In Re farris/white Minors

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 2022
Docket357743
StatusPublished

This text of In Re farris/white Minors (In Re farris/white Minors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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 farris/white Minors, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

FOR PUBLICATION In re FARRIS/WHITE, Minors. February 24, 2022 9:00 a.m.

No. 357743 Wayne Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 2020-000837-NA

Before: BOONSTRA, P.J., and RONAYNE KRAUSE and CAMERON, JJ.

CAMERON, J.

Respondent appeals the trial court’s order terminating his parental rights to his minor children AF, MW, and SW under MCL 712A.19b(3)(b)(i) (parent’s act caused physical injury or physical or sexual abuse), (j) (reasonable likelihood the child will be harmed if returned to parent), (k)(ii) (criminal sexual conduct involving penetration, attempted penetration, or assault with intent to penetrate), and (k)(ix) (sexual abuse of a child or the child’s sibling). For the reasons discussed below, we dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.

I. BACKGROUND

This matter arises from the termination of respondent’s parental rights to the three minor children that he shared with Portia Lynn Mobley. On August 28, 2020, petitioner filed a petition with respect to AF, MW, and SW, as well as Mobley’s three other minor children. The petition alleged that respondent had failed to protect his children from Mobley’s known substance-abuse issues, had failed to remove his children from “deplorable home conditions,” and was unable to provide adequate care to his children due to his own substance abuse. Petitioner requested that the trial court place all the children in foster care and exercise jurisdiction.

Respondent did not participate in a preliminary hearing that was held via videoconferencing technology. The Child Protective Services (CPS) investigator testified that she had been unable to contact respondent at his last known address, which appeared to be vacant, or at Mobley’s home, which was where respondent often watched the children. The CPS investigator believed that respondent lived with Mobley, which Mobley denied. After hearing testimony, the trial court authorized the petition and the children were placed in foster care. Respondent did not

-1- participate in the two pretrial hearings that followed; his first appearance was at the adjudication trial on January 22, 2021, via videoconferencing technology. Respondent acknowledged that he knew what was “going on” because he had been with Mobley, but could not be “in the camera” when she participated in the previous hearings. Respondent’s attorney requested a trial, and respondent’s adjudication trial was scheduled for March 8, 2021.1

Before trial, petitioner filed an amended petition which alleged that respondent had sexually abused AM and PM, two of Mobley’s children who are unrelated to respondent.2 Petitioner requested termination of respondent’s parental rights to AF, MW, and SW. Respondent did not appear for the scheduled March 8, 2021 adjudication trial, which was later adjourned, and did not participate in any subsequent court proceedings. Respondent also did not respond to his attorney’s attempts to contact him, and the caseworker was unable to locate him.3 Respondent failed to appear at the combined adjudication and dispositional hearing despite the trial court sending respondent a summons via certified mail. After the close of proofs, the referee recommended that the trial court exercise jurisdiction with respect to respondent, find that statutory grounds existed to support termination of respondent’s parental rights, and find that termination was in AF, MW, and SW’s best interests. The trial court thereafter entered an order in accordance with the referee’s recommendations. This appeal followed.

II. ANALYSIS

The argument on appeal is that termination of respondent’s parental rights was improper because the workers failed to make “any type of real effort or even a reasonable effort to contact” respondent and locate him. However, it is first necessary to address a jurisdictional matter. Although this Court’s jurisdiction has not been challenged, “[a] court is, at all times, required to question sua sponte its own jurisdiction.” Tyrrell v Univ of Mich, 335 Mich App 254, 260; 966 NW2d 219 (2020). “Whether this Court has jurisdiction to hear an appeal is a question of law reviewed de novo.” Id. at 260-261.

MCR 7.203(A)(2) provides that this Court “has jurisdiction of an appeal of right filed by an aggrieved party from” “[a] judgment or order of a court or tribunal from which appeal of right to the Court of Appeals has been established by law or court rule.” (Emphasis added.)

1 Following the January 2021 trial, the trial court exercised jurisdiction with respect to Mobley and ordered her to participate in services. At the time respondent’s parental rights were terminated, Mobley was still working toward reunification with the children. 2 AM submitted to a forensic interview during the proceeding, and the interview was recorded. The video of AM’s disclosures was admitted into evidence. 3 The caseworker testified that she had sent certified letters to respondent, that she had attempted to get updated contact information from Mobley, that she had conducted a “true person search,” that she had conducted other “online searches,” and that she had ensured that respondent was not incarcerated in Michigan. See Michigan Absent Parent Protocol: Identifying, Locating, and Notifying Absent Parents in Child Protective Proceedings (2018), § C(3), p 7. The caseworker also testified that she had called every known phone number that was associated with respondent. See id.

-2- MCR 3.993(A)(4) identifies “an order terminating parental rights” as an order that is appealable to this Court by right, and MCR 7.202(4) defines “filing” as “the delivery of a document to a court clerk and the receipt and acceptance of the document by the clerk with the intent to enter it in the record of the court.”

“[A]n appeal as of right in any civil case must be taken within 21 days,” and “[t]he period runs from the entry of:”

(a) the judgment or order appealed from;

(b) an order appointing counsel;

(c) an order denying a request for appointment of counsel in a civil case in which an indigent party is entitled to appointed counsel, if the trial court received the request within the initial 21-day appeal period;

(d) an order deciding a post-judgment motion for new trial, rehearing, reconsideration, or other relief from the order or judgment appealed, if the motion was filed within the initial 21-day appeal period or within any further time that the trial court has allowed for good cause during that 21-day period. [MCR 7.204(A)(1) (emphasis added).]

In child protective proceedings, “an indigent respondent is entitled to appointment of an attorney to represent the respondent on appeal” “[i]n any appeal as of right[.]” MCR 3.993(A). “A request for appointment of appellate counsel must be made within 14 days after notice of the order is given[.]” MCR 3.993(D)(1). If the request “is timely filed and the court finds that the respondent is financially unable to provide an attorney, the court shall appoint an attorney within 14 days after the respondent’s request is filed.” MCR 3.993(D)(2). The order of appointment “must be entered on a form approved by the State Court Administrator’s Office, entitled ‘Claim of Appeal and Order Appointing Counsel[.]’ ” MCR 3.993(D)(3). The trial court must submit this order to this Court. MCR 3.993(D)(3). “Entry of the order by the trial court . . . constitutes a timely filed claim of appeal for the purposes of MCR 7.204.” MCR 3.993(D)(3).

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In Re farris/white Minors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-farriswhite-minors-michctapp-2022.