In Re ALG

619 S.E.2d 561
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 4, 2005
DocketCOA04-1226
StatusPublished

This text of 619 S.E.2d 561 (In Re ALG) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re ALG, 619 S.E.2d 561 (N.C. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

619 S.E.2d 561 (2005)

In the Matters of As.L.G. and Au.R.G., Minor Children.

No. COA04-1226.

Court of Appeals of North Carolina.

October 4, 2005.

Charlotte Gail Blake, Jefferson, for respondent-mother.

Paul W. Freeman, Jr., Wilkesboro, for petitioner-appellee.

Sherrie R. Hodges as Guardian ad Litem.

*562 ELMORE, Judge.

Brenda Lee Fausnet (respondent) appeals from the orders terminating her parental rights to her two children, A.R.G. and A.L.G. On 1 May 2002, DSS filed petitions alleging that the children were not receiving proper care and were living in an environment injurious to their welfare. At the 3 June 2002 adjudication hearing, the district court, in part, found the following:

6. Although the mother of the children is in need of psychiatric counseling, she has failed to secure same.
7. The environment in which the children have been living is one characterized by violence and lack of proper supervision.
8. The Wilkes County Department of Social Services has utilized reasonable efforts to eliminate the need for placement of the children, including encouraging the parents to maintain a clean home, securing mental health assistance for the parents, finding a safe environment for the children.

The district court also found that the family had a history of domestic violence, including threats to harm the children, and that the children were filthy and living in extremely dirty conditions. Based on these findings the district court adjudicated the children *563 neglected as defined by N.C. Gen.Stat. § 7B-101(15). According to the record, the district court "entered"[1] the order in open court on the "2nd day of June, 2002"; however, the hearing was on the 3rd of June. Also, the order was signed "this 12 day of September, 2003, nunc pro tunc, June 2, 2002," and filed on 16 September 2003.

On 10 February 2003, the district court conducted a permanency planning hearing. It found that the children would best be served by a permanent plan of adoption and ordered the Wilkes County Department of Social Services (DSS) to cease reunification efforts.[2] The district court also ordered that:

[w]ithin sixty (60) days from the date of this Order, the Wilkes County Department of Social Services shall institute a termination of parental rights action with regard to the parents and shall pursue the completion of such termination of parental rights proceeding. If such termination of parental rights proceeding results in the termination of the children's parents' rights, the Department of Social Services shall then pursue adoption of the children.

The district court's order was "entered" in open court on 10 February, signed the 20th day of February, and filed the next day.

Notably though, DSS failed to initiate a termination of parental rights proceeding within sixty days. In fact, on 18 August 2003, the district court, during a mandated review hearing, again directed DSS to file the petition.

The Court has heretofore approved a permanent plan of adoption for the children, and has directed that [DSS] institute a termination of parental rights proceeding in order to help accomplish the plan of adoption. For reasons unexplained, this has not yet been done. The Court admonished the attorney for [DSS] to make haste in following through with the prior direction of the Court.

Although finding no reason for the delay in institution of termination proceedings, the district court gave DSS an additional ten days "from the filing of this Order" to comply. The order was filed on 5 September 2003. On 29 September 2003, twenty-four days after the second district court's order and over seven months after the first order, DSS filed a petition for termination of parental rights. Respondent argues that the five-month delay by DSS in filing for termination of parental rights prejudiced her case and is therefore reversible error. We disagree.

The statutory time limitation at issue here is N.C. Gen.Stat. § 7B-907(e) (2003), which mandates that DSS "file a petition to terminate parental rights within 60 calendar days from the date of the permanency planning hearing" if termination is "necessary in order to perfect the permanent plan for the juvenile[.]" Id. The General Assembly has placed this burden on DSS "unless the court makes written findings why the petition cannot be filed within 60 days," in which case DSS would comply with the time frame mandated by the district court.[3]Id.

The permanency planning hearing here, in which adoption was identified as the permanent plan, occurred on 10 February 2003. According to the statute then, DSS should have filed its petition to terminate respondent's *564 parental rights on or before 10 April 2003. But DSS did not file the necessary petition until 29 September 2003. Thus, DSS violated the statutory framework which required it to file a petition for termination of respondent's parental rights within sixty days of the permanency planning hearing. Moreover, DSS violated the district court's order demanding the same conduct of them. Then, after admonishment from the district court and a new deadline set, DSS still failed to comply, violating a second order of the court. These violations are clear error and we must now assess whether prejudice has been shown to the parties.

Whether a party has adequately shown prejudice is always resolved on a case-by-case basis; however, determining prejudice is not a rubric by which this Court vacates or reverses an order when, in our opinion, the order is not in the child's best interest. Nor is prejudice, if clearly shown by a party, something to ignore solely because the remedy of reversal further exacerbates the delay. If we were to operate as such, we would either reduce the General Assembly's time lines to a nullity, see In re L.E.B., 169 N.C.App. 375, 382, 610 S.E.2d 424, 428 (Timmons-Goodson, J., concurring) (stressing that reversal was necessary to restore the effectiveness of the General Assembly's mandates), disc. review denied, 359 N.C. 632, 616 S.E.2d 538 (2005); or worse, escalate violations of them beyond the reason for their existence: the best interests of the child. See N.C. Gen.Stat. § 7B-100; In re R.T.W., 359 N.C. 539, 547, 614 S.E.2d 489, 494 (2005) (protracted custody proceedings leaving the relationship of the Zchild and parent unresolved "thwart the legislature's wish that children be placed `in . . . safe, permanent home[s] within a reasonable amount of time.'") (quoting N.C. Gen.Stat. § 7B-100(5) (2003)); In re D.J.D., ___ N.C.App. ___, ___, 615 S.E.2d 26, 35 (2005) ("We reiterate that the best interests of the children are the paramount concern, . . . and they are at issue here, not respondent's hopes for the future.") (internal citations and quotations omitted).

In In re C.J.B., ___ N.C.App. ___, 614 S.E.2d 368 (2005), this Court clarified a growing number of cases dealing with prejudice arising from the district court's delay in filing the order terminating parental rights. There we reaffirmed our prior holdings that any violation of the statutory time lines was not reversible error per se,

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Bluebook (online)
619 S.E.2d 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-alg-ncctapp-2005.