25CA0875 Peo in Interest of AB 10-30-2025
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 25CA0875 Weld County District Court No. 23JV129 Honorable Allison J. Esser, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Appellee,
In the Interest of A.B., a Child,
and Concerning T.B.,
Appellant.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
Division VI Opinion by JUDGE SULLIVAN Welling and Berger*, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced October 30, 2025
Bruce T. Barker, County Attorney, David S. Anderson, Assistant County Attorney, Greeley, Colorado, for Appellee
Debra W. Dodd, Counsel for Youth, Berthoud, Colorado, for A.B.
Just Law Group, LLC, John F. Poor, Denver, Colorado, for Appellant
*Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art. VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2025. ¶1 In this dependency and neglect proceeding, T.B. (father)
appeals the juvenile court’s judgment allocating parental
responsibilities for A.B. (the youth) to her maternal grandparents.
We affirm.
I. Background
¶2 In September 2023, the then-thirteen-year-old youth and her
older half-sister (sister) were living with their mother. Mother’s
mental health began deteriorating, so the youth and her sister
snuck out of mother’s home and went to their maternal
grandparents’ home.
¶3 Shortly thereafter, the Weld County Department of Human
Services filed a petition in dependency and neglect alleging
concerns about mother’s mental health and substance use. The
petition noted that father and the youth had a positive relationship,
but they had limited contact because father lived in Missouri. The
juvenile court granted temporary legal custody to the Department,
and the youth and her sister remained with their maternal
grandparents.
¶4 Approximately four months after the Department filed the
petition, father entered a no-fault admission, and the juvenile court
1 adjudicated the youth dependent or neglected. On the same day,
the court adopted a treatment plan for father.
¶5 Mother passed away in April 2024. Three months later, father
moved the juvenile court to return the youth home to him. The
court denied father’s motion, finding that it was in the youth’s best
interests to remain with maternal grandparents.
¶6 Father then moved for an allocation of parental responsibilities
(APR) for the youth to him. Thereafter, the youth filed a competing
motion requesting an APR to maternal grandparents. The court
held a contested hearing on the motions. After considering the
evidence and taking the matter under advisement, the court
granted an APR for the youth to maternal grandparents. The court
ordered joint decision-making responsibility between maternal
grandparents and father. The court also granted father telephone
and video contact with the youth. It then ordered a step-up
visitation plan in which father would exercise two weekend visits in
Colorado and one week-long visit in Missouri during the first year of
the plan, followed by two week-long visits in Missouri during the
following years until the youth turned eighteen.
2 II. Determination of the APR
¶7 Father contends that the juvenile court abused its discretion
and “infringed upon [his] fundamental, constitutional right to
parent” by granting an APR to maternal grandparents. Specifically,
he argues that the court abused its discretion by granting the APR
because (1) he was a fit parent; (2) no evidence showed that the
youth’s health, safety, or development would be at risk if she lived
with him; and (3) considerable evidence showed that the youth’s
health, safety, and development would be in danger if she lived with
maternal grandparents. We aren’t persuaded.
A. Applicable Law and Standard of Review
¶8 The Children’s Code authorizes a juvenile court to enter an
order allocating parental responsibilities and addressing parenting
time when it maintains jurisdiction in a case involving a youth who
is dependent and neglected. § 19-1-104(5)-(6), C.R.S. 2025; People
in Interest of E.Q., 2020 COA 118, ¶ 10. When allocating parental
responsibilities in a dependency and neglect proceeding, the court
must consider the legislative purposes of the Children’s Code under
section 19-1-102, C.R.S. 2025. People in Interest of J.G., 2021 COA
47, ¶ 18. The overriding purpose of the Children’s Code is to
3 protect a youth’s welfare and safety by providing procedures
through which the youth’s best interests can be served. Id. at ¶ 19.
Consequently, the court must allocate parental responsibilities in
accordance with the youth’s best interests. Id.
¶9 Even so, parents maintain a fundamental liberty interest in
the care, custody, and control of their children. See Troxel v.
Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 66 (2000). In Troxel, the Supreme Court
recognized that a parent who is adequately caring for their child or
youth — a fit parent — is presumed to act in their child’s best
interests. Id. at 68-69. Thus, in a dependency and neglect
proceeding, if the court determines that a parent has become fit,
then it must apply the Troxel presumption before awarding an APR
to a nonparent. See J.G., ¶¶ 21, 27; People in Interest of N.G.G.,
2020 COA 6, ¶¶ 18-19. Applying the Troxel presumption requires
the court to accord “at least some special weight to the parent’s own
determination” regarding the youth’s best interests. J.G., ¶ 21
(quoting Troxel, 530 U.S. at 70).
