In re C.A.B. ( 2022 )


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  •                      IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2022-NCSC-51
    No. 138A21
    Filed 6 May 2022
    IN THE MATTER OF: C.A.B.
    Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1001(a1)(1) from an order terminating
    respondent-father’s parental rights entered on 2 February 2021 by Judge Kathryn
    Whitaker Overby in District Court, Alamance County. Heard in the Supreme Court
    on 22 March 2022.
    Jamie L. Hamlett for petitioner-appellee Alamance County Department of
    Social Services.
    Christina Freeman Pearsall for appellee Guardian ad Litem.
    Mercedes O. Chut for respondent-appellant father.
    EARLS, Justice.
    ¶1         In this case we consider whether a parent who was incarcerated at the time of
    an adjudicatory hearing on a motion to terminate his parental rights was entitled to
    a continuance in order to have the opportunity to be present at the hearing.
    Respondent-father was incarcerated when he first learned that he was the father of
    a newborn, Caleb,1 and he remained in detention throughout the duration of Caleb’s
    juvenile proceedings. He expressed a desire to parent Caleb upon his release and
    1 We use a pseudonym to protect the identity of the juvenile and for ease of reading.
    See N.C. R. App. P. 42(b). The juvenile’s mother is not a party to this appeal.
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    opposed the effort to terminate his parental rights. On the day of the adjudicatory
    hearing, respondent-father was unable to appear due to a lockdown at his prison
    necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic. According to respondent-father’s counsel,
    the lockdown was set to expire in five days. Nonetheless, the trial court denied
    respondent-father’s motion to continue the hearing and ultimately entered an order
    terminating his parental rights.
    ¶2         Parents, including incarcerated parents, possess a “fundamental liberty
    interest[ ]” which “includes the right of parents to establish a home and to direct the
    upbringing and education of their children.” Owenby v. Young, 
    357 N.C. 142
    , 144
    (2003) (cleaned up). Thus, “[w]hen the State moves to destroy weakened familial
    bonds, it must provide the parents with fundamentally fair procedures.” In re
    Murphy, 
    105 N.C. App. 651
    , 653 (quoting Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 753–54
    (1982)), aff’d per curiam, 
    332 N.C. 663
     (1992). In this case, respondent-father was
    denied the opportunity to present testimony at the termination hearing and to work
    with his counsel to develop and execute a strategy to oppose termination of his
    parental rights. Furthermore, the substantive findings in support of the trial court’s
    decision to terminate respondent-father’s parental rights all directly related to his
    conduct in prison, a subject respondent-father’s testimony would have aided the court
    in assessing. Accordingly, the trial court’s denial of respondent-father’s motion to
    continue the adjudicatory hearing undermined the fairness of that hearing. We
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    conclude that the trial court prejudicially erred and we vacate the order terminating
    respondent-father’s parental rights.
    I.      Background.
    ¶3         On 28 January 2019, the Alamance County Department of Social Services
    (DSS) assumed custody of Caleb, who was four days old, after his mother tested
    positive for cocaine at Caleb’s birth. No father was listed on Caleb’s birth certificate,
    but Caleb’s mother identified respondent-father as a possible biological father. At the
    time of Caleb’s birth, respondent-father was detained on federal charges including
    obtaining property by false pretenses, possession of stolen goods, and possession of a
    firearm by a felon. Eleven days after DSS took custody of Caleb, respondent-father
    took a paternity test which established to a near certainty that he was Caleb’s
    biological father.
    ¶4         On 14 March 2019, a DSS social worker visited respondent-father at the
    Alamance County Detention Center, where he was being held pending the resolution
    of the federal charges against him. At the time, respondent-father told the social
    worker that he thought he was “looking at three years in prison,” but that he “would
    like for his son to be with family” and “would like to work to regain custody of his son
    when he is released from prison.” He identified three relatives as potential alternative
    caregivers. None of the three relatives agreed to take custody of Caleb; however, the
    social worker subsequently learned that respondent-father’s sister, Larissa, was
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    willing to care for Caleb if she could also adopt him. DSS ordered a home study to
    determine if Larissa would be a suitable placement.
    ¶5         Before the home study was completed, Caleb was adjudicated to be a neglected
    and dependent juvenile. DSS retained nonsecure custody. The court approved a case
    plan proposed by DSS requiring respondent-father to:
       Develop a sufficient source of income to support
    himself and the child and use funds to meet basic
    needs. He can work to achieve this goal by applying
    for a minimum of five jobs a week, submitting
    monthly job search log[s] and taking part in job-
    readiness programs.
       Provide a safe, stable and appropriate home
    environment. He can work to achieve this goal by
    applying for housing at five locations a week and
    providing a monthly log to the social worker, saving
    sufficient funds for deposits, complying with the
    terms of his lease, maintaining the home in a fit and
    habitable condition and keeping working utilities.
       Refrain from allowing his substance abuse to affect
    his parenting of his child and provide a safe,
    appropriate home by not exposing his child to an
    injurious environment.
       Obtain and follow the recommendations of a
    substance abuse assessment, refrain from using
    illegal or illicit substances or abusing prescription
    medication[s], provide a home environment free of
    illegal or illicit substances and/or persons who are
    using or under the influence of such.
       Demonstrate the ability to implement age-
    appropriate disciplinary practices and parenting
    skills.
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       Attend a parenting curriculum and demonstrate
    appropriate skills during visitation.
    Although the trial court noted that respondent-father’s “visitation is suspended due
    to the limits of visits in the Alamance County [detention center],” the court did not
    otherwise adapt respondent-father’s case plan to reflect the circumstances of his
    incarceration.2
    ¶6          Subsequently, DSS received a favorable home study for Larissa and her
    husband, and Caleb was placed in their home on 3 May 2019. To facilitate Caleb’s
    adoption by Larissa, respondent-father executed a relinquishment of his parental
    rights specifically to his sister and brother-in-law. Caleb’s mother also relinquished
    her parental rights. Both parents were released as parties to Caleb’s juvenile
    proceedings. In April 2020, DSS received final approval for Larissa and her husband
    to adopt Caleb.
    ¶7          But, later that same month, Larissa informed DSS that she “feels overwhelmed
    with everything that is going on in her life right now.” She also expressed concern
    that, notwithstanding their relinquishments, respondent-father and Caleb’s mother
    “are going to want to be in and out of his life because [they are] family once [Caleb’s]
    adopted.” Larissa explained that she had arrived at the conclusion “that she just
    couldn’t keep [Caleb]” and that it was “in his best interest . . . to go to a deserving
    2 The trial court also developed a separate case plan for Caleb’s mother but that plan
    is not at issue in this appeal.
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    family . . . where his birth parents couldn’t mess up his life.” On 4 May 2020, DSS
    notified respondent-father and Caleb’s mother that Larissa’s adoption of Caleb would
    not go forward. Respondent-father subsequently revoked his specific relinquishment
    of his parental rights. Caleb was removed from Larissa’s home and placed with foster
    parents.
