In re the Termination Of: A.D.R. ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                              FILED
    DEC. 16,2014
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    In re the Tennination of:                      )         No. 31630-1-III
    )         (consolidated with
    A.D.R. and                                     )         No. 31631-9-III)
    A.K.D.R.                                       )
    )         PUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    SIDOOWAY, C.J. ­     In a series of decisions, our courts have held that a trial court
    abuses its discretion if, in refusing a parent's request to continue a parental rights
    tennination trial, it prejudicially denies a parent's fundamental liberty interest in the
    relationship with his or her child. In this case, Montez Minor asks us to find that the trial
    court abused its discretion when it denied his request to continue trial so that he could
    pursue the possibility of an open adoption of his two daughters.
    Mr. Minor's request for a continuance is distinguishable from the cases on which
    he relies. The prospect of an open adoption that he raised at the outset of trial was both
    irrelevant and too speculative to be admitted as evidence at the trial. And the court's
    denial of the motion caused no immediate or irremediable prejudice, since Mr. Minor
    remained able to act on the last minute possibility for adoption. Under these
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.KD.R.
    circumstances, the trial court's discretion to grant or deny the continuance was not
    constrained, and no abuse of discretion is shown. We affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Montez Minor is the father of two girls, A.D.R. and A.K.D.R., who were ages six
    and two at the time of the trial below. The Department of Health and Human Services
    (Department) placed A.D .R. in foster care in September 2010 due to concerns over her
    mother's mental health. A.K.D.R. was born shortly thereafter and was placed in the same
    foster home as her sister. Mr. Minor was living in Seattle at the time, while the girls'
    mother lived in Ellensburg.
    From the time A.D.R. was placed into foster care, the Department attempted to
    locate Mr. Minor. The only information the mother gave social worker Maura Brown
    about his whereabouts was that he lived on the west side of Washington State. It turned
    out that Mr. Minor, who had been unable to find steady employment since moving to
    Seattle from Georgia, was living in a church's homeless shelter.
    In April 2011, Ms. Brown was able to find a phone number for Mr. Minor's
    mother, who lived in Indiana. Mr. Minor's mother refused to provide Ms. Brown with
    information about her son's whereabouts but evidently did inform Mr. Minor of the call,
    because Mr. Minor called Ms. Brown the next day. A month later, when Mr. Minor
    visited the girl's mother, Ms. Brown was able to travel to the home and meet with him.
    2
    Nos. 31630-1-111; 31631-9-111
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    During their first meeting, Ms. Brown and Mr. Minor discussed services the Department
    could offer. She made referrals to services based on their discussions.
    Ms. Brown referred Mr. Minor to Dr. Robin LaDue for a parenting evaluation, and
    Mr. Minor participated in a psychological evaluation with a parenting component on
    October 26 and December 5, 2012. He did not return to complete the evaluation. Dr.
    LaDue completed a report on December 17 based on her two opportunities to interview
    Mr. Minor and observe him with his daughters.
    Ms. Brown referred Mr. Minor to Associated Behavioral Health, which is located
    in Seattle, for a domestic violence (DV) assessment. Mr. Minor completed the domestic
    violence assessment on December 27, the result of which was a recommendation that he
    participate in a one-year domestic violence intervention program in a state-certified DV
    facility. While several Seattle-based DV treatment providers were identified to Mr.
    Minor, he refused the referral, saying he needed time to think about it. Mr. Minor never
    enrolled in the recommended intervention program.
    Ms. Brown identified Seattle-based parenting classes offered by Catholic Family
    Services. Mr. Minor was unwilling to participate in parenting classes.
    Ms. Brown provided Mr. Minor with bus vouchers so that he could travel from
    Seattle to Ellensburg to visit the children. He accepted several bus vouchers. Between
    May 2011 and February 2013, he visited his daughters seven times. He developed a
    limited relationship with A.D.R. and no relationship with A.K.D.R.
    3
    Nos. 31630-1-111; 31631-9-111
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    Because Mr. Minor failed to engage in all of the court-ordered services, continued
    to have parental deficiencies, and failed to establish and maintain a relationship with his
    daughters, the Department filed a petition to terminate his parental rights in September
    2012. Trial was initially scheduled for January 23, 2013 but was continued several
    weeks, to February 14. Mr. Minor appeared for the trial with his court-appointed lawyer.
    The mother, whose parental rights were also at issue, appeared with her court-appointed
    lawyer but requested and was given permission to proceed pro se.
