N.D. v. State

2015 UT 92, 362 P.3d 1248, 2015 WL 7571828
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 2015
DocketNo. 20140786
StatusPublished

This text of 2015 UT 92 (N.D. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N.D. v. State, 2015 UT 92, 362 P.3d 1248, 2015 WL 7571828 (Utah 2015).

Opinion

Associate Chief Jusfiiqe LEE,

opinion of the Court:

1T 1 This is an appeal from a parental rights termination order entered in the juvenile court, The principal questions presented concern the applicability and operation of Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. §$ 12182, in parental termination proceedings under Utah law. We conclude that the ADA applies to the provision of reunification services under Utah Code sections 78A-6-8312 and T8A-6-507, but affirm on the ground that the juvenile. court judge did not exceed the bounds of his discretion in deciding that requested modifications to the reunification plan in question were not reasonable.

1 2 K.C. is a minor child born in 2005, She was removed from the custody of her mother, N.D., by order of the juvenile court at a shelter hearing in late October 2012, K.C.'s father was incarcerated at the time.

13 The shelter hearing continued six days later. There the State alleged that K.C.'s father had sexually abused her. Based on admissions by the father under Utah Rule of Juvenile Procedure 34(e), the court found that K.C. had been sexually abused. The court also expressed concerns about the mother's mental and physical health and about her ability to protect the child against subsequent abuse. And it adjudged the child "dependent"-"homeless or without proper care through no fault of the child's parent, guardian, or custodian." See UTAH CODE § 78A-6-105(11). ~

ment of Child and Family Services. [4 In March 2013, the juvenile court ordered reunification services for the mother. At that time N.D. agreed to the terms of a family service plan prepared by the Depart-She made no reference to the Americans with Disabilities Act or to any need for the plan to be modified in light of her disabilities.

T5 The service plan noted, however, that N.D. had extensive disabilities, including serious mental health problems such as schizoaf-fective disorder, and physical limitations such as poor vision. It also set out seven objectives for N.D. to accomplish in order to be reunited with K.C.

T 6 The court held review hearings on June 8, 2018, and July 81, 2018. At those hearings [1250]*1250the court found that DCFS was making "reasonable efforts" toward fulfillment of the service plan. And again N.D. made no reference to. the ADA and raised no criticism of the service plan or:any concerns regarding the effect of her disabilities on her-capacity to comply with the plan. At the June hearing the State recommended continuation of reunification services. Eventually, however, DCFS decided to oppose continued services, asserting that N.D. was unable to develop a healthy parental relationship with her child.

T7 A permanency hearing was held on October 15, 2013, at which the State and the Guardian ad Litem asked that reunification services be terminated based on N.D.'s lack of substantial progress." N.D.'s counsel sought a 90-day extension under Utah Code section T8A-6-814(8). But the request was made under Utah law; no reference was made to the ADA (except perhaps implicitly in a vague reference to the need for. "reasonable accommodations" for N.D.).

.T 8 An evidentiary hearmg on permanency began on December 8, 2018. In light of testimony presented at that heamng, the Juvenile court concluded that there was insubstantial compliance with the service plan and that . extending services was against the child's best interests, Although DCFS had done "more than might be expected to assist the mother" and had "consistently worked to accomplish reunification," the court concluded 'that N.D. was not likely to become a successful parent without another year or more of intensive therapy, supervision, and support from relatives. Reunification services were therefore terminated-nearly seventeen months after K.C. had omgmally been removed from N.D.'s custody

19 The State then filed a pet1t10n for termination of parental rights, mamtammg that the mother had not made sufficient efforts "to support or communicate with the child, to prevent neglect to the child, to eliminate the risk of serious harm to the child, or to avoid being an unfit parent." It was at this stage that N.D. first invoked the ADA-as an affirmative defense to the termination petition. She argued that DCFS had failed to "make reasonable efforts to provide sufficient disability-related reunification services" and had "failed to adequately revise, adjust, and increase disability-related services received during [the] course of this case consistent with the state governnient agency requirements of the [ADA]." And she contended that the State was, therefore precluded from terminating her parental rights, and that she was entitled to additional time for reunification services.

110 N.D. claimed that DCFS had not complied with the ADA because it failed to train its caseworkers to provide ADA-compliant services. On that basis, N.D. asserted that the State was incapable of making "reasonable efforts" towards reunification and that termination under such cireamstances would run afoul of the ADA. She also complained that she had not been referred to the Coordinating Council for Persons with Disabilities or the Utah Division of Services for People with Disabilities,

{11 The Guardian ad Litem advanced three arguments against application of the ADA in these cireumstances. » First, that the ADA does not apply to termination proceedings because they do not constitute "a service, program or activity" under the ADA. Second, that any ADA claims should have been brought prior to the termination proceeding and as a separate action from the child welfare case. And finally, that refusing to terminate parental rights based on ADA violations would cut against the best interests of the child. ~

12 The juvenile court concluded that the ADA is not a defense in a termination proceeding because the proceeding is not "a service, program, or activity." Alternatively, the court concluded that even if the ADA applied, the mother had not suffered harm from any failure to comply with the ADA because the mother's disabilities were accommodated and there was "no evidence of any accommodation that should have been provided but was not." In the court's view, the service plan was properly "tailored .to [the [1251]*1251mother's] individual needs and limitations and ... additional adjustment was therefore not needed." Accordingly, the court terminated N.D.'s parental rights under Utah Code section 78A-6-507, N.D. filed a timely appeal.

II

" 13 The threshold question presented con-, cerns the applicability of the, Americans with Disabilities Act to the provision of reunification services under Utah Code sections 78A 6-312 and 78A-6-507. That is a question of law, which we review for correctness. Manzanares v. Byington (In re Adoption of Baby B.), 2012 UT 35, ¶ 41, 308 P.3d 382. On this threshold question we disagree with the juvenile court,. For reasons set forth below, we conclude that the ADA applies in this context.

T14 That brings us to a second question-whether the juvenile court erred in its alternative determination that N.D.'s reliance on the ADA fell short on its merits, This was a mixed determination meriting deference on this appeal. Id. 142, The Juvenile court's alternative basis for its decision was a determination that there were no reasonable modifications to the reunification plan that could appropriately be made in the civrenmstances of this case-a mixed determination on a fact-intensive question not meriting -a hard look by an appellate court. See id.; A.O. v. State (State ex rel.

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Bluebook (online)
2015 UT 92, 362 P.3d 1248, 2015 WL 7571828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nd-v-state-utah-2015.