In Re Adoption/Guardianship No. TPR970011

712 A.2d 597, 122 Md. App. 462, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 1, 1998
Docket1762, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 712 A.2d 597 (In Re Adoption/Guardianship No. TPR970011) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Adoption/Guardianship No. TPR970011, 712 A.2d 597, 122 Md. App. 462, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 133 (Md. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

*465 THEODORE G. BLOOM, Judge

(retired), Specially Assigned.

Appellee, the Prince George’s County Department of Social Services (DSS), filed a petition in the Circuit court for Prince George’s County for guardianship with the right to consent to adoption, or long-term care short of adoption, of a five-year-old boy. Approximately four and one-half months after being served with a copy of the petition and a show cause order, appellant, the child’s father, filed an objection to the petition. This appeal is from an order striking the father’s objection to the guardianship petition.

Background

The show cause order served on appellant notified him that if he wished to object to the guardianship he must file, within thirty days, an objection (a form for which was attached to the order); that failure to object by the stated deadline could result in termination of his parental rights without his consent; that he was entitled to consult an attorney; and that if he were indigent an attorney might be appointed to represent him.

Appellee moved to strike appellant’s objection as untimely. At a hearing on that motion, appellant testified that his reading skill “is not strong”; that he had a third grade education in Jamaica; that he worked as a carpenter; that he tried to read “this paper” (the show cause order); that he talked to his sister, who told him that she was trying to get a lawyer for him; that he had no money to hire a lawyer. He did not understand the show cause order; he did not understand that if he did not have money for a lawyer the court would provide counsel for him. At that point in appellant’s testimony, the court interrupted, stating:

I don’t want to cut you off, but there is not a darn thing I can do for you. You fall right in the auspices of that case [In re: Adoption/Guardianship No. 93321055/CAD in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, 344 Md. 458, 687 A.2d 681 (1997) ].

*466 Even though you couldn’t read that well, you knew someone. When you got the papers from the sheriff you had your sister, who read them to you. You knew that this was a controversy over your child. You knew that. I am sure she told you to get private counsel. Even though you had CINA counsel or the Public Defender down below in the case, you missed the deadline. These deadlines are written in just about granite. Maybe not granite. We could chip a little away from it. But not in your case.

Your objection, filed late, is stricken, and the case will proceed without you.

James M. Diehl, who had represented appellant during the juvenile court proceedings that preceded the guardianship petition, in which appellant’s son was determined to be a child in need of assistance (CINA), proffered the following information:

Mr. Diehl was the attorney who represented appellant in the CINA proceedings “for the last nine or twelve hearings that [appellant] attended — [appellant] was pro s'e in the first” — but he was not notified of the filing of the guardianship petition until Friday, 5 September 1998. (The thirty day period for response to the show cause order expired 23 May 1997.) Mr. Diehl was told of the pending guardianship petition during a telephone conversation with Jonathan Gladstone, the attorney representing the child’s mother in that case. Appellant’s objection was filed on the next business day following that telephone conversation.
Mr. Diehl further proffered that “the records in the CINA file, including reports of Social Services and a psychological evaluation done on [appellant and the child’s mother] describes [sic] appellant as functionally illiterate.”
On 23 May 1997, the last day of the thirty-day period for filing an objection to the guardianship petition, Mr. Diehl appeared with appellant at a CINA hearing. Appellant asked, “What is this all about?” He did not mention that he had received the show cause order. Had Mr. Diehl, as the attorney who represented appellant known that there was a *467 show cause order about to expire on that date, he would have seen to it that appellant filed a timely objection.

Mr. Diehl referred the court to the statutory requirement that the attorney who represented a parent in a CINA proceeding be notified of the filing of a petition for guardianship with right to consent to adoption or long-term care short of adoption. Md.Code (1984, 1991 Repl.Vol.), § 5-322 of the Family Law Article (F.L.). The court’s response to Mr. Diehl’s proffer was, “I see what you are saying, but his sister told him. Even though he is a functional illiterate, my decision is the same.”

Appellee’s counsel did not dispute Mr. Diehl’s proffer. She informed the court that on 1 April 1997, the day after the guardianship petition was filed, appellee sent a letter to Mrs. McGinley, the head of the CINA division of the office of the public defender, notifying her of the filing of the petition. Appellee’s attorney further acknowledged that the notice was not sent to Mr. Diehl, who was a “panel attorney,” i.e., an attorney in private practice to whom the office of the district public defender may refer a case when there is the possibility of conflict between a party represented by the public defender and another party entitled to be represented by the public defender’s office. In this case, the child’s mother was being represented by the district public defender’s office throughout the CINA proceedings.

The mother of the child was also late in filing an objection to guardianship. Appellee’s motion to dismiss her objection on that ground was denied on the basis of a concession that she was under a mental disability, and that service was made upon an attorney appointed to represent her and not upon her personally. Appellee’s motion to strike appellant’s objection was granted, however, for the stated reason that the court could not entertain the objection because appellant’s case was governed by the decision of the Court of Appeals in In Re: Adoption!Guardianship No. 93321055/CAD, supra.

*468 Issues

Appellant raises a single issue: whether the court erred in granting appellee’s motion to strike his objection to the show cause order. Appellee, however, presents us with another issue, one that concerns our jurisdiction: whether the appeal should be dismissed as premature. We shall deal with the jurisdictional issue first.

I

Appellee asserted that this appeal must be dismissed because there is no final judgment. The case is not over; it is still pending with regard to the mother’s parental status.

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Bluebook (online)
712 A.2d 597, 122 Md. App. 462, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoptionguardianship-no-tpr970011-mdctspecapp-1998.