In Interest of FQ
This text of 470 N.W.2d 1 (In Interest of FQ) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN the INTEREST OF F.Q., J.Q., C.Q., M.Q. and H.R., Children Under the Age of Eighteen: N.Q., Appellant,[]
v.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Wisconsin.
*609 For the appellant N.Q. the cause was submitted on the briefs of S. Abrahamson & Associates, S.C. by Chris R. Velnetske, of Milwaukee.
For J.Q. the cause was submitted on the briefs of Joseph G. Alioto, of Milwaukee.
For the respondent the cause was submitted on the briefs of E. Michael McCann, district attorney, by Lisa Peterson Fricker, assistant district attorney, of Milwaukee.
Before Moser, P.J., Sullivan and Fine, JJ.
MOSER, P.J.
N.Q. appeals from the dispositional order finding her children in need of protection and services (CHIPS) pursuant to sec. 48.13(8), Stats. N.Q. raises two issues on this appeal. They are that the summary judgment procedure under sec. 802.08, Stats., of the Code of Civil Procedure does not apply to CHIPS proceedings, and, even if it does, the trial court erred in granting the summary judgment because there were material issues of fact. Because the civil procedure of summary judgment is applicable to CHIPS proceedings, *610 and because there were no material issues of fact, we affirm.
The record reflects that the children of N.Q. were determined to be in need of protective services since January 20, 1986. Legal custody of the six children was transferred to the Milwaukee County Department of Social Services (MCDSS). As a result of N.Q.'s treatment of the children, their physical custody was placed in foster homes pursuant to secs. 48.13(10), 48.345 and 48.355, Stats. They were placed for a one-year period with conditions required of N.Q. Because the conditions were never met, the disposition of the children was extended for 1987 and through most of 1988 pursuant to sec. 48.365, Stats.[1] A proceeding to extend the dispositional order was commenced in 1988, but because the trial court lost jurisdiction due to the untimeliness of the hearing, it was dismissed on November 9, 1988.[2] Thus, legal custody technically reverted to N.Q. on that dismissal.
The state, however, filed a new CHIPS petition that same day, November 9, 1988, and on receipt of the CHIPS petition, the trial court set the fact-finding hearing for November 30, 1988. The trial court also sua sponte found, pursuant to sec. 48.19(1)(c), Stats., that the MCDSS should take physical custody of the children. Because N.Q. was in Taycheedah women's prison, the CHIPS petition filed that day was predicated on her inability to care for the children's needs because of her incarceration pursuant to sec. 48.13(8), Stats.
On November 18, 1988, the state filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to sec. 802.08, Stats., relating *611 that because of N.Q.'s imprisonment, she was unable to care for the children's needs and because there were no material issues of fact, it was clear that there was no need for a fact-finding hearing as required under sec. 48.31, Stats. The summary judgment motion was set for November 30, 1988, the same date as the fact-finding hearing. At the close of the fact-finding hearing, the trial court, noting that N.Q. was in prison, held that the children were in need of protective services, and granted summary judgment because there were no material issues of fact and the law was clear that protective services were appropriate.
The dispositional hearing was held separately on several dates, which were January 18, February 28, March 1, April 27, June 26, June 28 and June 29, 1989. At the close of that extended hearing, the trial court ordered that in the best interests of the children, their legal custody should be placed with MCDSS. Further, it ordered that F.Q.'s physical custody should be with the Agnello foster home, and that the balance of the children should remain in the foster home placement that had existed since the original placement as a result of the 1986 disposition. The trial court also set forth certain enumerated prerequisite conditions for the children's return to N.Q.
[1-6]
N.Q. first argues that the summary judgment civil procedure is not appropriate for CHIPS proceedings, because the juvenile code alone applies to such matters. N.Q. is wrong. CHIPS proceedings are civil proceedings.[3] As such, the Code of Civil Procedure, chs. 801-47 of the statutes, can be employed in certain proceedings under ch. 48. These chapters of the Code of Civil Procedure *612 govern practice in the circuit courts in this state, whether deemed a civil action or special proceeding, and whether cognizable as cases at law, equity, or of statutory origin, except when a different procedure is prescribed by statute or rule.[4] The Children's Code, ch. 48, is of statutory origin, and thus, is controlled by the Code of Civil Procedure unless a specific statute within the Children's Code requires a different procedure.[5] Where particular chapters of the statutes provide specific direction, comparable parts of the Code of Civil Procedure are then not applicable.[6] This is simply an application of the statutory construction rule that a particular statute controls and exists as an exception to a general statute covering the same subject matter.[7] Because no section in the Children's Code provides a procedure different from sec. 802.08, Stats., for summary judgment, it is therefore available in CHIPS cases.[8] Clearly, summary judgment, in this factually limited case, is consistent with the statutory procedures set forth in ch. 48.[9]
[7]
N.Q. further argues that if summary judgment is appropriate, then the trial court still erred for failing to comply with the twenty-day notice required of sec. *613 802.08(2), Stats. Here, the trial court held the summary judgment hearing on November 30, 1988. N.Q.'s attorney had been given written notice on November 18, 1988. As discussed above, N.Q. argued that because there was no procedure in ch. 48 for summary procedure, it could not be used. The trial court rejected that argument and granted summary judgment. Nowhere in the trial court record did N.Q. argue that the time limits in the summary judgment statute were not preserved.[10] N.Q. only argued that summary judgment was unavailable. Our supreme court has held that failure to object in the trial court to the nonadherence of time limitations in summary judgment statutes cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.[11] Because of that failure, we reject this part of the argument on appeal because the issue was waived.
N.Q. finally argues that even if summary judgment was available, the trial court erred because there were material issues of fact noted in the record of the November 9, and November 11, 1988, hearings. N.Q. argues that because on those particular dates she technically had legal custody and the court ignored her desires and her right to have her children placed with her mother E.V., pursuant to sec. 48.60(2)(a), Stats., it erred in granting summary judgment.
The legal custody of the children had been placed with MCDSS in 1986 and since then, the children had been placed in various foster homes.
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470 N.W.2d 1, 162 Wis. 2d 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-interest-of-fq-wisctapp-1991.