¶ 10 Nonetheless, the Troxel presumption may be rebutted if the
nonparent shows by clear and convincing evidence that the parent’s
determination isn’t in the youth’s best interests and that the
4 nonparent’s request is in the youth’s best interests. See N.G.G.,
¶ 16; In re Parental Responsibilities Concerning B.J., 242 P.3d 1128,
1132 (Colo. 2010). The court must also identify special factors that
support entering an order contrary to the parent’s wishes. J.G.,
¶ 22; see also In Interest of C.T.G., 179 P.3d 213, 226 (Colo. App.
2007) (overturning a visitation order based on Troxel when the
nonparent failed to present evidence of special circumstances to
justify an order contrary to the parents’ wishes).
¶ 11 Allocating parental responsibilities is a matter within the
juvenile court’s sound discretion. In re Parental Responsibilities
Concerning B.R.D., 2012 COA 63, ¶ 15. A court abuses its
discretion when its ruling is “manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or
unfair, or when it misapplies the law.” People in Interest of M.H-K.,
2018 COA 178, ¶ 60. Further, we won’t disturb a court’s factual
findings unless they are unsupported by the record. See J.G., ¶ 17.
Whether a court applied the correct legal standard in making its
findings, however, is a question of law that we review de novo. Id.
B. The Record Supported the APR Determination
¶ 12 In its oral ruling, the juvenile court first found that father was
a fit parent because he had successfully completed his treatment
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25CA0875 Peo in Interest of AB 10-30-2025
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 25CA0875 Weld County District Court No. 23JV129 Honorable Allison J. Esser, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Appellee,
In the Interest of A.B., a Child,
and Concerning T.B.,
Appellant.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
Division VI Opinion by JUDGE SULLIVAN Welling and Berger*, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced October 30, 2025
Bruce T. Barker, County Attorney, David S. Anderson, Assistant County Attorney, Greeley, Colorado, for Appellee
Debra W. Dodd, Counsel for Youth, Berthoud, Colorado, for A.B.
Just Law Group, LLC, John F. Poor, Denver, Colorado, for Appellant
*Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art. VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2025. ¶1 In this dependency and neglect proceeding, T.B. (father)
appeals the juvenile court’s judgment allocating parental
responsibilities for A.B. (the youth) to her maternal grandparents.
We affirm.
I. Background
¶2 In September 2023, the then-thirteen-year-old youth and her
older half-sister (sister) were living with their mother. Mother’s
mental health began deteriorating, so the youth and her sister
snuck out of mother’s home and went to their maternal
grandparents’ home.
¶3 Shortly thereafter, the Weld County Department of Human
Services filed a petition in dependency and neglect alleging
concerns about mother’s mental health and substance use. The
petition noted that father and the youth had a positive relationship,
but they had limited contact because father lived in Missouri. The
juvenile court granted temporary legal custody to the Department,
and the youth and her sister remained with their maternal
grandparents.
¶4 Approximately four months after the Department filed the
petition, father entered a no-fault admission, and the juvenile court
1 adjudicated the youth dependent or neglected. On the same day,
the court adopted a treatment plan for father.
¶5 Mother passed away in April 2024. Three months later, father
moved the juvenile court to return the youth home to him. The
court denied father’s motion, finding that it was in the youth’s best
interests to remain with maternal grandparents.
¶6 Father then moved for an allocation of parental responsibilities
(APR) for the youth to him. Thereafter, the youth filed a competing
motion requesting an APR to maternal grandparents. The court
held a contested hearing on the motions. After considering the
evidence and taking the matter under advisement, the court
granted an APR for the youth to maternal grandparents. The court
ordered joint decision-making responsibility between maternal
grandparents and father. The court also granted father telephone
and video contact with the youth. It then ordered a step-up
visitation plan in which father would exercise two weekend visits in
Colorado and one week-long visit in Missouri during the first year of
the plan, followed by two week-long visits in Missouri during the
following years until the youth turned eighteen.
