Department of Human Services v. W. S. C.

273 P.3d 313, 248 Or. App. 374
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 29, 2012
Docket09J5718; Petition Number 05J5718; A149189; 09J5719; Petition Number 05J5719; A149190; 09J5720; Petition Number 05J5720; A149191; 09J5721; Petition Number 05J5721; A149192; 09J5722; Petition Number 03J5722; A149193
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 273 P.3d 313 (Department of Human Services v. W. S. C.) 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. W. S. C., 273 P.3d 313, 248 Or. App. 374 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

*378 WOLLHEIM, J.

The juvenile court terminated father’s and mother’s parental rights with respect to five of their children: N, C, G, L, and W. Mother timely appealed the termination judgments, and we affirmed those judgments on this date. Dept. of Human Services v. T. M. M., 248 Or App 352, 273 P3d 322 (2012). Father, however, did not timely appeal because his trial counsel mishandled the filing of his notices of appeal. He asks that we nonetheless allow his late appeal and reverse the termination judgments. For the reasons that follow, we are not authorized to create a judicial remedy for father’s attorney’s errors in initiating the appeal, and we are not persuaded that father, as a result of his trial counsel’s failure, was denied a fundamentally fair termination proceeding under the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution. We therefore deny father’s motion for a late appeal and dismiss the appeal as untimely.

The preliminary question in this case is whether father’s appeal is procedurally barred because his notices of appeal were filed more than 90 days after the entry of judgment. See ORS 419A.200(3)(c) (“The notice must be filed not later than 30 days after the entry of the court’s judgment.”); ORS 419A.200(5) (authorizing appeal to be filed within 90 days after entry of judgment, where failure to file notice within 30 days is not personally attributable to the appellant and appellant demonstrates colorable error). Thus, we begin by setting out the facts pertinent to the filing of the notices of appeal.

The termination hearing spanned 11 days, concluding on December 15, 2010, at which point the trial court announced in open court that it was terminating both parents’ rights to their children. Father, at that point, informed his trial counsel, Timothy Pizzo, of his intent to appeal.

According to Pizzo, he returned to his office and “called the Public Defense Appellate Division to notify them of [father’s] desire to appeal,” and was told by that office to “wait for a written order before beginning the appeal process.” Proposed judgment forms were sent to Pizzo in early January 2011, and Pizzo did not object to them. Judgments terminating father’s parental rights to N, C, G, L, and W *379 were signed on January 19, 2011, 1 and they were entered the following day. Copies were mailed to Pizzo but, he avers, were “misfiled by [his] relatively new legal assistant.”

On February 9, 2011, mother’s counsel telephoned Pizzo and left a message asking whether father had filed his notice of appeal. Pizzo returned her call six days later, and they discussed the filing deadline. On February 22, 2011, Pizzo “prepared and served the Notices of Appeal.” Pizzo, however, never filed the notices of appeal with this court; instead, he filed them in Clatsop County Circuit Court. (OJIN reflects that the notices were received by that court on February 23, 2011.)

On June 13, 2011 — almost four months after preparing and misfiling his notices of appeal — Pizzo received a call from an Oregon Public Defense Services (OPDS) supervisor and “discovered for the first time that [he] had failed to get the Notices to the Court of Appeals.” According to Pizzo, “[s]hortly thereafter, on the advice of OPDS, [he] contacted Angela Sherbo” at Youth, Rights, & Justice (formerly Juvenile Rights Project). Sherbo suggested the possibility of filing a motion for a late appeal and asked that Pizzo call her back with more information about the case. Pizzo states that “[a] family emergency arose and [he] left town and did not follow-up with Ms. Sherbo.”

Sherbo then called Pizzo sometime around the week of July 11, 2011, to inquire whether he had resolved the appeal issue. Pizzo told her that he had been out of town and had not resolved the matter. On July 14, Sherbo again called Pizzo to say that she had conferred with the appellate division of OPDS and that she would file a motion for a late appeal on behalf of father. She asked that Pizzo instruct father to call her so that she could discuss the case and determine whether father wanted to pursue that course of action.

On July 15, 2011, Sherbo requested Pizzo’s affidavit to file in support of her motion for a late appeal. Between *380 July 18 and July 22, Sherbo made multiple calls and sent two e-mails to Pizzo to remind him of his obligation. According to Pizzo, “On Friday, July 22, 2011, after a telephone conversation with Ms. Sherbo, [he] emailed a draft to her office”; “at approximately 9:00 pm that evening, [Pizzo] realized [he] had sent it to the wrong email address.” The following week, Sherbo filed an emergency motion to file a late appeal, along with an affidavit from Pizzo, dated July 25, 2011, describing the circumstances set out above.

In the meantime, mother had filed her opening brief on June 27, 2011, and oral argument had been scheduled for September 6, 2011. Counsel for the children (except N, who had his own attorney below but was not represented on appeal) and counsel for the Department of Human Services (DHS) had requested extensions of time in which to file their responses to mother’s brief; as a result of those requests, their response briefs were due on August 8, 2011.

Counsel for C, G, L, and W did not oppose father’s motion for a late appeal; in fact, father’s appellate counsel represented in her motion that the children’s counsel “also supports the motion.” DHS, however, did oppose the motion and, in response, filed a motion to dismiss the late appeal.

On August 8, 2011, the Appellate Commissioner deferred “ruling on the motions to the department that hears these cases on their merits.” The Appellate Commissioner postponed oral argument in mother’s case and ordered that mother’s and father’s cases be scheduled for argument before the same department on the same date. DHS sought reconsideration of that order by the Chief Judge, but the motion for reconsideration was denied.

Mother’s and father’s cases were ultimately argued on November 7, 2011, and it now falls upon us to resolve father’s request for leave to file a late appeal and DHS’s motion to dismiss father’s late appeal. Father advances two bases for considering his untimely appeal. First, he invites this court to fashion a judicial remedy to vindicate his statutory right to adequate assistance of counsel, the course taken in State ex rel SOSCF v. Hammons, 169 Or App 589, 10 P3d 310 (2000). Second, father argues that, as a matter of due process under the federal constitution, he is entitled “to a *381 mechanism to raise the substantive issues of his fitness on direct appeal.”

Father’s first argument — that this court may fashion its own exception to the statutory timelines in ORS 419A.200 in order to vindicate his right to adequate assistance of counsel — is foreclosed by our decision in

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Dept. of Human Services v. T. S.
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273 P.3d 322 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
273 P.3d 313, 248 Or. App. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-human-services-v-w-s-c-orctapp-2012.