In Re Juvenile 2006-833

937 A.2d 297, 156 N.H. 482, 2007 N.H. LEXIS 211
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 4, 2007
Docket2006-833
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 937 A.2d 297 (In Re Juvenile 2006-833) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Juvenile 2006-833, 937 A.2d 297, 156 N.H. 482, 2007 N.H. LEXIS 211 (N.H. 2007).

Opinion

HICKS, J.

The respondent-mother filed a petition for writ of certiorari, see Sup. Ct. R. 11, challenging an order of the Laconia Family Division (Martin, J.) directing the New Hampshire Division for Children, Youth and Families (DCYF) to file a petition to terminate her parental rights. We deny the respondent’s petition.

The following facts appear in the record before us or are not disputed by the parties. The juvenile was bom on January 19, 2004. In January 2005, DCYF filed petitions for neglect against the respondent and the juvenile’s father, see RSA 169-C:7 (2002), alleging that the juvenile “ha[d] been diagnosed with failure to thrive by two independent medical providers.” Following a preliminary hearing in February, DCYF was given legal custody of the juvenile, who was placed in a licensed foster home. The juvenile has remained in the same foster home throughout these proceedings. Following a two-day hearing in February and April 2005, findings of neglect were entered against both parents. The parents were ordered to, among other things: (1) “complete anger management and/or batterers’ intervention assessments”; (2) “satisfactorily complete therapeutic parenting classes”; (3) complete psychological evaluations; and (4) “satisfy and comply with all recommendations of both their psychological and anger management and/or batterers’ intervention evaluations.”

Several hearings were held in the family division from May 2005 through April 2006 to review the parents’ progress and their compliance with court orders aimed at correcting the conditions leading to the neglect findings. The respondent’s mental health was a primary concern throughout these proceedings. At a review hearing on November 9, 2005, the respondent requested an order from the court requiring the State to cover the co-pays on her mental health medications. The court issued an order requiring the respondent to “continue to address her mental health needs” and, through the services provided by the State, “meaningfully participate in individual outpatient counseling and ... follow any recommendations made by her counselor.” The court further noted: *484 “DCYF shall use all reasonable efforts to help [the respondent] to receive [her] medically recommended medicine.”

In a DCYF report dated January 30, 2006, DCYF responded to the court’s order regarding the respondent’s medications: “The Division is not able to assist clients with payment of prescriptions.” DCYF also noted in its report that the respondent had ceased attending individual counseling sessions as ordered by the court.

Following a hearing in early February 2006, the court issued an order stating: “DCYF [is ordered] to evaluate [the respondent’s] need for medication to develop appropriate parenting skills. At the Permanency Hearing, [the respondent] may claim lack of assistance to sustain corrective action by expert opinion if medications are not available.” The court also found that the respondent’s “psychological evaluation raised concerns as to her ability to parent.”

On March 8, DCYF sent a letter to the respondent with information on three different resources that could assist her in paying for her medications, stating that she would have to contact the various agencies directly. It is unclear whether the respondent pursued these resources. On March 15, the respondent filed a motion asking the court to order that DCYF pay for her prescribed medications. The motion included a letter from a nurse practitioner listing all of the respondent’s medications and their purpose, including medications alleged to be “essential to maintain [the respondent’s] emotional status and ability to parent.”

The motion was heard at the scheduled permanency hearing in April. Before the hearing, the court-appointed special advocate and DCYF filed reports recommending termination of the parental rights of the respondent and the father and adoption of the minor by her foster parents. After the hearing, the Court {McKenna, J.) issued an order declining to adopt this recommendation:

[The court] find[s] that the DCYF has made reasonable efforts at reunification, but has not exhausted all possible alternatives----
A significant factor in [the respondent’s] difficulties in the discharge of her parental duties is her own mental health issues for which the family cannot always afford all necessary medications____
It is hereby ordered that:
1. DCYF shall assist [the respondent] in the effort to obtain financial aid for her medications.

*485 On May 10, DCYF sent another letter to the respondent with a prescription card which could be used to obtain a discount on medications and a list of pharmacies in her area which accept the card. In late August, DCYF filed a permanency report with the court, detailing these efforts to assist the respondent to pay for her medications.

At a second permanency hearing held on September 6, DCYF reiterated that the respondent had failed to address her mental health issues or attend individual counseling sessions as required by the court. The respondent represented that she had recently joined a program that would help her obtain her necessary medications. She requested more time to see whether the medications would help to resolve her mental health issues.

On October 12, the Court (Martin, J.) issued a permanency order finding, among other things, that: DCYF had made “reasonable efforts to finalize the permanency plan of reunification between the childQ” and the parents; the respondent was only in partial compliance with prior orders; and the respondent “cannot demonstrate that return of custody is in the best interests of the child[]” in part because she had failed to address her “numerous and significant mental health needs.” The court ordered DCYF to proceed with a termination of parental rights petition against both parents in the probate court. See RSA 169-C:24-a (Supp. 2007). The respondent then filed this petition for with of certiorari.

Because there is no statutory right to de novo appeal in superior court from a post-final dispositional order in a RSA chapter 169-C proceeding, a party seeking review may file a petition for writ of certiorari in the superior or supreme court. See In re Diane R., 146 N.H. 676, 678-79 (2001).

Certiorari is an extraordinary remedy that is not granted as a matter of right, but rather at the discretion of the court. We exercise our power to grant the writ sparingly and only where to do otherwise would result in substantial injustice. Certiorari review is limited to whether the trial court acted illegally with respect to jurisdiction, authority or observance of the law, or unsustainably exercised its discretion or acted arbitrarily, unreasonably, or capriciously.

Petition of State of N.H. (State v. San Giovanni), 154 N.H. 671, 674 (2007) (citations omitted).

The respondent asserts that the family division erred as a matter of law when it found that DCYF had made reasonable efforts to finalize the permanency plan of reunification between the juvenile and herself.

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Bluebook (online)
937 A.2d 297, 156 N.H. 482, 2007 N.H. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-juvenile-2006-833-nh-2007.