In Re Bradshaw

587 S.E.2d 83, 160 N.C. App. 677, 2003 N.C. App. LEXIS 1910, 2003 WL 22387041
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 21, 2003
DocketCOA02-1325
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 587 S.E.2d 83 (In Re Bradshaw) 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 Bradshaw, 587 S.E.2d 83, 160 N.C. App. 677, 2003 N.C. App. LEXIS 1910, 2003 WL 22387041 (N.C. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

BRYANT, Judge.

Kevin Andre Rankin (respondent) appeals an “order as to grounds for termination .of parental rights” and an “order for the termination of parental rights” dated 8 May 2000 terminating respondent’s parental rights to his now five-year-old son (the minor child).

On 27 September 1999, Amy Lynne Bradshaw (petitioner), the mother of the minor child, petitioned the district court to terminate respondent’s parental rights based on N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-llll(a)(l) (neglect), § 7B-llll(a)(6) (incapability to provide proper care and supervision due to substance abuse),- and § 7B-llll(a)(7) (willful abandonment). An adjudication and dispositional hearing was scheduled for 27 and 28 March 2000, at which petitioner, her mother, and respondent testified. Certain words during their testimony are not recorded in the transcript of the hearing because they were inaudible. In addition, respondent’s March 27 testimony is missing completely from the transcript, as the tape that was supposed to record the afternoon session of the hearing was apparently not turned on, and only his March 28 testimony is available for review.

The trial court entered an “order as to grounds for termination of parental rights” finding in pertinent part: 1

3. The minor child was born in Salisbury, Rowan County, North Carolina, and his date of birth is May 6, 1998.
4. . . . [Respondent is currently incarcerated in the Department of Corrections at Mountain View Correctional Facility, where he is serving a sentence as a[] Habitual Felon[] of not less than eighty months, and not more than one hundred [and] five months. . . . [Respondent's earliest release date is March 2004.
*679 5. . . . [Respondent is employed on the maintenance crew at Mountain View Correctional Institute, where he works five days per week, and he is paid money as a result of this job. . . . [Respondent has at his disposal income in the amount of $5.00 per week.
7. . . . [R]espondent testified that he has failed to provide any financial aide [sic], at any time to . . . petitioner, for the use, benefit, and support of [the minor child] since the birth of the minor child.
8. . . . [R]espondent testified that he is using the income he receives as a result of working inside the prison system for his own personal cosmetics and his day[-]to[-]day toiletries.
9. ... [Respondent acknowledged, by way of his testimony, that he has seen the minor child . . . [on] no more than six occasions, and at all times while . . . respondent was in the Rowan County Detention Center awaiting trial for the charges for which he is currently serving time. . . . [R]espondent has been in the Department of Corrections serving time on his current sentence[] since March 1998.
14. ... [Respondent admitted that he has been addicted to drugs.
16. . . . [Respondent has largely been unemployed for the two years prior to his incarceration, except for two weeks when he worked for a temporary agency in 1997.
17. . . . [R]espondent has a history of assaulting . . . petitioner prior to and during her pregnancy.
25. ... [R]espondent testified that [in] approximately September 1999, he called . . . petitioner by telephone, and during that telephone call, he asked about the minor child ....
26. ... [R]espondent admits that the last letter he sent to ... petitioner was in 1998. Correspondence received by . . . petitioner from . . . respondent after his incarceration focused on the rela *680 tionship between . . . petitioner and . . . respondent] and did not address issues concerning the minor child. In addition to the correspondence concerning the parties’ relationship, the letters may have included drawings of Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse, which . . . respondent indicates were for the sole purpose of entertaining the minor child.
27. The [trial] court could not find as a fact when . .. respondent sent the last correspondence to . . . petitioner, in that[] respondent did not recall. All the believable evidence was that the correspondence was infrequent.
28. . . . [T]he family of . . . respondent has not contacted . . . petitioner to inquire about the minor child . . . although . . . respondent has a number of family members that reside in Salisbury.. . .
29. Acknowledging that . . . respondent has been incarcerated continually since the minor child’s birth, nevertheless, the [trial] court finds that. .. respondent has willfully conducted himself in a way that indicated a desire to relinquish his rights [to] the minor child....
30. ... [Respondent has withheld his care, love and affection to the minor child, and his failure to provide care, love and affection to the minor child has been willful.

Based on these findings, the trial court concluded that grounds for termination of parental rights existed under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-llll(a)(l) (neglect) and (7) (willful abandonment). Further concluding that it was in the minor child’s best interest, the trial court, through its “order for the termination of parental rights,” thereafter terminated respondent’s parental rights.

The issues are whether: (I) respondent was prejudiced, for purposes of receiving meaningful appellate review, by the inadequate recording of the proceedings and (II) the trial court’s findings support its conclusion of neglect and willful abandonment.

I

Respondent argues that the missing testimony in the transcript prejudiced him in that it foreclosed meaningful appellate review in this case and therefore warrants remand for a new hearing. We disagree.

*681 As this Court has recently held:

N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-806 requires that all juvenile “adjudicatory and dispositional hearings shall be recorded by stenographic notes or by electronic or mechanical means.” Mere failure to comply with this statute standing alone is, however, not by itself grounds for a new hearing. A party, in order to prevail on an assignment of error under section 7B-806, must also demonstrate that the failure to record the evidence resulted in prejudice to that party.
Furthermore, the use of general allegations is insufficient to show reversible error resulting from the loss of specific portions of testimony caused by gaps in recording. Where a verbatim transcript of the proceedings is unavailable, there are “means . . . available for [a party] to compile a narration of the evidence, i.e., reconstructing the testimony with the assistance of those persons present at the hearing.” If an opposing party contended “the record on appeal was inaccurate in any respect, the matter could be resolved by the trial judge in settling the record on appeal.”

In re Clark, 159 N.C. App. 75, 80,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
587 S.E.2d 83, 160 N.C. App. 677, 2003 N.C. App. LEXIS 1910, 2003 WL 22387041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bradshaw-ncctapp-2003.