    ¶8         On 15 July 2020, the trial court restored respondent-father as a party to
    Caleb’s juvenile proceedings and appointed him an attorney. DSS had difficulty
    establishing contact with respondent-father, who by this time was being held at the
    Beckley Federal Correctional Institution in West Virginia. Eventually, respondent-
    father notified DSS and the court that he “no longer wanted [Caleb] to be adopted by
    someone new because he had already gotten a full year closer to being released since
    he initially executed his specific relinquishment.” Respondent-father asserted that he
    “has not had any write-ups or engaged in any trouble since his incarceration in May
    of 2018,” “has taken courses at the prison in order to be a better father for [Caleb],”
    and “has a job in the penitentiary kitchen”; in addition, he stated that he “started a
    rehabilitation program for drug abuse” and signed up to “take a parenting class” but
    that both had been suspended due to COVID-19. Respondent-father also provided the
    names of additional relatives to be considered as potential placements for Caleb,
    including respondent-father’s own parents.
    ¶9         On 12 August 2020, the trial court approved an updated case plan requiring
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    respondent-father to
    participate in Parenting classes through the prison . . .
    demonstrate appropriate and safe parenting choices . . .
    maintain communication with [DSS] . . . engage in Mental
    Health services provided through the prison . . .
    demonstrate good coping skills . . . participate in his 100-
    hour rehab program through the prison . . . help provide for
    the needs of [Caleb] . . . give consent for his case manager
    to provide [DSS with] information regarding his stay in
    prison . . . [and] upon [his] release from prison . . . engage
    in activities to obtain and maintain an appropriate home
    for he and [Caleb]; . . . maintain a way to meet the[ir] daily
    needs . . . [and] refrain from illegal activities that could
    cause him to be arrested and incur more prison time . . . .
    The court maintained a primary plan of adoption with a secondary plan of
    guardianship and ordered DSS to perform a home study of Caleb’s paternal
    grandparents. The trial court later determined that “though the paternal
    grandparents have a suitable home and the financial ability to provide for the
    Juvenile . . . [Caleb] should remain in the current foster placement progressing to
    adoption by the [f]oster [f]amily.”
    ¶ 10         On 28 August 2020, DSS filed a motion in the cause seeking termination of
    respondent-father’s parental rights. DSS asserted that termination was warranted
    on four grounds: neglect pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(1); willful failure to make
    reasonable progress to correct the conditions that led to Caleb’s removal pursuant to
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(2); willful failure to pay a reasonable portion of Caleb’s cost of
    care pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3); and incapability to provide for Caleb’s
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    proper care and supervision pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(6). A hearing on the
    motion to terminate parental rights was initially set for 21 October 2020; however,
    this hearing was continued at respondent-father’s counsel’s request because counsel
    was “not available for [the] hearing.” A subsequent hearing scheduled for 16
    December 2020 was continued until 20 January 2021 due to the renewal of an
    Emergency Directive issued by then-Chief Justice Beasley in response to the ongoing
    COVID-19 pandemic.
    ¶ 11         On 12 January 2021, respondent-father’s counsel filed a motion to continue the
    upcoming adjudicatory hearing on DSS’s motion to terminate. In the motion,
    respondent-father’s counsel explained that respondent-father’s case manager had
    informed him
    that the federal penitentiary [where respondent-father was
    being held] was under lockdown due to COVID-19 until
    January 25, 2021 and no movement is permitted until that
    date. As such, [respondent-father] will not be available to
    call-in nor in any other way participate in the hearing
    scheduled for January 20, 2021.
    At the adjudicatory hearing, the trial court heard from respondent-father’s counsel
    in support of the motion, and from DSS and the guardian ad litem (GAL) in
    opposition. The trial court denied respondent-father’s motion to continue the hearing.
    In a subsequent written order, the trial court explained:
    3. That this motion to terminate parental rights was filed
    August 28, 2020 and initially scheduled for hearing on
    October 12, 2020. That hearing was continued at the
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    request of the father’s attorney and scheduled for
    December 16, 2020. That hearing was continued at no
    fault of anyone involved in this matter.
    4. [Respondent-father’s counsel] reports the lock down is
    scheduled to be lifted January 25, 2021. However, no
    one knows for sure how COVID-19 will continue to
    impact the prison system.
    5. That hearings on motions to terminate parental rights
    are required to be heard within 90 days of filing. This
    case is already outside the required timeframe. The
    father and his attorney have had an extended period of
    time to prepare for this matter.
    6. That the Respondent Father’s attorney will be present
    at the hearing and permitted to cross exam witnesses
    and present evidence. That the father’s report is
    admitted into evidence as well as his exhibits by the
    consent of the parties. These processes assure the due
    process rights of the father are being honored and the
    adversar[ial] nature of the proceeding is preserved.
    7. The Respondent Father and the Alamance County
    Department of Social Services both have a commanding
    interest in this proceeding.
    8. That due to the fundamental fairness of the process,
    representation of counsel for the father and other
    processes, the risk of error by not having the father
    present is low.
    Based on these findings, the trial court concluded that the motion to continue should
    be denied because respondent-father’s “due process and constitutional safeguards are
    being adequately observed and protected through the nature of these proceedings.”
    ¶ 12         After denying respondent-father’s motion to continue, the trial court conducted
    an adjudicatory hearing on DSS’s motion to terminate respondent-father’s parental
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    rights. During the hearing, DSS presented testimony from a DSS social worker.
    Respondent-father’s counsel presented testimony from Caleb’s paternal grandfather,
    Larry, who stated that respondent-father had called him on the morning of the
    hearing because respondent-father had been “let . . . out” of lockdown for about thirty
    minutes. At the dispositional stage, the court heard testimony from Caleb’s GAL. The
    trial court also considered a three-page report prepared by counsel which asserted
    that respondent-father had attained an “unblemished discipline history while
    incarcerated;” was “actively engaging in classes to better himself so that he can be a
    better parent to [Caleb];” and had “sent [Caleb] thirty-five dollars” and “two hand-
    made cards.” In addition, the report further argued it was “not in [Caleb’s] best
    interests for [respondent-father’s] parental rights to be terminated.” On the basis of
    this evidence, the trial court concluded that DSS had proven the existence of all four
    grounds for termination and that terminating respondent-father’s parental rights
    was in Caleb’s best interests.
    ¶ 13         On 11 February 2021, respondent-father timely filed a notice of appeal
    pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1001(a1)(1).
    II.   Standard of review.
    ¶ 14         The standard of review utilized by an appellate court in reviewing a trial
    court’s denial of a party’s motion to continue varies depending on the reason the party
    sought the continuance. “Ordinarily, a motion to continue is addressed to the
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    discretion of the trial court, and absent a gross abuse of that discretion, the trial
    court’s ruling is not subject to review.” State v. Walls, 
    342 N.C. 1
    , 24 (1995). “If,
    however, the motion is based on a right guaranteed by the Federal and State
    Constitutions, the motion presents a question of law and the order of the court is
    reviewable” de novo. State v. Baldwin, 
    276 N.C. 690
    , 698 (1970); see also State v.