    At the outset of trial, Mr. Minor's lawyer requested a continuance. Because the
    verbatim report of proceedings included a seriously deficient record of what was said
    during argument of the continuance motion, we directed the parties to prepare an agreed
    or court-settled narrative report of the inaudible portions of the record.
    We reproduce portions of the verbatim report of argument of the continuance
    motion, alongside the parties' agreed narrative report. Cathy Busha, who represented Mr.
    Minor, speaks, as does Marty Dixon, who represented the Department:
    VERBATIM REPORT OF PROCEEDINGS                            AGREED NARRATIVE
    THE COURT: ... Ms. [Busha], any issues that
    we should talk about before we get started here?
    MS. [BUSHA]: "Your Honor, Mr. Minor and I                 Ms. Busha was asking the
    have had several conversations. And if I could            court for a further opportunity
    just (inaudible)."                                        to speak.
    4
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-II1
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    THE COURT: Absolutely.
    MS. [BUSHA]: Urn, we have talked a lot about            Ms. Busha was alerting the
    (unintelligible) ... As you can imagine, Mr.            court that she had received
    Minor (unintelligible), however, we just received       last minute information about
    word that the open adoption (inaudible) by the          an open adoption agreement
    foster parents. Urn, which is unusual but it's a        that was different from the
    different opportunity for my client. My client has      prior offer and she had not
    just let me know this last night and we discussed it    had sufficient time to discuss it
    this morning, urn (unintelligible) so we're just in a   with Mr. Minor.
    really difficult position, urn so ...
    THE COURT: Okay, I appreciate you sharing
    that with us. Thank you. All right. Well, the
    Court will state that lawsuits, court cases, they
    sometimes are very hard because usually it's
    important stuff that we're talking about here in the
    courtroom. People disagree sometimes about
    what shouldn't happen in the future and that's
    okay, you know. You have two people, you're
    likely to have disagreement about something.
    Very rarely everybody sees the world the same on
    every issue. (Inaudible) disagree. So, the
    courtroom is a place where we can have those
    disagreements brought forward and argument can
    be made ... facts developed to establish a
    person's desire to try to have their wants met by
    the Court. The Court will take all the evidence
    and rule. I don't know what that's going to look
    like right now because I haven't seen the
    evidence. I don't know what's going to happen.
    So we do need to get our trial started and, Mr.
    Dixon, you're the moving party here.
    MR. DIXON: Yes, Your Honor, I'll waive
    opening (unintelligible) and we'll call Mr. Minor
    to the stand.
    THE COURT: All right.
    5
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.KD.R.
    MS. [BUSHA]: Your Honor, I didn't finish                Ms. Busha was explaining that
    (inaudible) ...                                         she did not finish speaking.
    THE COURT: Oh, okay.
    MS. [BUSHA]: My client has asked if, for his            Ms. Busha was explaining that
    portion of the trial, in lieu of the fact if we give    she received last minute
    this infonnation, urn, if (inaudible). I did not tell   information that she had not
    Mr. Dixon about this. This is totally (inaudible)       had a chance to talk about
    ... but this is what me [sic] client is bringing up     with Mr. Dixon, the assistant
    and I (inaudible).                                      attorney general. Her client
    wanted time to discuss the
    open adoption proposal before
    the trial and wanted to delay
    his trial.
    THE COURT: Can you tell me Ms. [Busha,] Mr.
    Minor's request is why?
    MS. [BUSHA]: The reason why is because we                Ms. Busha was telling the court
    have (inaudible) to talk about the possibility of        that the reason she wanted more
    relinquishing any open adoption. Prior to this, the      time was because this was a new
    open adoption only for the (unintelligible) and          possibility ofrelinquishing parental
    photograph. Urn, the foster parents have agreed          rights in favor ofan open adoption
    (unintelligible) after Felix went to them that they      agreement that Mr. Minor was
    would leave a description (unintelligible).              interested in discussing. This offer
    would include more than
    photographs and one letter per
    year, which was the prior open
    adoption offer. This new offer
    would allow some visits at the
    discretion ofthe foster parents.
    THE COURT: Is it their discretion?
    MS [BUSHA]: Their discretion which makes it              Ms. Busha was further
    more (unintelligible) for my client and he hasn't        explaining to the court that the
    really had a lot of time to think about it and hates     new offer would allow some
    to pressure (inaudible) at the end of the trial so       visits at the potential adoptive
    parent's discretion. She had let
    6
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-II1
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    I've let him know that once your parental rights        Mr. Minor know that if the trial
    are terminated that's (unintelligible) in terms of      proceeded and his rights were
    the ability to have a relationship with the children.   terminated, he would not have
    So that's the request. That's why we entered the        the ability to have any continued
    request. And I do apologize to the Court ...            relationship with his children.
