In the Interest of Cra, a Minor Child. Db v. State , 368 P.3d 294 ( 2016 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING
    
    2016 WY 24
    OCTOBER TERM, A.D. 2015
    February 24, 2016
    IN THE INTEREST OF CRA, A Minor
    Child.
    DB,
    Appellant
    (Respondent),
    v.                                        S-15-0194
    THE STATE OF WYOMING,
    Appellee
    (Petitioner).
    IN THE INTEREST OF CRA, A Minor
    Child.
    DB,
    Appellant
    (Respondent),
    v.                                        S-15-0208
    THE STATE OF WYOMING,
    Appellee
    (Petitioner).
    Appeal from the District Court of Sweetwater County
    The Honorable Nena James, Judge
    Representing Appellant:
    Douglas W. Bailey of Bailey, Stock, Harmon, Cottam, P.C., Cheyenne, Wyoming.
    Representing Appellee:
    Peter K. Michael, Wyoming Attorney General; Misha Westby, Deputy Attorney
    General; Jill E. Kucera, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Christina F. McCabe,
    Senior Assistant Attorney General. Argument by Ms. McCabe.
    Representing Guardian Ad Litem:
    Dan S. Wilde, Deputy State Public Defender; Aaron S. Hockman, Chief Trial and
    Appellate Counsel, Wyoming Guardian ad Litem Program, a division of the Office
    of the State Public Defender.
    Before BURKE, C.J., and HILL, DAVIS, FOX, and KAUTZ, JJ.
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third.
    Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building,
    Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of typographical or other formal errors so correction may be made
    before final publication in the permanent volume.
    KAUTZ, Justice
    [¶1] The juvenile court temporarily placed CRA, age five, with her maternal
    grandmother after the Sweetwater County Attorney filed allegations that EA, who is
    CRA’s mother, neglected her. All parties, including DB, who is CRA’s father, agreed
    that CRA should remain in Department of Family Services (DFS) custody for placement
    with her grandmother under a consent decree which would last for up to one year. The
    consent decree provided that if EA complied with certain requirements, the neglect action
    would be dismissed. While the consent decree was pending, DB asserted that he should
    have custody of CRA because the juvenile court had not determined him to be unfit. The
    juvenile court entered a permanency order continuing CRA in DFS custody, and DB
    appealed. Shortly thereafter, the County Attorney moved to dismiss the case and
    terminate DFS custody of CRA, asserting that EA had completed her case plan and had
    complied with the consent decree. The juvenile court dismissed the case without a
    hearing, and DB appealed that order as well. We consolidated the appeals.
    [¶2] We determine that the juvenile court properly dismissed the case without a
    hearing, and that other issues raised by DB are moot. Consequently, we affirm the
    juvenile court.
    ISSUES
    [¶3]   DB lists six overlapping issues, which we re-state as follows:
    1.     Did the juvenile court err when it granted the State’s motion to dismiss
    without a hearing or findings about EA’s completion of the consent decree requirements?
    2.     Are the other issues raised by DB moot? If so, does any exception to the
    mootness doctrine apply?
    3.     When a child in an abuse/neglect case must be temporarily removed from
    his/her custodial parent, is the non-custodial parent constitutionally entitled to temporary
    custody unless the juvenile court determines he/she unfit?
    FACTS
    [¶4] Appellant, DB, is the father of CRA, who was born in 2008. EA is CRA’s mother.
    In January of 2010, the district court in Sweetwater County issued a judgment and order
    establishing CRA’s paternity and placing CRA in the primary physical custody of EA.
    EA and CRA lived in Sweetwater County and DB lived in Laramie County.
    [¶5] On Sunday, May 18, 2014, Rock Springs police arrested and incarcerated EA.
    They placed five-year-old CRA in protective custody with DFS. DFS then temporarily
    1
    placed CRA with her maternal grandmother. Four days later the State filed a petition
    alleging CRA was a neglected child under 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14-3-202
    (a)(vii)
    (LexisNexis 2015). The Petition stated that the minor’s father “is unknown to the state,”
    although DFS had filed the earlier paternity suit asserting DB was CRA’s father.