    Johnson, 
    379 N.C. 629
    , 2021-NCSC-165, ¶ 16 (“Defendant’s motion to continue raised
    a constitutional issue, requiring de novo review by this Court.”).
    ¶ 15          “[A] parent enjoys a fundamental right ‘to make decisions concerning the care,
    custody, and control’ of his or her children under the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.” Adams v. Tessener, 
    354 N.C. 57
    , 60 (2001) (quoting Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 66 (2000)). Accordingly,
    as noted above, “[w]hen the State moves to destroy weakened familial bonds, it must
    provide the parents with fundamentally fair procedures.” In re Murphy, 105 N.C.
    App. at 653 (quoting Santosky, 
    455 U.S. at
    753–54). At an adjudicatory hearing, a
    respondent-parent must be afforded an adequate opportunity to present evidence
    “enabl[ing] the trial court to make an independent determination” regarding the facts
    pertinent to the termination motion. In re T.N.H., 
    372 N.C. 403
    , 409 (2019). Thus,
    when a parent is unable to attend a termination hearing as a result of the trial court’s
    refusal to grant a continuance, that parent’s constitutional due process rights may be
    implicated.
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    ¶ 16         Nonetheless, even if a motion to continue implicates a parent’s constitutional
    parental rights, a reviewing court will only review a denial of the motion de novo if
    the respondent-parent “assert[ed] before the trial court that a continuance was
    necessary to protect a constitutional right.” In re S.M., 
    375 N.C. 673
    , 679 (2020). If
    the respondent-parent fails to assert a constitutional basis in support of his or her
    motion to continue, “that position is waived and we are constrained to review the trial
    court’s denial of [a] motion to continue for abuse of discretion.” 
    Id.
     In this case, the
    constitutional basis for respondent-father’s motion to continue was apparent from the
    motion itself, in which respondent-father’s counsel expressly argued that
    the proper administration of justice and any reasonable
    understanding of due process demands [respondent-
    father’s] presence at this hearing to determine if the state
    will strip him of his constitutionally protected parental
    rights. [Respondent-father] has a fundamental right to
    participate in the state’s efforts to deny him his
    constitutional rights to care for his child. [Respondent-
    father] strenuously objects to the state’s efforts to
    terminate his parental rights over his minor child. In order
    to defend his rights [respondent-father] will testify at this
    hearing. This will be an impossibility if a continuance is
    not granted.
    Accordingly, we review the trial court’s denial of respondent-father’s motion to
    continue the termination hearing de novo.
    III.     Analysis.
    ¶ 17         To establish that a termination order entered after a trial court has denied a
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    motion to continue should be overturned, a respondent-parent must “show[ ] both
    that the denial was erroneous, and that [the respondent-parent] suffered prejudice
    as a result of the error.” In re A.L.S., 
    374 N.C. 515
    , 517 (2020) (quoting Walls, 
    342 N.C. at
    24–25). In support of their assertion that the trial court did not err, DSS and
    the GAL echo two justifications the trial court relied upon in support of its denial of
    respondent-father’s request for a continuance. First, they argue that the trial court
    did not err in denying the motion because “the matter was outside of the [ninety]-day
    statutory period, with two continuances having already been granted, one of which
    was requested by respondent[-]father’s attorney.” Second, they argue that the trial
    court did not err in denying the motion because the court appropriately “weighed and
    balanced the rights and interest[s] of all involved, assuring the father’s due process
    rights were secured” by conducting the hearing in a manner that “preserved the
    adversarial nature of the proceedings and assured the father had more than adequate
    representation.” With respect to prejudice, they argue that respondent-father has
    failed to demonstrate that his testimony “would have presented any evidence not
    already provided to the court,” especially given that respondent-father’s rights “were
    protected by counsel.” We address each argument in turn.
    A. The trial court erred to the extent it determined that the lockdown at
    respondent-father’s detention facility was not an “extraordinary
    circumstance[ ]” within the meaning of the Juvenile Code.
    ¶ 18         Under North Carolina’s Juvenile Code, a trial court may continue an
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    adjudicatory hearing on a motion or petition to terminate a parent’s parental rights
    for up to ninety days “for good cause shown.” N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(d) (2021). A trial
    court may also continue an adjudicatory hearing to a date more than ninety days past
    the date the motion or petition was filed, but “[c]ontinuances that extend beyond 90
    days after the initial petition shall be granted only in extraordinary circumstances
    when necessary for the proper administration of justice.” Id. (emphasis added). In
    this case, when respondent-father filed the motion to continue at issue on appeal,
    more than ninety days had already passed since DSS initially filed its termination
    motion. Indeed, the trial court had already determined that “extraordinary
    circumstances” justified continuing two previously scheduled adjudicatory hearings
    beyond the statutory ninety-day period: first, when respondent-father’s counsel noted
    a scheduling conflict, and second, when then-Chief Justice Beasley renewed a
    COVID-19 Emergency Directive.
    ¶ 19         The trial court did not expressly state that respondent-father’s motion failed
    to present an “extraordinary circumstance[ ]” within the meaning of N.C.G.S. § 7B-
    1109(d). But the trial court did refer to this statutory requirement in noting that
    “[t]his case is already outside the required timeframe.” Still, even if it is correct that
    a trial court should consider the overall amount of time that has elapsed when ruling
    on a motion to continue filed more than ninety days after the filing of a termination
    motion, a trial court is not entitled to ignore the nature of the circumstances
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    presented in support of the continuance motion. “Extraordinary circumstances” may
    occur both within and beyond ninety days after the filing of a termination motion or
    petition.
    ¶ 20         Here, the trial court had previously concluded that a disruption caused by the
    COVID-19 pandemic was an “extraordinary circumstance[ ]” permitting it to exercise
    its authority to grant a continuance pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(d). Logically,
    another disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, one which precluded
    respondent-father   from   attending    the adjudicatory       hearing,   was   also   an
    “extraordinary circumstance[ ]” permitting the trial court to exercise its authority to
    grant a continuance pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(d). While the trial court was
    certainly correct in noting that “no one knows for sure how COVID-19 will continue
    to impact the prison system,” the fact that the court was confronted with an
    unprecedented and rapidly evolving situation supports rather than detracts from the
    conclusion   that   respondent-father’s     motion       presented   an   “extraordinary
    circumstance[ ]” within the meaning of N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(d).
    ¶ 21         This conclusion does not necessarily mean that the trial court reversibly erred
    in denying respondent-father’s motion to continue. As previously noted, determining
    that a motion to continue presents an “extraordinary circumstance[ ]” does not require
    a trial court to continue the hearing under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(d). But our conclusion
    that respondent-father’s motion to continue did present an “extraordinary
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    circumstance[ ]” does foreclose upon the argument that the trial court necessarily
    could not have erred because it lacked the authority to continue an adjudicatory
    hearing beyond ninety days under our Juvenile Code. Accordingly, we reject the
    contention that the trial court properly denied respondent-father’s motion because
    the lockdown at his prison occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic was not an
    “extraordinary circumstance[ ]” within the meaning of N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(d).
    B. The adjudicatory hearing held in respondent-father’s absence did not
    meet the requirements of due process.
