In the Interest of Doe

65 P.3d 167, 101 Haw. 220
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 2003
Docket24923
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 65 P.3d 167 (In the Interest of Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of Doe, 65 P.3d 167, 101 Haw. 220 (haw 2003).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

LEVINSON, J.

The appellant Department of Human Services (DHS) appeals from: (1) the order of the district family court of the first circuit, the Honorable John C. Bryant presiding, filed on December 6, 2001, (a) granting the appellee guardian ad litem’s (GAL’s) 1 motion for immediate review, filed on November 29, 2001, (b) granting DHS’s oral motion for foster custody of Jane Doe (Jane), (c) ordering that, except upon a showing of imminent physical harm, Jane not be removed from her current placement without a court order, and (d) ordering that DHS render foster care board payments to Jane’s maternal aunt (Aunt); and (2) the family court’s order, the Honorable John C. Bryant also presiding, filed on January 10, 2002, denying DHS’s motion to reconsider, alter, or amend the order issued on December 6, 2001 or, in the alternative, for a stay of the order pending an evidentiary hearing [hereinafter, “the motion for reconsideration”].

• On appeal, DHS contends (1) that the family court exceeded its statutory authority under Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 587-71 (Supp.2002) 2 ’by awarding foster custody of Jane to DHS but simultaneously prohibiting DHS from exercising its statutory placement authority as a foster custodian and (2) that the family court exceeded its statutory authority by ordering DHS to make foster care *223 board payments to Aunt, an unlicensed caretaker.

We agree with DHS that the family court exceeded its statutory authority under HRS § 587-71 by ordering DHS to place Jane in an unlicensed foster family boarding home and render foster care board payments to Aunt. Accordingly, we vacate the family court’s orders, filed on December 6, 2001 and January 10, 2002, and remand this matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

The present matter involves the foster custody of Jane, Mother’s seven-year-old daughter. On July 7, 2001, DHS received a report from Mother, alleging that Jane had been sexually abused by her father. On August 2, 2001, DHS interviewed Jane- and her six-year-old brother (Brother), at which time Jane confirmed the allegation of sexual abuse by her father; Brother also disclosed that Jane had touched his penis with her hands while they were sleeping together in the same bed. On August 9, 2001, DHS interviewed Mother at Mona Lisa Santos’s residence, where Mother and her children occasionally resided. 3 Mother requested that DHS place Jane in a foster home due to her uncontrollable behavior—ie., Jane’s aggression toward Brother, dishonesty, and general disobedience. Upon DHS’s recommendation that Mother place Jane with a relative-caretaker, Mother arranged for Jane to reside with her paternal grandparents and assured DHS that she would seek counseling for Jane and herself to improve them mother-daughter relationship. On August 11, 2001, Jane began to live with her grandparents but soon returned on August 13, 2001, per Mother’s request, after Jane’s grandfather refused to permit Jane to attend psychological counseling.

In September 2001, Mother again requested that DHS locate a therapeutic foster home for Jane because she could no longer “handle [Jane’s] behaviors.” On October 23, 2001, DHS filed a petition for family supervision, 4 pursuant to HRS §§ 571-11(9) (1993), 5 587-11 (1993), 6 and 587-2 (1993). 7 The petition alleged, inter alia, (1) that Jane had been sexually abused by her father, (2) that Jane had sexually abused Brother, and (3) that there was a substantial threat of harm to Jane and Brother due to domestic violence between Mother and Santos. The family court conducted a hearing on the matter on *224 October 29, 2001, at which time the family court took jurisdiction over Jane’s case but continued the hearing to November 2, 2001, after Mother and Santos failed to appear in court as scheduled. On November 2, 2001, the family court granted DHS’s request for family supervision of Jane, pursuant to DHS’s October 9, 2001 sendee plan.

Meanwhile, on or about October 29, 2001, Mother, upon the advice of Jane’s maternal grandmother, unilaterally placed Jane with Aunt. Thereafter, Sammiedean Sutton, the DHS social worker assigned to Jane’s case, assisted Aunt in completing an application for a foster family boarding home license in order to provide foster care for Jane. During the ensuing certification process, Sutton discovered that Aunt had a prior history with Child Protective Services (CPS) and that her parental rights to three of her own children had been terminated pursuant to an HRS chapter 587 proceeding; DHS therefore denied Aunt’s application for a foster family boarding home license. DHS subsequently notified the GAL of its plan to remove Jane from Aunt’s unlicensed home and place Jane in a non-relative, licensed foster home as required by HRS § 346-17 (Supp.2002). 8

On November 29, 2001, the GAL filed a motion for immediate review, requesting an order overriding DHS’s decision to remove Jane from Aunt’s home; the GAL’s motion for immediate review, however, did not request that DHS render foster care board payments to Aunt. The family court conducted a hearing on the matter on December 6, 2001, at which Mother testified that she no longer wanted Jane to reside with Aunt because there was “too much family conflict” and that she preferred that Jane be placed in a non-relative foster home. Mother also accused Aunt of “spreading rumors” and vowing to prevent the reunification of Mother with Jane.

Jane’s therapist, Judith Rocap, who testified on the GAL’s behalf, opined, based on approximately ten meetings with Jane and Aunt, that Jane “ha[d] improved greatly” since she had relocated to her Aunt’s residence; Jane appeared well-mannered and regularly attended school and church. Ro-cap further opined that Aunt’s home was a “stable and caring environment” and that it would be detrimental to Jane to uproot her from Aunt’s home and place her with strangers. Rocap believed, notwithstanding that foster care placement could generally be detrimental to children, that removing Jane from Aunt’s home was particularly risky, given the allegations of sexual abuse of Jane by her father and, possibly, her paternal grandfather.

Aunt, who also testified on the GAL’s behalf, acknowledged that she had a prior history with CPS and that, in 1997, her parental rights had been terminated as to three of her children. 9 Aunt explained that her children had been removed from her home because her ex-boyfriend had been abusive toward them.

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Bluebook (online)
65 P.3d 167, 101 Haw. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-doe-haw-2003.