    She was apologizing to the Court
    because she hadjust learned this
    1
    information and had not had
    j                                                               enough time to discuss it with
    Mr. Minor.
    J
    j
    THE COURT: No, no, that's (unintelligible) okay
    I   1
    MS. [BUSHA]: Also to the attorney general                Ms. Busha was also apologizing
    who's been diligently making (unintelligible)            to the attorney general for this
    efforts to try to resolve this case.                     last minute request for additional
    time.
    I           THE COURT: Okay. Mr. Dixon, you've heard
    the motion for a continuance ...
    Agreed Narrative Report of Proceedings (July 14,2013) at
    I        5-7.
    At this point, the verbatim report of proceedings becomes more complete. Mr.
    !
    i	       Dixon pointed out that the trial had been continued several weeks already, that the
    children had been out of the parent's home for a long time, that Mr. Minor's participation
    would be needed in the Department's case against the mother even if the case against Mr.
    I        Minor was continued, and "[a]t this point we'd like to go forward." Clerk's Papers (CP)
    at 8. He added that "[i]f something comes to fruition during this case, then things could
    1
    I
    j
    change." 
    Id. I 7
    I
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    The trial court also heard from the guardian ad litem, who opposed a continuance,
    and the children's mother, who was neutral, but did point out that she lived in Georgia
    and "it did take two and a half days to get here." 
    Id. After hearing
    from all parties, the
    court ruled:
    THE COURT: Okay. Well .... This is the first time the case has been re­
    set. We have to have the ability to get these cases done. Everybody's here
    right now. The witnesses are all here right now, today and tomorrow and it
    has an adequate time for everyone to come prepared for this trial so there's
    no reason, ah, ... I don't think that the reason that's been proposed
    requires me to continue this overcomes the ... for me to (inaudible). We'll
    go ahead and deny the motion for continuance and do the trial today and
    tomorrow (inaudible).
    CP at 9.
    The parties proceeded with a two-day trial, at the conclusion of which the trial
    court took the matter under advisement.
    Six days after completion of the trial, the court sent its letter ruling to the parties.
    It found that the Department had met its burden of proving the elements required to
    terminate both parents' rights. On March 28, it entered findings of fact and conclusions
    of law and an order terminating the parental rights of both parents in both children. Mr.
    Minor timely appealed.
    In April 2014, we requested supplemental briefing addressing In re Welfare of
    j
    I   HQ., 
    182 Wash. App. 541
    , 
    330 P.3d 195
    (2014), which had been called to our attention by
    1
    J                                                  8
    I
    Nos. 31630-I-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    Mr. Minor. In May 2014, we directed the parties to provide the agreed narrative report of
    proceedings.
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Minor does not assign error to the court's findings of fact or conclusions of
    law. He essentially concedes that the Department proved the elements it was required to
    prove to terminate his parental rights. He instead assigns error to the trial court's refusal
    to continue the trial so that he could further consider and possibly pursue an open
    adoption.
    In both criminal and civil cases, a trial court's decision to grant or deny a
    continuance is ordinarily reviewed for a manifest abuse of discretion. State v. Downing,
    
    151 Wash. 2d 265
    , 272,87 PJd 1169 (2004). Discretion is abused only where no
    reasonable person would take the view adopted by the trial court. State v. Sutherland, 3
    Wn. App. 20,21,472 P.2d 584 (1970). In deciding a motion to continue, the trial court
    takes into account a number of factors, including diligence, due process, the need for an
    orderly procedure, the possible effect on the trial, and any prior continuances. In re
    Dependency ofVR.R., 
    134 Wash. App. 573
    , 581, 141 PJd 85 (2006).
    Mr. Minor argues that the trial court's refusal to grant Mr. Minor an adequate
    opportunity to consider and negotiate an open adoption violated his right to due process,
    in light of his fundamental liberty interest in a relationship with his children.
    9
    Nos. 31630~1~III; 31631~9~III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    Alternatively, he argues that the court's refusal to continue the trial denied him his right
    to the meaningful assistance of counseL
    In a series of three decisions, our courts have addressed circumstances in which
    courts abused their discretion by refusing to continue trial of a petition terminating
    parental rights. We first review those decisions and then tum to Mr. Minor's complaints
    of denial of due process and ineffective assistance of counsel.
