In re L.T.

2015 ME 94, 120 A.3d 650, 2015 Me. LEXIS 104, 2015 WL 4529679
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 28, 2015
DocketDocket Yor-15-9
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2015 ME 94 (In re L.T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re L.T., 2015 ME 94, 120 A.3d 650, 2015 Me. LEXIS 104, 2015 WL 4529679 (Me. 2015).

Opinion

GORMAN, J.

[¶ 1] The father of L.T. appeals from a judgment of the District Court (Spring-vale, Foster, J.) terminating his parental rights to the child. He contends that the evidence was not sufficient to support the court’s finding of parental unfitness, and that the court abused its discretion in determining that termination of his parental rights is in the child’s best interest. The *651 father also contends that the court abused its discretion in denying his motion for relief from judgment pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 60(b) and in denying him post-termination visitation with the child. Finally, the father argues that the trial judge was biased against him, and that he had a due process right to a jury trial. We disagree and affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] The father and mother, who are not married, separated shortly after the birth of their child in 2008. In 2010, the mother obtained a protection from abuse order against the father that restricted his contact with the child to supervised visits. 1

[¶ 3] Early in 2012, after an episode of domestic violence involving the mother and another male partner, the Department of Health and Human Services became involved with the family on an informal basis. By agreement, the child was placed with her paternal grandmother, and the Department offered services to both parents. Given the father’s propensity for violence — demonstrated not only by his history of convictions and incarcerations, but by his own reports that he had once tracked down and beat over the course of a day and a half an individual he believed had molested a child, and that he had been placed in solitary confinement for over two years because he “went crazy” after learning someone had tried to kill him in prison — the Department referred the father for therapy designed to address his anger and violence issues. The father began seeing the primary clinician for Violence No More, a certified batterers’ intervention program, in May of 2012 but attended the sessions inconsistently, and stopped attending in July of 2012.

[¶ 4] In the fall of 2012, after a series of events that caused the Department to believe that informal agreements with the parties would no longer provide sufficient protection to the child, the Department filed a petition for child protection alleging that the father 2 created jeopardy through neglect, emotional abuse, and physical abuse. On October 24, 2012, while at court for a case management conference, the father and the Department agreed to the entry of a jeopardy order as to the father, and the court signed an order referencing the parties’ agreement on November 26, 2012. That order, which was not docketed until December 28, 2012, continued the child’s placement with her paternal grandmother, and included a finding that the father had placed his child in jeopardy by “exposing the child to domestic violence ... perpetrated by him [against the child’s] mother.” In addition, the order referenced the father’s “long criminal history involving crimes of violence against others,” and stated that the father’s jeopardy “issues” were due, in part, to mental health and anger issues.

[¶ 5] Between the time the agreement was placed on the record and when it was actually entered in the docket, the father sent dozens of threatening and vulgar text messages to his mother. Based on those actions, the paternal grandmother requested and obtained a protection from abuse order against him. Nonetheless, as a result of the parties’ agreement and the jeopardy order, the child' continued to live with and be cared for by her paternal grandmother. Also during this time period, the father re-engaged in services in *652 tended to address his violence and his inability to control his anger. That re-engagement was short-lived, however, as he failed to complete a certified batterers’ intervention program after the program asked him to leave.

[¶ 6] In January of 2013, the father again started to attend sessions with the clinician for Violence No More. Because the clinician was struck by the level of the father’s impulsivity, he suggested a neu-ropsychological evaluation to rule out some organic brain disease or injury. During the evaluation, the father became angry and frustrated when he became concerned that the results of the evaluation might negatively affect his efforts to regain custody of the child. Ultimately, the evaluator was not able to determine the cause of the father’s behavior.

[¶ 7] In March of 2013, the father was incarcerated for allegedly threatening Department caseworkers. As a result of the criminal threatening charge, the father was incarcerated from March of 2013 to July of 2013, although the charges against him were eventually dismissed. While held in jail for those charges, the father began taking medications that seemed to decrease his impulsivity and increase his control. This improvement was noted by the Violence No More clinician, who resumed his work with the father after he was released from jail. 3

[¶ 8] While the father was incarcerated in April of 2013, the Department filed a petition to terminate the father’s rights to the child based largely on the factual allegations included in the jeopardy order. During the next year and a half, the Department continued to offer services to the father, and the parties continued to appear at court for judicial reviews. During at least two of those court events, the father demonstrated that he had not yet learned to control his anger. In January of 2014, he sent a lewd text message to the mother. On another occasion, the father told the paternal grandmother, “[y]ou scum; you’re lower than low.”

[¶ 9] On June 13, 2014, eighteen months after the docketing of the jeopardy order, after three judicial reviews, and after the petition to terminate his parental rights had already been pending for over a year, the father filed a motion to vacate the jeopardy order pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 60(b). 4 In that motion, which accompanied a motion to continue the termination hearing, the father alleged that his former counsel “misinformed him as to the language and content of the Jeopardy Order, as well as what the language meant” and forced him to waive “his right to a jeopardy hearing based on coercion and threat of arrest at the court.” The court denied both the motion to continue and the motion for relief that same day.

[¶ 10] On June 16, 2014, just as the hearing on the termination petition was to begin, the father’s attorney filed a motion seeking to end his representation of the father. Thereafter, the hearing on that petition was continued on multiple occasions as the court (Douglas, Foster, and Janette, JJ.) unsuccessfully attempted to assign new counsel for the father. Finally, on August 27, 2014, an attorney retained by the father entered his appearance, and *653 the hearing was held on September 19 and 22, 2014.

[¶ 11] Ultimately, at the time of the termination hearing, the father had discontinued all services, and his only continuing effort toward reunification was visitation with the child.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 ME 94, 120 A.3d 650, 2015 Me. LEXIS 104, 2015 WL 4529679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lt-me-2015.