2 II. Determination of the APR
¶7 Father contends that the juvenile court abused its discretion
and “infringed upon [his] fundamental, constitutional right to
parent” by granting an APR to maternal grandparents. Specifically,
he argues that the court abused its discretion by granting the APR
because (1) he was a fit parent; (2) no evidence showed that the
youth’s health, safety, or development would be at risk if she lived
with him; and (3) considerable evidence showed that the youth’s
health, safety, and development would be in danger if she lived with
maternal grandparents. We aren’t persuaded.
A. Applicable Law and Standard of Review
¶8 The Children’s Code authorizes a juvenile court to enter an
order allocating parental responsibilities and addressing parenting
time when it maintains jurisdiction in a case involving a youth who
is dependent and neglected. § 19-1-104(5)-(6), C.R.S. 2025; People
in Interest of E.Q., 2020 COA 118, ¶ 10. When allocating parental
responsibilities in a dependency and neglect proceeding, the court
must consider the legislative purposes of the Children’s Code under
section 19-1-102, C.R.S. 2025. People in Interest of J.G., 2021 COA
47, ¶ 18. The overriding purpose of the Children’s Code is to
3 protect a youth’s welfare and safety by providing procedures
through which the youth’s best interests can be served. Id. at ¶ 19.
Consequently, the court must allocate parental responsibilities in
accordance with the youth’s best interests. Id.
¶9 Even so, parents maintain a fundamental liberty interest in
the care, custody, and control of their children. See Troxel v.
Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 66 (2000). In Troxel, the Supreme Court
recognized that a parent who is adequately caring for their child or
youth — a fit parent — is presumed to act in their child’s best
interests. Id. at 68-69. Thus, in a dependency and neglect
proceeding, if the court determines that a parent has become fit,
then it must apply the Troxel presumption before awarding an APR
to a nonparent. See J.G., ¶¶ 21, 27; People in Interest of N.G.G.,
2020 COA 6, ¶¶ 18-19. Applying the Troxel presumption requires
the court to accord “at least some special weight to the parent’s own
determination” regarding the youth’s best interests. J.G., ¶ 21
(quoting Troxel, 530 U.S. at 70).
¶ 10 Nonetheless, the Troxel presumption may be rebutted if the
nonparent shows by clear and convincing evidence that the parent’s
determination isn’t in the youth’s best interests and that the
4 nonparent’s request is in the youth’s best interests. See N.G.G.,
¶ 16; In re Parental Responsibilities Concerning B.J., 242 P.3d 1128,
1132 (Colo. 2010). The court must also identify special factors that
support entering an order contrary to the parent’s wishes. J.G.,
¶ 22; see also In Interest of C.T.G., 179 P.3d 213, 226 (Colo. App.
2007) (overturning a visitation order based on Troxel when the
nonparent failed to present evidence of special circumstances to
justify an order contrary to the parents’ wishes).
¶ 11 Allocating parental responsibilities is a matter within the
juvenile court’s sound discretion. In re Parental Responsibilities
Concerning B.R.D., 2012 COA 63, ¶ 15. A court abuses its
discretion when its ruling is “manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or
unfair, or when it misapplies the law.” People in Interest of M.H-K.,
2018 COA 178, ¶ 60. Further, we won’t disturb a court’s factual
findings unless they are unsupported by the record. See J.G., ¶ 17.
Whether a court applied the correct legal standard in making its
findings, however, is a question of law that we review de novo. Id.
B. The Record Supported the APR Determination
¶ 12 In its oral ruling, the juvenile court first found that father was
a fit parent because he had successfully completed his treatment
5 plan and no safety concerns existed with his home. Based on that
finding, the court noted that it was required to “start with a
presumption that what [father] want[ed] for [the youth was] in her
best interest[s]” and that the youth should be with father. But the
court concluded that father’s presumption had been rebutted by
clear and convincing evidence showing that the youth living with
father wasn’t in her best interests.
¶ 13 To support its conclusion, the juvenile court made extensive
and thorough factual findings. It found that the youth’s “lack of a
relationship with father for years” and the youth’s “extremely close
bond” with her grandparents and sister were compelling reasons to
conclude that moving to Missouri with father wouldn’t be in the
youth’s best interests. The court also considered several “special
factors” in determining that an APR to father wasn’t in the youth’s
best interests while an APR to maternal grandparents was.
