In Re Jo

232 P.3d 880
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMay 6, 2010
Docket103,481
StatusPublished

This text of 232 P.3d 880 (In Re Jo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Jo, 232 P.3d 880 (kanctapp 2010).

Opinion

232 P.3d 880 (2010)

In re J.O., a Minor Child Under Eighteen (18) Years of Age.

No. 103,481.

Court of Appeals of Kansas.

May 6, 2010.

*881 Susan G. Richards, of Topeka, for appellant.

Natalie Chalmers, assistant district attorney, and Chadwick J. Taylor, district attorney, for appellee.

*882 Before RULON, C.J., GREENE, J., and LARSON, S.J.

GREENE, J.

P.S., the natural father of J.O. (born September 29, 2007), appeals the district court's termination of his parental rights. Father argues he was denied due process when he was not allowed to participate by telephone in the hearing that resulted in the termination. We agree with Father, reverse the judgment of termination, and remand for further proceedings.

Factual and Procedural Background

Shortly after J.O.'s birth, concerns for J.O.'s safety and well-being caused the State to file a petition to have J.O. declared a child in need of care (CINC) pursuant to the Revised Kansas Code for Care of Children, K.S.A.2009 Supp. 38-2201 et seq. As a result, the district court awarded SRS temporary custody of the child and ordered the State to serve Father, whose whereabouts were unknown by SRS at the time, for paternity testing.

On December 26, 2007, the district court adjudicated J.O. a CINC pursuant to K.S.A. 2009 Supp. 38-2202(d)(1), (2), and (3). Father had not yet appeared by that point, so the court granted a default judgment against him pending proof of service by publication. By the time of the February 5, 2008, disposition hearing, Father had apparently been personally served because he appeared at the hearing in shackles with court-appointed counsel and admitted his paternity.

From the February 2008 hearing until March 2009, the SRS social worker assigned to manage J.O.'s case had telephone contact with Father on only two occasions. The first contact took place shortly after the disposition hearing, when Father called the social worker to indicate he had always wanted to see J.O., but Mother prevented the visit. Father asked to schedule a visit with his son, but he needed to make arrangements for transportation and promised to call the social worker when these arrangements were made. When the social worker had not heard from Father by the following March, she called the number Father had given her, and Father returned the call on March 28 and scheduled a visit with J.O. for the beginning of April. Unfortunately, he failed to show up for that visit; reasons for this failure do not appear in the record.

Father's appointed counsel appeared on his behalf at a November 3, 2008, permanency hearing, at which the district court found reintegration was no longer a viable alternative. Rather, the court found either adoption or permanent custodianship might be in J.O.'s best interests, so it ordered the State to file pleadings to either terminate parental rights or establish permanent custodianship. Accordingly, the State then moved to terminate the parental rights of both Mother and Father.

The social worker was able to reestablish communication with Father in March 2009, after Mother advised that Father was in prison in Colorado. Father's earliest possible release date was 2012, but he continued to correspond by letter with the social worker to inquire how J.O. was doing.

At a June 29, 2009, review hearing, the district court granted Father's counsel's request to continue to October 21, 2009, the trial on the State's motion to terminate his parental rights. Father's counsel also accepted service on Father's behalf.

The case proceeded to a trial on the State's motion to terminate Father's parental rights on October 21, 2009. At the opening of the trial, the district court considered Father's motion to appear by telephone or video conference. The State and guardian ad litem argued that a court rule prohibited telephonic testimony in a trial on the merits and suggested that case law indicated that a parent's due process rights are not violated if that parent has appointed counsel present at the hearing. Father's counsel responded that in light of Father's desire to be present, she had arranged with Father's counselor at the Colorado prison for Father to be available to the court at 9 a.m. Because this designated hour had passed by the time the court took up the matter, counsel was unable to assure the court that Father would still be available in the counselor's office. Thus, Father's counsel asked for a continuance to *883 allow her to arrange a specific time for Father to be available.

The district court denied counsel's request for Father's telephonic appearance, explaining:

"Well, the Court believes that Supreme Court Rule 145 and . . . K.S.A. 60-243(a) direct that the testimony needs to be in person on the merits of the claim. And the primary factor for concern is the inability of the Court to . . . assess the demeanor of the witness on the stand in determining what level of weight the Court would give to that testimony.
"Further, it's my concern that Father is unable to be present today by his own actions, not by any restriction by the Court or the Agency. But he is in prison in the State of Colorado pursuant to his own behavior and his own actions and suffers the consequence.
"I am not inclined to allow him to participate by telephone and . . . to present testimony by telephone . . . in this proceeding. Supreme Court Rule does not allow that and the statute does not allow that.
"Now, I understand that the Supreme Court says there may be a variance in party but unless or until the Supreme Court authorizes [it] specifically, my sense is that the statute controls.
"And so I am not inclined to authorize his participation in this proceeding by telephone. And as such, that's [a] basis for you to file an appeal and maybe make new law in the State of Kansas. But as the existing law is as I understand it at this point in time, the testimony is to be in court."

At the close of the hearing, the district court granted the State's motion to terminate Father's parental rights. The court orally announced that it was applying the statutory presumption of K.S.A.2009 Supp. 38-2271(a)(5) and also found termination of Father's parental rights was proper under the statutory factors in K.S.A.2009 Supp. 38-2269(b)(4), (b)(7), (b)(8), (c)(3), and (c)(4). The court further announced that in light of Father's incarceration until at least 2012, J.O.'s age, and J.O.'s relationship with his foster family, termination of Father's parental rights was in J.O.'s best interests. In its subsequent journal entry, the court found "that it is highly probable that the evidence establishes a clear and convincing standard that father is unfit by conduct or condition and is not likely to change in the foreseeable future." Father timely appeals.

Standards of Review

Appellate courts generally review a district court's refusal to grant a continuance for an abuse of discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
232 P.3d 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jo-kanctapp-2010.