    ¶ 22         We next consider whether the trial court’s decision to deny respondent-father’s
    motion to continue the adjudicatory hearing violated respondent-father’s due process
    rights. As explained above, the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution
    requires the State to “provide [ ] parents with fundamentally fair procedures” when
    seeking to terminate their parental rights. In re Murphy, 105 N.C. App. at 653
    (quoting Santosky, 
    455 U.S. at 754
    ). The requirements of due process are “flexible
    and call[ ] for such procedural protections as the particular situation demands.” Jones
    v. Keller, 
    364 N.C. 249
    , 256 (2010) (quoting Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
    , 481
    (1972)). When assessing whether the requirements of due process have been met,
    courts consider “the private interests affected by the proceeding; the risk of error
    created by the State’s chosen procedure; and the countervailing governmental
    interest supporting use of the challenged procedure.” Santosky, 
    455 U.S. at
    754 (citing
    Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 335 (1976)).
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    ¶ 23         It is indisputable that respondent-father has a “commanding” interest “in the
    accuracy and justice of the decision to terminate his [ ] parental status.” Lassiter v.
    Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of Durham Cty., N.C., 
    452 U.S. 18
    , 27 (1981); see also Price v.
    Howard, 
    346 N.C. 68
    , 79 (1997) (recognizing “[a] natural parent’s constitutionally
    protected paramount interest in the companionship, custody, care, and control of his
    or her child”). This interest “weighs against the respondent’s absence from the
    adjudicatory hearing.” In re Murphy, 105 N.C. App. at 654. At the same time, it is
    indisputable that DSS possessed an “equally commanding” interest in the outcome of
    the proceeding. Id. at 655.
    ¶ 24         To be clear, the “countervailing government interest” at stake here was not an
    interest in rapidly terminating respondent-father’s parental rights to facilitate
    Caleb’s adoption. Id. Rather, DSS’s interest was in protecting Caleb’s welfare through
    a proceeding that reaches “a correct decision” regarding whether respondent-father’s
    parental rights could and should be terminated. Id. While it may be the case that
    terminating respondent-father’s parental rights was both legally permissible and in
    Caleb’s best interest, neither proposition could be assumed; the reason a trial court
    conducts an adjudicatory hearing is to determine if grounds exist to lawfully
    terminate a parent’s parental rights, and one of the purposes of the procedures
    created by our Juvenile Code is to “prevent[ ] the unnecessary or inappropriate
    separation of juveniles from their parents.” N.C.G.S. § 7B-100(4) (2021); cf. In re
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    A.C.F., 
    176 N.C. App. 520
    , 527 (2006) (recognizing “the State’s interests in preserving
    the family” of a child whose parents are subject to termination proceedings). The
    State’s interest in this proceeding necessarily partially overlapped with respondent-
    father’s interest, in that both had a commanding interest in ensuring that the
    adjudicatory hearing helped the trial court reach the correct disposition of DSS’s
    motion to terminate respondent-father’s parental rights. See In re K.M.W., 
    376 N.C. 195
    , 208 (2020) (recognizing that “fundamentally fair procedures” are “an inherent
    part of the State’s efforts to protect the best interests of the affected children by
    preventing unnecessary interference with the parent-child relationship”).
    ¶ 25         Because the parties largely agree that all parties to the adjudicatory hearing
    possessed a substantial interest in its outcome, “determination of whether
    respondent’s federal due process rights have been violated turns upon the second
    Eldridge factor, risk of error created by the State’s procedure.” In re Murphy, 105
    N.C. App. at 655. Respondent-father argues that his absence significantly increased
    the risk of an erroneous termination of his parental rights because (1) he was
    deprived of the opportunity to testify regarding topics central to the resolution of
    DSS’s termination motion, and (2) his counsel did not have the opportunity to obtain
    the information about which respondent-father would have testified to at the hearing
    given that respondent-father was in lockdown for weeks preceding the hearing. In
    response, DSS and the GAL contend that the risk of error was minimal because
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    respondent-father was represented by counsel and the trial court admitted into
    evidence a report summarizing respondent-father’s conduct while in prison. Although
    it is well established that “an incarcerated parent does not have an absolute right to
    be transported to a termination of parental rights hearing in order that he [or she]
    may be present under either statutory or constitutional law,” id. at 652–53, we
    conclude that respondent-father’s absence created a meaningful risk of error that
    undermined the fundamental fairness of this adjudicatory hearing.
    ¶ 26         The crux of DSS’s termination motion—and the central factual basis for the
    trial court’s termination order—was respondent-father’s conduct while in prison.
    Each of the grounds asserted by DSS required an assessment of his conduct in light
    of the constraints imposed by his incarceration. Naturally, respondent-father
    possessed firsthand information regarding his conduct in prison that would have been
    relevant to the trial court’s adjudication of these asserted grounds. This information
    included the availability of programs and services in his detention facility addressing
    the various components of his case plan, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the
    availability of those programs, his efforts to avail himself of any existing programs
    and services during the time he was not a party to Caleb’s juvenile proceeding, the
    progress he has made while enrolled in any programs or services, and his personal
    financial situation. The trial court needed this information to ensure that its
    adjudication was based on the specific facts of respondent-father’s conduct in prison,
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    as opposed to facts necessarily attendant to the fact of respondent-father’s
    incarceration in general. Cf. In re A.G.D., 
    374 N.C. 317
    , 327 (2020) (“[T]he fact of
    incarceration is neither a sword nor a shield for purposes of a termination of parental
    rights proceeding.”). Denying respondent-father’s motion to continue deprived the
    court of a crucial source of information about a topic central to the court’s resolution
    of the termination motion.
    ¶ 27         The presence of counsel representing respondent-father may have partially
    mitigated the unfairness of proceeding without respondent-father’s participation.
    Counsel’s representation ensured that someone would be at the adjudicatory hearing
    to advocate on respondent-father’s behalf. Yet under the circumstances of this case,
    counsel’s presence did not obviate the risk of error created by respondent-father’s
    absence. Counsel was severely limited in his ability to elicit up-to-date information
    from respondent-father at or near the time of the hearing because respondent-father
    was incarcerated in West Virginia in a facility under COVID-19 lockdown. Indeed,
    when respondent-father’s counsel e-mailed a prison official to schedule a meeting
    with respondent-father to prepare for the adjudicatory hearing, the official responded
    that respondent-father could not be made available for a meeting because the facility
    was under “lock down until Jan 25. No movement is available until then[.]”
    ¶ 28         Furthermore, while respondent-father’s counsel did submit a report to the trial
    court containing a summary of respondent-father’s conduct while in prison, the report
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    was admitted “so [respondent-father’s] wishes will be known today,” not to provide
    factual information rebutting the allegations DSS made in support of its termination
    motion. In addition, because respondent-father’s counsel was unable to meet with
    respondent-father before the hearing, it is unclear whether the report provided up-
    to-date information regarding respondent-father’s conduct in prison. Accordingly,
    even with the report, counsel could not adequately bridge the informational gaps
    created when respondent-father was unable to testify at the adjudicatory hearing.
