OPINION
ORME, Judge:
T1 This appeal concerns the juvenile court's order denying a mother's petition to terminate the parental rights of her ex-husband. We affirm. In the process, we are constrained to hold under recent precedent that her challenge to the legal sufficiency of the findings was not preserved for appeal.
BACKGROUND
12 M.B. (Mother) and J.B. (Father) were married in Utah in 1998. Almost two years
later, while residing in California, Mother and Father had a child, A.B. In August 2002, Mother and Father separated and, against Father's wishes, Mother and A.B. came to Utah to live with her parents. For the next several months after the relocation, Father contacted Mother and A.B. by phone, and in the fall of 2002, Father twice arranged for visitation with A.B. In December 2002, however, Father twice requested to see A.B., and Mother denied both requests. That same month, Mother's younger sister, A.A., had informed Mother that during the parties' marriage, Father had sexually abused her. From January through March 2003, the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS) investigated the allegations, and its investigation "supported a finding of sexual abuse ... relative to [A.A.]." From January 2008 into April 2003, Mother stopped taking Father's telephone calls, and Father was able to contact Mother only a few times during those months. Mother also informed Father that he was not welcome at her parents' residence.
T3 At the time of the parties' separation, Father was finishing podiatry school and was unable to maintain employment. After his graduation in 2008, Father attempted, through counsel, to establish a child support schedule for A.B. When Mother's then-counsel failed to cooperate, Father estimated an amount and made periodic payments to Mother. In 2005, the Office of Recovery Services (ORS) filed a motion to establish regular child support payments, which resulted in an order providing for income withholding. That same year, Mother filed her termination of parental rights petition. When ORS learned of the petition, it contacted Mother and inquired whether she wanted ORS to continue to collect child support from Father. Mother indicated that she simply wanted Father to leave her alone and that she did not desire child support from Father. When ORS then ceased to withhold income for child support, Father instead made a lump sum payment to Mother.
T 4 Father drove to Salt Lake City in April 2003 with the specific purpose of seeing A.B. Mother and her family did not allow him to see A.B., and had him arrested for sexually abusing A.A. Mother filed for divorce.
T5 After AA. disclosed Father's sexual abuse, Mother suspected that Father had also sexually abused A.B. Accordingly, she took A.B. to her family doctor and to Primary Children's Medical Center to be examined. Although medical professionals determined that A.B.'s hymen was "floppy," the examinations were "inconclusive of any sexual abuse." Furthermore, two psychiatrists who independently evaluated Father opined that he "presented very slight or no risk of sexually abusing [A.B.]."
T6 In May 2003, Father made his initial appearance in the sexual abuse case. The court issued a pretrial order mandating that, as a condition of Father's pretrial release, "he have no contact with [A.A.], or her family members and that he have no unsupervised contact with any individual under 18 years of age." In November 2004, Father entered a plea in abeyance to two counts of sexual battery of a minor, and the criminal court ordered him to serve thirty days in jail, attend counseling, receive a psychosexual evaluation, and pay a $500 fine. Additionally, the criminal court put him on probation for thirty-six months, which is set to expire in November 2007. After the prosecutor warned Father that deposing A.A. or her family in relation to the divorce case could jeopardize his plea agreement, Father abandoned his attempts to get court-ordered visitation and enlisted his parents to help him maintain a relationship with A.B. Except for one visit in September 2003 and a few phone calls, Mother did not provide Father's parents with contact information for A.B. Furthermore, Mother asked Father's parents to discontinue any contact with Mother at her parents' residence, as "her parents would not approve."
T7 On May 19, 2005, after Father sent A.B. a birthday gift that was rejected, Father
filed a motion for order to show cause requesting supervised parent-time with A.B. On May 20, 2005, Mother filed her petition to terminate Father's parental rights. In the petition, Mother alleged four grounds justifying the termination of Father's parental rights: (1) abandonment, see Utah Code Ann. § 78-38a-407(1)(a) (Supp.2007); (2) only token efforts to support or communicate, see id. § 78-Sa-407(1)(f); (8) parental unfitness, see id. § 78-8a-407(I)(c); and (4) neglect or abuse, see id. § 78-8a-407(1)(b).
