In the Interest of J.B. and R.R., Minor Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 11, 2026
Docket25-1802
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of J.B. and R.R., Minor Children (In the Interest of J.B. and R.R., Minor Children) 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.

Bluebook
In the Interest of J.B. and R.R., Minor Children, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 25-1802 Filed February 11, 2026 _______________

In the Interest of J.B. and R.R., Minor Children, State of Iowa, Appellant. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, The Honorable Lynn Poschner, Judge. _______________

AFFIRMED _______________

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Mackenzie L. Moran (argued), Assistant Attorney General, attorneys for appellant State of Iowa.

Jami J. Hagemeier (argued) and Nicole Garbis Nolan of Youth Law Center, Des Moines, attorneys and guardians ad litem for appellees minor children. _______________

Heard at oral argument by Badding, P.J., and Chicchelly and Langholz, JJ., but decided en banc. Opinion by Langholz, J. Dissent by Schumacher, J.

1 LANGHOLZ, Judge.

In this expedited juvenile appeal by the State, we must once again decide the effect of the legislature’s extensive 2022 amendments to our child- welfare statutes on the juvenile court’s authority to make decisions in the best interest of the subject child. See 2022 Iowa Acts ch. 1098. The precise question here—whether the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services has an absolute right to be appointed as a child’s guardian after termination of the rights of both parents unless the Department waives that right—came before our court once before. See In re T.T., No. 25-0072, 2025 WL 862145 (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 19, 2025). There, we agreed with the State that Iowa Code section 232.117(3) does grant the Department that right. See id. at *3. And the losing party did not seek further review of our decision.

With the benefit of fresh reasoning by the juvenile court here, further briefing and oral argument by these parties, later guidance from the supreme court on the proper interpretation of our child-welfare statutes even after the 2022 amendments, and careful consideration of the most accurate interpretation of section 232.117(3), we now respectfully correct course. The statute gives the Department the highest priority in consideration among the four categories of potential guardians. But it authorizes the juvenile court to select from “any of” those categories. And like the rest of chapter 232, the court must still consider the child’s best interest along with the order of priority in selecting the appropriate guardian.

We thus reject the State’s argument on appeal that the juvenile court was mandated to appoint the Department as guardian merely because the Department had not waived its right to first-priority consideration. The State makes no other challenge to the juvenile court’s order transferring guardianship and custody to the children’s foster parents. And so, we affirm.

2 I.

A one-year-old son and newborn daughter were removed from their parents’ custody in December 2024.1 Leading up to removal, the son endured significant instability—his parents used methamphetamine, his mother regularly left him with unsafe caregivers, and there was violence in the home. And when the daughter was born, she tested positive for methamphetamine.

After removal, the Department placed the children with a family friend. But the Department failed to adequately inspect the living arrangements—it was unaware there was a registered sex offender living in the home and caring for the children. And the family friend neglected to properly feed the daughter, requiring hospitalization for the daughter’s failure to gain weight. After the children’s guardian ad litem visited the home and discovered the unsafe environment, the guardian notified the Department and asked for a hearing to again remove the children.

The children were placed with a foster family in January 2025, where they have lived—and thrived—ever since. Indeed, the children’s foster mother stays home during the day, allowing her to bond with both children and attend to their “significant mental health” needs and “developmental delays.” The Department case worker agreed that the foster parents are “the only two adults that these children have ever had a positive, safe, stable relationship with.” So too is the foster home “the only place they probably have felt safe.” And all agree the children view their foster parents as their true parents.

1 We avoid using the parties’ names to respect their privacy because this opinion— unlike the juvenile court’s order—is public. Compare Iowa Code § 232.147(2) (2025), with id. §§ 602.4301(2), 602.5110; see also Iowa Ct. R. 21.25.

3 Meanwhile, the Department began locating possible relatives for a familial placement shortly after the children’s initial removal. See Iowa Code § 232.84(2) (2025) (requiring the Department to “exercise due diligence in identifying and providing notice to” certain adult relatives of the child within thirty days after removal). One family member—a great aunt in Tennessee— expressed interest. Under the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children, the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services completed and approved a home study in May.

The great aunt had no prior relationship with the children, and despite her proclaimed interest in caring for them, she had never asked to visit the children. Only after the guardian ad litem suggested in-person visits did she travel to see the children. And she only did so twice—for a two-week period in June where she had several supervised visits and for a brief period in September where she had one semi-supervised visit, one unsupervised visit, and one overnight. Otherwise, the great aunt’s interactions with the children were limited to Zoom calls, which were brief given that the children were roughly twenty- and eight-months old at the time. What’s more, the great aunt stated she could not accommodate a gradual transition out of their foster home or a slow ramp up in visitation to establish a relationship, as she cannot afford to travel back and forth between Tennessee and Iowa.

By the September termination hearing, the mother and father had not progressed toward reunification. The mother consented to termination. The father did not attend the hearing. And so, the fighting issue was not whether to terminate parental rights, but who should serve as the children’s guardian and custodian after termination. See Iowa Code § 232.117(3). The Department sought guardianship and confirmed that it intended to place the children with the great aunt. The children’s guardian ad litem believed the

4 children should stay with their foster parents—who wished to adopt them— and thus objected to transferring guardianship to the Department.

Relevant here, the guardian ad litem offered the testimony of a licensed social worker who specializes in infant and early childhood mental health. The specialist testified at length about the cascading harms of moving young children between homes and caregivers. The specialist also explained that children who are “drug-affected at birth” already struggle to form attachments, which can be compounded by moving them between caregivers. And once those children are settled and form bonds in a safe home, uprooting them “would have pretty serious and profound impact on their long-term mental health. They’re [going to] have a hard time forming relationships with anyone else in the future.” As far as forming new attachments, the specialist cautioned that any new relationships should be given time to form by progressive visits over several months, and that “there’s very little meeting [of ] needs that [can] happen through a computer.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Johnson
744 N.W.2d 646 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2008)
In the Interest of R.J.
495 N.W.2d 114 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In the Interest of J.B. and R.R., Minor Children, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-jb-and-rr-minor-children-iowactapp-2026.