    ¶ 29         The facts of this case stand in stark contrast to the facts of In re Murphy, upon
    which both DSS and the GAL rely. In In re Murphy, “respondent’s attorney did not
    argue that his client would be able to testify concerning any defense to termination,”
    and counsel “could point to no reason that the respondent should be transported to
    the hearing other than for respondent to contest his sexual assault convictions, an
    impermissible reason.” 105 N.C. App. at 655. Denying the respondent-parent the
    opportunity to testify in that case did not deprive the court of any information
    relevant to the disposition of any legal claims. In addition, because the respondent-
    father in In re Murphy was incarcerated “[a]s the result of his being convicted of
    sexual offenses he committed against his own children,” the Court of Appeals
    reasoned that “[r]espondent’s presence at the hearing combined with his parental
    position of authority over his children may well have intimidated his children and
    influenced their answers if they had been called to testify.” Id. Allowing the
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    respondent-parent to be present would have exacerbated the risk of error. By contrast,
    in this case respondent-father possessed information relevant to the legal question
    before the trial court, and there is no reason to believe that respondent-father’s
    presence at the adjudicatory hearing would have interfered with the trial court’s
    efforts to elicit truthful and candid testimony from other witnesses.
    ¶ 30         Under a different set of circumstances, the risk of error created by a
    respondent-parent’s absence from an adjudicatory hearing might be outweighed by
    the State’s interest in ensuring the efficient and orderly attainment of permanency
    for a juvenile. The State has a compelling interest in protecting a juvenile’s welfare,
    and this interest both demands and justifies adherence to an expeditious process for
    determining when a natural parent’s rights should be terminated. Cf. In re D.L.H.,
    
    364 N.C. 214
    , 219 n.2 (2010) (noting in a juvenile delinquency matter that “the
    mandates of [a provision of the Juvenile Code] . . . encourage expeditious handling of
    juvenile matters”). But, under these circumstances, this interest was not
    meaningfully implicated by respondent-father’s motion to continue the adjudicatory
    hearing. Respondent-father did not ask for an indefinite continuance, nor did he ask
    for a continuance until the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, whenever that may be.
    He asked to continue a hearing calendared for 20 January 2021 until some date after
    25 January 2021 because the lockdown at his prison was scheduled to be lifted at that
    time. Under these circumstances, “[t]he State’s interest in prompt resolution of
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    [termination] proceedings would not have been significantly affected by a brief
    continuance.” In re K.D.L., 
    176 N.C. App. 261
    , 265 (2006).
    ¶ 31         Similarly, under a different set of circumstances, the risk of error created by a
    respondent-parent’s absence from an adjudicatory hearing might be negated by the
    presence of other witnesses who could provide the court with the same information
    the parent possesses. A trial court is required to “receive some oral testimony at the
    [adjudicatory] hearing,” In re T.N.H., 372 N.C. at 410 (emphasis added), but there is
    no requirement that the respondent-parent himself or herself be its source. Thus, in
    this case, had the trial court received testimony from a prison official or some other
    individual who could speak directly to respondent-father’s conduct in prison, the
    presence of counsel might have adequately protected respondent-father’s interest in
    avoiding an erroneous termination of his parental rights. Cf. In re Barkley, 
    61 N.C. App. 267
    , 270 (1983) (concluding that the trial court did not err by excluding a
    respondent-mother from the courtroom because her counsel was allowed to cross-
    examine a different witness possessing the same relevant substantive information).
    But no witness who could compensate for the informational deficiency created by
    respondent-father’s absence was available at this adjudicatory hearing.
    ¶ 32         Procedural due process “is a flexible, not fixed, concept governed by the unique
    circumstances and characteristics of the interest sought to be protected.” Peace v.
    Emp. Sec. Comm'n of N. Carolina, 
    349 N.C. 315
    , 323 (1998). The procedure necessary
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    “to [e]nsure fundamental fairness” will vary given the particular context of each case.
    State v. Tolley, 
    290 N.C. 349
    , 364 (1976) (cleaned up); cf. In re D.W., 
    202 N.C. App. 624
    , 628 (2010) (“[A] case-by-case analysis is more appropriate than the application
    of rigid rules.”). In this case the trial court’s denial of respondent-father’s motion for
    a brief continuance, which prevented respondent-father from testifying at a hearing
    where his parental rights were adjudicated, undermined the fairness of that hearing.
    Given respondent-father’s inability to meet with counsel before the hearing because
    of the lockdown at his prison, the lack of any other testimony regarding respondent-
    father’s conduct in prison, the centrality of factual questions regarding respondent-
    father’s activities in prison to the court’s examination of the asserted grounds for
    termination, and the magnitude of respondent-father’s interest in avoiding an
    erroneous termination of his parental rights (which DSS shared), the trial court’s
    denial of respondent-father’s motion to continue was legal error.
    C. Respondent-father was prejudiced by the trial court’s erroneous denial
    of his motion to continue the adjudicatory hearing.
    ¶ 33         Furthermore, we agree with respondent-father that he was prejudiced by the
    trial court’s denial of his motion to continue the adjudicatory hearing. Although it is
    correct that reversal is warranted only upon a showing of prejudice “whether the
    motion raises a constitutional issue or not,” Walls, 
    342 N.C. at 24
    , our prejudice
    analysis is different when the trial court commits a constitutional error. When the
    trial court’s denial of a respondent-parent’s motion to continue violates that parent’s
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    due process rights, the “harmless error” standard applies: specifically, the challenged
    order must be overturned unless “the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt,”
    and DSS bears the “burden” of proving that the error was harmless. State v. Scott,
    
    377 N.C. 199
    , 2021-NCSC-41, ¶ 10; cf. In re T.D.W., 
    203 N.C. App. 539
    , 545 (2010)
    (applying harmless error analysis to a due process violation in termination of
    parental rights context). Under these circumstances, we are unpersuaded that the
    trial court’s denial of respondent-father’s motion to continue the adjudicatory hearing
    was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    ¶ 34         In general, to demonstrate prejudice resulting from the denial of a motion to
    continue an adjudicatory hearing, a respondent-parent should indicate what the
    parent’s “expected testimony” will address and “demonstrate its significance” to the
    trial court’s adjudication of the grounds for termination. In re A.L.S., 374 N.C. at 518.
    The “better practice [is] to support a motion for continuance with” an “affidavit or
    other offer of proof.” Id. (citing and quoting State v. Cody, 
    135 N.C. App. 722
    , 726
    (1999)). Respondent-father’s counsel did not submit an affidavit or other offer of proof
    in support of the continuance motion here. Yet respondent-father’s counsel had no
    means of eliciting the information necessary to support such an affidavit or other offer
    of proof—counsel’s inability to contact respondent-father and arrange for his
    testimony at the hearing because of circumstances beyond the control of either of
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    them was a principal justification for seeking the continuance.3 Trial counsel did state
    that respondent-father “is standing behind testifying before the [c]ourt” and that he
    would “vociferously refute the . . . position to terminate [his] parental rights.” In
    addition, in a brief to this Court, appellate counsel described the information
    respondent-father would have provided had he been permitted to testify. Accordingly,
    in assessing prejudice, we consider these arguments regarding the consequences of
    the trial court’s refusal to grant a continuance.