    Nothing in the Petition mentioned shelter care for CRA under 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14-3
    -
    409 (LexisNexis 2015). The State attached a DFS temporary case plan for CRA to the
    Petition. The temporary case plan entirely omitted DB.
    [¶6] The juvenile court issued an order setting an initial hearing for the same day the
    petition was filed. The order did not mention shelter care, and there is no indication that
    it was served on either parent. On June 10, 2014, the juvenile court signed an order for
    temporary custody, placing CRA into “the legal custody of the Wyoming Department of
    Family Services for placement in relative foster care, at or near Green River . . ..” The
    order said it was the result of a hearing conducted on May 22, 2014, in which DB
    participated by telephone. The order provided that DB could have supervised visitation
    with CRA.
    [¶7] Both DB and EA participated in a multidisciplinary team meeting on July 22,
    2014. In that meeting, DB agreed that CRA should remain with her maternal
    grandmother. On August 8, 2014, DFS filed a “Predisposition Report” with the juvenile
    court. The report indicated that DB had not visited CRA at all in the two and one-half
    months since the case began. It stated that the “permanency goal (for CRA) is
    reunification with (EA) and the concurrent plan is more than likely adoption.” As with
    the temporary case plan, the predisposition report never mentioned any consideration that
    CRA could be placed in her father’s custody.
    [¶8] On August 18, 2014, Robert Spence entered an appearance as DB’s attorney in the
    case. Subsequently, he approved a consent decree on behalf of DB. The essential terms
    of the consent decree, for our purposes, were:
    1.      The County Attorney, Guardian ad Litem for CRA, EA, and
    DB all stipulated to the consent decree as required by 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14
    -
    3-428(a) (LexisNexis 2015).
    2.      The consent decree placed probationary requirements on EA1
    for one year.2 Those requirements all related the goal of reuniting CRA
    with EA.
    1
    Section 14-3-428(b) requires that a consent decree include “the case plan for the family.” This consent
    decree did not address DB’s role in CRA’s life or as part of her family in any manner.
    2
    When a child is placed outside the home, as here, § 14-3-428(d) provides a maximum length of six
    months. For good cause, the juvenile court may grant one extension for an additional six months.
    2
    3.     CRA would remain in the custody of DFS “for placement
    until further order of the court.”
    4.      If EA failed to fulfill the conditions of the consent decree,
    “the original petition and proceedings may be reinstated at the County
    Attorney’s discretion.” If she completed the probation, the case would be
    dismissed. 3
    The parties submitted the consent decree to the juvenile court, and the court approved it
    on August 26, 2014.
    [¶9] The multidisciplinary team met again on November 4, 2014. DB participated in
    the meeting and agreed with the team that CRA should remain with her maternal
    grandmother. After that meeting, Douglas Bailey replaced Mr. Spence as DB’s attorney.
    Mr. Bailey filed a motion requesting additional visitation between DB and CRA. The
    juvenile court heard that motion and granted additional visitation to DB.
    [¶10] On February 3, 2015, the multidisciplinary team met for a third time. DB, for the
    first time, took the position that DFS custody was unnecessary, presumably arguing that
    he was fit to have custody. However, at the same meeting, DB and Mr. Bailey took the
    position that “if placement is still necessary, (CRA) remain with her grandmother.” One
    week later DB filed a document titled “Brief in Opposition to Continued State Custody
    and Foster Care Placement.” In that document he argued that, because he had not been
    found “unfit,” the juvenile court “should terminate the current custody arrangement and
    relinquish custody to the child’s father, (DB).” The juvenile court did not end CRA’s
    temporary custody, but instead adjusted DB’s visitation at the request of CRA’s
    counselor.
    [¶11] The multidisciplinary team met again on May 5, 2015. The team, including DB,
    recommended that CRA continue to live with her grandmother and that trial home
    placement with EA was the next step in the case. The multidisciplinary team’s report
    stated that EA’s compliance with her case plan was “very good.”
