In the Interest of A.C. and A.J., Minor Children, J.C., Father , 852 N.W.2d 515 ( 2014 )


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  •                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 14-0592
    Filed July 16, 2014
    IN THE INTEREST OF A.C. AND A.J.,
    Minor Children,
    J.C., Father,
    Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Floyd County, Karen R. Salic,
    District Associate Judge.
    A father appeals adjudicatory and dispositional orders in a child-in-need-
    of-assistance action. AFFIRMED.
    David A. Kuehner of Eggert, Erb, Mulcahy & Kuehner, P.L.L.C., Charles
    City, for appellant father.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Bruce Kempkes, Assistant Attorney
    General, and Normand Klemesrud, County Attorney, for appellee State.
    Cynthia Schuknecht of Noah, Smith & Schuknecht, Charles City, attorney
    and guardian ad litem for minor children.
    Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Bower, JJ.
    2
    VAITHESWARAN, P.J.
    A father appeals adjudicatory and dispositional orders in a child-in-need-
    of-assistance action.    He contends (1) the district court “erred in admitting
    evidence related to [an] ex parte order for drug testing and other evidence
    derived from that order” and (2) his trial attorney was ineffective in “failing to
    object to questioning of a witness by the court.”
    I.      Background Facts and Proceedings
    A mother and father shared “50/50 custody” of their two children, born in
    2006 and 2007. In 2013, the Iowa Department of Human Services received a
    complaint that the children’s father was seen in his home with drugs.         The
    department employee in charge of investigating the complaint interviewed the
    father, who denied using drugs “at this time” but refused to volunteer for a drug
    test.
    The investigator obtained an ex parte court order requiring the father to
    undergo drug testing.     After receipt of the drug test result and receipt of
    information that the father acted out in front of the mother’s home, the
    department issued a “founded” child protection service assessment report
    concluding the father denied the children critical care and failed to supervise
    them properly.
    The father underwent a substance abuse evaluation and appeared to
    meet the diagnostic criteria for amphetamine, cannabis, and alcohol abuse. It
    was recommended that he begin extended outpatient treatment services. The
    father began services as scheduled, with the focus on drug screening options. A
    drug patch was applied but, several days later, a service provider determined the
    3
    patch had been “compromised” and could not be sent in for testing. A second
    drug patch also could not be sent in for testing because the father was
    unavailable to have it removed.       The father declined a third drug patch and
    refused therapeutic services. He was “discharged due to a lack of readiness to
    resolve his problems.” Meanwhile, he agreed to have only supervised contact
    with the children.
    After affording the father approximately five months to address his drug
    addictions, the State filed a petition alleging the children to be in need of
    assistance.   At an adjudicatory hearing, the State offered several documents
    including the “founded” child protection service assessment report. The father’s
    attorney objected to the admission of this report, asserting,
    [T]he report contains reference to a drug test that was conducted
    pursuant to a court order, and it is our position that that court order
    was done with no—there was no statutory authority for that court
    order, and a drug test does—does bring into play the Fourth
    Amendment, and I don’t think there was any—in addition to no
    statutory authority for it, I think that the court order also violates my
    client’s rights under the Fourth Amendment to be free from
    unreasonable search and seizure, and a drug test clearly is at the
    heart of his protected interests.
    The court overruled the father’s objection and admitted the exhibit. Following the
    hearing, the court concluded
    the children are in need of assistance . . . based on their father’s
    drug use and based on the testimony that’s a long-standing issue
    and would have resulted—because of the nature of that drug and
    the frequency of use that the children would have been in a
    situation which they were not receiving appropriate supervision or
    care.
    The court ordered the father to resume substance abuse treatment and submit to
    drug testing, and the children to continue in the mother’s custody “with visitation
    4
    with [the father], supervised or unsupervised at the discretion of the Department.”
    At a subsequent dispositional hearing, the court maintained the status quo. The
    father appealed.
    II.    Analysis
    A.     Admission of Drug Test Result
    As noted, the father contends the court should not have admitted evidence
    relating to the ex parte order for drug testing or any evidence derived from the
    order. The State responds with an error preservation concern. In its view, the
    father “had the obligation to resist the drug testing order” when it was entered
    “and, if unsuccessful, to seek appellate relief from it.” While that was certainly a
    route the father could have taken,1 his failure to appeal the order does not
    foreclose our review of his timely objection to the report and the court’s ruling on
    the objection, which reaffirmed the reasoning of the ex parte order.            Error
    preservation is not a concern and we proceed to the court’s ruling on the
    objection.