    ¶ 35          As the Court of Appeals has correctly observed, although parents do not have
    an absolute right to be present and testify at a hearing where their parental rights
    are being adjudicated, “[g]enerally, we consider the testimony of a parent to be a vital
    source of information regarding the nature of the parent/child relationship and the
    necessity of terminating parental rights.” In re D.W., 202 N.C. App. at 629. Parental
    testimony is especially vital when it addresses facts that are central to the trial
    court’s adjudication of asserted grounds for termination and when no other witness
    3DSS argues that it is “disconcerting” that respondent-father called his own father on
    “the morning of the termination hearing . . . but did not take the initiative to call his
    attorney.” Although the transcript of the adjudicatory hearing does indicate that respondent-
    father spoke with his own father on the morning of the hearing, there is no evidence in the
    record suggesting respondent-father had the means or opportunity to appear at the
    adjudicatory hearing or otherwise meaningfully participate in preparing for the hearing with
    his attorney. As noted above, when respondent-father’s counsel attempted to contact
    respondent-father at his detention facility, a prison official told counsel that any such contact
    would be impossible due to the lockdown. Even respondent-father’s father’s testimony
    supports the conclusion that the lockdown significantly inhibited efforts to communicate with
    respondent-father—according to the testimony, respondent-father was only able to call his
    father during a brief window when he was released from lockdown earlier that morning.
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    is available who can accurately convey to the court the information the parent
    possesses.
    ¶ 36         Here, the trial court’s decision to terminate respondent-father’s parental rights
    necessarily depended upon its assessment of respondent-father’s conduct within the
    context of his case plan and the constraints of his incarceration. Every ground
    asserted by DSS and found by the trial court required careful parsing of these facts
    to ensure that respondent-father’s parental rights were being terminated because of
    his conduct, not because of his incarceration. Cf. In re K.N., 
    373 N.C. 274
    , 283 (2020)
    (“[R]espondent’s incarceration, by itself, cannot serve as clear, cogent, and convincing
    evidence of neglect. Instead, the extent to which a parent’s incarceration or violation
    of the terms and conditions of probation support a finding of neglect depends upon an
    analysis of the relevant facts and circumstances, including the length of the parent’s
    incarceration.”). Respondent-father asserts that he would have testified to “the
    fitness of all appropriate caregivers” he identified as alternative placements for
    Caleb, “[e]vidence of [his] ability and efforts to work toward reunification with Caleb
    when he was not a party to the case,” “[e]vidence of [his] ability to pay a reasonable
    portion toward Caleb’s cost of care in the six months preceding the filing of the
    termination motion,” “[e]vidence of [his] progress in the rehabilitative programs he
    was taking in prison to the date of the termination hearing,” and “updated evidence
    about his release date.” No other witness was present who could supply the court with
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    this factual information.
    ¶ 37         The absence of information regarding respondent-father’s conduct while in
    prison plainly had a “possible impact upon the actual hearing or the ensuing order by
    the trial court.” In re T.H.T., 
    362 N.C. 446
    , 453 (2008). DSS and the GAL have not
    met their burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the trial court’s violation
    of respondent-father’s due process rights was harmless. Accordingly, respondent-
    father was prejudiced when he was denied the opportunity to be heard at the
    adjudicatory hearing “in a meaningful manner.” Goldberg v. Kelly, 
    397 U.S. 254
    , 267
    (1970) (quoting Armstrong v. Manzo, 
    380 U.S. 545
    , 552 (1965)).
    IV.    Conclusion.
    ¶ 38         In this case, respondent-father was unable to attend the hearing during which
    his parental rights were adjudicated because the prison in which he was living was
    under lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He requested a brief continuance
    until the lockdown was lifted to enable him to prepare for the hearing with his
    attorney and to testify on his own behalf. The grounds for terminating respondent-
    father’s parental rights all required the trial court to carefully assess his conduct
    while in prison. No other witness with direct knowledge of that information was
    available to testify at the hearing. Ultimately, the trial court terminated respondent-
    father’s parental rights.
    ¶ 39         The purpose of an adjudicatory hearing is to determine whether the State’s
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    Opinion of the Court
    interest in protecting the welfare of a child requires displacing a parent’s
    “constitutionally[ ] protected paramount right . . . to custody, care, and control of [his
    or her] children.” Owenby, 
    357 N.C. at 145
     (quoting Petersen v. Rogers, 
    337 N.C. 397
    ,
    403–04 (1994). That right “is a ‘fundamental liberty interest’ which warrants due
    process protection.” In re Montgomery, 
    311 N.C. 101
    , 106 (1984) (quoting Santosky,
    
    455 U.S. at 759
    ). By denying respondent-father’s motion to continue the adjudicatory
    hearing, the trial court violated respondent-father’s due process rights and
    undermined the fundamental fairness of the hearing. Accordingly, we vacate the
    order terminating respondent-father’s parental rights and remand this case to the
    trial court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
    VACATED AND REMANDED.
    Chief Justice NEWBY dissenting.
    ¶ 40         The task here is to determine whether the trial court erred in terminating
    respondent-father’s parental rights. Respondent presents two bases for why the trial
    court’s order should be vacated. He first argues that the trial court’s denial of his
    motion to continue the termination of parental rights (TPR) hearing violated his right
    to due process because he was unable to attend the hearing virtually. Additionally,
    respondent contends that sufficient grounds did not exist for the trial court to
    terminate his parental rights under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(1), (2), (3), or (6). In order
    for respondent to prevail on appeal, however, he must establish that if he were
    virtually present at the hearing, the trial court would not have terminated his
    parental rights under any of the alleged grounds. Here respondent is unable to show
    that but for his absence, the trial court would not have terminated his parental rights
    for willful failure to pay a reasonable portion of Caleb’s cost of care for the six-month
    period immediately preceding the filing of the TPR motion. See N.C.G.S.
    § 7B-1111(a)(3) (2021). Thus, he cannot prevail on appeal. The trial court’s order
    terminating respondent’s parental rights should be affirmed. I respectfully dissent.
    ¶ 41         On 28 August 2020, the Alamance County Department of Social Services (DSS)
    filed a motion to terminate respondent’s parental rights to Caleb based, inter alia,
    upon respondent’s willful failure to pay a reasonable portion of Caleb’s cost of care
    pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3). Notably, during the relevant six-month period
    preceding the filing of the TPR motion, respondent contributed zero dollars toward
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    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    Caleb’s cost of care despite being employed in the dining room of the prison facility
    where he was incarcerated and receiving funds from his family. A hearing on the TPR
    motion was originally scheduled for 21 October 2020 but continued to 16 December
    2020 and again continued to 20 January 2021.
