In Re the Welfare of S.V.B.

880 P.2d 80, 75 Wash. App. 762
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 20, 1994
Docket16320-9-II
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 880 P.2d 80 (In Re the Welfare of S.V.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Welfare of S.V.B., 880 P.2d 80, 75 Wash. App. 762 (Wash. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Seinfeld, J.

Appellant, father of I, J, and S, 1 appeals the termination of his parental relationship with his three children. We reverse in part and affirm in part.

Facts

Appellant and RB are the father and mother of the three children who are the subject of this action: I, born June 28, 1985; J, born March 26, 1987; and S, born May 12, 1988. However, Appellant did not obtain and file an Adjudication of Paternity until less than 2 weeks before the hearing that resulted in the order at issue here. Further, RB and Appellant were never married; the children’s birth certificates do not identify a father; RB was married to another man until sometime in 1987; and the State was aware of at least one additional putative father.

During 1987 and 1988, the State placed the children in protective custody several times, first because RB was in jail and later because of reports of abuse, drug use, and neglect. On December 20, 1988, RB consented to the entry of dependency orders for the three children. The dependency petition for I names Appellant as a potential father; the petitions for J and S declare the father to be unknown. Although the *765 State did not make Appellant a party to the dependency proceedings or provide him formal notice of the dependency review hearings, several dependency review orders stated that Appellant should establish paternity so that he might receive services and be considered "a resource” for the children.

The children were in foster care for most of the more than 3-year period of dependency. During this time state social workers were in contact with Appellant and frequently advised him to establish legal paternity. Finally, in November 1989, Appellant signed an acknowledgment of paternity as to I and J, which he gave to a social worker. Although RB had earlier indicated to the social worker that Appellant was the father of I and J, she did not sign an acknowledgment of paternity. After Appellant signed the acknowledgment, the social worker explained to him:

these were just statements and we still needed to have a legal order of paternity and that a lawyer would need to be contacted in order to do that, that was not something I can do for him.

State social workers had received reports that Appellant in the past had physically abused RB and that he had a drug and alcohol problem. In addition, Appellant had been convicted of fourth degree assault; claimed to have been the children’s caretaker at a time when the State discovered them living in unhealthy and filthy conditions; and had an unstable work history. Thus, according to the testimony of the social workers, they were prepared to recommend anger management classes, parenting classes, and drug and alcohol services at such time as Appellant established paternity.

In July 1991, the State filed petitions seeking to terminate the parent-child relationship between the three children and RB; "John Doe, natural father”; and "[Appellant], putative father”. In the petitions, the State declared that adoption was in each child’s best interest and that continuing the parent-child relationship would diminish the chances of integrating each child into a stable and permanent home. The State also *766 alleged that it had offered all reasonably available services necessary to correct parental deficiencies.

The State gave Appellant notice of the termination proceeding, and he attended the initial hearing in August 1991. At that hearing, the juvenile court apparently ordered him to establish paternity by October 30, 1991. When Appellant failed to comply, the juvenile court apparently ordered him to do so by November 27, and then continued the case several more times.

It was not until March 12, 1992, that Appellant obtained a judicial determination of paternity. The order was filed on March 20, 1992, and Appellant provided the State with a copy of the paternity order on March 26, 1992, the first day of the termination hearing.

Also on the first day of trial, KB voluntarily relinquished her parental relationship with S and J. The State apparently concurred with RB’s earlier request that the court create a guardianship for I, with RB’s mother as the appointed guardian. The State then advised the juvenile court that at that time it was seeking to terminate only Appellant’s parental relationship, not RB’s.

At the hearing, a social worker testified that the children continued to display anger and confusion because of their unstable situation, and that the children’s behavior would deteriorate unless they were integrated into stable and permanent homes. Because of this, and because of Appellant’s suspected substance and anger problems, the social worker believed termination to be in the children’s best interests.

At the close of the evidence, Appellant moved the court to establish a guardianship for I as an alternative to termination, and to appoint the same maternal grandmother as I’s guardian. The juvenile court denied the motion without reaching the merits. It advised Appellant that he should have petitioned or counterpetitioned for a guardianship when the State petitioned for termination.

Before closing argument, the juvenile court called for the guardian ad litem’s report. Appellant objected "to any purported evidence being argued at this time”. The juvenile *767 court noted the objection, but told Appellant that it had appointed the guardian and wanted to hear his report. The guardian reported that he had no contact with Appellant until the State filed the termination petition, that S and J did not know Appellant, and that the children needed permanence which could only be achieved by termination. The juvenile court granted the State’s petition and terminated Appellant’s parental relationship with all three children. .

The juvenile court found that: (1) the State had offered Appellant all reasonably available services, but that services were available to Appellant only if he established paternity; (2) there was little likelihood that Appellant would remedy the deficiencies; (3) Appellant had "absolutely no relationship with” S and had only a "quite superficial and quite marginal” relationship with I and J; (4) continuing the parent-child relationship would clearly diminish prospects for integration of the children into stable and permanent homes; and (5) termination was in the best interests of each child.

On appeal, Appellant challenges the admission of the guardian ad litem report and contends generally that the evidence was insufficient to support termination.

Guardian Ad Litems Report

Appellant claims that the juvenile court erred in allowing the guardian ad litem to give his oral report while not under oath, and after the close of evidence. He claims that the report contained inadmissible evidence and that he did not have the opportunity to cross-examine its author. However, at trial, Appellant’s counsel simply objected to "any purported evidence being argued at this time”. Appellant did not seek to cross-examine the guardian or complain that the guardian was not under oath.

The law provides for the appointment of a guardian ad litem and for a report from the guardian to the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
880 P.2d 80, 75 Wash. App. 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-welfare-of-svb-washctapp-1994.