    Iowa Code section 232.96(6) (2013) governs the admissibility of
    department reports, including child protective assessment reports. It states:
    A report . . . made by the department of human services . . .
    relating to a child in a proceeding under this division is admissible
    notwithstanding any objection to hearsay statements contained in it
    provided it is relevant and material and provided its probative value
    substantially outweighs the danger of unfair prejudice to the child’s
    parent, guardian, or custodian. The circumstances of the making of
    the report, study, record or other writing or an audiotape or
    1
    We find it unnecessary to decide whether that order was appealable or subject to
    discretionary review. See In re C.S., 
    516 N.W.2d 851
    , 857 (Iowa 1994) (stating “[a]
    juvenile court decision is not final unless it disposes of all the issues”).
    5
    videotape recording, including the maker’s lack of personal
    knowledge, may be proved to affect its weight.
    See also 
    Iowa Code § 232.96
    (4) (stating “[a] report made to the department of
    human services pursuant to chapter 235A [Child Abuse] shall be admissible in
    evidence, but such a report shall not alone be sufficient to support a finding that
    the child is a child in need of assistance unless the attorneys for the child and the
    parents consent to such a finding”).
    In admitting the report, the court cited its authority to provide for “the
    safety of the children without the trauma of removal if that can be done.” We
    have no quarrel with this laudable goal; the exhibit was clearly relevant and
    material to the question of the children’s safety, a paramount consideration in a
    child-in-need of assistance action. See 
    id.
     § 232.116(2); In re P.L., 
    778 N.W.2d 33
    , 37 (Iowa 2010). That said, we are not convinced the probative value of the
    exhibit substantially outweighed the danger of unfair prejudice to the father. 
    Iowa Code § 232.96
    (6). The exhibit and, in particular, the exhibit’s reference to the
    drug test result obtained pursuant to an ex parte pre-adjudication order, raised
    serious statutory concerns.
    The only statutory authority the county attorney cited in support of ordering
    such a test was Iowa Code section 232.78, a provision that authorizes medical
    procedures to be performed on a child, not a parent. The county attorney was
    left to argue in favor of the court’s “inherent authority” to issue such an order.
    The county attorney was correct in noting that a court may have inherent
    authority to act in a child’s best interests. See In re K.N., 
    625 N.W.2d 731
    , 735
    (Iowa 2001) (noting the State’s duty “as parents patriae, to ensure that the aims
    6
    of the juvenile justice code are applied to each child in need of the code’s
    assistance”).   However, that authority cannot be used “to circumvent the
    expressed legislative policies woven into the law.” 
    Id. at 734
    .
    The legislature has specified precisely what the department can do on
    receipt of a child abuse complaint. See 
    Iowa Code § 232
    .71B. Nothing in that
    provision authorizes a department employee to obtain an ex parte court order
    mandating parental drug testing for the purpose of confirming child abuse
    allegations. To the contrary, the provision only authorizes the department to
    furnish voluntary services to families and then only to families of “abused
    children,” not families being investigated for abuse. See 
    id.
     § 232.71B(13).
    We recognize that a separate code provision, section 232.71C, allows the
    department to seek juvenile court action at any time during the assessment
    process if the department believes such action is necessary “to safeguard a
    child.” See id. § 232.71C(1). This provision cannot be read as authorizing the
    department to seek a pre-adjudication, ex parte order for mandatory parental
    drug testing because another provision permits such testing only “[f]ollowing an
    adjudication that a child is a child in need of assistance” and only “after a
    hearing.” See id. § 232.98(2).
    In sum, we find no statutory authority to support the district court’s ex
    parte pre-adjudication parental drug-testing order, nor do we find that the court
    had inherent authority to enter such an order.