    [¶12] The juvenile court set a “permanency review hearing” for May 14, 2015. The
    record contains no indication that the order setting hearing was ever served on any of the
    parties or attorneys in the case. EA apparently did not appear at the hearing, so the
    juvenile court re-set it for June 17, 2015. DB again asked the juvenile court to terminate
    the case and place CRA with him because he was a fit parent. Instead, the juvenile court
    set an extended summer visit between CRA and DB, and ordered that CRA remain in
    3
    Upon dismissal of the juvenile case, custody would be controlled by the 2010 paternity case.
    3
    DFS custody for an additional six months.4 Contrary to the multidisciplinary team’s
    finding that EA’s performance on her case plan was “very good,” the juvenile court’s
    order stated “case plan compliance has been poor.”5
    [¶13] On July 24, 2015, the county attorney’s office served all parties and attorneys with
    a motion to dismiss, asserting that EA had completed her probation and case plan. On
    July 28, 2015, the juvenile court signed an order of dismissal without DB’s consent and
    without a hearing. DB appealed from both the permanency order and the dismissal.
    [¶14] While the juvenile case was pending, DB filed a motion in the original paternity
    case seeking a modification of custody. At oral argument, DB’s counsel represented that
    a trial on his motion to change custody in the paternity case had occurred, and that the
    parties were awaiting a decision from the district court.
    DISCUSSION
    1. Did the juvenile court err when it granted the State’s motion to dismiss
    without a hearing or findings about EA’s completion of the consent decree
    requirements?
    [¶15] The State, through the Sweetwater County Attorney, filed a motion to dismiss the
    juvenile case and to vacate the temporary custody placed in DFS, asserting that “the case
    plan has been completed.” The juvenile court granted that motion without a hearing.
    Whether a hearing was necessary before the juvenile court could dismiss the case is
    determined by the Child Protection Act, 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14-3-401
     through 441
    (LexisNexis 2015), and by the terms of the consent decree. Questions of statutory
    interpretation and of contract construction are matters of law which this Court reviews de
    novo. LM v. Laramie County Dep’t of Family Servs. (In re MN), 
    2007 WY 189
    , ¶ 4, 
    171 P.3d 1077
    , 1080 (Wyo. 2007); MR v. State (In re CDR), 
    2015 WY 79
    , ¶ 26, 
    351 P.3d 264
    , 270 (Wyo. 2015).
    A. Statutory requirements.
    4
    This extension of placement under a consent decree is contrary to § 14-3-428(c). The case had already
    been pending for more than one year, and the consent decree had been in force for nearly ten months.
    5
    It is curious that the record includes multidisciplinary team reports and an order from this permanency
    hearing. 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14-3-427
    (h) (LexisNexis 2015) prohibits the juvenile court from considering
    multidisciplinary team reports before adjudication unless the parents consent. There was no adjudication
    in this case and the record contains no consents. Section 14-3-428 does not require permanency hearings
    in consent decree cases. Permanency hearings are required in twelve month intervals, and consent
    decrees can never be extended beyond twelve months.
    4
    [¶16] When interpreting a statute and its application, we first look at the plain language
    used by the legislature. MR, ¶ 19, 351 P.3d at 269. If the statute is sufficiently clear and
    unambiguous, the Court simply applies the words according to their ordinary and obvious
    meaning. Id.
    [¶17] Section 14-3-428 provides for consent decrees in juvenile neglect cases. This
    statute requires hearings in only two circumstances. First, the statute requires review
    hearings under § 14-3-431 while a child is in placement. Section 14-3-428(e). Second, a
    hearing is required to reinstate the original petition and proceeding if the parent or
    guardian fails to fulfill the terms of the consent decree. Section 14-3-428(f). This statute
    does not require any other hearings. It specifies that a consent decree cannot be entered
    without the agreement of the district (county) attorney, the child’s guardian ad litem and
    the parents, but does not require a hearing to create a consent decree. Section 14-3-
    428(a). Once a consent decree is ordered, further proceedings in the juvenile neglect case
    are held in abeyance. Id. A consent decree can then end either by expiration of its term,
    or by discharge by the court. Section 14-3-428(f). Nothing in the plain language of this
    statute requires the court to conduct a hearing or make findings before a consent decree
    can expire by either of those means.
