In re X.C.H.

2017 UT App 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 29, 2017
Docket20150613-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2017 UT App 106 (In re X.C.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re X.C.H., 2017 UT App 106 (Utah Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

2017 UT App 106

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, IN THE INTEREST OF X.C.H., A PERSON UNDER EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE.

G.H., Appellant, v. STATE OF UTAH, Appellee.

Opinion No. 20150613-CA Filed June 29, 2017

Third District Juvenile Court, Salt Lake Department The Honorable Julie V. Lund No. 1033582

Colleen K. Coebergh, Attorney for Appellant Sean D. Reyes and John M. Peterson, Attorneys for Appellee Martha Pierce, Guardian ad Litem

JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. and STEPHEN L. ROTH concurred.

CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:

¶1 Appellant G.H. (Father) challenges the juvenile court’s order terminating his parental rights in X.C.H. (Child). We affirm. In re X.C.H.

BACKGROUND

¶2 In November 2008, T.C. (Mother) gave birth to Child. In April 2010, the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS) filed a verified petition alleging that Child was “abused, neglected, and/or dependent.” The petition further alleged that “[G.H.] is the father of [Child]” and that G.H. was “believed to be residing in a detention facility in Montana.” Father was not served with notice of the proceedings and did not appear. Nevertheless, the juvenile court “found the allegations of the State’s petition to be true and correct” and incorporated the State’s allegations regarding Father into its findings (the 2010 Order). After determining that Mother had been involved in multiple domestic violence incidents, the court ordered protective supervision services for Mother and Child. In October 2010, Mother and Child were released from protective services.

¶3 In 2014, the State filed another verified petition, seeking custody of Child. The petition stated that Father was Child’s “alleged father.”1 In April 2014, after a shelter hearing, the juvenile court granted the State’s request for custody of Child. The court observed that Father had not been served with notice of the shelter hearing, that “paternity for [Child did] not appear to be established by the alleged father,” and that Father was believed to reside “out of state.” Child went to live with a foster family with whom he had previously resided.

¶4 On May 22, 2014, the State’s petition was adjudicated as to Mother. Mother did not attend the hearing, and the juvenile court entered a default judgment against her. The juvenile court found that Father was Child’s “alleged father” and that his whereabouts were unknown, but that Mother believed he was

1. “‘Alleged father’ means a man who alleges himself to be, or is alleged to be, the genetic father or a possible genetic father of a child, but whose paternity has not been determined.” Utah Code Ann. § 78B-15-102(2) (LexisNexis 2012).

20150613-CA 2 2017 UT App 106 In re X.C.H.

living in Montana. The court ultimately concluded that Child was neglected and that DCFS would retain custody.

¶5 In a verified petition filed on July 22, the State sought termination of Mother’s parental rights. This petition again stated that Father was Child’s “alleged father.”

¶6 Around that time, a DCFS caseworker began efforts to locate Father. She looked on “Vine Link and the Montana State website” to see if Father was incarcerated; looked “through the [Office of Recovery Services database] and [DCFS’s] SAFE website” for a phone number for Father and found that “there was a phone number in there, but it wasn’t correct”; and asked Mother’s family for Father’s contact information. She did not “look in any search engines,” use whitepages.com, or hire a constable or private investigator to help locate Father. She also did not check to see if Father’s paternity of Child had been established in Montana.

¶7 Mother eventually provided the DCFS caseworker with contact information for Father. On July 30, the DCFS caseworker called Father and left him a message “that [DCFS] didn’t have [proof of] paternity for him”; however, she did not actually speak with Father until September 2. At that time, the DCFS caseworker “told [Father] again that [DCFS] didn’t have [proof of Father’s] paternity, and he said that he would get it to [her] by Monday,” which was “less than a week” away. Father, however, did not timely follow through, and DCFS did not get “the paternity paper” from him until December 5.2

2. It is unclear what document this mention of Father’s “paternity paper” referred to. During oral argument before this court, Father’s counsel suggested that the document was a Montana birth certificate for Child. In her brief, the guardian ad litem asserted that “[t]he document, dated January 29, 2009[,] from an Ohio lab, appeared to be the results of genetic testing (continued…)

20150613-CA 3 2017 UT App 106 In re X.C.H.

¶8 Once DCFS received “the paternity paper” from Father, the DCFS caseworker maintained regular contact with him. The DCFS caseworker informed Father of a January 29, 2015 hearing related to Mother’s termination trial, and the DCFS caseworker and Father met in person for the first time at that hearing.

¶9 Father’s first supervised visit with Child took place on January 29 after the hearing, and Father had one more visit with Child on February 24. Father completed only one of his scheduled phone calls with Child even though the DCFS caseworker had rearranged the phone call schedule to accommodate Father’s work schedule. Father provided no financial support, cards, or gifts for Child before the termination trial.

¶10 In February 2015, the juvenile court appointed Father’s current counsel to represent him. And in April 2015, Father filed an answer in apparent response to the State’s verified petition for termination of Mother’s parental rights. In his answer, Father asserted that he “is [the] biological father of [Child], which has been established by DNA testing, and he believes this Court adjudicated him father.”3 Somewhat contradictorily, he also objected “to any findings from [the 2010 Order] pertaining to him,” which included the finding that Father “is the father of

(…continued) confirming [Father’s] biological relationship to Child.” The document was not entered into evidence and does not appear in the record on appeal. Regardless, in its order terminating Father’s parental rights, the juvenile court found that the “documentation [from] December 2014, prov[ed] paternity had been established substantially at [Child’s] birth.”

3. “‘Adjudicated father’ means a man who has been adjudicated by a tribunal to be the father of a child.” Utah Code Ann. § 78B- 15-102(1).

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[Child]”—the very finding Father now claims amounted to an adjudication of his paternity.

¶11 The juvenile court held a termination trial on May 4, 2015.4 Both the DCFS caseworker and Child’s foster father testified. At the conclusion of the trial, the juvenile court terminated Father’s parental rights on grounds of abandonment and lack of anything other than token efforts at communication.

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