    What was inherent was the prejudice to the father. Because the original
    order was entered ex parte, the father had no opportunity to raise the absence of
    authority to support drug testing at this stage. While he could have refused to
    7
    comply with the order, he then would have faced immediate removal of the
    children.     We conclude the probative value of those portions of the child
    protective assessment report making reference to the drug test and drug test
    result was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice to the
    father.     Those portions of the report should not have been admitted. 2               The
    remainder of the report, including the summaries of the investigator’s interviews
    with the father and others and the department’s opinions and conclusions were
    admissible. See In re Long, 
    313 N.W.2d 473
    , 480-81 (Iowa 1981).
    Our resolution of the admissibility issue on statutory grounds makes it
    unnecessary to address the father’s constitutional objection to the exhibit. See In
    re S.P., 
    672 N.W.2d 842
    , 846 (Iowa 2003) (confining analysis to statutory law). 3
    2
    The existence of an objection and a ruling allows us to assess the probative value and
    prejudicial affect and determine the admissibility of the document. Alternately, we could
    affirm the admission of the entire exhibit and determine that the drug test result was
    entitled to no weight. See 
    Iowa Code § 232.96
    (6) (“The circumstances of the making of
    the report, study, record or other writing or an audiotape or videotape recording,
    including the maker’s lack of personal knowledge, may be proved to affect its weight.”);
    In re A.B., 
    815 N.W.2d 764
    , 773 (Iowa 2014) (noting that in absence of objection to
    exhibit it was still “fair for the court of appeals to comment on the limitations of the test
    report”).
    3
    The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution affords people a right to be
    free from unreasonable searches and seizures. See Missouri v. McNeely, 
    133 S. Ct. 1552
    , 1558 (2013). “A court-ordered blood test [] is a search for Fourth Amendment
    purposes.” State v. Washington, 
    832 N.W.2d 650
    , 658 (Iowa 2013) (citing McNeely,
    
    133 S. Ct. at 1558
    ). Several courts have weighed in on the constitutionality of
    mandatory drug testing orders under similar circumstances. See Marchwinski v.
    Howard, 
    113 F. Supp. 2d 1134
    , 1143 (E.D. Mich. 2000) (holding State failed to show
    special need grounded in public safety for suspicion-less drug testing of FIP recipients,
    establishing a strong likelihood of succeeding on the merits of their Fourth Amendment
    claim), aff’d by 
    60 Fed. Appx. 601
     (6th Cir. 2003) (affirming on rehearing by evenly
    divided en banc panel); Wainright v. Superior Court, 
    100 Cal. Rptr. 2d 749
    , 753 (Cal
    App. 2000) (finding “serious constitutional difficulties” with reading statute that empowers
    family court to demand independent corroboration before considering allegations of a
    parent’s drug abuse to authorize court-ordered drug testing); State v. Jane Doe, II and
    John Doe, I, 
    233 P.3d 1275
    , 1282 (Idaho 2010) (holding order requiring parents of
    juvenile to undergo drug testing as condition of juvenile’s probation was “presumptively
    8
    Although portions of the exhibit were inadmissible, we need not reverse
    because our review is de novo and we are able to address the merits without
    resort to the objectionable testimony. See In re Adkins, 
    298 N.W.2d 273
    , 278
    (Iowa 1980). Accordingly, we proceed to the question of whether there was clear
    and convincing evidence to support the adjudicatory and dispositional orders, a
    question that was not explicitly raised but that underlies the father’s appeal. In re
    L.G., 
    532 N.W.2d 478
    , 481 (Iowa Ct. App. 1995) (“The state has the burden to
    prove the allegations of the petition by clear and convincing evidence.”).
    The admissible portions of the child assessment report reveal that the
    father was coy about his drug use when interviewed by the department
    investigator. While he denied present drug use, he indicated that, if a drug test
    were taken, it might be positive for legitimate reasons. Later, in a meeting with
    the investigator, he opined that methamphetamine use while away from the
    children was not a safety issue.      He also admitted to relapsing four months
    before the meeting.
    In addition to indications of drug use independent of the drug test, the
    child assessment report made reference to an altercation outside the mother’s
    home that scared the children.         This alternate basis for adjudication was
    discussed by the court in its adjudicatory order.
    invalid under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution . . . absent a warrant”);
    State v. Moreno, 
    203 P.3d 1000
    , 1012 (Utah 2009) (holding order requiring parent of a
    delinquent juvenile to undergo drug testing absent probable cause to believe the parent
    was using drugs conflicted with the Fourth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution); but see Luminella v. Marcocci, 
    814 A.2d 711
    , 725 (Pa. 2002) (concluding
    order compelling mother to undergo drug testing in connection with child custody case
    was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment).
