In re M.E. , 131 A.3d 898 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                          Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:    
    2016 ME 1
    Docket:      Cum-15-43
    Submitted
    On Briefs: July 23, 2015
    Argued:      December 9, 2015
    Decided:     January 7, 2016
    Panel:       SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR, JJ.
    IN RE M.E.
    PER CURIAM
    [¶1] This is the second appeal in this child protection matter. In the first
    appeal, we affirmed the order of the District Court (Portland, Powers, J.) finding
    that M.E.’s father had placed her in circumstances of jeopardy to her health or
    welfare. In re M.E., 
    2014 ME 98
    , ¶ 19, 
    97 A.3d 1082
    ; see 22 M.R.S. § 4035
    (2015). The father now challenges the court’s termination of his parental rights to
    M.E. on grounds that the procedures undertaken by the court violated his due
    process rights, and that there is insufficient evidence in the record to support the
    court’s judgment. We disagree and affirm the judgment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] Our decision in In re M.E. contains a detailed recitation of the facts and
    procedure up to that point, 
    2014 ME 98
    , ¶¶ 2-14, 
    97 A.3d 1082
    .                 To avoid
    duplication, we focus on the court’s findings, which are supported by the record,
    regarding the events that have occurred since In re M.E. was issued.
    2
    [¶3] The father has continued to discount the severity of the child’s medical
    problems, refused to acknowledge his role in her illness or the effect of his own
    behavior on the child, and either cannot or will not agree to follow the medical
    instructions that would keep her healthy.        He has not complied with any
    rehabilitation or reunification requirements, and he remains unable to care for the
    child’s needs. Because of his intemperate actions, the father was discharged by
    two individual counselors, one of whom he had selected himself. He refused to
    cooperate with various community agencies. The father has not seen the child
    since July of 2014 and, since he moved to Missouri in August or September of
    2014, the father has failed to contact the Department of Health and Human
    Services or anyone else about his child. Nevertheless, he blames the Department
    for his failure to see her.
    [¶4] The father has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder,
    paranoid personality disorder, and social and refugee issues, and has been very
    difficult to work with. He has threatened suicide, for which he was involuntarily
    hospitalized for several days. He is loud, angry, defiant, aggressive, intimidating,
    and accusatory during medical appointments and team meetings. Three
    pediatricians have attempted and failed in their attempts to work with the father.
    His behavior required the Department to arrange for two police officers and two
    case aides to attend his supervised visits with the child.   During those visits, he
    3
    engaged in inappropriate behavior, and the visits were at times suspended because
    he failed to comply with visit rules. The father has also been required to leave the
    courtroom at times based on his disruptive behaviors. Throughout the proceedings,
    the father refused to cooperate with the multiple attorneys appointed to represent
    him. Although the father testified that he wanted to return to Maine, forgive
    everyone involved in the proceedings, and work to get the child back, the court
    found that “[t]his last minute statement of contrition” was not credible.
    [¶5] The court also provided the father with Russian language interpreters at
    state expense throughout the proceedings, including during meetings with his
    attorney, team meetings, court hearings and conferences, the child’s medical
    appointments, and visits with the child.      Documents were translated between
    Russian and English for the benefit of the father. Ultimately, the court found that
    [t]he court and providers have gone well beyond the norm to help
    these parents, including the use of interpreters, and regularly
    translated court and [guardian ad litem] documents. Nothing has
    seemed to help. These parents have tested the patience of providers
    and court personnel. This court has not ever encountered parental
    obstinance like this.
    [¶6] The child has improved substantially in foster care, but continues to
    suffer from some food-related problems that require special care; she has a gastric
    tube from which she receives about thirty percent of her calories. The foster
    parents have monitored the child’s condition, appropriately fed the child and
    4
    maintained the equipment to do so, and cooperated with medical instructions. The
    child is bonded with them, and they wish to adopt her.