    1. In re VR.R., Welfare ofR.H., and Welfare ofH.Q.
    In In re VR.R., the Department filed a petition to terminate Amos Ramsey's
    parental rights to his two minor children. James Nelson had been appointed as Mr.
    Ramsey's lawyer in the dependency proceeding, which was uncontested. A year and
    nine months after the agreed order of dependency was entered, the Department filed a
    petition to terminate Mr. Ramsey's parental rights. Although a notice to appear at a
    hearing informed Mr. Ramsey of the right to seek appointed counsel and court minutes of
    a hearing in the termination proceeding indicated that Mr. Ramsey needed a lawyer, none
    was appointed until the day before the triaL At that time, Mr. Nelson was again
    appointed to represent Mr. Ramsey. The reason for the delay in the appointment was not
    clear.
    Mr. Nelson appeared at the time for trial, told the court he was unprepared to
    proceed, and asked for a continuance. The Department, noting Mr. Ramsey's failure to
    appear, asked for a default. The trial court attributed the delay in Mr. Nelson's
    10
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-II1
    In re Termination 0/ A.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    appointment to Mr. Ramsey,l chose to proceed, and following the trial, terminated Mr.
    Ramsey's parental rights.
    On appeal, Division One of our court began its analysis by recognizing that
    "[pJarents have a fundamental liberty interest in the care and custody of their children,
    that is protected by the Fourteenth Amendment and article I, section 3 of the Washington
    State Constitution." In re 
    V.R.R., 134 Wash. App. at 581
    (citing Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 753,102 S. Ct. 1388,71 L. Ed. 2d 599 (1982); In re Welfare a/Myrick, 85
    Wn.2d 252,533 P.2d 841 (1975». It recognized that "[tJhe State also has a compelling
    interest in protecting the physical, mental, and emotional health of the children." 
    Id. (citing Myrick).
    While acknowledging that a trial court's decision on a request for a trial
    continuance is ordinarily reviewed for manifest abuse of discretion, the court noted that
    "[ wJhen denial of a motion to continue allegedly violates constitutional due process
    rights, the appellant must show either prejudice by the denial or the result of the trial
    1 The appellate opinion includes the trial court's oral ruling:
    I see no reason why we can't go ahead this morning. Your client has had
    notice of this matter for months. He's not here. And he just got his
    attorney on board last night. That is not the approach of somebody who is
    particularly interested in this case or his children ... the limitations that
    you're suffering are entirely the responsibility of your client and not the
    responsibility of the Department or this court.
    In re 
    V.R.R., 134 Wash. App. at 579
    n.2.
    11
    I
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-II1
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    would likely have been different if the continuance was granted. 
    Id. (citing State
    v.
    Tatum, 
    74 Wash. App. 81
    , 86, 
    871 P.2d 1123
    (1994)).
    The appellate court rejected the Department's argument that Mr. Ramsey had
    forfeited his right to legal representation by being dilatory in securing appointment of a
    lawyer. Observing that "a party must engage in extremely severe and dilatory conduct to
    establish forfeiture" of counsel, the court pointed out that the record did not support the
    conclusion that the delay in Mr. Nelson's appointment was the result of extremely
    dilatory conduct on Mr. Ramsey's part. 
    Id. at 582
    (citing City of Tacoma v. Bishop, 
    82 Wash. App. 850
    , 856, 
    920 P.2d 214
    (1996)).
    The court also rejected the Department's argument that because Mr. Nelson had
    represented Mr. Ramsey in the dependency and was somewhat familiar with the matter,
    Mr. Ramsey had not demonstrated ineffective assistance. It pointed out that Mr. Nelson
    received no discovery, had no opportunity to review the documents
    identified by [the Department] in the Notice of Intent to Admit, and had no
    opportunity to interview the witnesses identified by [the Department] or to
    obtain an independent evaluation of Ramsey.
    
    Id. at 585.
    It concluded that "[u]nder either the fair hearing standard in Strickland v.
    Washington, 466 U.S. 668,104 S. Ct. 2052, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984), or the meaningful
    hearing standard in In re Moseley, 34 Wn. App. 179,660 P.2d 315 (1983), Mr. Nelson
    could not provide effective assistance of counsel without additional time to prepare." 
    Id. at 586.
    Under the circumstances, it concluded that the trial court's decision to deny the
    12
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    motion to continue deprived Mr. Ramsey of the right to effective assistance of counsel
    and was an abuse of discretion.
