In re G. F.

455 A.2d 805, 142 Vt. 273, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 640
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 30, 1982
DocketNo. 82-051
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 455 A.2d 805 (In re G. F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re G. F., 455 A.2d 805, 142 Vt. 273, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 640 (Vt. 1982).

Opinion

Underwood, J.

The Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS) appeals an order of the juvenile court which placed the juvenile, G. F., under SRS’s protective supervision, ordered that he be placed in a specific foster home, and required SRS to pay for his care at that home.

The juvenile, now age 15, was originally adjudicated a child in need of supervision (CHINS) by a disposition order of the Lamoille juvenile court dated December 13, 1974. Legal custody of G. F. was given to SRS “until further order of court but not beyond majority of child.” In 1981, after seven years in SRS’s custody, he asked to be allowed to live with his natural mother, and they were reunited. The arrangement was not a happy one, and in October of that same year his mother, who was unable to control him, asked SRS to remove him from her home. SRS complied with her request and placed him first with an older sister, and afterwards with another family, which he left without SRS’s approval and returned to his mother who was then living in Bristol, Vermont. Sometime later she abandoned her apartment, leaving him behind in it. On December 1, 1981, a Bristol police officer heard glass breaking in that apartment. Investigation revealed a very [276]*276intoxicated G. F. and a much older companion vandalizing his mother’s vacated apartment and throwing the furniture, and anything else that would fit, out of the window overlooking the main street below.

At the request of the Bristol Police Department the state’s attorney for Addison County brought a petition to the Addison juvenile court to have G. F. determined to be a delinquent child. On December 14, 1981, the Addison juvenile court determined that G. F. was a delinquent child and ordered that he be detained in temporary custody of SRS pending a disposition hearing. At the January 11, 1982, disposition hearing, SRS recommended to the court that custody of G. F. be transferred from it to the Commissioner of Corrections. Further, it evidenced an intent, as a future delegatee of the Commissioner of Corrections, to remove G. F. from the foster home where he had been placed temporarily, and where it conceded he was getting along well, to the Benson Wilderness Camp for at least five months as a disciplinary measure. The foster parents urged the court to leave G. F. with them, and stated that because of their interest in the boy, they wanted him even if SRS carried out its threats to withhold payment to them for their services. The court said it did not want to discipline the boy but wanted to give him another chance. As the following discussion indicates, the trial court believed G. F. would be better served by staying at the foster home, but wanted to insure that the foster parents would be reimbursed by SRS.

State’s Attorney: The [foster parents] have testified that you warned them that if they received placement directly from this Court as opposed to the placement with SRS, that SRS would not be paying them as a foster home?
SRS Representative: That is correct. The reason for that being his custody would be remanded to the [foster parents] rather than SRS.
The Court: What if the Court places custody in [277]*277SRS with the provision that he be placed at the [foster home] ?
SRS Representative: Your Honor, I am not sure that that can be legally done. Once the custody of the child is placed with SRS, the SRS I believe, has full say to where he is placed.
The Court: There are ways of getting around that.
SRS Representative: I am sure there are, your Honor.

Following the disposition hearing the court ordered G. F. to be

placed under the protective supervision of SRS for placement in [the foster home]. It is further ordered that amount of restitution be determined by SRS and juvenile shall pay one-half of the amount, paying through juvenile services officer. It is also ordered that SRS shall reimburse the foster home for juvenile’s care.

The above order was originally issued on a standard form entitled “Order of Disposition of a Child in Need of Care or Supervision.” SRS moved to modify the order or to alter judgment. Its motion pointed out that the juvenile court had used the wrong form, and argued strenuously that the order was beyond the court’s jurisdiction. SRS insisted the order exceeded the court’s jurisdiction because (1) SRS retained legal custody of the juvenile pursuant to the 1974 order adjudicating him a neglected child and transferring legal custody to SRS; (2) a legal custodian has “the right to have the physical possession of [the juvenile] and to determine where and with whom he shall live,” 33 V.S.A. § 632(a) (10); and (3), therefore the court had no power to override the judgment of the legal custodian.

The court reissued the order on the correct form, entitled “Amended Order of Disposition of a Delinquent Child” but denied SRS’s motion, standing on its previous order of disposition placing G. F. in the foster home under SRS’s protective supervision, and ordering SRS to reimburse the foster parents.

[278]*278SRS appeals this order and the denial of its motion, and repeats here the arguments made below, with the added admonition that the juvenile court also lacked jurisdiction to order it to pay for G. F.’s foster care.

SRS contends that it retains custody of G. F. by virtue of the 1974 order of the Lamoille juvenile court which adjudicated him a neglected child and transferred custody of him to SRS. In this regard, it points out that the juvenile court in the instant case did not transfer legal custody of G. F. to the Commissioner of Corrections as requested by SRS, but simply placed him under protective supervision of SRS. SRS argues that this being the case, its contention is mandated by 33 V.S.A. § 658 (a), which provides:

Unless otherwise specified therein an order under the authority of this chapter transferring legal custody, or guardianship over the person or residual parental rights and responsibilities of a child to an individual, agency, or institution shall be for an indeterminate period, ....

As G. F. correctly points out, however, the above-quoted statute does not end there in the middle of the sentence but continues, “and provided further that, every order transferring legal custody or guardianship over the person shall be reviewed two years from the date entered and each two years thereafter.” The statute thereby creates a contrast between orders transferring legal custody or guardianship, and those transferring residual parental rights and responsibilities. The former shall be reviewed at two-year intervals; no such review is required for the latter.

33 V.S.A. § 658(b) directs that the legal custodian “file a notice of biennial review with the court before whom such proceeding was held, the state's attorney having jurisdiction, and all parties to the proceeding, and, in addition, shall file with such court and such state’s attorney a report and recommendation.” But the same section of the statute goes on to state specifically that: “Failure to give such notice or to review an order shall not terminate the original order or limit the court’s jurisdiction.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Prior to 1982, 33 V.S.A. § 658 (c) further provided that any such party could request a hearing within 20 days of notice by the legal custodian.

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Bluebook (online)
455 A.2d 805, 142 Vt. 273, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-g-f-vt-1982.