    [¶18] We decline to interpret this statute as requiring a hearing prior to the juvenile
    court’s discharge of EA because the plain language of the statute does not include such a
    requirement. Similarly, the statute does not require any court findings prior to discharge.
    “A basic tenet of statutory construction is that omission of words from a statute is
    considered to be an intentional act by the legislature, and the Court will not read words
    into a statute when the legislature has chosen not to include them.” Adelizzi v. Stratton,
    
    2010 WY 148
    , ¶ 11, 
    243 P.3d 563
    , 566 (Wyo. 2010). “When the legislature specifically
    uses a word in one place, we will not interpret that word into other places where it was
    not used.” Id.; In re Adoption of Voss, 
    550 P.2d 481
    , 485 (Wyo. 1976).
    [¶19] DB argues that the juvenile court was required to hold a hearing to determine
    whether EA had complied with the consent decree requirements. He then asserts that she
    had not complied, so “the original petition and proceeding should have been reinstated.”
    In effect, DB argues that a hearing was necessary so the juvenile court (or DB himself)
    could decide to proceed with the original neglect accusations against EA. Such a hearing
    would have been meaningless because only the county attorney could decide whether to
    prosecute the neglect case. Even if the juvenile court found that EA had not complied
    with the consent decree, under Wyoming statutes it could not force the county attorney to
    pursue the neglect action.6
    6
    Although the juvenile court cannot force the county attorney/district attorney to seek reinstatement of a
    neglect case after a consent decree is entered, it can, on its own motion, find a parent in contempt for
    failure to comply with the conditions ordered in a consent decree under § 14-3-438 (LexisNexis 2015).
    5
    [¶20] Under Wyoming’s Child Protection Act the district attorney or county attorney has
    the sole discretion to determine whether to pursue a neglect action. Section 14-3-411.
    Only the district attorney or county attorney may file a petition alleging neglect. Id.
    Only the district attorney or county attorney is responsible for presenting evidence in
    support of a petition alleging neglect. Section 14-3-424(a). Under Wyoming’s statutes,
    neither the juvenile court nor the other parent can prosecute a neglect action. Neither the
    juvenile court nor the other parent can force the district attorney or county attorney to
    prosecute a neglect action. Here, the county attorney decided that EA had complied with
    the consent decree satisfactorily, and determined not to pursue the neglect case. At that
    point there was nothing for the juvenile court to find or decide at a hearing. 7
    B. Contract Principles
    [¶21] DB correctly recognizes that a consent decree is a contractual agreement between
    the parties and is enforced as a contract. MR, ¶ 24, 351 P.3d at 269. As with any
    contract, a consent decree must be “construed as it is written.” Id., ¶ 24, 351 P.3d at 270.
    DB then argues that “the consent decree imposed many conditions on (EA), the violation
    of which could have caused the original petition and proceedings to be reinstated.” He
    asserts that there should have been a hearing to determine EA’s compliance before the
    juvenile court discharged EA.
    [¶22] The consent decree which EA agreed to stated, “if, prior to expiration of this
    decree, (EA) fails to fulfill the terms and conditions of this decree, the original petition
    and proceedings may be reinstated at the County Attorney’s discretion . . . .”
    (Emphasis added.) The plain language of the consent decree recognized that the county
    attorney had the discretion to decide if the original petition should be pursued. Nothing
    in the consent decree required a hearing in the event the county attorney decided not to
    pursue the original case. Nothing in the consent decree requires court findings before the
    consent decree is ended. DB does not and cannot point to any provision in the consent
    decree which requires a hearing to review the county attorney’s exercise of his discretion.
    [¶23] The Wyoming Child Protection Act and the consent decree in this case both
    recognize that the county attorney had sole discretion to decide whether to pursue neglect
    charges against EA. Neither the statutes nor the consent decree itself required a hearing
    or any court findings before the juvenile court discharged EA at the request of the county
    attorney. The juvenile court properly discharged EA from the consent decree in this case.
    2. Are the other issues raised by appellant moot? If so, does any exception to
    the mootness doctrine apply?
