In Re David H.

2009 ME 131, 985 A.2d 490, 2009 Me. LEXIS 137, 2009 WL 5103119
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 29, 2009
DocketDocket: Wal-09-300
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2009 ME 131 (In Re David H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re David H., 2009 ME 131, 985 A.2d 490, 2009 Me. LEXIS 137, 2009 WL 5103119 (Me. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

[¶ 1] Last year, this matter was before us on appeal from a judgment entered in the District Court (Belfast, Nivison, J.) terminating the mother’s and father’s parental rights to the child, David H. Following the appeal by both the mother and the *492 father, 1 we affirmed the termination of parental rights judgment, see In re David, H., Mem-08-127 (July 8, 2008), ending an extensively litigated three-year process that had commenced when the Department of Health and Human Services (the Department) filed a petition for a child protection order in October 2005.

[¶ 2] Approximately four months after we affirmed the termination judgment, the mother and father filed a joint motion in the District Court seeking to reopen or collaterally attack the termination judgment. At about the same time, the first cousin of the father and the cousin’s spouse (the cousin couple), and a couple not related to the parties (the unrelated couple) who allege they wish to adopt the child, filed a series of motions seeking to: (1) gain intervener or interested-person status in the child protection proceeding; (2) secure a kinship placement of the child; (3) stay or delay proceedings for judicial review and permanency placement of the child; and (4) enjoin or prevent completion of an on-going adoption proceeding.

[¶ 3] After a hearing that was followed by extensive evidentiary submissions by the parties, the court (Field, /.), by a careful and well-reasoned opinion, denied or dismissed all of the pending motions. The court also dismissed the child protection proceeding upon representation by the Department that adoption of the child had been completed.

[¶ 4] The mother and father, the cousin couple, and the unrelated couple all appeal from the District Court’s judgment and certain orders. They assert a variety of issues on appeal, most related to claims that new evidence or new legal arguments have been discovered since the close of the record in the termination proceeding that should have caused the trial court to reopen the termination proceeding. Because the record demonstrates conclusively that all of the facts or issues argued by the appellants were known and could, with due diligence, have been presented in the termination proceeding, and because the appellants’ other claims asserting that the trial court’s actions were an error of law or an abuse of discretion are without merit, we affirm the judgment and orders of the District Court.

I. CASE HISTORY

[¶ 5] Review of the record indicates the following facts relevant to the issues on this appeal. The marriage of the mother and the father was severely afflicted by domestic violence perpetrated by the father against the mother. The child, now ten years old, was adopted into this marriage as a young child.

[¶ 6] The child regularly witnessed domestic violence. The father admitted that he physically abused the mother in front of the child. Among the incidents the child reported was one when a physical assault left his mother bloodied and another when his father put his mother into a dumpster. The child was also a direct victim of physical violence. In one instance, his father struck him. In another instance, his father put the child in a cold shower with his clothes on after the child had wet his pants.

*493 A. The Child Protection Proceeding

[¶ 7] The Department filed a petition for a child protection order on October 3, 2005, alleging that the child was in jeopardy due to the father’s abusive behavior and the mother’s failure to protect the child from abuse. Initially the Department allowed the child to remain in his mother’s custody, with a requirement that the father be out of the home and have no contact with the child.

[¶ 8] The court (Nivison, C.J.) held a jeopardy hearing on January 24, 2006. With agreement of the mother and the father, the court entered a jeopardy order finding jeopardy as to the mother and father. The order states, “At the outset, the parties represented to this [c]ourt that they were in agreement as to findings and disposition in this matter.” The court found that the child had witnessed domestic violence between the mother and father, constituting emotional abuse to the child; that the mother had been unable to protect the child from jeopardy; and that she was unlikely to be able to protect him from jeopardy posed by the father without continued mental health treatment and other supports. The child remained in the mother’s custody, with the father to have no unsupervised contact with the child.

[¶ 9] The mother, while acknowledging the need for mental health treatment, made no suggestion that she was incompetent to participate in the proceeding or incompetent to care for her child. Further, the record at this point, viewed objectively, does not suggest any issue regarding the mother’s competence to participate in the proceedings. For the trial court, the case would have appeared similar to other child protective matters involving a mother who was a victim of domestic violence who was experiencing difficulty in separating herself from the domestic violence perpetrator and in protecting her child from observing and being victimized by domestic violence.

[¶ 10] The record suggests that in early 2006, there were outstanding orders prohibiting the father from having contact with the child or contact with the mother in: (1) the pending child protective proceeding; (2) a protection from abuse proceeding; and (3) a bail order in a criminal proceeding. Despite these orders, the mother continued to contact and allow the child to have unsupervised contact with the father. In one instance, the mother took the child to Great. Neck, New York, met the father, and enrolled the child in school in New York for the apparent purpose of removing him from Maine jurisdiction.

[¶ 11] Following these incidents, the Department requested and was granted an order for preliminary child protection, removing the child from his mother’s custody. The mother, in the presence of her attorney, consented to this order and waived a summary preliminary hearing. A review hearing was held in April 2006. The father was incarcerated in New York State at that time, but he was represented by counsel at the review hearing. The court (Anderson, J.) reaffirmed the Department’s custody of the child in a detailed order. However, even with this history, the Department continued its efforts to maintain the mother-child relationship. To this end, the Department began a trial placement of the child with the mother in August 2006.

[¶ 12] Another review hearing was held on October 12, 2006. After that hearing, the court (Nivison, C.J.) entered a judicial review order directing the parties to establish therapeutic supervised, contact between the father and the child. However, the mother continued her past practice of allowing unsupervised contact with the father in violation of court orders. This pattern continued despite several more *494 court hearings and permanency plans entered by the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 ME 131, 985 A.2d 490, 2009 Me. LEXIS 137, 2009 WL 5103119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-david-h-me-2009.