    [¶7] On August 1, 2014, the Department filed a petition for termination of
    parental rights.1        The court scheduled a trial management conference for
    December 1, 2014, and later scheduled the trial itself for December 4 and 5, 2014.
    The court found that the father was notified of these dates by his attorney. The
    father did not appear at either the trial management conference or the termination
    hearing. On December 4, the court conducted a full evidentiary hearing during
    which the Department presented six witnesses and ten exhibits; even in the absence
    of the father’s cooperation, the father’s attorney cross-examined each of those
    witnesses and made a closing statement.
    [¶8]    On December 8, 2014, the father appeared at the courthouse.
    Notwithstanding the father’s failure to attend the termination hearing, the court
    reopened the evidence and allowed him to testify that day. By judgment dated
    December 11, 2014, the court terminated the father’s rights to the child after
    finding all four grounds of parental unfitness—that the father is unwilling or
    unable to protect the child from jeopardy, is unwilling or unable to take
    responsibility for the child, has abandoned the child, and has failed to make a good
    1
    The proceedings also resulted in the termination of the mother’s parental rights. The mother does
    not appeal from that judgment.
    5
    faith effort to rehabilitate and reunify with the child—and that termination is in the
    child’s best interest. See 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2) (2015).
    [¶9] On December 22, 2014, the father moved for a new trial and to set
    aside the termination judgment, which he argued was a default judgment.
    See M.R. Civ. P. 55, 59, 60. By a post-judgment order entered on January 5, 2015,
    the court denied the motions.                  The father filed a notice of appeal on
    January 22, 2015.
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶10] The father challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the
    court’s finding that he is unwilling or unable to protect the child from jeopardy.2
    2
    We assume without deciding that the appeal is both timely and justiciable. The father’s notice of
    appeal was filed within twenty-one days after the entry of the post-judgment order on the father’s motions
    for a new trial and for relief from judgment, but not within twenty-one days after the entry of the
    termination judgment itself. See M.R. App. P. 2(b)(3). We have never applied to child protection matters
    the appeal period extension of Rule 2(b)(3), and, more generally, we have not yet evaluated whether and
    to what extent traditional civil motion practice is permissible, appropriate, or appealable in child
    protection cases in particular. See 22 M.R.S. § 4006 (2015); see also M.R. App. P. 2(b)(4), 3(b).
    Although the timeliness and justiciability of the father’s appeal were not raised by the parties, we asked
    the parties to submit additional briefing—and invited the submission of amicus curiae briefs—on the
    following issues:
    1. Whether 22 M.R.S. § 4006 precludes the termination of the appeal period pursuant to
    M.R. App. P. 2(b)(3) when a party files a post-judgment motion enumerated in the
    rule, thereby requiring a party to file any notice of appeal within 21 days after the
    entry of the original judgment regardless of any post-judgment motions;
    2. Whether 22 M.R.S. § 4006 precludes appellate review of an order entered on a
    post-judgment motion enumerated in M.R. App. P. 3(b), despite the provisions of
    M.R. App. P. 2(b)(4); and
    3. Whether 22 M.R.S. § 4006 precludes appellate review from an order on a motion
    pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 60(b) for relief from a judgment that is appealable pursuant
    to section 4006.
    6
    See 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(b)(i). The father does not challenge the other three
    grounds of parental unfitness as found by the trial court, however, and the court
    need only find one ground of parental unfitness to support a termination of parental
    rights. See In re A.H., 
    2013 ME 85
    , ¶ 14, 
    77 A.3d 1012
    . The court’s finding of
    parental unfitness is therefore supported on that basis alone.
    [¶11] In any event, there was sufficient evidence to support the court’s
    findings of parental unfitness on the ground of the father’s unwillingness or
    inability to protect the child from jeopardy. See In re M.B., 
    2013 ME 46
    , ¶ 37,
    
    65 A.3d 1260
    . The court also did not err or abuse its discretion in determining that
    termination is in the child’s best interest. See In re Thomas H., 
    2005 ME 123
    ,
    ¶ 16, 
    889 A.2d 297
    . The father, when faced with a child in a life-threatening
    situation, failed to understand the seriousness of the child’s medical condition or
    his role in the condition, and he refused to follow the medical instructions of the
    child’s providers. In the more than eighteen months during which these child
    protection proceedings were pending in the District Court, the father also refused
    to comply with any rehabilitation and reunification requirements.
