In the Interest of N.F., Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMay 13, 2026
Docket26-0010
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of N.F., Minor Child (In the Interest of N.F., 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 N.F., Minor Child, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 26-0010 Filed May 13, 2026 _______________

In the Interest of N.F., Minor Child, P.C., Father, Appellant. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Warren County, The Honorable Mark F. Schlenker, Judge. _______________

AFFIRMED _______________

Zachary Priebe of Jeff Carter Law Offices, PC, Des Moines, attorney for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Mackenzie Moran, Assistant Attorney General, attorneys for appellee State.

Yvonne Naanep, Des Moines, attorney and guardian ad litem for minor child. _______________

Considered without oral argument by Tabor, C.J., and Chicchelly and Sandy, JJ. Opinion by Sandy, J.

1 SANDY, Judge.

One-month-old N.F. came to the attention of the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services when he was found to have bruising to both eyes, bruising on his back, and fractured ribs while in the care of his mother. N.F. was initially placed with his father but then removed from his care following a domestic disturbance. Despite being offered services to address the department’s concerns, the father did not meaningfully engage with them. The juvenile court terminated the father’s parental rights under Iowa Code sections 232.116(1)(d) and (h) (2025), finding that N.F. could not safely be returned to his custody at the time of the termination hearing. On appeal, the father challenges both the statutory ground for termination and whether termination serves the child’s best interests. In addition, he asks for a six- month extension towards reunification. We affirm.

BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS N.F. was one month old when the department first took notice of him. The injuries that drew that attention—bruising to both eyes, bruising to his back, fractures to his sixth and eighth ribs—were discovered in September 2024. The child had been in the care of his mother. She was charged with child endangerment, a class “C” felony, in Warren County, later pleading to a class “D” felony and receiving probation and a five-year no-contact order with N.F. as the protected party.

N.F. was removed from his mother’s care by court order and placed with his father. He remained there through November, when N.F. was found to be a child in need of assistance. At the disposition in January 2025, the department’s recommendations for the father were modest: participation in SafeCare programming. The child stayed in the father’s home.

2 That arrangement did not last long. On January 27, the State moved to modify placement. The precipitating incident was a domestic dispute at the home the father shared with his mother, where the father had been aggressively yelling and cursing at his mother while holding N.F. The confrontation escalated to the point that the paternal grandmother struck the father as he held the child, and both she and the father’s teenage sister had to leave the home for their own safety. N.F. was removed from the father’s care that same day and placed with his maternal great-aunt and her husband, where he has remained since.

The concerns that animated the modification were not confined to that single incident. A psychosocial evaluation and parenting assessment conducted by Susan Gauger, ACSW, LISW, on January 27 and 31, painted a more systemic picture. Gauger found that the father could appear hostile and uncooperative, was reactive when angered, and did not appear to understand why the altercation with his mother raised legitimate concerns. Her report documented N.F.’s mother’s allegations that the father had held a knife to her throat and threatened her with a gun—allegations the father brushed aside on the grounds he had not been criminally charged. The report identified a pattern of dominance and control and a lack of recognition that his aggressive behaviors posed a problem. Gauger recommended referral to an anger management program and individual therapy to address stress and mood regulation.

Services were offered but there was a persistent gap between what was offered and what was accepted. The father was ordered to complete the Iowa Domestic Abuse Program (IDAP) and engage in individual mental-health therapy. He sought and initially received court-ordered funding for IDAP— only for the State to resist that request and the juvenile court to reverse its

3 prior ruling. The father paid for the program himself. He also began mental- health services through Eyerly Ball, where he was evaluated in April and saw a therapist for the first time in May.

The department encouraged the father to find a provider who could see him weekly, given the documented concerns about his emotional regulation. The father resisted this, stating repeatedly that he did not need therapy and could not be compelled to attend weekly. His Eyerly Ball therapist wrote a letter noting that clinic capacity limited appointments to monthly. The father construed this as a professional judgment that weekly therapy was unnecessary. The State disputed that reading, and the therapist confirmed to the case manager that he had provided the father with referrals to providers who could offer weekly sessions and that he could benefit from more frequent care. The father did not pursue those referrals. He missed a therapy appointment on August 5, cancelled another on August 27, and did not engage in any further therapy sessions after that.

His IDAP completion fared no better. In August, the father’s conduct toward the program instructor was sufficiently rude and disrespectful that she contacted the department to report it. He was discharged from the program in October for exceeding the allowable number of absences and for failure to make any payments toward his program fee.

The permanency hearing was held in July. The father requested the return of N.F. to his care or, alternatively, a six-month extension of time to reunify. The juvenile court authorized the State to file a termination petition instead. That petition was filed October 1. By the time of the termination hearing in November, the father had not visited N.F. since September— nearly two months. He had also disengaged from family casework during that period. Before that withdrawal, his visits with the child had remained fully

4 supervised. He had cycled through five to ten jobs since the child’s birth and had not maintained independent housing, residing in his mother’s basement while N.F. had slept in the father’s mother’s bedroom. A domestic abuse protective order, obtained by the child’s mother against the father, had been in effect from July 2024 through July 2025.

The mother consented to termination of her parental rights. She did not appear at the termination hearing, and she does not appeal. The juvenile court entered its order terminating parental rights to both parents on December 31, 2025. The court terminated the mother’s rights under Iowa Code sections 232.116(1)(a), (d), (h), and (i), and the father’s rights under sections 232.116(1)(d) and (h). The court found no statutory exception under section 232.116(3) that would counsel against termination, noting that the parent-child bond was effectively nonexistent and that N.F. had never lived with either parent for more than a few months of his short life.

The father appeals. He challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting termination under sections 232.116(1)(d) and (h) and contends that termination was not in N.F.’s best interests. He asks this court to reverse and remand with directions to return the child to his care.

STANDARD OF REVIEW We review termination-of-parental-rights cases de novo. In re A.B., 957 N.W.2d 280, 293 (Iowa 2021). We are not bound by the juvenile court’s fact findings, but we give them respectful consideration, especially when assessing the credibility of witnesses. Id.

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Related

§ 232.116
Iowa § 232.116
§ 232.117
Iowa § 232.117

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In the Interest of N.F., Minor Child, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-nf-minor-child-iowactapp-2026.