In Re AC

686 S.E.2d 635
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 5, 2009
DocketS09A0931
StatusPublished

This text of 686 S.E.2d 635 (In Re AC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re AC, 686 S.E.2d 635 (Ga. 2009).

Opinion

686 S.E.2d 635 (2009)

In the Interest of A.C., a child.

No. S09A0931.

Supreme Court of Georgia.

October 5, 2009.

Phillip Jackson, Atlanta, for appellant.

Abdulhakim Saadiq, Decatur, Tyrone M. Hodnett II, Atlanta, for appellee.

HINES, Justice.

This Court granted a discretionary appeal in this termination of parental rights case to address: whether a challenge to the constitutionality of a statute governing appellate procedure that is made for the first time on appeal constitutes an exception to the general rule that this Court will not consider a constitutional challenge to a statute unless it was raised and ruled on in the trial court; if such a challenge is an exception to the general rule, whether OCGA § 5-6-35(a)(12), which requires an application for appeal from an order terminating parental rights, is constitutional; and whether the juvenile court erred in terminating the father's parental rights in this case. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the present constitutional challenge to OCGA § 5-6-35(a)(12) is *636 properly before the Court, that the challenge is unsuccessful on the merits, and that it was not error to terminate the father's parental rights.

The female child, A.C., was born on May 25, 2003. The child's father had entered negotiated pleas of guilty to two counts of child molestation and one count of cruelty to children in the first degree on August 25, 2000, and the Superior Court of Cobb County had sentenced the father to ten years to be served on probation. On October 20, 2003, a warrant issued for the father's arrest pursuant to a petition for revocation of the father's probation because he was living in the same home as his infant daughter, A. C., in violation of the terms of his probation. The father left Cobb County with A.C. and A.C.'s mother.

On May 9, 2007, the father was arrested in Fulton County by U.S. Marshals for failing to register as a sex offender and unsupervised contact with a child under the age of 18, both violations of his probation. His probation was revoked and he was ordered to serve the remainder of his sentence in custody, with a maximum release date of May 2010. At the time of the father's arrest, A.C. was under his care. The whereabouts of the mother were unknown. A.C. was taken into custody under the provisions of OCGA § 15-11-45,[1] and custody was placed in the Georgia Department of Human Resources ("DHR"), acting through the Fulton County Department of Family and Children Services ("DFCS").

On May 16, 2007, DFCS filed a deprivation complaint in the Juvenile Court of Fulton County on the basis that A.C. was without a legal guardian and anyone to care for her. A deprivation petition was filed on May 22, 2007; the petition alleged that A.C. was deprived and in need of protection because of certain detrimental conditions, including that the father had absconded from Georgia and that his whereabouts had been unknown to authorities for three and a half years; that A.C. was in her father's care and custody at the time of his arrest; that his arrest left the child without a legal custodian; that her father was unable to provide adequate care and a home for A.C. because of his conviction for child molestation; that the whereabouts of A.C.'s mother were unknown and she was listed as a "missing person"; that the mother was believed to be in the process of moving *637 to California and disappeared after last having contact with A.C.'s father; and that the father was a suspect in the mother's disappearance.

The juvenile court held a hearing in the matter on September 24, 2007; an amended deprivation petition was filed on the day of the hearing alleging that A.C. had been sexually abused by her father. The father, though incarcerated, was present at the hearing and represented by counsel. The juvenile court found that the father stipulated to receiving the original petition filed on May 22, 2007, and acknowledged that the allegations therein were true; the father denied the allegations in the amended petition. In its judgment entered on November 2, 2007, the juvenile court detailed the sexual abuse allegations made by A.C., as disclosed to A.C.'s foster parent, to the effect that her father and mother had engaged in sexual intercourse in her presence, that her mother had molested her, that her father had inserted his penis into A.C.'s vagina, and that the father had taken photographs during the sexual encounters. The juvenile court found A.C. to be deprived, as defined in OCGA § 15-11-2(8),[2] and ordered that temporary care and custody be given to DHR by and through DFCS. Temporary custody of A.C. was granted to A.C.'s maternal aunt; on June 5, 2008, the maternal aunt and her husband filed a petition to terminate the mother's and father's parental rights.

On September 11, 2008, the juvenile court held a hearing on the termination petition. The father was present at the hearing, was represented by counsel, and testified. During the hearing, a DFCS supervisor testified that when A.C. came into DFCS's care, she had a yeast infection and required both physical and psychological care, and that A.C. had revealed to her foster parents and in therapy that she was sexually molested by her father. A senior psychotherapist and forensic evaluator with the Georgia Center for Child Advocacy testified, inter alia, that she did a forensic evaluation of A.C.; that A.C. disclosed that her father had touched and inserted his penis into her vagina; that she was also molested by a male friend of her father; that she was in a motel with her mother, father, and the father's friend and that her father told the friend to touch her and her mother's vaginas and that her father was photographing them. The psychotherapist further testified that she found A.C. to be "absolutely credible" and that the child was "terrified of her father." On September 30, 2008, the juvenile court entered a judgment terminating the parental rights of A.C.'s father and mother. In so doing, the juvenile court specifically found, inter alia, that there were current unappealed orders finding A.C. to be deprived and placing A.C. in the temporary care and custody of the maternal aunt and her husband for purposes of adoption, the conditions of deprivation as previously found by the court had not been alleviated, that A.C. was abandoned by both her mother and father, that the parents would be unable to alleviate the causes of A.C.'s deprivation, and that termination was in the best interest of A.C.

1. A.C.'s father filed an application for discretionary appeal of the termination order in the Court of Appeals, raising, inter alia, a constitutional challenge to present OCGA § 5-6-35(a)(12), which became effective on January 1, 2008, requiring that appeals from orders terminating parental rights be by application rather than be a matter of direct appeal. The Court of Appeals transferred the case to this Court.

*638 The father did not raise a constitutional challenge to the statute in the trial court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
686 S.E.2d 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ac-ga-2009.