    [¶12] In addition, the court found that the father is unable to place the
    child’s needs before his own substantial anger and paranoia, characterizing the
    Given the father’s lack of any meritorious argument on the merits and the lack of any amicus curiae
    briefs, we save for another day our analysis of these important and complex issues.
    7
    father as “beyond difficult and uncooperative,” “extremely loud and accusatory,”
    “aggressive[],” “out of control,” “disrupti[ve],” “intimidat[ing],” and “angry and
    defiant,” for example.    These findings are supported by the following record
    evidence. The father called one of the child’s pediatricians “crazy,” an “idiot,” and
    a “clown,” and joked about bashing in the pediatrician’s head with a hammer and
    poking out his eye with a pen. The father accused the child’s medical providers of
    wanting the child to die so that they could “make money harvesting her organs.”
    He put his hand across his neck to intimidate a child protective worker, and talked
    about wanting to “cut people’s heads off.” A police officer described the father as
    a “powder keg waiting to explode” at team meetings and called the father’s
    continued participation in such meetings “a recipe for disaster.” The guardian ad
    litem reported that the father’s statements “have gone outside the realm of societal
    decency,” and that he has openly insulted all of those involved with his child’s care
    and called some of them “pederasts.” He threatened to hang himself in the medical
    clinic treating the child, and attempted to use his other child as a human shield. He
    has told the child that the foster father is “the devil.” Dr. Lawrence Ricci, from the
    Spurwink Child Abuse Program, reported, “I’ve never had a situation where a
    family was quite this persistently difficult, in fact, impossible to work with.” The
    record contains numerous other such evidentiary details.
    8
    [¶13] The father also argues that the court, the Department, and all other
    involved persons demonstrated prejudice against him based on his national origin
    and immigration status. In contrast, the court expressly found that the attorneys,
    the court staff, the medical providers, and the Department’s employees more than
    accommodated the language barrier and any cultural differences.                                 The record
    supports the court’s findings and demonstrates the efforts the court made to
    accommodate an extremely difficult litigant.                          The record is replete with
    documentation of the interpreters provided to the father at state expense at every
    stage of the proceedings—including meetings with his attorney, team meetings,
    court hearings and conferences, the child’s medical appointments, and visits with
    the child. In addition, the court arranged to have countless documents translated
    from Russian to English and vice versa for the benefit of the father.
    [¶14] After a thorough review of the entire record, we conclude that it is
    devoid of any suggestion that any party, provider, or witness, or the trial court
    judge himself, exhibited any such prejudice.3 We cannot discern whether the
    3
    In addition, the father never sought the recusal of the trial court judge. Rather, when the father’s
    current attorneys began to represent him, after the court had issued its order terminating the father’s
    parental rights, the father’s attorneys suggested as follows:
    It is apparent that this Court has heard much in this case and has reached conclusions
    regarding [the father] based on the State’s evidence and [the father’s] behavior in this
    proceeding. In light of this, [the father] believes that it would be beneficial for a different
    judge to review this case moving forward. This is not an aspersion against the skill of the
    sitting judge, but rather an effort to relieve any fatigue, so to speak, that may have come
    from the long and unusual track this litigation has taken. It may also be helpful to have a
    9
    father’s contention of prejudice originated with the father himself, who clearly
    struggles with mental health challenges that he claims were caused or exacerbated
    by torture and trauma he suffered before his arrival in the United States, or with the
    father’s attorneys. In either event, when pressed at oral argument, the father’s
    attorney was unable to provide any reasonable support for this accusation.4
    [¶15] We are dismayed by the hyperbolic and vitriolic manner in which the
    father’s entire argument was presented in his brief, as written by his attorneys. For
    example, the brief asserts that the court did “a bad thing”; condoned a “playground
    game [of] telephone” and a “gossip game”; credited a “cartoonish” exchange “on
    the level of ‘me Tarzan, you Jane’”; and “added insult to injury.” The brief
    characterizes various aspects of the proceedings as “insidious,” “chilling,”
    “bizarre,”        “shocking,”          “outrageous,”          “disturbing,”          “unfathomable,”
    “contaminat[ed],” “absurd,” “incredible,” and “evidence of the court’s own
    fatigue,” and states that the decision constitutes a “horrendous wrong” that must be
    new judge handle this matter so that opinions as to [the father] arising from his
    eccentricities, which have been clearly on display, may not color the issue of justice for
    him and his family. The undersigned wishes it to be understood that there is no intended
    disrespect in this request.