Specifically, the court said that the following findings constituted
the “special factors” it relied on in making its determination:
• The youth was sufficiently mature to express her opinion,
and she was “very clear” that she wanted to remain in the
home with her grandparents. The youth’s wishes were
6 based on the fact that maternal grandparents’ home was
the home she had “known for her whole life” and that she
had an “extremely close relationship” with her
grandparents and sister.
• The youth’s connection to her sister was strong, and her
sister was “one of the most stable individuals in [the
youth’s] life.”
• Maternal grandparents had been involved in the youth’s
care since at least 2018. But father left when the youth
was very young and didn’t have contact with her for a
significant period of time, which diminished the bond
between them.
• At the time of the hearing, the youth hadn’t seen father
in person for almost a year; she said that she would run
away if forced to move to Missouri to live with him.
• The youth was well-adjusted to her Colorado school and
had recently improved her grades and attendance. A
move to Missouri would require the youth to “completely
start[] over” at a new school.
7 • The youth was also well-situated in her Colorado
community. She had future plans in Colorado, including
a summer job and the desire to attend college in Denver.
• If the youth moved to Missouri to live with father, it
would be a “drastic” change for her because she would be
“going from her home state that she ha[d] been living in
her entire life to an entirely new location where she ha[d]
never lived before.” The move would also prevent the
youth from frequent contact with her grandparents and
sister, who she relied on for support.
• The youth was particularly vulnerable because of the
recent loss of her mother. It “would be devastating to her
emotional and mental health” if the court “ripped her
away” from her community, sister, and maternal
grandparents only a year after her mother passed away.
¶ 14 The record supports these findings. The youth was fourteen
years old by the time of the APR hearing and testified that she
wanted to continue living with maternal grandparents and her
sister. More specifically, the youth testified that she had a very
good relationship with her grandparents and that she would be
8 “devastated” if she was separated from them. She also testified that
she was very close with her sister, had lived with her sister for her
whole life, and would “feel lost and probably alone” without her
sister.
¶ 15 Similarly, the caseworker testified that the youth was very
bonded to maternal grandparents and that they had maintained a
“parental role” throughout the case. The caseworker stated that
maternal grandparents were very supportive of the youth and that
the youth relied on them when she was struggling. The caseworker
described the youth’s sister as her “protector” and testified that the
youth relied on her sister for support in difficult times.
¶ 16 The youth, the caseworker, and maternal grandfather all
testified that the youth and her sister had lived with maternal
grandparents off and on since 2018. Father testified that he moved
to Missouri when the youth was approximately three years old. The
youth testified that she didn’t have any contact with father for
approximately nine years after he moved to Missouri. Father
disagreed but acknowledged that he didn’t have any in-person
contact with the youth from the time the youth was four years old
until she was ten years old.
9 ¶ 17 Further, the youth testified that when she was three years old,
she had one visit with her father in Missouri, but she didn’t
remember that visit. After that visit, she didn’t visit father again
until she was twelve years old. After this case opened, she visited
father in Missouri two more times. The caseworker noted that after
the second visit, the youth’s relationship with father was “fractured”
and became unstable because the youth felt betrayed when father
asked the juvenile court to grant him an APR. Indeed, the youth
testified that she had blocked father on her phone and wasn’t open
to communication with him because she felt like he didn’t consider
how she felt before he asked the court for an APR.
¶ 18 Moreover, the youth testified that she had attended school in
the same district since second grade. She said that she had known
many of her friends since then, had established good relationships
with her teachers, and felt as though she belonged to a community
through her Colorado school and neighborhood. The youth also
testified that she had summer plans to work at the Colorado
International Speedway and wanted to attend college in Denver
when she graduated from high school. The youth believed that her
10 plans would “go down the drain” if she was forced to move to
Missouri.
¶ 19 The caseworker agreed that the youth was connected to her
school, noting that some of her school counselors had provided
support when the youth’s mother died. The caseworker further
testified that the youth felt comfortable and “very secure” in her
Colorado community because she had lived there for her entire life
and had many friends in the area.
¶ 20 Finally, the caseworker, who testified as an expert in child
protection casework, opined that it wouldn’t be in the youth’s best
interests to move to Missouri to live with father. The caseworker
based her opinion, in part, on the fact that moving to Missouri
would separate the youth from the people who provide her support.
