Florida Department of Children & Families v. Y.C.
This text of 82 So. 3d 1139 (Florida Department of Children & Families v. Y.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The Florida Department of Children and Families seeks review of an order directing it to provide a Chapter 39 case plan and services for the mother Y.C. and her three children. 1 Unhappy with her situation, that of her children, and the fact that after investigation, DCF had previously determined her complaints did not warrant Department intervention, Y.C. filed a ‘private’ dependency petition ‘against’ herself and O.D., the children’s father, in which she alleged that she and her children were at risk of harm based on O.D.’s various acts of violence. 2 , 3 Notwithstanding the DCF’s decision, the GAL Program moved to have the trial court *1141 order the Department to file a case plan and provide services. DCF filed a limited appearance to object to that motion. A few days later, the GAL Program joined in Y.C.’s dependency petition. A month after that, with no trial conducted and no evidence presented, the court entered an order of dependency. The sole basis then or ever asserted for the order was the fact that Y.C. had defaulted and thus ‘admitted’ her oum allegations of dependency, 4 DCF maintains that the order which followed, requiring the agency to provide a case plan and services, 5 departed from the essential requirements of the law. We agree for several reasons, most significantly because the order was premised on a fundamentally invalid determination of dependency. 6
First, we see no acceptable way for one to file a petition, acquiesce to the allegations of that petition, and thereby secure judicial relief. This is not a case or controversy and not, therefore, a basis for court action. 7 The respondents base their position on the statutory language providing that “any ... person with knowledge *1142 of the facts alleged,” not excluding a parent, may file a petition for dependency. See § 39.501(1), Fla. Stat. (2010). Reliance on that language to support the order below, however, just makes no sense. See Sch. Bd. of Palm Beach Cnty. v. Survivors Charter Sch., Inc., 3 So.3d 1220, 1235 (Fla.2009) (“We are not required to abandon either our common sense or principles of logic in statutory interpretation.”). A scenario in which the same person asks the court to act and then admits the need for that action, without more, simply does not legally confer authority upon it to do so. Rather than presenting a legally cognizable proceeding, it involves merely an unopposed request for the assistance of the court in a similar request to the responsible agency. When as here, the agency has already declined that request, it is wholly improper for the court to intervene. 8
More to the point, a valid dependency determination rests on a finding by the *1143 court of one or more of the conditions enumerated in section 39.01(15), Florida Statutes (2010). 9 We reject the premise that the statutory obligation of a court to find that a child is dependent and make findings supporting that conclusion may be satisfied based on no more than a parent’s “agreement” with herself. 10 When the court makes a determination of dependency premised only on such a ‘default,’ this requirement is not met.
The Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure addressing dependency proceedings provides two routes by which a determination of dependency may be accomplished — either by admission, see Fla. R. Juv. P; 8.325, 11 or by adjudicatory hearing. See Fla. R. Juv. P. 8.330. 12 Each ‘route’ how *1144 ever requires the trial judge to list the factual determinations relied on. See Fla. R. Juv. P. 8.332. 13 Even in the case of an ‘admission’ — which as we read that provision clearly envisions adverse parties coming to an agreement-the court’s order must include “findings of fact specifying the act or acts causing dependency, by whom committed, and facts on which the findings are based.” See Fla. R. Juv. P. 8.325. With no evidence taken and no countervailing position advanced, there was no opportunity for the trial judge to make the crucial findings necessary to a valid dependency determination. 14 , 15 ’ 16 Without a valid depen *1145 dency determination, the trial court acted in excess of its jurisdiction in directing DCF to provide the services ordered. 17 , 18
Certiorari granted.
. These children are O.D., Jr., born December 26, 1997; L.D., born August 25, 2000; and A.D., born May 11, 2003.
. The petition recounted, among many other things, that Y.C. had sought and was granted a temporary domestic violence injunction, September 25, 2010. However in response to the investigation prompted by that action, Y.C. denied to a CPI that the children had witnessed any of the physical abuse being *1141 investigated and said she did not believe O.D. had placed the children at harm. The CPI report also reflects that Y.C. and the children had moved to an undisclosed location. On November 2, 2010, therefore, the very, next day after Y.C. filed her petition, DCF closed its investigation, finding that the allegations of abuse had not been substantiated. The allegations of an earlier report of domestic violence had likewise been discounted by Y.C. herself to an investigating CPI.
. The agency’s conclusion was based on findings that (1) Y.C. had informed the CPI that the children did not witness any of the physical abuse alleged; (2) none of the children disclosed domestic violence between their respective mothers and O.D.; (3) Y.C. informed the CPI that she did not believe O.D. had placed the children in harm; and (4) Y.C. and her three children had relocated away from O.D.
. The co-respondent father denied the allegations. That issue remains unresolved.
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82 So. 3d 1139, 2012 WL 716091, 2012 Fla. App. LEXIS 3676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-department-of-children-families-v-yc-fladistctapp-2012.