    ¶ 42         On 12 January 2021, respondent moved to continue the TPR hearing for a third
    time, arguing he would otherwise be unable to attend the hearing virtually due to a
    COVID-19 lockdown at the prison. In respondent’s motion to continue, he argued that
    “due process demands [his] presence at th[e] hearing to determine if the state will
    strip him of his constitutionally protected parental rights.” Respondent further
    contended that denying the requested continuance would render him unable to testify
    and thus unable to defend his constitutional right to care for his child. The trial court
    made the following findings with respect to respondent’s motion:
    2.   That at the call of the hearing, [respondent’s counsel]
    was heard on his written motion to continue the
    hearing on termination of parental rights. He
    indicated to the court that [respondent] could not
    attend the hearing due to the prison being on lock
    down due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    3.   That this motion to terminate parental rights was
    filed August 28, 2020 and initially scheduled for
    hearing on October [21], 2020. That hearing was
    continued at the request of [respondent’s] attorney
    and scheduled for December 16, 2020. That hearing
    was continued at no fault of anyone involved in this
    matter.
    4.   [Respondent’s counsel] reports the lock down is
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    scheduled to be lifted January 25, 2021. However, no
    one knows for sure how COVID-19 will continue to
    impact the prison system.
    5.    That hearings on motions to terminate parental rights
    are required to be heard within 90 days of filing. This
    case is already outside the required timeframe.
    [Respondent] and his attorney have had an extended
    period of time to prepare for this matter.
    6.    That [respondent’s] attorney will be present at the
    hearing and permitted to cross exam[ine] witnesses
    and present evidence. That [respondent’s] report is
    admitted into evidence as well as his exhibits by the
    consent of the parties. These processes assure the due
    process rights of [respondent] are being honored and
    the adversary nature of the proceeding is preserved.
    7.    [Respondent] and [DSS] both have a commanding
    interest in this proceeding.
    8.    That due to the fundamental fairness of the process,
    representation of counsel for [respondent] and other
    processes, the risk of error by not having [respondent]
    present is low.
    The trial court denied respondent’s motion. After the hearing on 20 January 2021,
    the trial court determined that grounds existed to terminate respondent’s parental
    rights based upon neglect, willfully leaving Caleb in foster care or placement outside
    the home without correcting the conditions which led to his removal, willfully failing
    to pay a reasonable portion of the cost of Caleb’s care, and dependency. See N.C.G.S.
    § 7B-1111(a)(1), (2), (3), (6).
    ¶ 43          On direct appeal before this Court, respondent now argues the trial court
    violated his right to due process when it denied his motion to continue the TPR
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    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    hearing because it rendered him unable to testify at the hearing. Even assuming,
    without deciding, that the trial court erred in denying respondent’s motion,
    respondent cannot prevail on appeal because he cannot show that he was prejudiced
    by such an error.1
    ¶ 44          “ ‘When the State moves to destroy weakened familial bonds, it must provide
    the parents with fundamentally fair procedures,’ which meet the rigors of the due
    process clause.” In re Murphy, 
    105 N.C. App. 651
    , 653, 
    414 S.E.2d 396
    , 397 (quoting
    Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 753–54, 
    102 S. Ct. 1388
    , 1394 (1982)), aff’d per
    curiam, 
    332 N.C. 663
    , 
    422 S.E.2d 577
     (1992). Nonetheless, an incarcerated parent
    does not have an absolute right to be present at a TPR hearing. In re Murphy, 
    105 N.C. App. at
    652–53, 
    414 S.E.2d at 397
    . As such, “[w]hen . . . a parent is absent from
    a termination proceeding and the trial court preserves the adversarial nature of the
    proceeding by allowing the parent’s counsel to cross examine witnesses, with the
    questions and answers being recorded, the parent must demonstrate some actual
    prejudice in order to prevail upon appeal.” Id. at 658, 
    414 S.E.2d at 400
    . In other
    words, a respondent must show that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for
    [his absence], there would have been a different result in the proceedings.” In re
    1The analysis required to determine prejudice is comparable to that required by the
    second Eldridge factor—i.e., the risk of error caused by respondent’s absence. Because this
    Court should decide this case under the prejudice analysis, an analysis of the Eldridge factors
    is unnecessary.
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    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    T.N.C., 
    375 N.C. 849
    , 854, 
    851 S.E.2d 29
    , 33 (2020) (quoting State v. Braswell, 
    312 N.C. 553
    , 563, 
    324 S.E.2d 241
    , 248 (1985)).
    ¶ 45         Here the trial court preserved the adversarial nature of the proceedings
    because respondent was represented by counsel, who presented evidence, called a
    witness, and cross-examined witnesses at the TPR hearing. Though “a finding of only
    one ground is necessary to support a termination of parental rights,” In re A.R.A., 
    373 N.C. 190
    , 194, 
    835 S.E.2d 417
    , 421 (2019), the trial court found that grounds existed
    to terminate respondent’s parental rights under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(1), (2), (3), and
    (6). Therefore, to prevail on appeal, respondent must show that if he were permitted
    to testify at the hearing, the trial court would not have terminated his parental rights
    based upon any of the above grounds.
    ¶ 46         Respondent’s presence at the hearing would not have changed the trial court’s
    adjudication under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3). A trial court may terminate a parent’s
    parental rights under this ground when
    [t]he juvenile has been placed in the custody of a county
    department of social services, a licensed child-placing
    agency, a child-caring institution, or a foster home, and the
    parent has for a continuous period of six months
    immediately preceding the filing of the petition or motion
    willfully failed to pay a reasonable portion of the cost of
    care for the juvenile although physically and financially
    able to do so.
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3). We have recently explained that termination under
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3) is proper “where the trial court finds that the respondent
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    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    has made no contributions to the juvenile’s care for the period of six months
    immediately preceding the filing of the petition and that the respondent had income
    during this period.” In re J.E.E.R., 
    378 N.C. 23
    , 2021-NCSC-74, ¶ 18.
    ¶ 47         Here the trial court found that
    13. [Respondent] entered into the Alamance County Jail
    on May 21, 2018 and has not left incarceration since
    that date.
    ....
    16. The juvenile has been alive 726 days. Out of these 726
    days, he has been in DSS custody 725 days. He has
    never lived with [respondent].
    ....
    46. [Respondent] receives financial assistance while
    incarcerated from his mother and other family
    members/friends. He also works within the prison and
    receives a small amount of pay.
    47. [DSS] has expended over $10,000.00 for the cost of
    care of the juvenile.
    48. The petition to terminate parental rights was filed
    August 28, 2020. The relevant six month period for
    determination if [respondent] has paid his reasonable
    portion of the cost of care is from February 28, 2020
    until August 28, 2020. During that period of time,
    [respondent] paid zero dollars towards the cost of care
    for the juvenile.
    49. [Respondent] has the ability to pay more than zero
    towards the cost of care for the juvenile, as
    demonstrated by the money he provided in September
    of 2020, and has willfully failed to pay such.