    9
    After the department issued its “founded” child protective assessment
    report but before the child in need of assistance petition was filed, the father
    agreed to participate in therapeutic services. As noted, he did not cooperate with
    the service provider and those services were curtailed.
    At the adjudicatory hearing, the children’s mother testified that she learned
    of the father’s drug use five or six years before the hearing. The department
    became involved at that time. The mother opined that the father’s drug use had
    essentially continued since then.4
    After setting aside the objectionable portions of the child protective
    assessment report, we conclude there is still clear and convincing evidence to
    support   the   adjudicatory    and    dispositional   orders.      See    
    Iowa Code § 232.2
    (6)(c)(2) (failure to supervise), (n) (drug or alcohol abuse results in
    inadequate care).
    B.     Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    As discussed above, the father agreed to participate in therapeutic
    services before the child-in-need-of-assistance petition was filed.               At the
    adjudicatory hearing, the State offered a discharge report summarizing the
    father’s pre-petition progress. The father objected to admission of the report on
    the basis of a department social worker’s testimony that the referral for these
    services was a direct result of his positive drug test. The district court proceeded
    4
    We acknowledge the Iowa Supreme Court’s holding in In re J.S., 
    846 N.W.2d 36
    , 42
    (Iowa 2014) that “general statements about methamphetamine addiction are [not]
    enough by themselves to prove that a child is imminently likely to suffer physical harm.”
    However, unlike, J.S., the father did not have someone willing and able to step in and
    relieve him of parenting duties when he was not up to the task. 
    Id.
    10
    to ask the department employee whether the father signed a release allowing the
    department to obtain the report. The witness answered, “Yes.”
    The father contends his attorney should have objected to this question
    because “[t]he court was not acting as an independent arbiter, but rather was
    searching out a reason to receive [the exhibit] into evidence.”
    The test for ineffective assistance of counsel in termination
    cases is generally the same as in criminal proceedings. In order to
    establish an ineffective assistance claim, it must be shown that
    (1) counsel’s performance is deficient, and (2) actual prejudice
    resulted. We presume that counsel’s conduct falls within the range
    of reasonable professional competency. The burden of proving
    ineffectiveness is on the claimant.
    In re A.R.S., 
    480 N.W.2d 888
    , 891 (Iowa 1992) (internal citations omitted).
    A court may interrogate witnesses “[w]hen necessary in the interest of
    justice.” Iowa R. Evid. 5.614(b). However, “we have cautioned against assuming
    the role of an advocate.”     See State v. Cuevas, 
    288 N.W.2d 525
    , 533 (Iowa
    1980)
    Here, the district court judge came close to the line of impermissible
    advocacy by raising a foundational issue that aided the State. However, the
    court did not attempt to undermine the father’s position that the document flowed
    from the statutorily unauthorized ex parte drug testing order and, as “fruit of the
    poisonous tree,” was inadmissible. See Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 487-88 (1963). On that score, we note that the document focused on the
    father’s non-compliance with therapeutic services he agreed to undergo rather
    than the compelled pre-adjudication drug test.       For that reason, there is a
    reasonable probability that the father’s objection would not have been successful
    and the document would have been admitted irrespective of the court’s
    11
    assistance.   In any event, because courts have some leeway in expediting
    matters, we conclude counsel’s failure to object to the district court’s question did
    not amount to deficient performance. 
    Id. at 531
     (“The presiding judge is not a
    mere functionary present only to preserve order and lend ceremonial dignity to
    the proceedings. . . . [A] trial judge has the duty to control and conduct its court
    in an orderly, dignified and proper manner. In fulfilling its role, occasions will
    arise when a trial judge is constrained to intervene on its own volition to . . .
    require that the proceedings move forward without undue delay . . . .” (internal
    citations omitted)).   Accordingly, the father’s ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
    claim fails. See Mills v. State, 
    383 N.W.2d 574
    , 578 (Iowa 1986) (finding attorney
    was not incompetent in failing to object to judge’s questions).
    We affirm the district court’s adjudicatory and dispositional orders.
    AFFIRMED.