Maria L. v. Eighth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada

130 P.3d 657, 122 Nev. 305, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 27, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 31
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 2006
Docket43919, 45415
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 130 P.3d 657 (Maria L. v. Eighth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maria L. v. Eighth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, 130 P.3d 657, 122 Nev. 305, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 27, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 31 (Neb. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Gibbons, J.:

These are consolidated original petitions for a writ of mandamus, challenging district court orders denying a maternal grandmother’s petition for guardianship and petition for visitation with her minor granddaughter. We grant the petitions because the district court failed to comply with Nevada’s abuse and neglect statutes, NRS Chapter 432B, by not ensuring that the grandmother, a relative with a special interest in the child, was involved in and notified of the placement plan before it granted custody of the child to the State, thereby depriving her of the benefit of the familial preference for placement. Further, the district court erroneously gave great weight to the foster parents’ opposition to visitation over the other mandatory factors set forth in the visitation statute, NRS 125C.050. Accordingly, we grant the petitions.

FACTS

Petitioner Maria L. is the maternal grandmother of N.S., the sixth and youngest child of Maria’s daughter, Y.S. While incarcerated for prostitution, Y.S. gave birth to N.S. A toxicology report *308 indicated that Y.S. and N.S. tested positive for amphetamine and methamphetamine. Pending further proceedings, the district court placed N.S. into the protective custody of the real party in interest, the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS). DCFS commenced a proceeding under NRS Chapter 432B, Nevada’s abuse and neglect statute.

A few weeks after the protective placement, Child Protective Services (CPS) contacted Maria because Y.S.’s exact whereabouts were unknown. According to a CPS report, Maria discussed the fact that N.S. might be placed with DCFS. Maria was already taking care of Y.S.’s five other children, pursuant to a temporary guardianship signed by Y.S. Maria expressed to CPS her desire to keep her family together, especially for the children’s sake, but was unsure of how she would care for another child. Maria did not say she could not take N.S. at the time, but because the caseworker believed Maria was taking care of too many children, the CPS report recommended that N.S. be placed elsewhere through DCFS.

Thereafter, the district court made N.S. a ward of the state and, based on the report submitted by CPS, granted custody of N.S. to DCFS for appropriate placement. DCFS immediately placed N.S. with a foster family. Only a few weeks later, the district court made Y.S.’s five other children wards of the state but granted custody to Maria. Since the initial placement, N.S. has lived continuously with the foster family, who subsequently expressed their desire to adopt the child. DCFS allowed Maria unsupervised visitation with N.S. while she was in the care of the foster family. Maria visited the child regularly and also brought the child’s siblings for visits.

DCFS located Y.S. and devised a case plan for her with the permanency goal of reuniting N.S. with Y.S. The case plan required that Y.S. complete a domestic violence program and drug treatment. The plan further allowed supervised visitation between Y.S. and N.S. at the DCFS office. Concurrent with its efforts to reunite N.S. with her mother, DCFS also established adoption as the alternative permanency plan for N.S. in the event that Y.S. failed to comply with her case plan and reunification was not possible.

In the interim, when N.S. was approximately four months old, Maria petitioned the district court, in the abuse and neglect proceedings, to appoint her as the child’s guardian. Around this time, the district court terminated the State’s wardship over Y.S.’s five other children and awarded Maria legal guardianship. Maria secured a larger house and made other preparations necessary to accommodate her sixth grandchild. DCFS opposed Maria’s petition, arguing that, based on CPS’s initial meeting with Maria, she was “overwhelmed” by the responsibility of caring for Y.S.’s other children and could not care for another child. DCFS also ex *309 pressed concern about Maria’s ability to protect N.S. from Y.S. The concern stemmed from one incident where Maria had informed Y.S., who was allowed only supervised visitation with N.S., about the location of an unsupervised visit with N.S. and the foster family. Further, DCFS insisted that N.S. had bonded with the foster family and appeared to be thriving in that environment.

During an evidentiary hearing on Maria’s guardianship petition, the district court heard testimony from Maria; Kisha Earhart, the DCFS social worker in charge of supervising N.S.; and the foster mother. Maria testified that she had recently separated from her husband and had moved into a larger, four-bedroom home to accommodate the children. In addition, to support the children, Maria stated that she earned a regular wage as a kitchen worker and received Social Security benefits and food stamps from Medical each month for the children. Maria testified that her twenty-three-year-old daughter, the children’s aunt, assisted her in watching the children while she was at work, often staying the night.

Earhart testified that she believed Maria would find it difficult to care for all six children. Earhart was also concerned that Maria would allow Y.S. unsupervised access to N.S. Earhart believed that Maria could not keep N.S. safe because she did not understand the extent of Y.S.’s drug addiction and criminal history. The foster mother testified that she and her husband are employed and have two natural children, one of whom still lives with them in their three-bedroom home.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the district court commended Maria for her efforts to keep the family together. However, it concluded that giving Maria the responsibility of another child was too much. Although Maria was successfully caring for N.S.’s five siblings, the court expressed concern that Maria lacked the time, emotional support, and financial resources to care for N.S. Further, the district court found that Y.S.’s drug problems and possible interaction with N.S. would make Maria’s guardianship problematic. The district court noted that it was bothered by DCFS’s decision to place N.S. in a foster home immediately, to the exclusion of the grandmother and the family. The court recognized that while there is a preference to place a child with his or her family, it was in N.S.’s best interest to stay with the foster parents because N.S. had already lived with them for a period of eight months. The district court noted that “to disrupt that would be unfair to the child.” Taking this factor into account, along with the foster parents’ commitment, the district court concluded that there were adequate grounds for overcoming the familial preference. Consequently, the district court denied Maria’s petition for guardianship. Maria immediately appealed the guardianship decision.

*310 DCFS subsequently filed a permanency and placement review report in the district court, outlining its attempts to reunite Y.S. and N.S. However, Y.S. had not complied with her case plan and refused to submit to drug testing during the course of the review. DCFS concluded that reunification was not in the child’s best interest, and thus, DCFS filed a petition to terminate Y.S.’s parental rights. 1

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Bluebook (online)
130 P.3d 657, 122 Nev. 305, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 27, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maria-l-v-eighth-judicial-district-court-of-the-state-of-nevada-nev-2006.