    See Samsara Mem’l Trust v. Kelly, Remmel & Zimmerman, 
    2014 ME 107
    , ¶ 25, 
    102 A.3d 757
    (“When a
    party fails to make a timely motion for recusal before the entry of judgment, that party has forfeited its
    objection to the judge’s qualification and cannot be heard to complain following a result alleged to be
    unfair.”).
    4
    The father’s remaining contentions—regarding notice of the termination hearing, the preservation of
    his right to counsel, and the extent of the findings made by the District Court—also are not persuasive.
    10
    “purged.” The brief refers to the trial as a “tapestry of ethnocentric nationalism on
    display” against a “backdrop of . . . pervasive flaws,” notes that the court was
    aware of the child’s heritage only in “the way one might be mindful of a hole in a
    driveway,” accuses the court of undertaking a “casual disregard for the dignity of
    [the father’s] language and culture,” suggests that the family’s providers used
    “stereotypical and reductivist language,” and cautions that a judgment in the
    Department’s favor would “put the judges hearing these cases in the position of
    being able to act with impunity for overt constitutional deprivations.” Again, none
    of these assertions is borne out by the record, nor could counsel point to anything
    supporting the allegations when given that opportunity at oral argument. Such
    baseless assertions have no place in the courts of Maine or any other jurisdiction.5
    [¶16] Finally, the brief suggests that “[t]his Court should not be enticed to
    reduce the strong due process protections it has announced to a rubber stamp.”
    Rather than demonstrating a “rubber stamp” approach, the process in this case
    reflects careful adherence to the principles established through legislation and
    5
    Cf. M.R. Prof. Conduct 3.5 cmt. (4) (“Refraining from abusive or obstreperous conduct is a corollary
    of the advocate’s right to speak on behalf of litigants.”); In re Jon N., 
    2000 ME 123
    , ¶ 6, 
    754 A.2d 346
    (noting, with disapproval, the “extensive hyperbole employed in the [parent’s] brief”). This practice of
    making unsupported allegations of prejudice is neither appropriate nor successful. See, e.g., In re I.S.,
    
    2015 ME 100
    , ¶ 8, 
    121 A.3d 105
    (“Contrary to the father’s contentions, there is not even a suggestion in
    the record that the court terminated his parental rights solely because he has been diagnosed as having a
    borderline personality disorder.”).
    11
    court policy that are designed to assure that a parent’s rights and need for
    resources—such as language services—are recognized.
    The entry is:
    Judgment affirmed.
    On the briefs:
    Aaron B. Rowden, Esq., and Jared S. Brewer, Esq., Schneider
    & Brewer, Waterville, for appellant father
    Janet T. Mills, Attorney General, and Meghan Szylvian, Asst.
    Atty. Gen., Office of the Attorney General, Augusta, for the
    Department of Health and Human Services
    At oral argument:
    Jared S. Brewer, Esq., for appellant father
    Meghan Szylvian, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the Department of
    Health and Human Services
    Portland District Court docket number PC-2013-27
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY