In the Interest Of: RAA, AMA, and CMA, Minor Children, RA v. AW

2016 WY 117, 384 P.3d 1156, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 131, 2016 WL 7177015
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 2016
DocketS-16-0109
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2016 WY 117 (In the Interest Of: RAA, AMA, and CMA, Minor Children, RA v. AW) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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: RAA, AMA, and CMA, Minor Children, RA v. AW, 2016 WY 117, 384 P.3d 1156, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 131, 2016 WL 7177015 (Wyo. 2016).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice.

[¶1] RA (Father) appeals a district court decision terminating his parental rights. He argues that the statutory requirements for termination in Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 14—2— 309(a)(i) (LexisNexis 2015) were not met. We agree with Father that communications he directed to his children were not merely incidental. As a result, the requirement that there be no communication from the absent parent for a period of at least one year was not proven by clear and convincing evidence. We must therefore reverse.

ISSUE

[¶2] While Father presents a number of issues, we find the following narrow question dispositive: Were Father’s communications to his children merely incidental so as to allow his parental rights to be terminated pursuant to § 14-2-309(a)(i)?

FACTS

[¶3] Father and AW (Mother) married in 1998. They had three children together. While the family was living in Texas, Father was arrested in August of 2006.on federal charges involving white collar crimes. Eventually he pled guilty to two counts of the indictment against him: conspiracy to commit wire fraud and aggravated identity theft, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. 1 Father was sentenced to 120 months in prison. .

[¶4] Mother and the children visited Father in county jail at least once right after his arrest; and Mother also wrote him letters for a while. As time went on, Mother felt it was best to protect the children by moving on and putting some distance between them and Father. Mother became the gatekeeper of the communications between Father and the children. She filed for divorce in Texas, and a divorce decree was entered in February of 2007. Father did not participate in the proceedings, so the decree was entered by default. It provided in part:

*1158 [RA] is currently incarcerated in the Hunt County Jail, Greenville, Texas awaiting trial on several criminal offenses and that his release therefrom is not imminent. It is therefore ordered that in the event [RA] is released from detention that he may petition the court for access and possession with the children.
* * *
[RA] is currently incarcerated in the Hunt County Jail, Greenville, Texas awaiting trial on several criminal offenses and that his release therefrom is not imminent. It is therefore ordered that in'the event [RA] is released from detention that either of the parties may petition the court for child support and provisions for healthcare for the children:.

[¶5] Mother remarried in 2008, and she and the children moved from Texas to Wyoming with her new husband. Mother, the children, and her new husband were able to pick up the pieces and make a new life for themselves. 2

[¶6] During the years he was in prison, Father sent letters and cards to the children. From 2008 until his release in 2014,' he sent over forty letters and cards to his children. The substance of those communications varied from a few sentences to full-page letters to each child. The content is about what one might expect from a person in Father’s position. He sent cards on various holidays and birthdays, reminded the children of things they had done together before he was arrested, and wrote of how he looked forward to seeing them again when he got out of prison.

[¶7] Whether these communications reached the children was for Mother to decide. She withheld some of them because Father referred to law enforcement as the “bad police,” and Mother felt such statements were inappropriate for the children to see. 3 The children did not write back after Father was in prison—Mother testified that this was because they did not want to do so, and she did not make them.

. [¶8] Father was granted supervised release from federal prison in November of 2014. 4 That same month, he had his attorney email Mother about visitation, which the Texas divorce decree indicated he might be granted upon release from his charges. See supra, ¶ 4. Mother, acting through her attorney, would not agree to any visitation (including by phone), which prompted Father to file a petition in Laramie County (where Mother and the children now reside) to establish visitation on January 9, 2015. In response, on January, 30, 2015, Mother filed a petition to terminate Father’s parental rights. 5

[¶9] The district court held a trial on the petition for termination, planning to proceed with a later hearing on visitation if Father’s rights were not terminated. Various witnesses testified, including Father and Mother. A number of exhibits were also received. The district court found that Mother had proven grounds to terminate Father’s parental rights under § 14-2-309(a)(i) by clear and convincing evidence, and that it was also in the children’s best interest to do so. It determined that Father had left his children in the care of Mother without provision for support and without communication for a period of at *1159 least a year. With regard to Father’s letters and cards to his children, the district court found them to be incidental communications which did not prevent termination. 6

[¶10] Father timely perfected this appeal.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

[¶11] The issue before us presents a mixed question of law and fact. We must first interpret the word “incidental”. as set forth in Wyo. Stat.. Ann. § 14-2-309(a)(i). Statutory interpretation raises .a question of law, which we review de novo. In re ARW, 2015 WY 25, ¶ 11, 343 P.3d 407, 410 (Wyo. 2015). We then need to decide whether the evidence was sufficient to clearly and convincingly prove grounds for termination of parental rights under the aforementioned statute.

We apply traditional principles of eviden-tiary review when a party challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting termination. We examine the evidence in the light most favorable to the party prevailing below, assume all favorable evidence to be true, and disregard conflicting evidence presented by the unsuccessful party. Because the right to associate with one’s family is fundamental, however, we strictly scrutinize petitions to terminate parental rights. As part of our strict scrutiny standard, we require that a case for termination of parental rights must be established by clear and convincing evidence. Clear and convincing evidence is that kind of proof that would persuade a trier of fact that the truth of the contention is highly probable.

In re HLL, 2016 WY 43, ¶ 39, 372 P.3d 185, 193 (Wyo. 2016) (quoting In re ARW, ¶ 21, 343 P.3d at 413).

DISCUSSION

[¶12] This Court is well aware that termination of parental rights is an extremely important and highly emotional issue. In re FM, 2007 WY 128, ¶ 27, 163 P.3d 844, 851 (Wyo. 2007).

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2016 WY 117, 384 P.3d 1156, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 131, 2016 WL 7177015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-raa-ama-and-cma-minor-children-ra-v-aw-wyo-2016.