    In a second case, In re Welfare ofR.H, 176 Wn. App. 419,309 P.3d 620 (2013),
    Bobby Adolphus moved the trial court to either continue trial of the Department's
    petition to terminate his parental rights to his three minor children or require the
    Department to expedite its consideration of a guardianship placement with the children's
    aunt. The Department had filed its petition to terminate Mr. Adolphus's parental rights in
    October 2011. The children's aunt came forward as a potential guardian in January 2012.
    When it appeared that the Department's completion ofa required home study of the aunt
    might not be completed in time for the May, 3, 2012 trial, Mr. Alophus filed his motion
    for a continuance or expedited home study on April 5. The motion was heard on April
    18. The trial court denied the motion, accepting the Department's argument that whether
    the children would be placed with their aunt was immaterial to whether the State could
    prove the required elements at the termination trial.
    The appellate court disagreed, and held that "an ide':ltijied guardianship is
    material" to a determination whether the continuation of the parent and child relationship
    clearly diminishes the child's prospects for early integration into a stable and permanent
    home, an element the Department is required to prove under RCW 
    13.34.180(1)(t). 176 Wash. App. at 423
    (emphasis added). It added that because a parent's fundamental
    constitutional right is at stake, "due process requires that parents have the ability to
    13
    I
    !
    I1
    1        Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    1
    J
    i        present all relevant evidence for the juvenile court to consider prior to terminating a
    i        parent's rights." Id at 426 (citing In re Welfare ofShatay c.J., 121 Wn. App. 926,940,
    I
    !
    ~
    
    91 P.3d 909
    (2004). "Here," the court said,
    i
    I
    the potential for a guardianship placement had been established for four
    I;              months prior to the termination trial and the State had completed the
    necessary background check and was in the process of approving the aunt
    I               for guardianship placement. At the termination hearing, [the Department]
    II
    expressed optimism about being able to permanently place the children
    with the aunt. The juvenile court should have considered the availability of
    I               guardianship placement with the aunt when determining whether the State
    !
    i
    !
    had met its burden to prove RCW 13.34. 180(l)(f).
    I '
    i        Id at 429. As a result, it concluded, "the juvenile court abused its discretion by denying
    !
    Adolphus's timely motion to continue the trial." Id
    In a third case, In re Welfare ofH.Q., 
    182 Wash. App. 541
    , 
    330 P.3d 195
    (2014), the
    trial court was not presented with a motion for continuance, but instead faced an unusual
    pretrial dispute. The guardians of a developmentally disabled father, whose legal
    competence was questionable, wished to voluntarily relinquish parental rights to his
    daughter, H.Q., so that he could enter into an open-communication adoption agreement
    with her adoptive parents. But the Department took the position neither the disabled
    father nor his guardians had the capacity to voluntarily relinquish his parental rights.
    According to the Department, the only option was to pursue involuntary termination of
    the father's rights. Rather than resolve the dispute, the juvenile court simply proceeded
    14
    i
    1    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    1
    ~
    I    with the termination trial, at the conclusion of which it found that the Department had
    met its burden of proof and terminated the father's rights.
    I
    On appeal, the court held that "a parent has a substantive due process right to
    i
    pursue voluntary relinquishment of his or her parental rights as an alternative to
    II   involuntary termination," and that "[t]he juvenile court should have held a hearing to
    I
    determine [the father's] competence to relinquish his parental rights before involuntarily
    I,   terminating his parental rights to H.Q." 
    Id. at 449-550.
    It vacated the termination of the
    father's parental rights and remanded for the juvenile court to hold a hearing on the
    father's competence to voluntarily relinquish his parental rights or, ifhe was found
    incompetent, to "explore alternatives to establishing permanency for the child while still
    safeguarding the important familial bond H.Q. and [her father] share." 
    Id. at 556.
    While the decision speaks broadly of a parent's "substantive due process right to
    pursue statutory alternatives to involuntary termination when the statutory alternatives are
    available as viable options," 
    id. at 552-53
    (citing 
    R.H, 176 Wash. App. at 428-29
    ), it does
    so in the context of an open-adoption alternative that had been explored and pursued by
    the father's guardians as far as possible until running headlong into the Department's
    opposition.
    With that background, we tum to Mr. Minor's arguments on appeal.
