A.M. v. State

2016 UT App 145, 376 P.3d 1093, 2016 WL 3911287
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 14, 2016
DocketNo. 20150614-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 UT App 145 (A.M. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.M. v. State, 2016 UT App 145, 376 P.3d 1093, 2016 WL 3911287 (Utah Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

GREENWOOD, Senior Judge:

1 A.M. (Father) appeals the juvenile court's termination of his parental rights in E.M.J. We affirm.

12 E.M.J. was removed from Father's custody in October 2013 after Father "had a medical incident involving psychiatric medicine that involved physical restraint by the police." Following a hearing, the juvenile court adjudicated E.M.J. neglected by his mother2 and dependent as to Father, The [1095]*1095juvenile court set a permanency goal for E.M.J. of reunification with Father and ordered Father to complete mental health therapy and follow all recommendations of his therapist. In connection with his treatment, Father was required to undergo periodic drug testing. After making positive progress for several months, Father began skipping drug tests and missing visits with E.M.J. He then failed to appear at a review hearing in August 2014, at which point the juvenile court ordered that Father's visitation be therapeutically supervised at the discretion of the therapist. The juvenile court expressed confusion at Father's behavior, observing that Father "was very close to having [E.M.J.] returned but had begun to 'shoot himself in the foot' by failing to take drug tests and missing visits." |

13 In October 2014, the juvenile court held a permanency hearing. Father again failed to appear. At the permanency hearing, it was reported that Father had completed his individual treatment but had not taken any drug tests since July 2014 and had only two visits with E.M.J. since the August review hearing, neither of which had gone well, The therapist expressed his opinion that visits between Father and E.M.J. should be terminated. Based on this information, the juvenile court terminated reunification services and changed E.M.J.'s permanency goal to adoption. However, the court reaffirmed its prior order regarding visitation, which permitted Father to have therapeutically supervised visitation with E.M.J. at the therapist's discretion. A few days later, the State filed a petition to terminate Father's parental rights, in which it raised several grounds in support of termination. *

T4 Following the permanency hearing, E.M.J.'s therapist and E.M.J.'s foster mother informed Father that his visitation rights had been discontinued.3 Relying on this information, Father moved to California in November to live with his parents and made no attempt to contact E.M.J. for several months, although Father's parents had consistent phone contact with E.M.J. and sent letters and gifts. When Father finally learned that there was no court order terminating visitation, he made a single phone call to E.M.J.'s caseworker in- April 2015 to arrange visitation but then failed to follow up.4

5 In January 2015, the State amended its petition to include the ground of abandonment and ultimately restricted its arguments at the termination trial to that ground. The termination trial was held in June 2015. At the trial, the State asserted that Father had abandoned E.M.J. by failing to communicate with him for more than six months. See Utah Code Ann. § 78A-6-508(1)(b) (LexisNexis Supp. 2015)5 Father responded that he stopped contacting E.M.J. only because he was misinformed as to his visitation rights. The juvenile court determined that the State had made a prima facie showing of abandonment and that Father's evidence had failed to overcome that showing, The court further determined that termination was in E.M.J.'s best interests, Accordingly, the juvenile court terminated Father's parental rights. Father now appeals.

16 Father first asserts that the juvenile court employed the wrong procedural framework and standard of proof in evaluating whether he abandoned E.M.J. Whether the juvenile court applied the correct standard of proof is a question of law, which we review for correctness. See In re S.H., 2005 UT App 324, ¶ 10, 119 P.3d 309.

"7 "[A] showing of abandonment requires satisfaction of a two-part test." In re T.E., 2011 UT 51, ¶ 20, 266 P.3d 739. The petitioner must demonstrate, first, "that the [1096]*1096respondent parent has engaged in conduct that implies a conscious disregard for his or her parental obligations" and, second, "that the respondent parent's conduct led to the destruction of the parent-child relationship." Id. A parent's failure "'to communicate with the child by mail, telephone, or otherwise for six months'" constitutes prima facie evidence of abandonment, creating "a presumption that the respondent parent has abandoned the child." Id. T 21 (quoting Utah Code Ann. § T8A-6-508(1)(b)). The burden then shifts to the respondent parent to rebut the presumption by presenting "evidence indicating that [the parent] did not consciously disregard [his or her] parental obligations or that [his or her] conduct did not lead to the destruction of the parent-child relationship." Id. § 22. In doing so, "respondent parents are not required to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that they did not abandon the child" but "need produce only enough evidence to persuade the juvenile court that the petitioner seeking to terminate [the respondent parent's] parental rights has not established abandonment by clear and convincing evidence." Id. T 28. The court is required to "consider the totality of the evidence" to determine whether there is "clear and convincing evidence to support a finding of abandonment." Id.

18 Father asserts that the juvenile court improperly required him to disprove abandonment by clear and convincing evidence because it "evaluated Father's evidence in a manner that required him to show that either he did in fact communicate with E.M.J. or that he had & legitimate reason for his lack of successfull ] communication." Instead, Father asserts, the juvenile court should have considered only whether Father consciously disregarded his parental obligations toward E.M.J, Father argues that the court inappropriately rejected his explanation for failing to contact E.M.J.-that he believed his visitation rights had been terminated-based on its conclusion that a reasonable person would not have relied on the therapist's and foster mother's representations to that effect when there was no corresponding court order. At oral argument, Father explained that the court should have instead considered only whether he personally believed he could not have contact with EM.J ., because such a belief would belie any conscious disregard of his parental obligations.

19 We disagree with Father's assessment of the juvenile court's analysis. Although the court did 'find that it was unreasonable for Father to rely on the representatlons of the therapist and foster mother in establishing his belief that he was barred from visiting E.M.J., the court's decision relied primarily on its determination that Father's actions even in light of that belief-were inconsistent with those of a "dedicated" parent. Indeed, we have previously indicated that even when a parent is barred from contact with his children by means of a protective order, his lack of effort toward restoring his visitation rights, his failure to provide support for the children in the interim, and his failure to take advantage of opportunities to visit the children demonstrate a conscious disregard for parental obligations. See In re I.B., 2007 UT App 1770, paras.

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Bluebook (online)
2016 UT App 145, 376 P.3d 1093, 2016 WL 3911287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/am-v-state-utahctapp-2016.