In the Interest of P.B., Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedApril 26, 2023
Docket22-1467
StatusPublished

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In the Interest of P.B., Minor Child, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-1467 Filed April 26, 2023

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

B.M., Mother, Petitioner-Appellee,

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

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Marion County, Erica Crisp, District

Associate Judge.

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

chapter 600A (2021). AFFIRMED.

Ryan A. Genest of Simpson, Jensen, Abels, Fischer & Bouslog, P.C., Des

Moines, for appellant.

Andrew B. Howie of Shindler, Anderson, Goplerud & Weese, P.C., West

Des Moines, for appellee.

Lois Vroom, Knoxville, attorney and guardian ad litem for minor child.

Heard by Bower, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Tabor, JJ. 2

PER CURIAM.

A father, J.B., appeals the termination of his parental rights under Iowa

Code section 600A.8(3)(b) (2021). He contends that he did not abandon his

daughter, P.B. And he asserts that termination was not in her best interests. On

our review, we find P.B.’s mother, B.M., offered clear and convincing evidence of

abandonment. We also conclude that termination serves P.B.’s best interests.

Thus, we affirm the termination order.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

The parents married in June 2010. They welcomed their daughter, P.B., in

February 2015. Before his daughter’s birth, J.B. completed an eleven-month tour

in Afghanistan with the United States Army National Guard.1 When he returned

from service, J.B. suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a traumatic

brain injury, sleep apnea, and nerve damage to his back and hands.2 His mental-

health issues contributed to strife in their marriage; J.B. admitted that they “were

fighting a lot at the time, a lot of arguing, and I was just not being a good husband.

I was sleeping on the couch, hanging out with friends more than I should of,

drinking a little bit more than I should of.”

By October 2015, J.B. left a note for B.M. saying that he planned to move

out: “I specifically said I think I need to either get an apartment on my own or . . .

1He also completed a two-year tour in Iraq before the marriage. 2Some of his mental-health issues may stem from the causalities of his fellow soldiers in Afghanistan: “I lost two out of my squad July 16, 2012, and I lost four out of first platoon January 6, 2012.” 3

move in with my parents, and we need to work on us, that I'm having all these

issues.” He left the next day for Des Moines, but left most his belongings behind.3

B.M. immediately called J.B.'s parents. They asked J.B. what the note meant. He

responded, "I don't know what it means."

B.M. filed for divorce that November. After J.B. was served with the divorce

petition, he “had a breakdown” and attempted suicide. He realized he “needed to

get help” and went to the Veterans Affairs (VA) Hospital in Des Moines. The father

entered a 90-day PTSD program. He was not allowed to leave until the program

was completed. And he stayed for 100 days. He testified that he was discharged

with a disability rating of 100 percent for his PTSD and 70 percent for his brain

injury. He had minimal contact with P.B. during this time. But, at his request, B.M.

did bring the child for two visits while he was in the hospital.

J.B. failed to respond to the divorce petition. So the district court entered a

default decree in February 2016. The court ordered J.B. to pay $114 in monthly

child support, based on the federal minimum wage. The district court awarded

sole legal custody and physical care of P.B. to B.M., who lived in Peoria, Iowa.

The decree allowed J.B. visitation, “at the times, days, and in a manner as may be

agreed upon by the parties from time to time, and not to interfere with the activities,

well-being and best interest of the child.” Plus, J.B.’s visits had to be supervised

by B.M. or another adult that she designated. J.B. testified he did not blame the

Court “by any means” for acquiescing in B.M.’s request to be in charge of visitation.

3 The mother testified that he did not tell her where he was going. But he disputes that account. 4

Following the divorce, J.B. moved out of Iowa. He testified that the parents

of a fallen comrade loaned him money to relocate to Indiana so he could “get work

and obviously finish working on myself.” After the move, he worked full-time as a

corrections officer. Meanwhile, B.M. stayed with P.B. in Peoria. They continued

to have some contact with P.B.’s paternal grandparents, who also lived in Iowa.

However, J.B. did not have any personal contact with the child for nearly five years.

According to trial testimony, J.B. had four visits with his daughter after he

moved. Their first interaction was at the Eddyville Raceway. The second visit was

at the Blank Park Zoo in 2017. He also saw P.B. at Christmas time that year. And

B.M. recalled that J.B. “showed up randomly” on her porch when he was back in

Iowa once to visit his parents. On top of those in-person visits, J.B. testified that

he and his daughter spoke on the phone two or three times per week while he was

living in Indiana.

But things changed when both parents remarried in 2018.4 B.M.—along

with P.B.—moved to a home in Pella with her new husband, J.M.5 That year,

according to J.B.’s testimony, “all contact stopped, and I would just get voicemails.”

He remembered calling B.M. from his office phone; she picked up, then hung up,

realizing it was him. And J.B.’s mother, D.B., also testified that she saw B.M. send

a call from J.B. to voicemail.

B.M. testified that she decided in 2018 that contact between J.B. and their

daughter was no longer in the child’s best interests. Yet B.M. claimed that she

4By the time of trial, J.B. and his new wife had a five-month-old son. 5Pella was about twenty miles away from B.M.’s former home in Peoria. B.M. had a son with her new spouse and became a stepmother to his three daughters from a previous marriage. Their family moved to a different address in Pella in 2019. 5

never told J.B. that she was ending communication.6 But J.B. testified that he got

the message through his parents. They showed him text messages and emails

from B.M. informing them that they too would be cut off from their grandchild if they

allowed him to contact P.B.

After learning of B.M.’s decision, J.B. said he considered hiring a lawyer,

but couldn’t afford one: “I did call several, tried to reach out to several Veteran

Services to see if a lawyer could be appointed or help someone with—you know,

on disability and, unfortunately, that just wasn’t the case.” J.B.’s mother

corroborated his inability to afford legal representation: “He didn’t have the money

to do that.”7 Despite his limited means, J.B. did maintain regular employment.

Moving from Indiana, he took a job in North Carolina with a specialty lighting

company. Eighteen months later, he relocated to Virginia, where he trained young

people how to ride motocross.

P.B.’s relationship with her paternal grandparents also changed after B.M.

remarried. The couple, who lived in Sully, had been seeing P.B. two to three times

per week. Then after 2018, B.M. restricted their visits. For example, P.B. could

not stay overnight at her grandparents’ house because B.M. worried they would

allow J.B. to see her.

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