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    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    ¶ 48         Respondent challenges finding of fact 49, arguing the record does not support
    any finding that he had the ability to pay an amount greater than zero dollars toward
    Caleb’s cost of care during the relevant period. The record, however, includes two
    individualized needs plans for respondent, which indicate that respondent was
    employed in the dining room of the prison facility at least from 12 November 2019 to
    22 July 2020, almost the entirety of the relevant six-month period. Moreover, Christy
    Roessler, a DSS social worker, testified that respondent had access to money to help
    with Caleb’s cost of care because respondent was being paid for his work at the prison
    and was receiving funds from his family. Though respondent sent thirty-five dollars
    to Caleb on 9 September 2020, demonstrating his ability to pay some amount, he paid
    nothing during the relevant six-month period. Therefore, the trial court’s finding that
    respondent had the ability to pay more than zero dollars during the relevant period
    is supported by the record evidence. Since respondent made no contributions to the
    cost of Caleb’s care during the relevant period despite having some income, the trial
    court properly terminated his parental rights pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3).
    ¶ 49         The majority states that the trial court was required to consider “up-to-date”
    testimony from respondent regarding his good behavior in prison. According to the
    majority,
    the trial court’s decision to terminate respondent-father’s
    parental rights necessarily depended upon its assessment
    of respondent-father’s conduct within the context of his
    case plan and the constraints of his incarceration. Every
    IN RE C.A.B.
    2022-NCSC-51
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    ground asserted by DSS and found by the trial court
    required careful parsing of these facts to ensure that
    respondent-father’s parental rights were being terminated
    because of his conduct, not because of his incarceration.
    As such, the majority erroneously concludes that respondent’s absence “created a
    meaningful risk of error that undermined the fundamental fairness of this
    adjudicatory hearing” because the trial court was unable to consider relevant, up-to-
    date information regarding respondent’s conduct in prison.
    ¶ 50         As explained above, however, the trial court’s adjudication under N.C.G.S.
    § 7B-1111(a)(3) did not require an understanding of respondent’s current conduct. 2
    Rather, it merely required the trial court to find two facts: (1) that respondent had
    some income during the relevant period and thus the ability to pay something; and
    (2) that respondent contributed zero dollars toward Caleb’s cost of care. Since the
    relevant period for adjudication under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3) consisted of the six
    months immediately preceding the filing of the TPR motion, the facts necessary to
    support termination under this ground were finalized on the date the TPR motion
    was filed. As such, the trial court did not need to hear “up-to-date” testimony from
    respondent about his subsequent good behavior in prison.
    ¶ 51         The majority is thus unable to articulate what evidence respondent’s testimony
    2 Though respondent’s conduct at the time of the hearing may have been relevant to
    adjudication of some of the other grounds alleged, his conduct after 28 August 2020 had no
    bearing on the trial court’s N.C.G.S. § 7B 1111(a)(3) determination.
    IN RE C.A.B.
    2022-NCSC-51
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    would have offered that could have altered the trial court’s adjudication under
    N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3). Respondent presented no offer of proof before the trial
    court. On appeal, respondent also failed to specify any facts showing that he did not
    have income during the relevant period. Rather, respondent, and now the majority,
    merely asserts that respondent would have presented “[e]vidence of [his] ability to
    pay a reasonable portion toward Caleb’s cost of care in the six months preceding the
    filing of the termination motion.” What exactly such evidence is remains unknown.
    This conclusory assertion is not sufficient to show that respondent’s testimony would
    have rendered a different result under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3). It is clear that
    respondent had income but paid nothing. Notably, if contrary evidence existed, then
    respondent could have included it in his report, which was admitted into evidence.
    ¶ 52         The majority excuses respondent’s counsel’s failure to present an offer of proof
    by claiming that “[c]ounsel was severely limited in his ability to elicit up-to-date
    information from respondent-father at or near the time of the hearing because
    respondent-father was incarcerated in West Virginia in a facility under COVID-19
    lockdown.” However, all of the information needed to defend against the termination
    of respondent’s parental rights under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3) had been available
    since the TPR motion was filed on 28 August 2020. Certainly, in preparing for the
    two previously scheduled TPR hearings in October and December of 2020, any
    relevant information would have been available to respondent’s counsel. Therefore,
    IN RE C.A.B.
    2022-NCSC-51
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    the 145-day period between the filing of the TPR motion and the hearing, including
    the two scheduled hearings, provided respondent and his counsel sufficient time and
    incentive to prepare a defense to termination under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3).
    ¶ 53         Furthermore, the trial court found that
    [respondent] called [the paternal grandfather] before this
    hearing and they spoke for approximately thirty minutes.
    Although the federal penitentiary is on a COVID shutdown
    right now and would not allow [respondent] to participate
    in this hearing via WebEx, they do allow some telephone
    communication with the outside world. [Respondent] did
    not call his attorney during this time.
    This finding is supported by the paternal grandfather’s testimony that he spoke to
    respondent the morning of the TPR hearing for about thirty minutes. As such, it is
    binding on appeal. See In re C.H.M., 
    371 N.C. 22
    , 28, 
    812 S.E.2d 804
    , 809 (2018) (“[A]
    trial court’s findings of fact ‘are conclusive on appeal if there is competent evidence
    to support them.’ ” (quoting In re Skinner, 
    370 N.C. 126
    , 139, 
    804 S.E.2d 449
    , 457
    (2017))). Instead of calling the paternal grandfather on the morning of the TPR
    hearing, respondent could have called his counsel to prepare for the hearing.
    Therefore, the majority’s contention that respondent’s counsel was unable to
    sufficiently prepare for the hearing is without merit.
    ¶ 54         Moreover, the majority concludes that the COVID-19 lockdown constituted an
    “extraordinary circumstance” under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(d), which required the trial
    court to continue the hearing. See N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(d) (2021). N.C.G.S.
    IN RE C.A.B.
    2022-NCSC-51
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    § 7B-1109(d), however, does not require that a trial court grant a continuance but
    merely gives a trial court the authority to do so if it finds that extraordinary
    circumstances exist. See State v. Phillip, 
    261 N.C. 263
    , 266, 
    134 S.E.2d 386
    , 389
    (1964) (“Ordinarily a motion for continuance is addressed to the sound discretion of
    the trial judge and his ruling thereon is not subject to review on appeal except in a
    case of manifest abuse.”). Here the trial court acted within its discretion when it
    considered the circumstances surrounding the COVID-19 lockdown and determined
    that a continuance was not necessary.3
    ¶ 55         The trial court in the present case appropriately found that grounds existed to
    terminate respondent’s parental rights under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3). Even if
    respondent testified regarding his “up-to-date” conduct while incarcerated, the trial
    court’s adjudication under N.C.G.S. § 7B-1111(a)(3) would have remained the same.
    Respondent cannot show prejudice and thus cannot prevail on appeal. Since a finding
    of only one ground was necessary to support the trial court’s TPR order, there is no
    need to address the remaining grounds. The trial court’s order terminating
    respondent’s parental rights should be affirmed. I respectfully dissent.
    Justices BERGER and BARRINGER join in this dissenting opinion.
    3  In reaching a contrary conclusion, the majority gives weight to the fact that
    respondent only requested a five-day continuance. Unlike the trial court, however, the
    majority has no familiarity with the court calendar in Alamance County and thus cannot
    know when this case could have been rescheduled. Thus, such a consideration is better left
    to the sound discretion of the trial court.