In Re The Welfare Of T.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 25, 2020
Docket52928-9
StatusPublished

This text of In Re The Welfare Of T.P. (In Re The Welfare Of T.P.) 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 T.P., (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 25, 2020

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of No. 52928-9-II the Dependency of

T.P.,

A Minor child.

D.P.,

Petitioner,

v.

DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN, YOUTH, PUBLISHED OPINION AND FAMILIES,

Respondent.

CRUSER, J. — D.P. appeals a juvenile court order continuing a shelter care hearing to 22

days1 after his daughter, T.P., was removed from her parents’ home, arguing that this continuance

violated RCW 13.34.065(1)(a) and D.P.’s due process rights.

1 RCW 13.34.065(1)(a) provides that the hearing must be held within 72 hours of the child’s removal, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays. Therefore, the amount of time that elapsed since T.P.’s removal, as measured in terms of the available dates according to the statute, was 14 days. No. 52928-9-II

The Department of Children, Youth, and Families (Department) argues that this appeal is

moot because agreed shelter care and dependency orders have since been entered and this court

can no longer provide D.P. with effective relief. Accordingly, the Department argues that any

error committed by the juvenile court in entering the continuance order was harmless as to the

dependency proceeding.

We hold that although the appeal is moot, it is an issue of substantial and continuing public

importance that, due to the timing of subsequent proceedings in dependency actions, will likely

continue to evade review. We further hold that the juvenile court violated RCW 13.34.065(1)(a)

when it failed to hold the shelter care hearing within 72 hours after the child was removed from

her home. However, given that the parties have since entered into agreed shelter care and

dependency orders, reversal is not required. Because this appeal is moot, we deny D.P.’s request

to vacate the dependency order.2

FACTS

D.P., the petitioner, is father to T.P., a four-year-old girl. N.D. is T.P.’s mother. On

December 11, 2018, the Department filed a dependency petition alleging that T.P. and her half-

brother, A.C.,3 were dependent children under RCW 13.34.030(6)(c) because they had “no parent,

guardian or custodian capable of adequately caring for [them].” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 2. The

petition described a history of domestic violence between D.P. and N.D. The petition also alleged

that both parents have engaged in substance abuse and have struggled with mental health issues.

2 Furthermore, even if this case was not moot, T.P. has failed to demonstrate that vacation of the dependency order is the appropriate remedy. 3 A.C.’s case is not part of this appeal.

2 No. 52928-9-II

A juvenile court commissioner reviewed the Department’s petition that same day and determined

that T.P. was at risk of imminent harm due to unsafe conditions in the home and placed her in the

Department’s custody.

A shelter care hearing was set to occur two days later, on December 13. Both of T.P.’s

parents appeared and were represented by the same counsel. A.C.’s father also appeared and was

represented by separate counsel. At this hearing most, though not all, the requisite topics under

RCW 13.34.065(4) were addressed by the juvenile court. T.P.’s parents requested appointed

counsel, and the court granted the requests and appointed separate counsel. The juvenile court

ascertained that T.P. was residing with relatives and it granted supervised visitation for both D.P.

and N.D. The Department was concerned that T.P. may have been exposed to “something” and

requested a hair follicle test, which the juvenile court granted. Verbatim Report of Proceedings

(VRP) at 3. The juvenile court inquired as to whether T.P. may be an Indian child under RCW

13.38.040(1)(a) to determine whether the Washington State Indian Child Welfare Act, ch. 13.38

RCW, applied. The Department also requested, and the juvenile court appointed, a guardian ad

litem.

Because the parents requested a contested hearing, the Department stated that “[w]e have

been given the date of January 2nd” on which to hold the hearing. Id. at 2. Both parents objected

and requested that the juvenile court “not wait until January to have this issue litigated.” Id. at 5.

Counsel for the parents stated that he “explained the normal court practice of setting out a few

weeks, but they are requesting that this contested hearing happen today.” Id.

Because A.C.’s biological father was being evaluated as a suitable placement for A.C., the

Department requested that the court delay the shelter care hearing as to both children rather than

3 No. 52928-9-II

bifurcate the case. The court’s earliest availability, the Department explained, was January 2. The

juvenile court agreed that there would be no courtroom available before January 2, and so it ruled

that the contested shelter care hearing would be continued until that date. Despite D.P.’s and

N.D.’s objection at the hearing, the order granting the continuance states that “[a]ll parties agree”

with the motion for a continuance. CP at 37.

The order granting the continuance also contained a checked box next to preprinted

language which stated,

It is currently contrary to the welfare of the child to remain in the child’s home. The petition and/or supporting declarations and affidavits establish reasonable grounds to believe that the child is dependent and the child’s health, safety, and welfare will be seriously endangered if not taken into custody. The petitioner has demonstrated that there is a risk of imminent harm to the child in the child’s home. The assessment of risk by petitioner constitutes reasonable efforts to prevent or eliminate the need for removal of the child from the child’s home.

Id. at 38. Neither D.P. nor N.D. had an opportunity to testify or present their own evidence during

this hearing. In addition, beyond the allegations in the Department’s petition, there was no

discussion at the hearing regarding whether T.P. could be safely returned home while the

dependency proceedings were adjudicated, there was no description of the services provided to the

family to prevent or eliminate the need to remove T.P. from the home, and there was no

consideration as to whether the Department’s proposal would be the least disruptive and most

family-like setting that would meet the child’s needs.

On January 2, D.P. requested a continuance of the contested shelter care hearing because

his attorney was not available. The hearing was continued to February 6, 2019. However, before

the continued contested hearing took place, the parents agreed to a shelter care order on January

4 No. 52928-9-II

29 and waived their right to a contested shelter care hearing. They agreed that T.P. would remain

in the Department’s custody and would be placed with relatives during the pendency of the action.

The parties later held a settlement conference in which they agreed that T.P. was dependent,

and although D.P. and N.D.

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