In Re BB

2006 MT 66, 133 P.3d 215, 331 Mont. 407
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 2006
Docket05-249
StatusPublished

This text of 2006 MT 66 (In Re BB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re BB, 2006 MT 66, 133 P.3d 215, 331 Mont. 407 (Mo. 2006).

Opinion

133 P.3d 215 (2006)
2006 MT 66
331 Mont. 407

In the Matter of B.B. and J.B., Youths in Need of Care.

No. 05-249.

Supreme Court of Montana.

Submitted on Briefs October 19, 2005.
Decided April 11, 2006.

*216 For Appellants: Amy N. Guth, Attorney at Law, Libby, Montana (Mother), Ann C. German, Attorney at Law, Libby, Montana (Father).

For Respondent: Honorable Mike McGrath, Attorney General; Joslyn M. Hunt, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana, Bernard G. Cassidy, County Attorney; James D. Reintsma, Deputy County Attorney, Libby, Montana, Scott B. Spencer, Attorney at Law, Libby, Montana (Guardian ad Litem).

Justice JIM RICE delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 Appellants J.B. and B.B., parents of j.b. and b.b., youths in need of care, appeal from the order of the Nineteenth Judicial District Court terminating their parental rights. Appellants argue procedural errors deprived them of due process. We affirm.

¶ 2 We consider the following issues on appeal:

¶ 3(1) Did J.B. and B.B., by stipulation, relieve the District Court of the need to hold a separate dispositional hearing pursuant to § 41-3-438, MCA?

¶ 4(2) Does the District Court's failure to hold a permanency plan hearing pursuant to § 41-3-445, MCA, require reversal of the order terminating J.B.'s and B.B.'s parental rights?

¶ 5(3) Did the District Court err in finding that J.B. suffers from a conduct or condition that renders her unfit to parent that is unlikely to change within a reasonable time pursuant to § 41-3-609, MCA?

BACKGROUND

¶ 6 After a series of illegal drug and assault incidents involving J.B. and B.B. in 2002, Deputy County Attorney Robert Slomski, on behalf of the Department of Public Health and Human Services (Department), petitioned the District Court for Emergency Protective Services and Temporary Investigative Authority to protect J.B. and B.B.'s two young children, j.b. and b.b.[1] The District Court granted the petition on January 10, 2003, set a date for a show-cause hearing, and further granted the Department authority to remove the children from J.B. and B.B.'s (Appellants) home. The Department thereafter took custody of the children, and placed them in the care of their grandmother.

¶ 7 On April 17, 2003, after J.B. failed to complete her court-ordered drug treatment plan, and upon social worker Marquita Peterson's (Peterson) determination that B.B. was unable to appropriately care for the children, the Department petitioned the District Court to have b.b. and j.b. adjudicated youths in need of care under § 41-3-437, MCA (2001). The District Court held a hearing on the petition on April 28, 2003, in which the following discussion took place:

THE COURT: And the Petition requests me to adjudicate your children as youths in need of care and to award temporary legal custody to the Department. And is that something that the two of you oppose?
[B.B.]: In part, Your Honor. . . . Marquita has mentioned on numerous occasions that within 30 days we would have our children back after today. If that's the case we do not oppose this. You know, as far as if [J.B.] and myself follow the guidelines that you have set forth in the Petition, the Treatment Plan.
*217 . . . .
MR. CASSIDY [Deputy County Attorney]: Your Honor, if the parents aren't objecting to the Court finding the youths as youths in need of care and signing a treatment plan, I think if we were to have Ms. Peterson testify to some of the history and where we are at with this case, then that would suffice as an adjudicatory hearing.
THE COURT: All right.

After the hearing, each parent signed a treatment plan and undertook to complete the tasks set forth therein. Furthermore, the District Court issued an order adjudicating j.b. and b.b. youths in need of care.

¶ 8 After the parents showed improvement, the Department returned j.b. and b.b. to their care on June 11, 2003. However, approximately three and a half months later, the Department learned of continued drug use on the part of both J.B. and B.B. As a result, the Department immediately removed the children from Appellants' care for the second time and moved the District Court for an extension of its temporary legal custody of j.b. and b.b. A hearing regarding that motion was held on October 27, 2003.

¶ 9 At the October 27, 2003 hearing, Marquita Peterson expressed her desire to give J.B. and B.B. another opportunity to successfully complete treatment, and therefore recommended only an extension of temporary legal custody. Though the county attorney ultimately acquiesced in that course of action, he expressed concern at the hearing, questioning whether the continued drug use and failed treatment plans did not instead warrant a proceeding to terminate parental rights. Despite the county attorney's concern, and given that J.B. and B.B. did not object to the motion to extend temporary legal custody, the court granted the motion to extend temporary legal custody on November 3, 2003. However, at the close of the October 27, 2003 hearing, the District Court cautioned J.B. and B.B. that their continued failure to complete treatment would have consequences:

THE COURT: . . . But I just want you [J.B. and B.B.] to be aware the reason we are appointing an attorney for you at this time is we are coming to an end of that period where we are going to keep giving you another six months, and another six months, and another six months. And so you need to be aware that when we come back to Court in six months, I'm either going to get a report from Ms. Peterson that says, boy, these parents have shaped up . . . [o]r she's going to tell me these people messed up again, and it is time to bring some permanency in these children's lives, and we need to talk about terminating parental rights. That is what is at stake here. Do both of you understand that? [B.B.]?
[B.B.]: Yes, I do, Your Honor.
THE COURT: And [J.B.]?
[J.B.]: Yes.
. . . .
THE COURT: All right. Well, I want you to succeed and Ms. Peterson wants you to succeed. But understand I'm not going to have your children hanging out there in limbo forever until you people get your act together. I mean you've had enough time and now's the time to put your money where your mouth is. . . . [G]ood luck to both of you.

¶ 10 Following the October 27, 2003, hearing and subsequent order, J.B. and B.B. again showed improvement and the Department returned the children to Appellants on January 15, 2004. However, as had happened previously, both parents began using illegal drugs again, and that, coupled with B.B.'s incarceration for a parole violation, required the Department to retake custody of j.b. and b.b. The children were removed from Appellants' residence on March 26, 2004.

¶ 11 After retaking the children, the Department again moved to extend temporary legal custody on April 7, 2004. Despite what the court had said at the October 2003 hearing about it being the Appellants' last chance, it again acquiesced, and granted the motion to extend temporary legal custody for a third time on April 29, 2004. The Department had not moved to terminate parental rights.

¶ 12 Because J.B. again showed signs of improvement, the Department returned j.b. and b.b. to J.B.'s care on May 1, 2004. Unfortunately, *218

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 MT 66, 133 P.3d 215, 331 Mont. 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bb-mont-2006.