    15
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    II     Due process
    Mr. Minor first compares his request for a continuance to the motion whose denial
    was found to be an abuse of discretion in R.H But both the facts presented and the law at
    issue in R.H. are distinguishable. In R.H., Mr. Adolphus made what the appellate court
    characterized as a timely motion to more fully develop evidence of an identified
    guardianship that the court found was material to one of the elements the State was
    required to prove: namely, whether the "continuation of the parent and child relationship
    clearly diminishes the child's prospects for early integration into a stable and permanent
    home." RCW l3.34.180(1 )(f). The appellate court concluded that an identified
    guardianship that had been under review for four months and that the State's witnesses
    conceded looked promising was relevant, and that the Department's home study should
    be completed before the Department's petition was tried.
    In this case, Mr. Minor was not offering the adoption option as evidence. He
    conceded at trial that he was not in a position to care for his children due to his lack of
    housing and employment. It was apparent that Mr. Minor simply wanted more time to
    consider the option as an alternative to contesting the termination of his rights. The
    reasons for the holding in R.H have no application.
    More apt, but equally unavailing, is Mr. Minor's reliance on Welfare ofH.Q. As
    in this case, the basis for deferring the termination trial in H. Q. was not to develop
    evidence but instead to pursue an option on the father's behalf. But unlike this case, there
    16
    Nos. 31630-I-III; 31631-9-II1
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    was nothing new or speculative about the intentions of the guardians of the
    developmentally disabled father in HQ.-they had clearly decided that relinquishment of
    parental rights was the course of action they wished to pursue. They had simply run into
    a roadblock with the Department, given its disagreement as to their, or their ward's, legal
    capacity. What the guardians and their ward needed in H.Q, was not more time for
    reflection, but a court's resolution as to how they could accomplish a relinquishment of
    rights they had concluded was in their client's best interest.
    Mr. Minor, by contrast, had not run into any roadblock; there had simply been a
    new development in his settlement options. Unlike in H Q., nothing prevented him from
    continuing to try to resolve open adoption terms. The Department's lawyer even stated in
    responding to the continuance motion that if "something comes to fruition," the
    Department's position could change. CP at 8. Without a continuance, Mr. Minor could
    still try to pursue negotiations during trial recesses, or at the end of the trial day. He
    could have asked the court to recess early, so the parties and the adoptive parents could
    confer. He could have asked the court to take the termination issue under advisement
    (which the court ultimately did), thereby giving him time to explore alternatives. He
    could have pursued discussions in the six days following the trial and before the court
    dispatched its letter ruling. Given all of these alternatives, Mr. Minor cannot demonstrate
    prejudice or that the result of the trial would likely have been different.
    17
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-III
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    The trial court properly considered the Department's and guardian ad litem's
    concerns about the length of time the children had been out of the home and the
    convenience of other parties and witnesses. No abuse of discretion is shown.
    III. Ineffective assistance ofcounsel
    Alternatively, Mr. Minor contends that the trial court's denial of his motion for a
    continuance denied him the meaningful assistance of counsel. Unlike in VR.R., he
    presents literally no showing that Ms. Busha was not prepared to represent him in the
    termination proceeding.
    Instead, he argues that the scope of the right to counsel in a termination
    proceeding includes not only preparation and participation at trial but also negotiating
    toward a settlement on a client's behalf, likening his lawyer's obligation to a criminal
    defense lawyer's obligation to promptly convey and counsel a client concerning a plea
    offer. Br. of Appellant at 9 (citing Missouri v. Frye,      U.S. _, 
    132 S. Ct. 1399
    , 1407,
    
    182 L. Ed. 2d 379
    (2012)). He contends that his right to representation in pursuing
    settlement was denied by the court.
    We agree that Ms. Busha had a duty to counsel Mr. Minor about an open adoption
    alternative and participate as appropriate in communicating settlement offers and
    responses. But it does not follow from his right to such representation that the trial court
    was required to suspend trial so that settlement counseling and communication could take
    place instead. It is the rare case in which a court will call off trial so that parties can try
    18
    Nos. 31630-1-III; 31631-9-II1
    In re Termination ofA.D.R. and A.K.D.R.
    to achieve a settlement that has so far proved elusive. The more prevalent view is that
    holding parties to a trial schedule facilitates settlement.
    Because it is the norm that a party presented with an eve of trial settlement
    proposal is required to deal with it as trial proceeds, Mr. Minor shows no prejudice. Here
    again, he shows no prospect of a change in the trial result and no abuse of discretion.
    Affirmed.
    Sid~                         (/
    WE CONCUR:
    Brown, J.
    19