Hunt v. Weiss

8 P.3d 990, 169 Or. App. 317, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1277
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 9, 2000
Docket98-A-0006; CA A103014
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 P.3d 990 (Hunt v. Weiss) 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
Hunt v. Weiss, 8 P.3d 990, 169 Or. App. 317, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1277 (Or. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*319 ARMSTRONG, J.

In this step-parent adoption case, father appeals the trial court’s judgment terminating his parental rights to his nine-year-old daughter. He assigns error to the trial court’s failure to appoint counsel for him and to its determination that the adoption would be in the child’s best interest. Because we conclude that the trial court improperly denied father’s request for court-appointed counsel, we reverse.

Mother and father were married in 1984 and divorced in 1994. Mother married stepfather in January 1998, and, in March of that year, they petitioned to have the child adopted by stepfather. Father had been incarcerated beginning in 1995 for various crimes involving mother and several members of mother’s family. Because of the incarceration and a prior restraining order that had been issued against him, father had not had any in-person contact with child since 1994. 1 He was scheduled to be released in January 1999.

The trial court issued a citation to father directing him to appear and show cause why the adoption should not go forward or to file a response or answer before the hearing date. Father attempted to file a response objecting to the adoption about three weeks before the scheduled hearing. However, he mistakenly sent it to the federal district court, which faxed it to the state circuit court a few days before the hearing. Because father had attempted to file an answer, the trial court continued the hearing for about a month. In doing so, it noted that father desperately needed counsel but that it could not provide it for him. Although the court indicated that it would send father a letter advising him to obtain counsel if possible, the trial court record does not contain such a letter. Shortly after the initial hearing, which he did not attend, father filed a motion and affidavit requesting a waiver of court costs and fees because of indigency. Five days before the second scheduled hearing, father requested a continuance until after his release so that he could “seek legal counsel and financial status.” The court apparently did not *320 address the motion until the hearing began. Father appeared telephonically at the hearing and represented himself. At the start of the hearing, the trial court denied the request for a continuance. Before beginning to testify, father stated that he “would like to ask the Court for counsel” and repeated his request for a continuance until after his release. The trial court proceeded to the merits and determined that adoption would be in the child’s best interest. Accordingly, it terminated father’s parental rights without his consent under ORS 109.322. 2

Father assigns error to the trial court’s failure to appoint counsel for him. He argues that he was entitled to appointed counsel under Article I, section 20, of the Oregon Constitution, as interpreted in Zockert v. Fanning, 310 Or 514, 800 P2d 773 (1990). Mother and stepfather respond that Zockert does not entitle father to appointed counsel, that, if it does, father did not properly preserve that issue, and that the court’s failure to appoint counsel was harmless error. Father also assigns error to the trial court’s conclusion that the adoption would be in child’s best interests. Because we agree with father that he was entitled to appointed counsel and that the court’s failure to appoint him counsel requires reversal, we do not reach father’s second assignment of error.

We first address whether father properly preserved his claim to appointed counsel. Father specifically requested counsel, which is all that the father did in Zockert to raise that issue. See Zockert, 310 Or at 516-17. Although the *321 Supreme Court did not address preservation in Zockert, the fact that it decided the father’s claim on the merits indicates that it understood his assignment of error to have been preserved. We see no reason why the preservation issue should be decided differently in this case than it was in Zockert. Accordingly, we conclude that father’s first assignment of error is preserved.

We now turn to whether father was entitled to appointed counsel under Article I, section 20, of the Oregon Constitution. Article I, section 20, provides that “[n]o law shall be passed granting to any citizen or class of citizens privileges, or immunities, which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens.” Or Const, Art I, § 20. Zockert involved an adoption under ORS 109.324, which eliminates the requirement of parental consent in a privately initiated adoption when the parent whose rights are to be terminated is found to have wilfully neglected or abandoned the child. The legislature had provided for court-appointed counsel for indigent parents in termination proceedings conducted in juvenile court. See former ORS 419.525 (1989). 3 The court identified the relevant class for Article I, section 20, purposes either as parents or as parents facing termination of their parental rights. It held that the members of the class of parents facing termination of their parental rights under ORS chapter 109 were similarly situated to those facing termination under ORS chapter 419. It further held that there was no legitimate basis to distinguish between parents facing termination under one chapter and those facing it under the other and, therefore, that Article I, section 20, of the Oregon Constitution, required an extension of the right to counsel to indigent parents involved in ORS chapter 109 termination proceedings. Zockert, 310 Or at 520-24.

The Zockert court did not limit the scope of its analysis to the specific statute at issue in that case; rather, it spoke broadly of terminations under ORS chapter 109 and *322 ORS chapter 419. Id. at 520-22. Although there are some differences between the facts that would be at issue in a termination proceeding involving an incarcerated parent under ORS 109.322 and those involving the same parent under ORS chapter 419, those differences do not affect the functions that legal counsel would perform, the importance of those functions, or the stakes at issue for the parties. The Zockert court focused on whether the legislature had made a policy choice to distinguish between chapter 109 and chapter 419 termination proceedings, and the court concluded that it had not. See id. at 522-23. Nothing that has occurred since Zockert suggests that the legislature has made a policy choice to distinguish among chapter 109 proceedings for that purpose. Moreover, Zockert

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244 P.3d 904 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2010)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 P.3d 990, 169 Or. App. 317, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-weiss-orctapp-2000.