any way create a parental relationship of any kind. Even by the
    time of trial, when she was two and one-half years old, reading letters from Father to her would
    not have helped develop a parental relationship. In fact, neither the Department nor the foster
    parents even told her who her Father was. By the time of the trial, Daughter was calling the
    foster father “Daddy.” There is no way that Father could develop any relationship with Daughter
    without having personal contact with her, and that was not possible as long as Daughter was in
    the United States.
    The magistrate judge also found that Father had abandoned Daughter because he “sent no
    support to Maria of any kind.” The only evidence of Father’s income was that he worked two to
    three days a week and that his salary was 800 to 900 pesos. Nine hundred pesos would be about
    $70.30. He lives in his parents’ house with his sister, and they all work and contribute to provide
    support for those in the household. To determine a parent’s ability to pay support for a child, the
    court must consider both the parent’s income and the parent’s living expenses. In re Adoption of
    Doe, 
    143 Idaho 188
    , 192, 
    141 P.3d 1057
    , 1061 (2006). The magistrate stated, “While the
    evidence shows that [Father] is a man of modest means, the record does show and this court
    finds that [Father] has been employed during the course of this case and that he has used those
    resources in the support of himself and his family in Mexico.” That was the entire finding
    regarding Father’s ability to have paid support for Daughter. There was no finding as to how
    much of Father’s income was required for his share of the living expenses.           Absent such
    7
    evidence, the magistrate’s finding that he could have provided some support to Daughter was
    clearly erroneous.
    In order to prove that Father had abandoned the Daughter, the prosecutor had to prove by
    clear and convincing evidence that he had “willfully failed to maintain a normal parental
    relationship” with the children. I.C. § 16–2002(5) (emphasis added). “For one to willfully fail to
    do something, he or she must have the ability to do it.”    Doe I v. Doe II, 
    148 Idaho 713
    , 716,
    
    228 P.3d 980
    , 983 (2010). There was no evidence that Father had the ability to establish any
    relationship with Daughter as long as she was in the custody of the Department and he was in
    Mexico, legally barred from entering the United States. Likewise, there is no evidence that he
    had the ability to pay support. Throughout the proceedings under the Child Protective Act and
    these proceedings, Father has consistently expressed the desire to have custody of Daughter, and
    he did all that he could do for that to happen.
    In her report to the court, the caseworker stated that Father’s parental rights should be
    terminated because he “has waited to contact the Mexican Consulate until the month of June
    2010.” He was told in February that the Department would consider placing Daughter with him
    and that he needed to contact a specific person at the Mexican consulate in Boise. He testified
    that he called the consulate several times, but was not able to make contact with that person until
    May. The caseworker herself testified that when she called the consulate and left a message
    asking that person to call her, it was a month before he did. The assertion that Father’s parental
    rights should be terminated because it took him three months of trying before he was able to
    contact the person at the Mexican consulate certainly seems pretextual. It makes one wonder
    whether the real reason for seeking termination of Father’s parental rights is the fact that a
    Department employee wanted to adopt Daughter.
    Best interests of Daughter. The magistrate found that it was in Daughter’s best interests
    to have Father’s parental rights terminated so that she can be adopted by persons who can and
    will provide her with the guidance, care, and support that she has not had in Mother’s custody.
    The court further found that it was contrary to her best interests “to be introduced at this late
    hour to the home of her father.” The court stated that Daughter “has no relationship with
    [Father] or any other tie to Mexico whatsoever. The only home [Daughter] has ever known is
    Idaho and she is currently being well cared for and has bonded with her foster family in a pre-
    adoptive placement.” This finding is clearly erroneous.
    8
    In making this finding, the magistrate court failed to recognize the significance of a
    parent’s rights regarding his or her child. “A parent has a fundamental liberty interest in
    maintaining a relationship with his or her child.” In re Adoption of Doe, 
    143 Idaho 188
    , 191, 
    141 P.3d 1057
    , 1060 (2006). In Stockwell v. Stockwell, 
    116 Idaho 297
    , 299, 
    775 P.2d 611
    , 613
    (1989), we stated as follows:
    In custody disputes between a “non-parent” (i.e., an individual who is neither
    legal nor natural parent) and a natural parent, Idaho courts apply a presumption
    that a natural parent should have custody as opposed to other lineal or collateral
    relatives or interested parties. This presumption operates to preclude consideration
    of the best interests of the child unless the nonparent demonstrates either that the
    natural parent has abandoned the child, that the natural parent is unfit or that the
    child has been in the nonparent’s custody for an appreciable period of time.
    That same presumption applies here. There is no contention that Father abused or
    neglected Daughter, nor is there any contention that he is unfit to have her custody. Although
    the Department had custody of Daughter for slightly over two years by the trial date, that was not
    through any fault of Father. He could not lawfully enter the United States, and for almost two
    years of that time he was not even represented by counsel. He repeatedly expressed the desire to
    be with Daughter, and he did all that the Department told him to do in an attempt to obtain her
    custody. He was ultimately prevented from obtaining custody simply because the Department
    decided that Daughter should remain in the United States. Absent evidence that Father was unfit
    to have custody of Daughter, it was in Daughter’s best interests to be placed with him once it
    was determined that Mother was unable to successfully complete her case plan.
    The prosecutor offered the testimony of the guardian ad litem, who stated: “I think it’s in
    the best interest of [Daughter] obviously to remain in the United States because there’s no
    comparison between being in Mexico and being in the United States, being a United States
    citizen. She has all the luxuries or all the things that we can offer.” The fact that a child may
    enjoy a higher standard of living in the United States than in the country where the child’s parent
    resides is not a reason to terminate the parental rights of a foreign national.
    III.
    Conclusion.
    9
    We reverse the judgment of the magistrate court and remand this case with instructions
    for the court to order the Department to take all reasonable steps to promptly place Daughter
    with Father in Mexico.
    Chief Justice BURDICK, Justices J. JONES, W. JONES, and HORTON CONCUR.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 39464-2011

Citation Numbers: 153 Idaho 258, 281 P.3d 95

Judges: Burdick, Eismann, Horton, Jones

Filed Date: 6/21/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023