In Re: Parental Rights as to R.Y.

CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 2014
Docket60791
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: Parental Rights as to R.Y. (In Re: Parental Rights as to R.Y.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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: Parental Rights as to R.Y., (Neb. 2014).

Opinion

shallow desert grave. The murder allegedly occurred just days after R.Y. was born. R.Y. has been in foster care since Anne's and Gabriel's arrest, living with her maternal aunt and uncle in Tennessee. It is now more than five years later and, due to a series of motions and unexplained delays, Anne and Gabriel remain in jail pending their separate capital murder trials. Their trials currently are scheduled to begin in August and September 2014. Several years after the criminal charges were brought, appellant Clark County Department of Family Services (DFS) filed a petition to terminate Anne and Gabriel's parental rights. The petition was filed so that R.Y.'s maternal aunt and uncle, whom she calls "Mom" and "Dad," could permanently adopt her. After granting repeated motions for continuance of the parental rights termination hearing pending the outcome of Anne's and Gabriel's criminal cases, the district court ruled on the merits of DFS's petition. To terminate parental rights and bring R.Y.'s permanent placement to fruition, DFS needed to prove by clear and convincing evidence (1) that R.Y.'s best interest would be served by the termination and (2) "parental fault." NRS 128.105; In re Parental Rights as to A.G., 129 Nev. „ 295 P.3d 589, 594 (2013). The district court found, and the parents accept, that DFS carried its burden of proving that R.Y.'s best interests would be served by termination. But, the district court found that DFS had failed to demonstrate parental fault and therefore declined to terminate Anne's and Gabriel's parental rights. DFS appeals.

DFS focused its arguments in the district court on the grounds for parental fault enumerated by NRS 128.105(2), including neglect,

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA

(0) 1947A failure of parental adjustment, and token efforts. As a result, the district court focused on the parents' participation in counseling programs available to them in jail. It found that Gabriel had attended "over fifty (50) marriage and family therapy courses, a life skills course, and an additional forty (40) other courses" and that Anne "attended over thirty- five (35) parenting classes, a chemical dependency class, approximately seven (7) anger management classes and underwent a psychological assessment." The district court findings also enumerated the parents' attempts to contact their daughter, noting that Gabriel "has sent [R.Yd six (6) written communications and has made several requests for pictures of [her]" and that Anne "has sent two (2) to three (3) letters a month .. . and [had] two (2) face to face visits" with the child over the years they have been incarcerated. The parties' appellate briefs similarly debate at length the sufficiency of Anne's and Gabriel's attempts to comply with their respective "case plans," the steps DFS outlined for them to be reunited with R.Y. The result of this discussion is a surreal incongruence between the horrifying facts underlying Anne and Gabriel's criminal charges, the reality of their extremely limited contact with their daughter, who only lived with them for nine days before being placed in a foster care setting that has since matured into an adoptive option, and DFS's asserted grounds for terminating their rights. Standing alone, many of the grounds enumerated in NRS 128.105 are a poor fit for circumstances such as these. Thus, the district court correctly found that Anne and Gabriel did not "neglect" R.Y. because, while in jail, they do not have custody of her.' Champagne v. Welfare Div.

'Anne and Gabriel's incarceration alone cannot evince their neglect, else grounds would exist to terminate the parental rights of the 800,000 parents estimated to be incarcerated. See Deseriee A. Kennedy, Children, SUPREME COURT continued on next page... OF NEVADA 3 (0) I947A of Nev. State Dep't of Human Res., 100 Nev. 640, 658, 691 P.2d 849, 862 (1984), superseded by statute on other grounds, as stated in In re Termination of Parental Rights as to N.J., 116 Nev. 790, 8 P.3d 126 (2000). Similarly, their efforts in writing letters to and telephoning an infant and toddler who lives in Tennessee are not "token" since they are the best they can do, compare In re N.J., 125 Nev. 835, 846, 221 P.3d 1255, 1263 (2009); but the efforts may be ineffective for any realistic purpose. And, we cannot say they have not abided by the educational goals DFS has set for them; it is just that those classes are far removed from the larger question of when, if ever, they may be released from custody to make a life with R.Y. 2 But NRS 128.105 does not stand alone. Rather, it cross- references NRS 128.106 and NRS 432B.393(3). Thus, in determining whether parental fault exists "the court shall consider, without limitation" the grounds enumerated there, including, as relevant here, "[c]onduct toward a child of a physically, emotionally or sexually cruel or abusive nature." NRS 128.106(2) (emphasis added). And, while NRS 128.106(6) specifies "[c]onviction" of a felony as one of the permissible bases for finding parental fault, which is not

...continued Parents & the State: The Construction of a New Family Ideology, 26 Berkeley J. Gender L. & Just. 78, 85 (2011).

2 We review the district court's determinations deferentially, so long as they are supported by substantial evidence and not affected by evidentiary or legal error. In re N.J., 116 Nev. at 795, 8 P.3d at 129. Artificially limiting the facts to those unrelated to the murder charge, we cannot say that the district court erred. The problem lies in the district court's rejection of DFS's efforts, such as they were, to address the circumstances leading to Anne's and Gabriel's present incarceration.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 4 (0) I947A applicable here, NRS 128.105(2) also permits a finding of fault based on a finding made pursuant to subsection 3 of NRS 432B.393. NRS 432B.393(3)(a)(1) augments the bases for termination of parental rights, allowing DFS to forego reasonable reunification efforts and thus apparently for the district court to base termination on the best interests of the child once a juvenile court makes a finding that a parent has "[c]ommitted, aided or abetted in the commission of, or attempted, conspired or solicited to commit murder or voluntary manslaughter. . .

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Bluebook (online)
In Re: Parental Rights as to R.Y., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-parental-rights-as-to-ry-nev-2014.