In re A.C.

597 A.2d 920
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 1991
DocketNo. 90-1569
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 597 A.2d 920 (In re A.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re A.C., 597 A.2d 920 (D.C. 1991).

Opinion

WAGNER, Associate Judge:

Appellant, R.R., the father of A.C., challenges an order of the trial court terminating his parental rights under the provisions of D.C.Code § 16-2353 (1989). The child’s mother, P.C., whose parental rights were terminated in the same proceeding, did not appeal. R.R. argues that his due process rights were violated by the failure of the District of Columbia Department of Human Services (DHS), the social service agency which had court ordered custody of the child, to make reasonable efforts to reunite him with his child and that the trial court erred by failing to apply a presumption in favor of a fit, natural parent. Appellee, the minor child, contends that the trial court’s order is supported by clear and convincing evidence and that appellant was not entitled to a parental preference, having failed to grasp his “opportunity interest.” Appellee also argues that reunification efforts by DHS are not a required element of proof under applicable law; [922]*922nevertheless, DHS made reasonable efforts at reunification, but appellant failed to display any significant interest in the child. We hold that the efforts of a public custodial agency to reunify the family are a relevant factor in the decision-making process in a proceeding to terminate parental rights, but that the agency’s defaults in that regard do not preclude termination, if in the child’s best interest. Finding no error in the decision to terminate R.R.’s parental rights, we affirm.

I.

A.C. was born on August 10, 1985. When he was only two months old, A.C.’s natural father, R.R., voluntarily placed him in emergency care with DHS after the child’s mother could not be located. The parents were never married to each other. Initially, DHS placed A.C. at St. Ann’s Infant Home, and later, in an interim foster care placement. In July 1986, A.C. was placed in foster care with the family with whom he remained continuously until the termination hearing in November 1990. The child has bonded with his foster mother. With the exception of one visit during A.C.’s brief hospitalization in October 1985, R.R. has not visited nor otherwise contacted the child. An order providing R.R. reasonable visitation rights was entered on June 28, 1988. Thereafter, DHS workers attempted to locate R.R. without success. Finally, R.R. requested and arranged for a visit with A.C. in February 1989, but he failed to keep the appointment.

In February 1989, the child’s mother, P.C., entered a stipulation in the neglect proceeding acknowledging that she had neglected A.C. by leaving him alone or with unwilling caretakers. She also admitted her inability to care for the child because of her incarceration and emotional problems, among other reasons. R.R., then a party to the proceeding, did not sign the stipulation; therefore, the trial date for R.R.’s case was reset, along with the dispositional hearing in P.C.’s case for May 9, 1989.1 DHS workers could not locate R.R. again until he appeared for the hearing. At that time, R.R. informed a social worker that he was unable to care for A.C. because he was unemployed. The trial court entered an order committing A.C. to the custody of DHS. The neglect case was later dismissed as to R.R. at his attorney’s request.2

On February 23, 1990, the attorney and guardian ad litem for the child filed a motion to terminate parental rights. While incarcerated at Lorton, Virginia, R.R. was personally served with a summons and order to appear for the hearing on the motion. R.R. was brought to court from Lor-ton for the hearing on August 20,1990, but the case was postponed until November 5, 1990 to secure proper service on A.C.’s mother. In spite of having been personally served and notified of the continued date at the August proceeding, R.R., who had been released from jail by this time, did not appear for the hearing on the motion to terminate parental rights in November. R.R.’s counsel was present at the hearing which resulted in an order terminating R.R.’s parental rights on November 15, 1990. R.R.’s attorney filed a timely notice of appeal on his behalf.

At the hearing on the motion, the family social worker testified that she did not attempt to enter into a case plan3 with R.R. because he had said that he was unemployed and unable to care for A.C. Further, R.R. had been difficult for DHS to locate. The family social worker contacted [923]*923shelters, hospitals, jails and the morgue in an effort to find him. When R.R. appeared at the neglect hearing, he was given information through which he could contact the agency and maintain contact with the child. R.R. provided DHS with only his mother’s address. After R.R. failed to make the scheduled visit he had requested with the child- in February 1989, neither the social worker nor R.R. initiated any further contact.

An expert witness on adoptions testified, and the trial judge found as fact, that if parental rights were terminated, A.C. would be readily adoptable because of his tender age and lack of physical, emotional or behavioral problems. As of the date of the termination order, an adoptive family had been approved for A.C., and a backup adoptive family had been identified.

II.

Appellant argues that his due process rights were violated by DHS’s failure to make reasonable efforts to reunite him with his son. The argument is unpersuasive. The protections afforded by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to natural parents to direct the upbringing of their children are well established. In re A.B.E., 564 A.2d 751, 754-55 (D.C.1989) (citations omitted). Such rights are not absolute, and they must yield to the child’s best interest in a proceeding to terminate parental rights. Id. at 754. In such proceedings, the “parents’ constitutional rights are relevant only to the question of what process is due.” Id.

As desirable as it might be, appellant’s due process rights do not include as a condition precedent to termination of parental rights that the state agency having custody of a minor child make affirmative efforts to reunite the family. The statute in this jurisdiction which governs proceedings to terminate the parental rights of neglected children, D.C.Code § 16-2351 et seq. (1989), contains no express requirement that the agency having custody of a neglected child demonstrate that it has made reasonable efforts to reunite parent and child before the government or a guardian, acting on behalf of the child, can institute termination proceedings nor before the court can decide such cases.

In support of his argument that his due process rights were violated by the failure of DHS to make reasonable efforts to reunite him with his child, appellant relies on cases from states which have statutes requiring proof that the agency having care of the child has made reasonable efforts to strengthen and encourage the family relationship before the petition to terminate can be filed or granted. See In re Lori D., 510 A.2d 421, 424 (R.I.1986) (order dismissing petition reversed where record replete with efforts of state agency to reunite family as required by law);4 see also Weaver v.

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Bluebook (online)
597 A.2d 920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ac-dc-1991.