In Re MB

2009 MT 97, 204 P.3d 1242
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 2009
Docket08-0443
StatusPublished

This text of 2009 MT 97 (In Re MB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re MB, 2009 MT 97, 204 P.3d 1242 (Mo. 2009).

Opinion

204 P.3d 1242 (2009)
2009 MT 97

In the Matter of M.B., E.B., and B.B., Youths in Need of Care.

No. DA 08-0443.

Supreme Court of Montana.

Submitted on Briefs February 11, 2009.
Decided March 31, 2009.

*1243 For Appellant: Nancy L. Rohde, Rohde Law & Associates, LLC, Billings, Montana.

For Appellee: Steve Bullock, Montana Attorney General, Matthew T. Cochenour, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana.

Justice JAMES C. NELSON delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 Appellants Roberta and Thomas Rawson (the Rawsons), Intervenors in these three consolidated causes of action, appeal from the final judgment and order of the Second Judicial District, Silver Bow County, denying Intervenors' motion for new trials or for amended judgments and denying Intervenors' motion to stay the judgments. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶ 2 In December 2006, the Department of Public Health and Human Services (DPHHS) filed a petition for emergency protective services, adjudication as youths in need of care and temporary legal custody for two children, one-year-old E.B. and three-week-old M.B. In September 2007, DPHHS filed another such petition for four-day-old B.B. The first petition was based on a report that the mother tested positive for methadone when she gave birth to M.B. and the second was based on the mother's admitted drug use while pregnant with B.B. All three children were placed in foster care with the Rawsons, who live in Whitehall, Montana. E.B. was born in May 2005 and was nineteen months old when placed with the Rawsons, M.B. was born in November 2006 and was nineteen days old when placed with the Rawsons, and B.B. was born in November 2007 and was removed from his mother's care at birth and, after a month in the hospital, was placed with the Rawsons.

¶ 3 After the children were placed in temporary foster care with the Rawsons, DPHHS designed a number of treatment plans for the birth mother and birth father, which provided remedial services and rehabilitative programs, with the hope of eventually returning the children to their parents. Both parents repeatedly failed the treatment plans and in April 2008, DPHHS filed a "Petition for Permanent Legal Custody and Termination of Parental Rights with Right to Consent to Adoption or Guardianship" for each of the three children. The parents then signed affidavits waiving all parental rights, relinquishing the children and consenting to adoption.

¶ 4 In May 2008, the Rawsons filed motions to intervene "to enable them to be heard for the purposes of permanency and placement" for the three children. The motions stated that "[i]mportantly, this matter involves an Indian Child as defined in the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) of 1978 (25 U.S.C. chapter 21.). Accordingly, the parent[s'] wishes as to permanent, adoptive placement should be considered especially in this situation where a non-ICWA compliant home is being contemplated by DPHHS out of the state of Montana." The motion continued by stating it was the Rawsons' understanding *1244 "that both parents desire that [the children] remain with and be adopted by the foster family...." The District Court granted the Rawsons' motion to intervene. The District Court held a termination hearing in June 2008, based on DPHHS' April 2008 petitions. Following the hearing the court entered findings of fact, conclusions of law and an order terminating the parental rights and granting DPHHS permanent legal custody of the children, with the right to consent to adoption or guardianship.

¶ 5 All three children are eligible for enrollment as members of the Little Shell Tribe of Chippewa Indians (Little Shell Tribe). The tribe is recognized in Montana but is not a federally recognized tribe. Their enrollment status is due to their father being an enrolled member of the Little Shell Tribe.

¶ 6 A DPHHS adoption selection committee, tasked with securing permanent adoptive placement of the three children, selected Doug and Trudie Nesbitt (the Nesbitts), a non-Indian family, in Spokane, Washington, as the best option for permanent placement. The committee determined that adoptive placement with the Nesbitts would more closely achieve the purposes and policies of ICWA than placement with the Rawsons because the Nesbitts are the adoptive parents of A.B. (now age 7), one of the children's full-blood siblings. The birth parents previously had their parental rights terminated on three children in the state of Washington and the Nesbitts adopted A.B. The two other full-blood birth siblings, A.B. (now age 5) and N.B. (now age 11) were adopted by another family who also live in Spokane, Washington. And, Spokane is where at least four paternal aunts and their children (natural cousins of this sibling group) reside and where the birth mother and birth father presently reside. The Nesbitts have developed and maintained, for the benefit of their adopted daughter A.B., a family-like relationship with the adoptive mother of N.B. and A.B.

¶ 7 After the termination hearing, the Rawsons filed a motion to continue the placement hearing. The motion stated, among other things, that the court had failed to comply with ICWA's requirement to notify the Little Shell Tribe of its rights to intervene in the proceedings. The motion stated there is "some concern with ICWA issues that could pose future problems." The Rawsons noted that they "did not intend or want undue delay in effectuating the permanency of these children" but that "it would be the children who would suffer the most ill effects of any challenge or invalidation of an adoption...." The motion also pointed out that the standard of proof ICWA required for the termination of parental rights is "beyond a reasonable doubt" rather than the "clear and convincing evidence" standard the court used. Based on the Rawson's motion the court held a supplemental hearing and applied the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard and heard testimony from an ICWA expert. The District Court then again awarded DPHHS legal custody of the children.

¶ 8 In July 2008, the court held a hearing on the Rawson's motion for an order restraining DPHHS from removing M.B., E.B. and B.B. from their care and also on the issue of whether the Rawsons could demonstrate good cause to deviate from the adoptive placement preferences set forth in ICWA. The Rawsons presented a number of witnesses including an occupational therapist for the children, a family support specialist who has worked with the children, an ICWA qualified expert in the area of Indian culture, and testimony from foster mother Roberta Rawson. DPHHS presented testimony from a child protection specialist and an ICWA qualified expert in the area of Indian culture. The children's guardian ad litem was present and did not testify but submitted a report concerning placement. The court also noted that the Little Shell Tribe was given notice of the July 2008 hearing, as well as notice of numerous prior hearings, and that no representative of the Little Shell Tribe appeared or otherwise indicated an interest in having the tribe represented in these proceedings.

¶ 9 In August 2008, the District Court entered findings of fact, conclusions of law and an order concluding that the Nesbitts qualified as "extended family members" under ICWA, placing the children with the Nesbitts satisfied the purpose of ICWA and the Rawsons failed to show good cause to *1245 deviate from ICWA's preferred placements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 MT 97, 204 P.3d 1242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mb-mont-2009.