8 After an unsuccessful attempt at mediation, the petition to terminate Father's parental rights was scheduled for trial. At the end of a fourteen-day trial, the juvenile court issued findings of fact, conclusions of law, and an order denying Mother's petition to terminate Father's parental rights. The juvenile court reasoned that although "[Father] has significant parenting, anger management, and sexual conduct issues,"
Mother "failed to prove any statutory basis for the termination of [Father's] parental rights by clear and convincing evidence." Mother did not file any objection to the juvenile court's factual findings and timely appealed the juvenile court's order to this court.
ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
T9 Mother raises two basic challenges on appeal.
First, Mother argues that the juvenile court's factual findings are internally inconsistent, insufficiently detailed, and fail to support its conclusions of law. Second, Mother argues that the juvenile court erred in concluding she failed to prove any of the statutory bases justifying termination of Father's parental rights in A.B. and that the court's related factual findings lack evidentia-ry support.
T10 In reviewing cases where the termination of parental rights is in issue, we give the juvenile court a "wide latitude of discretion as to the judgments arrived at based upon not only the court's opportunity to judge credibility firsthand, but also based on the juvenile court judges' special training, experiencel,] and interest in this field." In re E.R., 2001 UT App 66, ¶ 11, 21 P.3d 680 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). "Findings of fact in a parental rights termination proceeding are overturned only if they are clearly erroneous." In re E.D., 876 P.2d 397, 402 (Utah Ct.App.), cert. denied, 890 P.2d 1034 (Utah 1994). Furthermore, "[in reviewing a decision to grant or deny a.
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OPINION
ORME, Judge:
T1 This appeal concerns the juvenile court's order denying a mother's petition to terminate the parental rights of her ex-husband. We affirm. In the process, we are constrained to hold under recent precedent that her challenge to the legal sufficiency of the findings was not preserved for appeal.
BACKGROUND
12 M.B. (Mother) and J.B. (Father) were married in Utah in 1998. Almost two years
later, while residing in California, Mother and Father had a child, A.B. In August 2002, Mother and Father separated and, against Father's wishes, Mother and A.B. came to Utah to live with her parents. For the next several months after the relocation, Father contacted Mother and A.B. by phone, and in the fall of 2002, Father twice arranged for visitation with A.B. In December 2002, however, Father twice requested to see A.B., and Mother denied both requests. That same month, Mother's younger sister, A.A., had informed Mother that during the parties' marriage, Father had sexually abused her. From January through March 2003, the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS) investigated the allegations, and its investigation "supported a finding of sexual abuse ... relative to [A.A.]." From January 2008 into April 2003, Mother stopped taking Father's telephone calls, and Father was able to contact Mother only a few times during those months. Mother also informed Father that he was not welcome at her parents' residence.
T3 At the time of the parties' separation, Father was finishing podiatry school and was unable to maintain employment. After his graduation in 2008, Father attempted, through counsel, to establish a child support schedule for A.B. When Mother's then-counsel failed to cooperate, Father estimated an amount and made periodic payments to Mother. In 2005, the Office of Recovery Services (ORS) filed a motion to establish regular child support payments, which resulted in an order providing for income withholding. That same year, Mother filed her termination of parental rights petition. When ORS learned of the petition, it contacted Mother and inquired whether she wanted ORS to continue to collect child support from Father. Mother indicated that she simply wanted Father to leave her alone and that she did not desire child support from Father. When ORS then ceased to withhold income for child support, Father instead made a lump sum payment to Mother.
T 4 Father drove to Salt Lake City in April 2003 with the specific purpose of seeing A.B. Mother and her family did not allow him to see A.B., and had him arrested for sexually abusing A.A. Mother filed for divorce.
T5 After AA. disclosed Father's sexual abuse, Mother suspected that Father had also sexually abused A.B. Accordingly, she took A.B. to her family doctor and to Primary Children's Medical Center to be examined. Although medical professionals determined that A.B.'s hymen was "floppy," the examinations were "inconclusive of any sexual abuse." Furthermore, two psychiatrists who independently evaluated Father opined that he "presented very slight or no risk of sexually abusing [A.B.]."
