Matter of R.J.F., YINC

CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 2026
DocketDA 25-0707
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of Matter of R.J.F., YINC (Matter of R.J.F., YINC) 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
Matter of R.J.F., YINC, (Mo. 2026).

Opinion

06/09/2026

DA 25-0707 Case Number: DA 25-0707

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2026 MT 125

IN THE MATTER OF:

R.J.F.,

A Youth in Need of Care.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District, In and For the County of Yellowstone, Cause No. DN 23-294 Honorable Thomas Pardy, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Laura Reed, Attorney at Law, Missoula, Montana

For Appellee:

Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Cori Losing, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

Scott Twito, Yellowstone County Attorney, Amanda Tiernan, Deputy County Attorney, Billings, Montana

For Foster Parents J.A. and B.A.:

Joseph M. Raffiani, Raffiani Law Firm P.C., Billings, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: April 29, 2026

Decided: June 9, 2026

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Appellant R.F. (Mother) appeals the order of August 18, 2025, from the Thirteenth

Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County, granting primary custody of R.J.F. (Child) to

the foster parents and dismissing the child dependency cause. We reverse the District

Court’s August 18, 2025 Order to Dismiss and remand to the District Court to strike foster

parents’ Motion for Dismissal and to issue an order dismissing cause DN 23-294 based on

Mother’s successful completion of her treatment plan, meeting the conditions for return,

and being a fit parent.

¶2 We restate the issue on appeal as follows:

Whether the District Court erred in granting primary custody to the foster parents and dismissing the cause under § 41-3-438(3)(d), MCA.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 This is Mother’s second appeal of this cause. The Montana Department of Health

and Human Services, Child and Family Services Division (Department), became involved

with Mother at the time of Child’s birth in October 2016. Eleven months after its initial

petition (DN 16-407) for emergency protective services, and only five months after

Mother’s treatment plan was put in place, the Department sought termination of Mother’s

parental rights. Following hearing on the petition, the District Court terminated

Mother’s parental rights to Child. Mother appealed. On appeal, this Court determined the

Department failed to provide Mother with the required reasonable efforts to avoid removal

and to reunify her with Child.1 Given this, combined with the substantial positive change

1 A more detailed account of the factual and procedural background and the reasonable efforts 2 Mother had already accomplished by the time of the termination hearing, the District Court

erred in its determination that the Department established that the condition rendering

Mother unfit to safely parent, namely her substance use disorder, was not likely to change

within a reasonable time. As such, we remanded “to the District Court for the Department

to provide Mother with reasonable efforts to reunify her with Child.” In re R.J.F.,

2019 MT 113, ¶ 48, 395 Mont. 454, 443 P.3d 387.

¶4 This appeal must be understood in light of our prior remand. In In re R.J.F., we did

not remand for the Department to facilitate a permanent custodial arrangement between

Mother and the foster parents. We remanded for the Department to provide Mother

reasonable efforts to reunify her with Child. In re R.J.F., ¶ 48. The Department’s statutory

obligation after remand therefore was not merely to keep Child safe in foster placement; it

was to work, consistent with Child’s safety, toward restoration of Mother’s care and

custody. When Mother thereafter completed the tasks required of her and met the

conditions for return, the Department’s role was to return Child to Mother’s care and

dismiss the cause; it could not condition dismissal of the child-welfare case on a Title 40

arrangement that transferred primary physical custody to the foster parents.

¶5 In the months following remand, Mother successfully completed her treatment plan

and met the conditions for return of Child to her care. Despite this, the Department did not

timely seek dismissal of the cause by placing Child with Mother. Mother asserts that

despite her successful completion of her treatment plan and meeting the conditions for

analysis can be found in In re R.J.F., 2019 MT 113, 395 Mont. 454, 443 P.3d 387. 3 return of Child to her care, the Department refused to return Child to her care or allow her

to relocate with Child to California where she had family support. Mother reports the

Department informed her it would not dismiss her case unless she agreed to enter into a

parenting plan with the foster parents. Fourteen months after this Court remanded the case

to the Department with the directive to provide Mother reasonable efforts to reunify her

with Child—and several months after Mother successfully completed her treatment plan—

the Department still had not dismissed the cause. On August 7, 2020, Mother signed a

parenting plan (the Plan) drafted by foster parents’ attorney in DR 20-801.2 The court

adopted the Plan on August 14, 2020. Less than three weeks later, the Department sought

dismissal and DN 16-407 was dismissed.

¶6 The Plan in DR 20-801 is fairly generic. It does not assert that it establishes, or

intends to establish, in foster parents a parental interest under § 40-4-228(1), MCA, or a

child-parent relationship under § 40-4-211(4)(b), MCA. The Plan does not refer to foster

parents as “parents”; generally it uses “the parties” and occasionally refers to Mother as

Child’s mother. At the end of the document, the district court ordered3:

This Court having reviewed the foregoing Parenting Plan and finding that the Plan is in the best interest of the minor children of the parties,

IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the foregoing Parenting Plan of the parties is hereby adopted by the Court as being in the best interest of the children. Both parties are ordered to adhere to said parenting Plan.

2 Foster parents at times inaccurately cite this cause as DR 20-1801. 3 Further, demonstrating its generic nature, it is noted the District Court refers to the Plan being “in the best interests of the children” when Child is the only subject of the Plan.

4 The district court’s order adopting the Plan contains no findings, conclusions, or

order establishing foster parents a parental interest or parent-child relationship under

§§ 40-4-228(1) or -211(4)(b), MCA. The Plan generally appears to be an agreement, with

no stated consideration, allowing the foster parents to care for Child during specified

periods; it does not confer constitutional or legal parental status to the foster parents.

Further, upon review of the pleadings of record in DR 20-801, the Plan is the initiating

pleading—no petition was filed seeking for establishment of a parenting plan pursuant

to Title 40, or a parental interest or parent-child relationship under §§ 40-4-228(1)

or -211(4)(b), MCA.

¶7 In December 2020, Mother gave birth to a second child, M.P., who remained in her

care without Department involvement. Over three years later, after Mother experienced

relapse and criminal charges,4 the Department filed the petition in this cause, DN 23-294.

Child and M.P. tested positive for methamphetamine exposure and Child and his sister

were removed from Mother’s care on December 1, 2023. Child was placed full-time with

the foster parents; M.P.

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