The caseworker went on to opine that forcing the youth to
communicate with father before she was ready would be
“emotionally traumatizing” for the youth. The caseworker noted
that the youth had threatened to run away if she had to move to
Missouri. And the caseworker didn’t believe that father would be
able to meet the youth’s emotional needs, particularly because she
lacked a relationship with father and wouldn’t feel comfortable
11 asking him for support. The caseworker concluded that a move to
Missouri would be “detrimental” to the youth because she was still
dealing with the loss of her mother and wouldn’t have anyone to
talk to if she was forced to leave maternal grandparents, her sister,
and her community.
¶ 21 Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the juvenile court
applied the correct legal standard for allocating parental
responsibilities to a nonparent in a dependency and neglect case
and that the record supports its determination that an APR to
father wasn’t in the youth’s best interests, while an APR to maternal
grandparents was.
C. The Juvenile Court Wasn’t Required to Grant an APR to Father Simply Because He Was Fit
¶ 22 To the extent that father argues that the APR to maternal
grandparents was improper because he was a fit parent, we
disagree. True, the juvenile court specifically found that father had
become fit by the time of the APR hearing. But the fact that a
parent is fit isn’t, on its own, dispositive of whether a court must
grant an APR to that parent. Rather, “parental deficiencies less
serious than unfitness may give rise to a compelling reason not to
12 return the child home when considered in light of the [youth’s]
physical, mental, and emotional conditions and needs.” People in
Interest of C.M., 116 P.3d 1278, 1283 (Colo. App. 2005).
¶ 23 Here, the juvenile court presumed that father’s request for an
APR was in the youth’s best interests but nonetheless found that
the presumption had been rebutted and that several “special
factors” justified entering an order contrary to father’s wishes. See
J.G., ¶¶ 21, 27; C.T.G., 179 P.3d at 226. In other words, the court
properly analyzed whether father’s request for an APR was in the
youth’s best interests and determined it wasn’t.
¶ 24 Accordingly, we reject father’s argument that the juvenile
court should have granted him an APR simply because he was a fit
parent.
D. The UMDA’s Endangerment Standard Doesn’t Apply
¶ 25 Next, citing section 14-10-129(1)(b)(I), C.R.S. 2025, father
asserts that “in the domestic relations context, a court may not
restrict a parent’s time with his or her children unless parenting
time would endanger the child’s physical health or significantly
impair the child’s emotional development.” From that premise,
father argues that because no party presented evidence showing
13 that parenting time with him would endanger the youth, the APR to
maternal grandparents constituted an improper restriction of his
parenting time and a violation of his constitutional right to parent.
¶ 26 But section 14-10-129(1)(b)(I) is part of the Uniform
Dissolution of Marriage Act (UMDA). When a custody issue arises
in a dependency and neglect proceeding, the court is guided by the
Colorado Children’s Code, not the UMDA. See J.G., ¶ 18; People in
Interest of L.B., 254 P.3d 1203, 1208 (Colo. App. 2011).
Consequently, unlike a restriction of parenting time in the domestic
relations context, a court need not find endangerment before
allocating parental responsibilities in a dependency and neglect
case. See L.B., 254 P.3d at 1208.
¶ 27 Accordingly, the fact that the youth wouldn’t be endangered if
she lived with father wasn’t dispositive of the juvenile court’s APR
determination.
E. Father’s Concerns with Maternal Grandparents Didn’t Render the APR Determination an Abuse of Discretion
¶ 28 Last, father argues that the juvenile court’s judgment granting
an APR to maternal grandparents rose to an abuse of discretion
because “considerable evidence” showed that the youth’s health,
14 safety, and development were at risk if she remained in maternal
grandparents’ care. True, father testified that he had numerous
concerns about maternal grandparents’ parenting abilities and their
home. Specifically, father expressed concern that the youth’s
grades and school attendance were poor; that maternal
grandparents allowed the youth to attend parties with alcohol,
drugs, and inappropriate sexual activities; that the youth was
entangled in contentious and emotionally difficult family conflicts;
and that maternal grandparents had been unable to prevent the
youth from being exposed to the details of mother’s death.
¶ 29 But the juvenile court heard and considered the evidence
father presented. In fact, it acknowledged father’s concerns in its
oral ruling. Even so, the court found, with record support and by
clear and convincing evidence, that an APR to maternal
grandparents was in the youth’s best interests. As an appellate
court, we don’t reweigh the evidence presented to the juvenile court.
See People in Interest of K.L.W., 2021 COA 56, ¶ 62.
III. Disposition
¶ 30 We affirm the judgment.
JUDGE WELLING and JUDGE BERGER concur.