John M. v. Ades, Shannon M.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 21, 2007
Docket2 CA-JV 2007-0029
StatusPublished

This text of John M. v. Ades, Shannon M. (John M. v. Ades, Shannon M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John M. v. Ades, Shannon M., (Ark. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

FILED BY CLERK IN THE COURT OF APPEALS NOV -7 2007 STATE OF ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION TWO DIVISION TWO

JOHN M., ) ) 2 CA-JV 2007-0029 Appellant, ) DEPARTMENT B ) v. ) OPINION ) ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF ) ECONOMIC SECURITY and ) SHANNON M., ) ) Appellees. ) )

APPEAL FROM THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PINAL COUNTY

Cause No. JD200600031

Honorable Joseph R. Georgini, Judge

AFFIRMED

Richard Scherb Florence Attorney for Appellant

Terry Goddard, Arizona Attorney General By William V. Hornung Tucson Attorneys for Appellee Arizona Department of Economic Security

V Á S Q U E Z, Judge.

¶1 John M. appeals from the juvenile court’s April 30, 2007, order, entered after

a contested severance hearing, terminating his parental rights to his daughter, Shannon, born

in October 2004, on the grounds that he had neglected or wilfully abused a child, A.R.S. § 8-533(B)(2), and had substantially neglected or wilfully refused to remedy the

circumstances that had caused Shannon to be in an out-of-home placement for nine months

or longer, A.R.S. § 8-533(B)(8)(a). On appeal, John maintains the termination order should

be reversed on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel. He contends his attorney’s

conduct denied him a meaningful opportunity to be heard, and therefore violated his right

to due process, and that he is entitled to a new severance hearing.

Background

¶2 John does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence presented at the

severance hearing that supported the following course of events. John is Shannon’s

biological father, and Shannon’s mother, Tiffany, is John’s stepdaughter. Tiffany was

fourteen years old when Shannon was born. After the Pinal County Sheriff’s Department

received and investigated a report about underage drinking at John’s home during the last

weekend in February 2006, John and his wife, Kitty M., Tiffany’s mother, were arrested for

public indecency, indecent exposure, and luring, exploiting, and furnishing harmful material

to minors. The Arizona Department of Economic Security (ADES) removed Tiffany and

Shannon from the home on February 27, 2006, and they have remained out of the home

since then. They are currently placed with foster parents who wish to adopt them.

¶3 Before and after John’s arrest, Tiffany and other children told detectives and

employees of Child Protective Services that in late February 2006 and on other occasions

they had been served alcohol at John’s home; they had engaged in games of “truth or dare”

with John and had exposed themselves while John photographed them; John and Kitty had

“dance[d] naked” in front of them; and John had masturbated while the children watched.

2 According to Tiffany, sixteen-month-old Shannon had been present when these events

occurred. Tiffany also reported that she had been having sexual relations with John since

she was eleven or twelve.

¶4 The state filed a dependency petition and petition to establish paternity in

March 2006, and in June, John submitted to the dependency petition without contest,

contending he was “willing but unable” to properly parent Shannon.1 At the permanency

hearing, the juvenile court ordered that Shannon’s case plan, as to John, would be severance

of parental rights and adoption. ADES filed a motion to terminate John’s parental rights to

Shannon in December 2006, alleging he had neglected or wilfully abused her. A contested

hearing on the motion commenced in April 2007.

¶5 When the severance hearing began, John was awaiting trial on fifty felony

charges, including sexual conduct with a minor, sexual indecency, sexual exploitation of a

minor, luring, providing harmful materials to a minor, and weapons offenses. Consistent

with the advice of his counsel, John did not testify at the severance hearing. At the

beginning of the hearing, John’s attorney advised the juvenile court that he had “discussed

. . . a number of different issues” with his client. He said he would be objecting to exhibits

attached to reports that had “not been substantiated,” such as certain test results; he noted

John’s continuing objection to the court’s refusal to disclose information about Shannon’s

placement; and he moved to continue the hearing until after the pending criminal charges

were resolved, informing the court that John might also want new counsel appointed. After

1 Based on paternity tests, the court subsequently found John to be Shannon’s biological father.

3 the juvenile court denied the motion to continue, John stated, “That’s it,” demanded that

sheriff’s officers “take [him] back,” and left the courtroom. After the court ordered John to

return to the courtroom and admonished him to remain, John asked that his attorney be

removed from his case, contending that

[Counsel] hasn’t done anything. I sit here with a stack of discovery in front of me I have not had a chance to read through at all. He’s never sent me one piece of discovery since he’s been my attorney; therefore, I come in blind into this—this hearing, and yet everything that I ask for is denied, denied, denied.

¶6 After the court denied his request for new counsel, John asked the court to

continue the hearing so he could personally review documents, telling the court, “I don’t

know what to say, Your Honor, because I haven’t read the discovery. I don’t know what’s

being said about me and I don’t know what’s not being said about me.” The court denied

the request and expressed its doubts about John’s protests, noting:

I’m sure you have some idea as to what the matters of this petition and motion are. You’ve been present at prior proceedings. You’re aware of the dependency that was filed. I believe you have some idea as to why you’re here.

¶7 At the end of the hearing, John’s attorney orally moved to dismiss the

proceeding on the ground that ADES had failed to show the acts had occurred in Pinal

County. He also argued that Shannon had been thriving when she was removed from John’s

home; that no evidence suggested she had been physically abused; and that statements made

by Tiffany and the other minors, while possibly sufficient to support a probable cause

determination in John’s criminal case, did not provide clear and convincing evidence to

support termination of parental rights under § 8-533. The juvenile court denied John’s

4 motion to dismiss and found ADES had sustained its burden of proving the grounds for

terminating his parental rights that were alleged in its motion, as amended.2

Discussion

¶8 On appeal, John does not identify specific trial errors made by counsel but

argues only that he was “denied an adequate opportunity to be meaningfully heard because

he was not consulted or prepared for the hearing by his appointed counsel.” John

recognizes that when reviewing ineffective assistance claims in criminal cases, Arizona courts

employ the standard announced in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S. Ct.

2052 (1984), and that under that test, a party must show both that counsel’s representation

fell below prevailing professional norms and that a reasonable probability exists that, but

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