In the Matter of the Adoption of C.C.L.B.

2001 MT 66, 22 P.3d 646, 305 Mont. 22, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 107
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 2001
Docket00-275
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2001 MT 66 (In the Matter of the Adoption of C.C.L.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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 Matter of the Adoption of C.C.L.B., 2001 MT 66, 22 P.3d 646, 305 Mont. 22, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 107 (Mo. 2001).

Opinion

JUSTICE LEAPHART

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 The “Greens” adopted C.B. on May 26, 1999, through a judicial decree of adoption in the Twenty-first Judicial District Court. The “Whites” also wanted to adopt C.B. and filed a motion to intervene and to set aside the Greens’ final-decree of adoption. 1 The District Court determined that the Whites’ motions were untimely and that they had no standing to intervene or set aside the final decree. We affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶2 This case began in July 1996, when the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services (DPHHS) removed C.B. from the custody of her natural mother and placed her in temporary foster care with the Greens. At the time, C.B. was a little less than a year old. C.B.’s natural father had never taken any responsibility for her care, but DPHHS had developed a treatment plan for C.B.’s natural mother with the hope of reuniting the family. By October 1997, however, it was clear the plan would not be successful, and DPHHS began proceedings to terminate parental rights. By this time, C.B. had been with the Greens for seventeen months, and they decided to pursue permanent adoption, pending the outcome of the termination proceeding. Mrs. White is C.B.’s second cousin. After she learned of the termination proceeding through C.B.’s aunt, the Whites contacted DPHHS to express their interest in adopting C.B. They hoped that, by doing so, C.B. would be able to maintain ties to her natural family.

¶3 From this point forward, the case developed along three lines: the parental rights’ termination action initiated by DPHHS, the adoption proceeding initiated by the Greens and the adoption proceeding initiated by the Whites. The DPHHS termination action and the Greens’ adoption petition were filed in the Twenty-first Judicial District, Ravalli County, where C.B. lives. The Whites filed their adoption petition in the Twelfth Judicial District, Choteau County, *25 where they live. Initially, neither the Twenty-first Judicial District Court nor the Twelfth Judicial District Court knew there was a competing adoption petition pending in the other court. Later, the Whites filed post-judgment motions to intervene in both the termination proceeding and the Greens’ adoption petition.

A. Intervention in the Termination Proceeding

¶4 The Twenty-first Judicial District Court terminated the parental rights of C.B.’s mother and father in March 1998; at the same time it granted custody of C.B. to DPHHS and authorized it to consent to her adoption. When DPHHS subsequently gave its consent to adopt to the Greens, the Whites attempted to intervene in the termination proceeding-despite the fact that some six months had passed since the District Court’s final order. Although the Whites’ motion to intervene in the termination proceeding is not at issue on appeal, its history and outcome are relevant to the questions of how and why the Whites came to file their motion to intervene in the Greens’ adoption petition.

¶5 Well before the termination hearing, DPHHS told the Whites that, before they could be approved as adoptive parents or initiate visits with C.B., they would need to go through a preadoptive evaluation and training process. This involved a study to assess the conditions in the Whites’ home and their suitability as adoptive parents. DPHHS also recommended that the Whites complete a training program for potential foster parents. In addition, the Whites undertook numerous lengthy trips to the Greens’ home to begin to become acquainted with C.B.

¶6 The termination hearing was held in March 1998. The Whites completed the recommended programs and evaluations in July 1998. Shortly thereafter, DPHHS staff approved their home as “an adoptive resource” and recommended placement of C.B. with the Whites. These developments led the Whites to believe that DPHHS would support their efforts to adopt C.B. However, like the Whites, the Greens were also being reviewed by DPHHS as potential adoptive parents for C.B. In August 1998, DPHHS determined that C.B. had formed a strong bond in her current foster placement and that it would be in her best interests to stay with the Greens. In response, the Whites moved to intervene in the termination action, the only legal proceeding that had been filed to date. The Whites, who contend that they are members of C.B.’s extended family, argued that DPHHS should have given them priority as adoptive parents.

¶7 The District Court determined that the Whites failed to state *26 sufficient grounds for intervention in the termination proceeding:

[The Whites] do not appear to be challenging the Court’s decision to terminate ... parental rights and give [DPHHS] permanent legal custody, or the Court’s decision to grant [DPHHS] the right to consent to adoption. Instead, the substance of the briefs leads the Court to determine that the [Whites] are seeking judicial review of [DPHHS’s] decision to approve the [Greens] as C.B.’s adoptive family. The [Whites] do not set forth any authority for judicial review of the Department’s placement determination, and the statutes governing placement of youths do not provide for any such review....

The District Court also determined that the motion to intervene was untimely. It noted that the Whites’ motion to intervene came almost two years after initial investigatory authority was granted and almost eight months after parental rights had been terminated. Citing § 42-2-620, MCA, which limits the time to question a termination order to six months, the District Court denied their motion.

¶8 The District Court went on to recommend that a more appropriate forum for the Whites to seek judicial review of DPHHS’s decision would be in “an action against [DPHHS], or in the separate adoption proceeding, should ... the [Greens] file such an action” (Emphasis added.) The Whites did not follow either recommendation, electing instead to file their own adoption petition in' the Twelfth Judicial District Court.

B. Motion to Intervene in the Greens’Adoption Action

¶9 By the summer of 1998, C.B. had been with the Greens for nearly two years. They formally filed their petition to adopt on March 17, 1999, after DPHHS indicated that it would give them its consent to adopt and after the Whites’ motion to intervene in the termination proceeding had been denied. The Twenty-first Judicial District Court granted the Greens’ petition on May 26, 1999. The Whites filed their motion to intervene and set aside the adoption on December 9, 1999, more than six months after the final decree and more than three years after C.B. was first placed in the Greens’ care.

¶10 The Whites made their motion to intervene pursuant to Rule 24(a), M.R.Civ.P., which specifies conditions under which an applicant shall be allowed to intervene in an action as a matter of right, and Rule 24(b), M.R.Civ.P., which sets outs conditions under which the court may, at its discretion, allow intervention. The Whites also argued that the Greens’ adoption decree should be set aside under the provisions *27 of Rule 60(b)(3), (4) and (6), M.R.Civ.P.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 MT 66, 22 P.3d 646, 305 Mont. 22, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-adoption-of-cclb-mont-2001.