    7
    The role of the district or county attorney in a juvenile case is analogous to the role of a prosecutor in a
    criminal case. A statute giving the courts authority to require prosecution of a certain case is an
    unconstitutional violation of our principles of separation of powers. Hilderbrand v. Padget, 
    678 P.2d 870
    (Wyo. 1984).
    6
    [¶24] Both the State and the guardian ad litem for CRA assert that this case is moot
    because the temporary custody in the juvenile case has ended, the juvenile case was
    dismissed, and DB has now presented his claim for custody of CRA to the district court.
    They argue that any decision this Court were to make on DB’s claim that he should have
    been given temporary custody of CRA would have no effect. We agree.
    [¶25] Under the doctrine of mootness, “a court should not hear a case where there has
    been a change in circumstances occurring either before or after a case has been filed that
    eliminates the controversy.” Operation Save America v. City of Jackson, 
    2012 WY 51
    , ¶
    21, 
    275 P.3d 438
    , 448 (Wyo. 2012) (quoting KO v. LDH ( In re Guardianship of MEO),
    
    2006 WY 87
    , ¶ 27, 
    138 P.3d 1145
    , 1153 (Wyo. 2006)). “The central question in
    a mootness case is ‘whether decision of a once living dispute continues to be justified by
    a sufficient prospect that the decision will have an impact on the parties.’” Id., ¶ 27, 138
    P.3d at 1153-54 (quoting Southwestern Pub. Serv. Co. v. Thunder Basin Coal Co., 
    978 P.2d 1138
    , 1143 (Wyo. 1999)).
    [¶26] We have consistently found issues moot when a change occurs while an appeal is
    pending that makes any decision we might make of no consequence. For example, in
    Northern Arapahoe Tribe v. State (In re SNK), 
    2005 WY 30
    , 
    108 P.3d 836
     (Wyo. 2005) a
    child was placed in foster care. Appellant challenged the foster care placement. After
    the appeal was filed, the parties signed a consent decree which returned the child to her
    mother and ended the foster placement. We determined that the issue was moot because
    any “opinion relating to the matter would have no impact on the parties.” Id., ¶ 5, 108
    P.3d at 837. In McLain v. Anderson, 
    933 P.2d 468
    , 472 (Wyo. 1997) appellants
    challenged a ruling about protective covenants but then agreed to amend the covenants to
    match the ruling of the trial court. We found that the issue was moot because any
    decision “cannot have any practical effect on the existing controversy.”
    [¶27] Those same principles apply here. Any ruling we make about temporary custody
    during CRA’s juvenile neglect case would have no impact on DB, EA, CRA, or the State.
    The juvenile neglect case is entirely over. There is no pending case in which the juvenile
    court could order temporary custody to DB. DB had the opportunity to present his
    position about permanent custody to the district court, and CRA’s custody is determined
    by the ruling of that court, not the juvenile court. The issues DB raises about temporary
    custody during the pendency of a neglect case are simply moot.
    [¶28] There are exceptions to the mootness doctrine. Even though an issue is moot, we
    will decide it when:
    1. The issue is one of great public importance;
    2. It is necessary to answer the issue to provide guidance to
    state agencies and lower courts; or
    7
    3. The controversy is capable of repetition yet evading
    review.
    Circuit Court of the Eighth Judicial Dist. v. Lee Newspapers, 
    2014 WY 101
    , ¶ 12, 
    332 P.3d 523
    , 528 (Wyo. 2014) (quoting Operation Save America, 275 P.3d at 448-49).
    [¶29] In determining whether any of these exceptions to the mootness doctrine apply to
    this case, it is important to review the progress of this case. The juvenile court originally
    placed CRA in shelter care with her maternal grandmother after a hearing. DB did not
    challenge that placement. Not long after that placement, the case was resolved by a
    consent decree. When DB entered into the consent decree, he agreed that CRA could
    remain in DFS custody for placement with her maternal grandmother. He agreed with
    the consent decree goal of involving both EA and CRA in a plan to reunite them. On
    four separate occasions while the consent decree was pending, DB represented, through
    multidisciplinary team reports and the consent decree, that CRA should remain with her
    grandmother. This is the setting DB created and in which he attempts to raise his
    constitutional claim to temporary custody of CRA.
