Department of Human Services v. J. N.

291 P.3d 765, 253 Or. App. 494, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1391
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 15, 2012
Docket08286J; 08286J01; A150405
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 291 P.3d 765 (Department of Human Services v. J. N.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Human Services v. J. N., 291 P.3d 765, 253 Or. App. 494, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1391 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

ORTEGA, P. J.

In this juvenile dependency case, father appeals from a juvenile court order denying his motion to dismiss jurisdiction over his child, M, and a permanency judgment that changed the permanency plan for M to guardianship. Father contends that the basis for the court’s jurisdiction no longer existed at the time of his motion to dismiss. Alternatively, father claims that the court erred by changing the permanency plan to guardianship rather than reunification. The Department of Human Services (DHS) maintains that jurisdiction is proper, but agrees with father that the proper permanency plan for M is reunification. M, however, argues that jurisdiction is proper and that guardianship is the appropriate permanency plan. We conclude that the court properly denied father’s motion to dismiss jurisdiction. However, because evidence does not support the court’s determination that M cannot be placed with father within a reasonable time, the court erred by changing the permanency plan to guardianship. Accordingly, we reverse and remand the permanency judgment.

The parties do not request de novo review and we decline to exercise it. See ORS 19.415(3)(b) (providing for discretionary de novo review of certain equitable actions); ORAP 5.40(8)(d) (setting forth a nonexclusive list of factors that govern the exercise of de novo review under ORS 19.415(3)(b)). We review the juvenile court’s legal conclusions for errors of law, and we are bound by its findings of historical fact unless there is no evidence to support those findings. Dept. of Human Services v. C. Z., 236 Or App 436, 442, 236 P3d 791 (2010).

The following facts are taken from the juvenile court’s findings, as supported by evidence in the record, and supplemented with procedural or undisputed facts as needed. M was born in December 2002. Johnson, who was married to mother but was not cohabitating with her at the time of M’s conception and birth, was listed on M’s birth certificate as her legal father. See ORS 109.070(l)(b) (2003) (establishing a rebuttable presumption that a man married to a child’s mother at the time of the child’s birth is presumed to be the child’s father). Johnson never had a relationship [497]*497with M, and the juvenile court entered a judgment of non-paternity in July 2009 declaring that Johnson was not M’s legal father.

In April 2008, when M was five years old, DHS received reports that mother was using drugs and neglecting M and her half-siblings, A and Q,1 and that domestic violence between mother and her boyfriend occurred in the children’s presence. DHS placed the children in shelter care the following month and filed a petition for juvenile court jurisdiction because of mother’s mental health issues and substance abuse and the children’s exposure to domestic violence. M, A, and Q became wards of the court in July 2008 and were placed in DHS’s legal custody. Initially, M and A were placed in the same foster home, and Q was placed elsewhere. M and A have always lived in the same home, and the trial court found that they are “significantly bonded.”

Two years later, in June 2010, when M was seven years old, M, A, and Q were moved into foster care with A’s paternal grandparents. Shortly thereafter, the court changed M’s permanency plan from reunification to adoption. Two months later, DHS filed a petition to terminate mother’s parental rights to M, A, and Q. See ORS 419B.504 (providing basis for termination of parental rights for unfitness). At that time, A’s paternal grandparents were identified as the adoptive resource for all three children.

Father did not enter the picture until very recently, although he was aware of the possibility that he had a child with mother around the time of M’s birth. Mother and father had a very brief relationship in 2002, but he moved to North Carolina shortly after meeting her and has lived there since. Mother telephoned him in 2002 to inform him that he had a daughter, but she called back a day later to retract her claim, asserting that Johnson was the father. In 2008, mother again telephoned father and informed him that he had a daughter in state custody in Oregon. Father reported that DHS also contacted him in 2008, informing him that Johnson was M’s legal father and that he would need an attorney to establish paternity; father claimed that he lacked the finances to follow up at that time. Mother [498]*498contacted father again in April 2010 and informed him that M was going to be adopted. DHS also contacted him again around the same time.

DHS paid for the paternity test that established in late August 2010, when M was seven years old, that father was M’s biological father. DHS, through the Interstate Compact on Placement of Children, see ORS 417.200 - 417.260, requested a home study from a social services agency in North Carolina. That evaluation was conducted in late 2010 and early 2011 and resulted in a positive recommendation.2

Before the juvenile court entered a judgment of paternity under ORS 419B.395 establishing father’s status as M’s legal father, DHS filed a petition for jurisdiction, naming him as the putative father of M and asserting that the court retained jurisdiction over M because

“ [t]he circumstances and conditions of [M] are such as to endanger her own welfare, in that:
“A. The putative father has failed to establish a relationship with the child, thereby failing to provide the child with the care, guidance and protection necessary for the child’s physical, mental and emotional well-being. Therefore, Juvenile Court Jurisdiction is necessary to protect the child.
“B. The child is dependent for care and support on a public or private child caring agency that needs the services of the court in planning for the best interests of the child.”

The court entered a judgment of paternity on December 17, 2010. Ten days later, father signed an admission that juvenile court jurisdiction was appropriate because

“[t]he father was unable to establish or maintain a relationship with the child which would allow him to act protectively on the child’s behalf. The father does not have a custody order which would allow him to protect the child and is in need of juvenile court jurisdiction to protect the child.”

[499]*499Based on that admission, the court entered a judgment of jurisdiction as to father. The court also ordered father to “[participate in and successfully complete a comprehensive psychological evaluation with a DHS/CWP approved provider, by DHS/CWP, sign releases of information, and follow services recommended from the evaluation.”

Father’s first contact with M occurred in December 2010, the month she turned eight, when he visited her for a week at her foster parents’ home in Oregon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
291 P.3d 765, 253 Or. App. 494, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-human-services-v-j-n-orctapp-2012.