In the Interest of W.T., Minor Child

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 3, 2021
Docket21-0540
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of W.T., Minor Child (In the Interest of W.T., Minor Child) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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 W.T., Minor Child, (iowa 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 21–0540

Submitted October 20, 2021—Filed December 3, 2021

IN THE INTEREST OF W.T., Minor Child,

J.L., Father,

Appellant.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Marshall County, Paul G.

Crawford, District Associate Judge.

Dad seeks a delayed appeal from the juvenile court’s termination of his

parental rights. DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; JUVENILE

COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.

Oxley, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which Christensen, C.J.,

and Appel and Mansfield, JJ., joined. Waterman, J., filed a dissenting opinion.

McDermott, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Waterman and McDonald,

JJ., joined.

Christopher A. Clausen of Clausen Law Office, Ames, for appellant father. 2

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Ellen Ramsey-Kacena, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee. 3

OXLEY, Justice.

This appeal involves the termination of a dad’s parental rights. Dad filed

his notice of appeal one day late and asks us to grant his request for a delayed

appeal. For the reasons discussed below, we grant Dad’s request and, on our de

novo review, affirm the juvenile court’s order terminating his parental rights.

I.

This case was brought to the department of human service (DHS)’s

attention when it was reported Mom allowed a registered sex offender to stay

overnight with her and her three children, including W.T. Mom agreed with DHS

that this was a bad idea. She was arrested for child endangerment and jailed

after it happened again. The juvenile court granted DHS’s removal order, and all

three children were placed in foster care. The State filed a child-in-need-of-

assistance (CINA) petition in November 2019. Mom identified Dad as W.T.’s

father, and paternity testing confirmed he was her biological father in mid-March

2020. Dad lived in Arizona, and a home study was started. By then, W.T. was

six months old.

Dad returned to Iowa in July for his brother’s graduation and ended up

staying when, in his words, he “got stranded.” DHS met with him later that

month. A provider scheduled a visit between Dad and W.T. in August, which Dad

cancelled. DHS made contact with Dad nearly every month after that, but Dad

did not even meet W.T. until January 17, 2021, four days before the termination

hearing. In the meantime, the State moved to terminate Mom’s and Dad’s

parental rights on November 4, 2020 because Mom was not in a position to 4

provide for the needs of the child, and Dad had not engaged in services or even

met W.T. even though he had moved back to Iowa in July. When Dad finally met

W.T. on January 17, 2021, she clung to the provider during the first half of the

two-hour visit because she had never met Dad and was scared. She eventually

warmed up to Dad, but as the provider testified, they couldn’t have been bonded

after that one short visit.

At the time of the hearing on January 21, Dad lacked a stable income,

having just started working part-time doing odd jobs for his landlord for an

undetermined amount of pay. Dad was living with a woman whose parental

rights to her own children had previously been terminated, which raised

concerns for DHS. The DHS case manager also expressed concerns at the

termination hearing about W.T.’s emotional state if she was separated from her

half sister, who was in the same foster placement. The juvenile court concluded

the State proved the grounds for termination and terminated Mom’s and Dad’s

parental rights on April 6.

The deadline to appeal was April 21. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.101(1)(a). Mom

did not appeal. Dad appealed but filed the notice of appeal on April 22—one day

late. Recognizing the untimeliness of the notice, Dad’s counsel filed a motion for

a delayed appeal, explaining: “The undersigned conferred with the father who

wishes to appeal. The undersigned had calendared the deadline to appeal based

on the date of notification of April 8, 2021, in error.” We ordered the motion be

submitted with the appeal. 5

We transferred the case, and the court of appeals denied Dad’s request for

a delayed appeal because the late filing was based on attorney inadvertence and

was not attributable to any extenuating circumstances. We granted Dad’s

application for further review to further define the parameters of delayed appeals

in the context of chapter 232 appeals.

II.

We begin by determining whether we can hear Dad’s appeal. Although an

untimely appeal from a termination-of-parental-rights (TPR) order results in

dismissal of the appeal, see In re J.H., 952 N.W.2d 157, 165 (Iowa 2020), we

recently extended our delayed appeal jurisprudence involving criminal appeals

to TPR appeals under limited circumstances, see In re W.M., 957 N.W.2d 305

(Iowa 2021) (granting father a delayed appeal when his notice of appeal was filed

two days late); In re A.B., 957 N.W.2d 280 (Iowa 2021) (granting father a delayed

appeal when the petition on appeal, required to perfect his appeal under rule

6.201(3), was filed two days late). In the TPR context, we said a delayed appeal

is proper “only where the parent clearly intended to appeal,” the “failure to timely

perfect the appeal was outside of the parent’s control,” and the delay was “no

more than negligible.” In re A.B., 957 N.W.2d at 292.

In In re A.B., the father’s intent to appeal was obvious from his timely-filed

notice of appeal, his counsel was responsible for missing the deadline for filing

the petition on appeal, and the two-day delay “did not unnecessarily prolong the

appeal process.” Id. at 293. We reached a similar conclusion in In re W.M., where

an incarcerated father’s intent to timely appeal was shown by his return of the 6

signed notice of appeal to his attorney postmarked on the deadline for filing the

notice, the prison transfer and mail situation that delayed the father’s receipt of

the order and notice from his attorney was beyond the father’s control, and the

belated notice of appeal did not delay the proceedings where the petition on

appeal was still filed within thirty days of the juvenile court’s termination order.

957 N.W.2d at 316–17.

Here, Dad argues the same standard applies to him because he clearly

intended to appeal, the failure to timely perfect the appeal was his attorney’s

fault, not his, and the appeal process was not delayed by the one-day-late filing

of the notice of appeal where the petition on appeal was still filed within thirty

days of the termination order, just as in W.M. Dad contends the only thing

missing is a “statement of extenuating circumstances,” a reference to footnote 4

in In re A.B. See 957 N.W.2d at 293 n.4. There, we cautioned:

That is not to say an attorney’s inadvertent failure to properly calendar the deadline for a petition on appeal will entitle her client to a delayed appeal. Such would effectively write our “no extensions” provision out of the rules, which we have no intention of doing. Rather, we recognize the extenuating circumstances in this case involving the heightened quarantining practices required by the coronavirus . . . .

Id. We must now decide whether footnote 4 adds an extenuating circumstances

requirement that precludes parents from receiving appellate review of their

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