In Re Zk
This text of 645 S.E.2d 637 (In Re Zk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the Interest of Z.K. et al., children.
Court of Appeals of Georgia.
*638 Samuel J. Gowin, Chatsworth, for appellant.
Thurbert E. Baker, Attorney General, Shalen S. Nelson, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Jason S. Naunas, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
ELLINGTON, Judge.
The father of two children, six-year-old Z.K. and five-year-old L.K., appeals from the order of the Juvenile Court of Murray County terminating his parental rights.[1] The father contends the trial court erred in forcing him to proceed without legal counsel. For the following reasons, we affirm.
In any proceeding for terminating parental rights, "[i]f the parent or parents of the child desire to be represented by counsel but are indigent, the court shall appoint an attorney for such parent or parents." OCGA § 15-11-98(b). See also OCGA § 15-11-6(b) (indigent parent's right to appointed counsel "at all stages of any proceedings" alleging his *639 or her child is deprived, delinquent, unruly, or incorrigible); In the Interest of A.M.R., 230 Ga.App. 133, 136(2), 495 S.E.2d 615 (1998). Under OCGA § 15-11-6(b),
If a party [to juvenile proceedings] appears without counsel, the court shall ascertain whether such party knows of his or her right to counsel and to be provided with counsel by the court if he or she is an indigent person. The court may continue the proceeding to enable a party to obtain counsel and shall provide counsel for an unrepresented indigent person upon the request of such a person. . . . If the interests of two or more parties conflict, separate counsel shall be provided for each of them.
"In order to waive a right as fundamental as effective counsel, the trial court must, on the record, determine that the waiver is knowing, intelligent and voluntary." (Citation omitted.) Redd v. State, 264 Ga. 399, 401, 444 S.E.2d 776 (1994). Even though the right to counsel in juvenile proceedings is statutory, rather than constitutional, waiver must be knowing and voluntary. In the Interest of B.B., 267 Ga.App. 360, 362(2), 599 S.E.2d 304 (2004) (parent's waiver of right to counsel under OCGA § 15-11-6 must be both knowing and voluntary).[2] When reviewing a trial court's ruling that a litigant knowingly and intelligently waived a right to counsel, we accept the trial court's findings on disputed facts and credibility of witnesses unless clearly erroneous, but independently apply the law to the facts. State v. Rodriguez, 274 Ga. 728, 559 S.E.2d 435 (2002).
Viewed in the light most favorable to upholding the trial court's findings on disputed facts, the record shows the following. The children were first removed from the home in April 2000, based on inadequate housing. Over the next six years, the children were repeatedly removed from the home based on filthy, unsafe conditions in the home and the parents' lack of employment or other source of income. When the children were most recently placed in foster care, in May 2004, the home was found to be in bad repair, unsafe, filthy, and lacking in electricity and food.
On April 3, 2006, the Department of Human Resources, acting through the Murray County Department of Family and Children Services, filed a petition for termination of parental rights. The summons stated that the petition would be heard on June 20, 2006, and advised as follows:
If you want a lawyer but are not able to hire a lawyer without undue financial hardship, you may ask for a lawyer to be appointed to represent you. The Court would inquire into your financial circumstances and if the Court finds you to be financially unable to hire a lawyer, then a lawyer will be appointed to represent you. If you want a lawyer appointed to represent you, you must let the Court or the officer of this Court handling this case know that you want a lawyer immediately.
The order terminating parental rights recites that the father was served with the summons and petition on April 6, 2006. The parents requested counsel, and the juvenile court appointed an attorney to represent them jointly. By April 27, the father was told to get separate counsel. The father submitted an application for appointed counsel to the court administrator.
On June 20, 2006, at the beginning of the hearing on the termination petition, the juvenile court inquired whether the father had counsel. The father replied that he did not have counsel and that he did not want to proceed without a lawyer. A court administrator, who was not placed under oath, told the court that the father's application failed to include required financial information and that the father had not supplemented his application.[3] The father responded that he *640 had returned with a pay stub, which the court administrator could neither confirm nor deny. The juvenile court pursued the issue as follows:
This case has been pending since April the 3rd. I've marked out an entire day and paid three lawyers and a court reporter to be here and I'm not in any mood to continue it if you didn't make diligent efforts to get an attorney. You've had since April the 6th. You applied in early May and if you did not provide what you needed to provide to the court administrator's office to get an attorney appointedand why haven't you been back since early May to ask "who's my attorney, what are you doing about getting me an attorney?"
The father responded that he lacked transportation and lacked a telephone. The court continued:
[T]here's no way for [the court administrator] to get in touch with you. Is he supposed to call you and ask you? You have not gone back since the first of May since you applied; is that right? . . . It's not the court administrator's job to call you. It's your responsibility to see that you have the appropriate documentation there. And assuming for the sake of argument that you brought the appropriate documentation, you have not followed up in six weeks to find out if you had a lawyer and who your lawyer was or meet with your lawyer. And based on the fact that for six weeks you haven't followed up with the court administrator's office to find out if you qualify and if you did who your lawyer is going to be, I'm not going to continue this hearing today and put this off yet another six or eight weeks for you to get a lawyer. You've had two and a half months to do something about this and you have not. You've had almost six weeks since you first went into the court administrator's office and you haven't called back, come back, or done anything, made any effort to follow up and find out, "hey, am I getting a lawyer; who's my lawyer, who do I need to go see?" Nor have you gone to see anybody.
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645 S.E.2d 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-zk-gactapp-2007.