In Re An. C.

722 A.2d 36, 1998 WL 904742
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1998
Docket96-FS-1195, 96-FS-1196, 96-FS-1258
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 722 A.2d 36 (In Re An. 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 An. C., 722 A.2d 36, 1998 WL 904742 (D.C. 1998).

Opinion

SCHWELB, Associate Judge:

On August 8, 1996, following a contested fact-finding hearing, the TPR judge 1 issued an order terminating the parental rights (TPR) of the father (S.W.) and the mother (AC.) with respect to their three minor children, respondents Sh.C (born April 23, 1988), St.C., Jr. (born February 23, 1991) and An.C. (born February 23, 1992). On appeal, the father contends that the TPR petition was prematurely filed and that the trial judge gave inadequate consideration to an alternative placement proposed by the father. We affirm.

I.

On August 10, 1993, a fact-finding hearing was held before the neglect judge on a petition by the Office of Corporation Counsel alleging that both parents had neglected the three respondents. At the conclusion of the hearing, the judge orally found that each respondent was a neglected child. Entries to that effect were made on each respondent’s jacket. On October 4, 1993, the neglect judge entered written disposition orders reflecting that each child “has been found to have been neglected and in need of protection pursuant to D.C.Code § 16-2301(9)(B), (C) and (F),” and committed the children to the Department of Human Resources. The neglect judge did not, however, enter his written Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order finding the children to be neglected, until July 25, 1996, three days after the TPR judge had held a hearing on the motion of the children’s guardian ad li-tem (GAL) to terminate the parental rights of both parents.

*38 The GAL’s TPR motion was filed on December 1, 1995. The District’s TPR statute provides, with exceptions not here applicable, that such a motion “may be filed only when the child who is the subject of the motion has been adjudicated neglected at least six months _” D.C.Code § 16-2354(b) (1997). The father now contends that the GAL’s petition was premature. The father relies on Super. Ct. Neg. R. 16(b) (1998), which provides in pertinent part that “[a] finding of neglect shall be supported by a preponderance of the evidence, and shall be accompanied by a written statement of the specific facts on which the finding is based .... ” The father points out that the neglect judge’s written findings were not entered until seven months after the TPR motion was filed. He claims that the children therefore were not “adjudicated neglected” within the meaning of § 16-2354(b) until the neglect judge’s written findings were entered, and that the TPR motion could not properly be filed until January 25, 1997, six months after the entry of these written findings.

The TPR judge rejected the father’s contention, both as a matter of construction of the applicable statute and Rule, 2 and because the parents had failed to raise the issue in timely fashion. 3 The judge concluded that

the parents’ current contention is unfounded and, in any event, has been waived by their previous acquiescence. Moreover, the children’s need for stability and permanency should not be delayed because of the court’s delay in complying with a rule where no one was prejudiced.

We agree with the judge’s analysis. The adjudication of neglect in these cases occurred in August 1993, when the first trial judge’s oral findings were entered on the jacket, and not in 1996, when the judge formally issued his written findings of fact. The parents’ objection to the lack of any written findings was not raised at the appropriate stage of the proceedings, and the defect could readily have been cured if a timely objection had been made. See, e.g., Miller v. Avirom, 127 U.S.App. D.C. 367, 369-70, 384 F.2d 319, 321-22 (1967) (contentions not timely raised in the trial court are normally spurned on appeal).

II.

This case began in 1992, after two citizens acting as “good Samaritans” reported that the parents, both of whom were abusing unlawful drugs, were repeatedly engaged in panhandling on the street. The children, the youngest of whom was only a few months old, were with the parents. The neglect judge subsequently found that the children were “filthy, unwashed, malodorous, and ravenously hungry.” The judge concluded that “[t]he children were deprived of food, clothing, shelter, and emotional security and stability not due to lack of financial resources.”

In November 1992, the two girls, Sh.C. and An.C., were placed in the home of their foster mother, S.H., a licensed day care provider. The boy, St.C., Jr., was placed in the same home in January 1993. The ages of the respondents at the time that they began to live with the foster mother were as follows:

*39 Sh.C. four years, seven months
An.C. nine months
St.C., Jr. two years

Each respondent has now resided in the foster mother’s home for approximately six years. The younger children have no recollection of living with anyone other than S.H. The older girl, who has lived more than half of her life with the foster mother, regards S.H. as her mother. She recalls the time before S.H. as a “bad time.”

After the children were removed from the custody of the parents, neither the father nor mother took any appreciable interest in them. There has been very little visitation. The father and the mother were offered parenting classes and other services, but each parent failed to follow through. In her order terminating parental rights, the TPR judge found:

These children need a timely integration into a stable and permanent home. Neither parent is able to provide a stable home at this time. [The father] is serving five years’ incarceration on a robbery conviction and does not expect to be eligible for parole for at least two years. [The mother], although in the community, has made no effort to achieve reunification with her children. From 1993 to 1995, while the children were becoming bonded with their foster mother, neither parent had any alternative plan for care of the children.

The foster mother has expressed an interest in adopting the three respondents, and she wishes to make her home a permanent home for them. 4 The children are now firmly bonded with her and well cared for in her home. At the TPR hearing, the GAL presented the expert testimony of a clinical psychologist, who opined that separation of the children from the foster mother would be detrimental to the children “because of the very strong bond the respondents have with [her] and the absence of close attachment to any relative.”

After a painstaking analysis of the record in terms of each of the relevant criteria set forth in our TPR statute, 5

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722 A.2d 36, 1998 WL 904742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-an-c-dc-1998.