In the Interest of B.B., Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 5, 2024
Docket23-1041
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of B.B., Minor Child (In the Interest of B.B., Minor Child) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In the Interest of B.B., Minor Child, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-1041 Filed June 5, 2024

IN THE INTEREST OF B.B., Minor Child,

L.S., Mother, Petitioner-Appellee,

J.W., Father, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Joseph Seidlin, Judge.

A father appeals the termination of his parental rights under Iowa Code

chapter 600A (2023). AFFIRMED.

Elizabeth M. Wayne, Parkersburg, for appellant father.

Emilia Edwards of Tollakson Law, PLLC, West Des Moines, for appellee

mother.

Kara L. McClure of Bergkamp, Hemphill & McClure, P.C., Adel, attorney

and guardian ad litem for minor child.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Ahlers and Langholz, JJ. 2

AHLERS, Judge.

The mother of a child born in 2015 petitioned to terminate the parental rights

of the child’s father on the ground of abandonment pursuant to Iowa Code

section 600A.8(3)(b) (2023). Termination of parental rights under chapter 600A

involves a two-step process of (1) establishing a statutory ground for termination,

and (2) proving termination is in the child’s best interest. In re B.H.A., 938

N.W.2d 227, 232 (Iowa 2020). Both steps require proof by clear and convincing

evidence. Id.

The juvenile court found the mother had satisfied both steps and granted

her petition. The father appeals, challenging the juvenile court’s findings on both

steps. Our review is de novo, which means we give weight to the juvenile court’s

fact findings, especially as to witness credibility, but we are not bound by them. Id.

As noted, the mother relied on the statutory ground of abandonment in

section 600A.8(3)(b). That section provides:

If the child is six months of age or older when the termination hearing is held, a parent is deemed to have abandoned the child unless the parent maintains substantial and continuous or repeated contact with the child as demonstrated by contribution toward support of the child of a reasonable amount, according to the parent’s means, and as demonstrated by any of the following: (1) Visiting the child at least monthly when physically and financially able to do so and when not prevented from doing so by the person having lawful custody of the child. (2) Regular communication with the child or with the person having the care or custody of the child, when physically and financially unable to visit the child or when prevented from visiting the child by the person having lawful custody of the child. (3) Openly living with the child for a period of six months within the one-year period immediately preceding the termination of parental rights hearing and during that period openly holding himself or herself out to be the parent of the child. 3

Iowa Code § 600A.8(3)(b). Chapter 600A also defines abandoning a minor child

as “reject[ing] the duties imposed by the parent-child relationship . . . which may

be evinced by the person, while being able to do so, making no provision or making

only a marginal effort to provide for the support of the child or to communicate with

the child.” Id. § 600A.2(20). A parent’s subjective intent “unsupported by evidence

of acts specified in [section 600A.8(3)(b)] . . . , does not preclude a determination

that the parent has abandoned the child.” Id. § 600A.8(3)(c).

Based on our de novo review, we find that the father has never lived with

the child. He also has not visited the child at least monthly. Nor has he regularly

communicated with the child or with the child’s mother as the person having

custody of the child. From the child’s birth in 2015 through 2017—the year the

father was discharged from the military—the father visited the child only three

times. The father moved back to Iowa in 2017 and lived within a few blocks of the

mother and the child, but he made no effort to contact the mother or the child.

In 2020, the father briefly stepped up his efforts to see the child, seeing her about

four times between June and August of 2020. The burst of effort was short-lived,

as the father then went approximately a year with no contact. When he did get

back in touch, the communication was limited to asking the mother to allow phone

contact at night after the child was in bed and sending a text to the mother wishing

her and the child a happy Thanksgiving. Even after the father filed a petition

seeking visitation in 2022, he made no meaningful attempts to see or contact the

child. In sum, the father had physically seen the child about seven times by the

termination hearing, which was held when the child was seven years old. 4

The father sought to explain his absence from the child’s life by testifying

he has spent the last several years trying to get his feet under him and did not

have the financial means to visit with his child. But the evidence indicates he was

simply unwilling to make the effort. Although he lived out of state for the first few

years of the child’s life, he moved back to Iowa in 2017 but still made little to no

effort to visit the child. On the rare occasions when he has visited the child, the

visits have been short, lasting no more than two hours, and typically lasting less

than an hour. Even when the mother brought the child on a vacation with the father

and his extended family, he had only limited contact with the child. He also has

not asked the mother to bring the child to visit him or tried to meet the mother and

child halfway between their homes.1

Even if we agreed that the father’s failure to regularly visit with the child

could be excused by lack of means, the mother still proved that he did not regularly

communicate with the child or the mother. The father’s contact with the child has

been sporadic at best. The father’s fits-and-starts pattern of communicating with

the child does not amount to the regular communication required by the statute.

See In re J.H., No. 16-2076, 2017 WL 1735912, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. May 3, 2017)

(finding mother’s communication was insufficient when she would go thirty to

ninety days at a time without contacting the child or father).

The father also seeks to explain his lack of involvement with the child by

arguing that contacting the mother about the child was difficult because it strained

1 While the father and mother lived only a few blocks apart when the father first

moved back to Iowa, the mother and her current husband later moved to Waukee and the father moved to Manchester. 5

the relationship between the mother and her then husband. However, he does not

claim that the mother prevented him from contacting the child because of it. In

fact, he admits that his communication with the mother and child did not improve

after the mother divorced her then husband. While the father suggests that the

mother interfered with his ability to interact with the child, his suggestion is rebutted

by the record. The record shows that the mother was generally easy to contact

and allowed the father to visit when he asked. The limited restrictions the mother

placed on visitation were reasonable. See In re G.A., 826 N.W.2d 125, 130 (Iowa

Ct. App. 2012) (“The reasonable requests by the mother cannot be blamed for the

father failing . . . to have any contact with his child . . . .”).

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Related

In the Interest of Q.G. and W.G., Minor Children
911 N.W.2d 761 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)
In the Interest of G.A.
826 N.W.2d 125 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2012)
In Interest of J.H.
901 N.W.2d 839 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2017)

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