In Re Interest of Jaden H.

625 N.W.2d 218, 10 Neb. Ct. App. 87, 2001 Neb. App. LEXIS 82
CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 2001
DocketA-00-831
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 625 N.W.2d 218 (In Re Interest of Jaden H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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 Interest of Jaden H., 625 N.W.2d 218, 10 Neb. Ct. App. 87, 2001 Neb. App. LEXIS 82 (Neb. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Sievers, Judge.

Darren H. appeals and Amanda T. cross-appeals a juvenile court’s decision to grant the State’s motion for partial summary judgment in the juvenile court action seeking termination of their parental rights to their son Jaden H. In an earlier appeal, we upheld the termination of Darren’s and Amanda’s parental rights to Jaden’s siblings, Destiny H. and Suede H. See In re Interest of Destiny H. & Suede H., No. A-99-444, 2000 WL 1005218 (Neb. App. July 18, 2000) (not designated for permanent publication). This appeal involves the use of summary judgment and collateral estoppel in a juvenile case, because the State used the prior factual determination that Destiny and Suede lacked proper parental care as the basis for termination of Darren’s and Amanda’s parental rights to Jaden.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Darren and Amanda have three children: Destiny, bom May 26, 1993, Suede, bom May 28, 1994, and Jaden, bom November 21, 1998. Destiny and Suede were adjudicated under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-247(3)(a) (Reissue 1998), as children lacking proper parental care, by the separate juvenile court of Douglas County in two March 30, 1999, orders. In those orders, Darren’s parental rights to Destiny and Suede were terminated under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-292(2) (Reissue 1998) (substantial, continuous, or repeated neglect), and Amanda’s parental rights to Destiny and Suede were terminated under § 43-292(2) and (9) (torture and chronic abuse).

For convenience, we shall hereafter generally reference this first case as the “Destiny and Suede proceeding.” On July 18, *89 2000, we affirmed the juvenile court’s March 30, 1999, orders. See In re Interest of Destiny H. & Suede H., supra. Our opinion recited the evidence of abuse of Suede, including multiple fractures and bruises in various stages of healing, swollen and blue feet and hands likely caused by direct or repeated blows, and malnourishment which stunted his growth. He was forced to stand in a closet as punishment and wore inappropriate clothing for weather conditions. There was testimony in that case from a psychologist that Destiny and Suede suffered from posttraumatic stress disorder resulting from the abuse occurring within the family.

The State filed a petition to adjudicate Jaden and terminate Darren’s and Amanda’s parental rights to him under § 43-292(2). Under § 43-292(2), parental rights can be terminated when parents have substantially and continuously or repeatedly neglected and refused to give necessary parental care and protection to a sibling of the child at issue. The State alleged that Darren and Amanda substantially and continuously or repeatedly neglected and refused to give necessary care and protection to Suede, that this conduct put Jaden at risk of harm, and that it was in Jaden’s best interests that Darren’s and Amanda’s parental rights be terminated. The factual allegations supporting termination were those facts concerning the abuse and neglect of Destiny and Suede which the juvenile court found to be true when it adjudicated Destiny and Suede and terminated Darren’s and Amanda’s parental rights to them.

On July 21, 2000, immediately after our affirmance in the Destiny and Suede proceeding, the State filed an amended motion for partial summary judgment in Jaden’s case. The State’s motion asserted that the allegations in the second amended petition regarding Jaden were substantially the same allegations made in the Destiny and Suede proceeding. Therefore, the State claimed that the factual findings in the Destiny and Suede proceeding were established facts in Jaden’s case and res judicata. The juvenile court held a hearing on July 25 on the motion for partial summary judgment. During that hearing, the court found that Darren and Amanda were both present when the Destiny and Suede proceeding was held; that Darren and Amanda fully participated in that proceeding with *90 counsel at every stage; that they are the parents of Destiny, Suede, and Jaden; and that the issues had been decided by the court in the Destiny and Suede proceeding, making them res judicata in the action to terminate parental rights to Jaden. The “partial” attribute of the summary judgment comes from the fact that the juvenile court did not decide whether Jaden was a child at risk of harm or that terminating parental rights to Jaden was in his best interests, expressly leaving those matters open for further litigation.

Darren and Amanda filed timely motions for new trial which asserted, among other things, that the order in the Destiny and Suede proceeding was not a final order for res judicata purposes because a mandate from this court had not been issued. Our opinion affirming the lower court’s decision in the Destiny and Suede proceeding was issued a week before the juvenile court entered partial summary judgment in Jaden’s case.

Darren filed a petition for further review with the Supreme Court on August 4, 2000. On that same day, the juvenile court held a hearing on Darren’s and Amanda’s motions for new trial in Jaden’s case, which were denied. On August 8, Darren then appealed and Amanda cross-appealed to this court the juvenile court’s July 25 order sustaining the State’s motion for partial summary judgment in Jaden’s case and the court’s August 7 order overruling their motions for new trial. See Neb. Ct. R. of Prac. 1C and 1E (rev. 2000).

Thus, by mid-August 2000, this court had affirmed the termination concerning Destiny and Suede, but Darren had sought further review of our decision from the Nebraska Supreme Court. In Jaden’s case, there had been a grant of partial summary judgment using the Destiny and Suede proceeding, and Darren and Amanda had perfected their appeal and cross-appeal, respectively, of that decision to this court — the instant appeal.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Darren asserts, restated and reordered, that the trial court erred when it used res judicata as the basis for sustaining the State’s partial summary judgment motion in Jaden’s case because (1) the court used a preponderance of the evidence standard to decide the allegations of neglect and abuse of Destiny *91 and Suede, but then used those findings of fact to determine whether to terminate his parental rights to Jaden, which requires a different standard of proof — clear and convincing evidence; (2) the March 30, 1999, orders in the Destiny and Suede proceeding were not final orders because the Supreme Court had been asked to take further review of our affirmance; (3) the use of the orders from the Destiny and Suede proceeding denied Darren due process in Jaden’s case by precluding him from confronting and cross-examining the State’s witnesses and adducing his own evidence. While stated somewhat differently, Amanda’s assignments of error in her cross-appeal are essentially the same as Darren’s. Any differences of consequence will be detailed in our opinion.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Juvenile cases are reviewed de novo on the record, and an appellate court is required to reach a conclusion independent of the juvenile court’s findings. In re Interest of Clifford M. et al., 258 Neb.

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Bluebook (online)
625 N.W.2d 218, 10 Neb. Ct. App. 87, 2001 Neb. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-interest-of-jaden-h-nebctapp-2001.