T6 In May 2003, Father made his initial appearance in the sexual abuse case. The court issued a pretrial order mandating that, as a condition of Father's pretrial release, "he have no contact with [A.A.], or her family members and that he have no unsupervised contact with any individual under 18 years of age." In November 2004, Father entered a plea in abeyance to two counts of sexual battery of a minor, and the criminal court ordered him to serve thirty days in jail, attend counseling, receive a psychosexual evaluation, and pay a $500 fine. Additionally, the criminal court put him on probation for thirty-six months, which is set to expire in November 2007. After the prosecutor warned Father that deposing A.A. or her family in relation to the divorce case could jeopardize his plea agreement, Father abandoned his attempts to get court-ordered visitation and enlisted his parents to help him maintain a relationship with A.B. Except for one visit in September 2003 and a few phone calls, Mother did not provide Father's parents with contact information for A.B. Furthermore, Mother asked Father's parents to discontinue any contact with Mother at her parents' residence, as "her parents would not approve."
T7 On May 19, 2005, after Father sent A.B. a birthday gift that was rejected, Father
filed a motion for order to show cause requesting supervised parent-time with A.B. On May 20, 2005, Mother filed her petition to terminate Father's parental rights. In the petition, Mother alleged four grounds justifying the termination of Father's parental rights: (1) abandonment, see Utah Code Ann. § 78-38a-407(1)(a) (Supp.2007); (2) only token efforts to support or communicate, see id. § 78-Sa-407(1)(f); (8) parental unfitness, see id. § 78-8a-407(I)(c); and (4) neglect or abuse, see id. § 78-8a-407(1)(b).
8 After an unsuccessful attempt at mediation, the petition to terminate Father's parental rights was scheduled for trial. At the end of a fourteen-day trial, the juvenile court issued findings of fact, conclusions of law, and an order denying Mother's petition to terminate Father's parental rights. The juvenile court reasoned that although "[Father] has significant parenting, anger management, and sexual conduct issues,"
Mother "failed to prove any statutory basis for the termination of [Father's] parental rights by clear and convincing evidence." Mother did not file any objection to the juvenile court's factual findings and timely appealed the juvenile court's order to this court.
ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
T9 Mother raises two basic challenges on appeal.
First, Mother argues that the juvenile court's factual findings are internally inconsistent, insufficiently detailed, and fail to support its conclusions of law. Second, Mother argues that the juvenile court erred in concluding she failed to prove any of the statutory bases justifying termination of Father's parental rights in A.B. and that the court's related factual findings lack evidentia-ry support.
T10 In reviewing cases where the termination of parental rights is in issue, we give the juvenile court a "wide latitude of discretion as to the judgments arrived at based upon not only the court's opportunity to judge credibility firsthand, but also based on the juvenile court judges' special training, experiencel,] and interest in this field." In re E.R., 2001 UT App 66, ¶ 11, 21 P.3d 680 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). "Findings of fact in a parental rights termination proceeding are overturned only if they are clearly erroneous." In re E.D., 876 P.2d 397, 402 (Utah Ct.App.), cert. denied, 890 P.2d 1034 (Utah 1994). Furthermore, "[in reviewing a decision to grant or deny a. termination petition, [wle will not disturb the juvenile court's findings and conclusions unless the evidence clearly preponderates against the findings as made or the court has abused its discretion." In re R.A.J., 1999 UT App 329, ¶ 6, 991 P.2d 1118 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted) (second alteration in original).
ANALYSIS
I. Inadequacy of Juvenile Court's Factual Findings
$11 Mother argues that the juvenile court's factual findings are internally inconsistent, are insufficiently detailed, and fail to support its conclusions of law. While the findings, taken as a whole, support the legal conclusions, Mother's point is well-taken to the extent that there are, indeed, some internal inconsistencies in the juvenile court's seventy-six factual findings. But because Mother did not raise any objection regarding the legal sufficiency of the findings with the juvenile court, that issue is not preserved, and we do not address it. See 438 Main St. v. Easy Heat, Inc., 2004 UT 72, ¶¶ 50, 52, 55, 56, 99 P.3d 801 (holding that even where the plaintiff objected to the findings of fact orally and in two post-trial motions, the argument that the findings were insufficiently detailed had been waived because the objections were not specific enough to alert the trial court to this particular concern). See also In re K.H., 2004 UT App 488, 119, 10 & n. 5, 12, 105
P.3d 967 (stating, with two judges concurring in the result only, that court of appeals is "bound" to follow the preservation rule of 438 Main Street, while noting the new rule "seems to be hyper technical and to impose an unduly heavy burden on counsel").