    [¶30] The first exception to the mootness doctrine permits the Court to consider issues
    of great public importance. Ordinarily, protection of the parent-child relationship is of
    great public importance. In many circumstances the parent-child relationship is
    constitutionally protected. DB argues that temporary placement of his daughter
    interfered with his constitutional rights as a parent. The State, on the other hand, asserts
    that juvenile neglect cases do not interfere with constitutional rights of parents because
    they are temporary, remedial, and intended to support parent-child relationships. We
    decline to consider whether temporary placement of a juvenile in a neglect case qualifies
    for this mootness exception because DB’s claim about his constitutional right to parent
    his child is in direct opposition to the position he agreed to in the consent decree. In
    context, he is simply complaining that he does not like the deal he made in the consent
    decree, and he asks this Court to re-write it. The issue here does not truly involve DB’s
    constitutional rights as a parent, but rather involves his dissatisfaction with the consent
    decree. That issue is not a matter of such great public importance that it justifies this
    Court making an advisory ruling.
    [¶31] The second exception to the mootness doctrine recognizes that the Court, at times,
    should give guidance to lower courts and state agencies. This is not such a time. We see
    no need to give any guidance to either the juvenile court or to DFS in the context of this
    case because it was entirely controlled by a consent decree. In the consent decree all the
    parties, including DB, agreed to work toward reuniting CRA with EA by temporarily
    placing CRA with her grandmother and DFS providing services to EA and CRA. The
    8
    parties themselves developed that plan. The situation does not call for guidance to the
    juvenile court nor to DFS.8
    [¶32] We recognize the third exception to the mootness doctrine when a controversy is
    capable of repetition yet evading review. Two requirements must be met for this
    exception to apply. “First, the duration of the challenged action must be too short for
    completion of litigation prior to its cessation or expiration. Second, there must be a
    reasonable expectation that the same complaining party will be subjected to the same
    action again.” KO, ¶ 28, 138 P.3d at 1154.
    [¶33] Wyoming’s Child Protection statutes intend for the case to be relatively short, and
    any placement of a child outside his or her home to be temporary. It is possible that a
    temporary placement in a neglect case could end before appellate review is complete.
    However, there is no reasonable expectation that DB will again be in the same position as
    he was during the consent decree. If the district court continues custody of CRA with
    EA, there is no reasonable expectation that temporary custody would again be required
    under a neglect case, or that DB would enter into a consent decree. Consequently, we
    find that the third exception to the mootness doctrine does not apply.
    [¶34] The issue DB raises about custody of CRA during the pendency of the juvenile
    neglect case is moot. We decline to address that issue because any determination we
    make would be wholly advisory, having no impact on any party.
    CONCLUSION
    [¶35] Once a neglect action is held in abeyance under a consent decree, the county
    attorney or district attorney has the sole discretion to end the case or to pursue
    reinstatement. Neither the Wyoming Child Protection Act nor the consent decree in this
    case requires any hearing or findings for discharge upon a motion from the county
    attorney or district attorney. Consequently, the juvenile court properly discharged the
    parties from their consent decree upon the motion of the county attorney, without a
    hearing and without making findings.
    [¶36] DB asserts that the temporary placement of CRA, which he approved, violates his
    constitutional rights to parent. The temporary placement ended, the underlying juvenile
    case was dismissed, and DB had a full opportunity to make his custody claim in the
    district court. DB’s claim regarding temporary custody during the juvenile case is moot,
    and we decline to address it.
    8
    Although juvenile placement in neglect cases is temporary, the juvenile court and DFS must follow the
    law even for that temporary period. The record shows numerous procedural matters which might raise
    questions about how the law was followed. In its brief the State argued that § 14-3-413 (v) makes
    placement of a child with a noncustodial parent optional and permissive, but not required. Absent a
    consent decree, such matters might suffice for the second exception to the mootness doctrine.
    9
    [¶37] Affirmed.
    10