II. Insufficiency of the Evidence Supporting Juvenile Court's Factual Findings
112 Mother also argues that there was insufficient evidence to support the juvenile court's factual findings. Mother contends that the juvenile court committed clear error in concluding that she failed to provide clear and convincing evidence that statutory grounds existed to terminate Father's parental rights in A.B.
Utah law requires a court to make two distinet findings before terminating a parent-child relationship. First, the court must find that the parent is below some minimum threshold of fitness ... based on any of the grounds for termination under section 78-3a-407. Second, the court must find that the best interests and welfare of the child are served by terminating the parents' parental rights.!
In re R.A.J., 1999 UT App 329 at ¶7, 991 P.2d 1118 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). The petitioner in a parental rights termination case "has the burden of establishing both of these elements by clear and convincing evidence." Id. See Utah Code Ann. § 78-3a-406(8) (Supp.2007).
13 Insofar as Mother challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the juvenile court's findings of fact, she has an affirmative obligation to "marshal the evidence in support of the findings and then demonstrate that despite this evidence, the [juvenile] court's findings are so lacking in support as to be against the clear weight of the evi
dence, thus making them clearly erroneous." Mountain States Broad. Co. v. Neale, 776 P.2d 648, 646 (Utah Ct.App.1989) (quoting In re Bartell, ¶6 P.2d 885, 886 (Utah 1989)) (emphasis in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). "This does not mean that [Mother] may simply provide an exhaustive review of all evidence presented at trial. Rather, [Mother] must provide a precisely focused summary of all the evidence supporting the findings [she] challenges." Chen v. Stewart, 2004 UT 82, ¶77, 100 P.3d 1177 (citations omitted). Then, she "must ferret out a fatal flaw in the evidence" and demonstrate why the evidence does not support the trial court's findings. West Valley City v. Majestic Inv. Co., 818 P.2d 1811, 1815 (Utah Ct.App.1991).
4 14 While Mother did not completely disregard her duty to marshal the evidence, she apparently misunderstood it.
With the exception of findings 8 and 9,
Mother fails to even identify which findings she is actually challenging on appeal. Instead, she vaguely argues that "the trial court's finding of insufficient evidence was a clear error," and then broadly "urges this Court to find that the evidence presented by [Mother] did prove one or more statutory bases required for the termination of parental rights."
15 Additionally, "(instead of marshalling only the evidence supporting the [Juvenile court's] findings, [Mother] review[s] in minute detail all the evidence before the [juvenile court)," and "insist[s] on [primarily] emphasizing the evidence that support[s her] position." Heinecke v. Department of Commerce, 810 P.2d 459, 464 (Utah Ct.App.1991) (footnote omitted). She essentially lays out all the evidence she presented at trial, as well as the evidence presented by Father, and then asks this court to find that the juvenile court erred in concluding that "[she] failed to prove any statutory basis for the termination of [Father's] parental rights by clear and convincing evidence." She does not, however, specifically indicate what evidence supports the trial court's findings and does not "ferret out a fatal flaw in [Father's] evidence," Majestic Inv. Co., 818 P.2d at 1315, to demonstrate why the juvenile court's findings are clearly erroneous. Accordingly, "[Mother] failed to completely satisfy [her] obligation to marshal the evidence by 'persistently arguing [her] own position without regard for the evidence supporting the [juvenile court's] findings.'" Heinecke, 810 P.2d at 464 (citation omitted). ~
{16 Because Mother failed to properly marshal the evidence, and even failed to precisely identify which findings she actually challenges on appeal, "we refuse to consider the merits of [her] challenges to the findings and accept the findings as valid."
Mountain States, TTC P.2d at 646. Taking those
findings as valid, we cannot say the juvenile court erred in concluding she failed to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence any statutory ground for terminating Father's parental rights.
CONCLUSION
T17 Because Mother failed to raise any objection to the legal sufficiency of the findings with the juvenile court, her claim that the findings are internally inconsistent and insufficiently detailed is unpreserved, and we therefore do not reach it. Moreover, because Mother failed to properly marshal the evidence, her challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the findings is without merit, and we accept the findings as valid. The juvenile court's legal conclusions follow from those findings. Accordingly, we affirm the juvenile court's findings of fact and conclusions of law, and its order denying Mother's petition.
18 I CONCUR: PAMELA T. GREENWOOD, Associate Presiding Judge.
19 I CONCUR IN THE RESULT: JUDITH M. BILLINGS, Judge.