Peo in Interest of AJ

CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 2026
Docket25CA1987
StatusUnpublished

This text of Peo in Interest of AJ (Peo in Interest of AJ) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Peo in Interest of AJ, (Colo. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

25CA1987 Peo in Interest of AJ 05-21-2026

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS

Court of Appeals No. 25CA1987 Douglas County District Court No. 22JV91 Honorable H. Clay Hurst, Judge

The People of the State of Colorado,

Appellee,

In the Interest of A.J., a Child,

and Concerning S.J.,

Appellant.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART AND APPEAL DISMISSED IN PART

Division IV Opinion by JUDGE WELLING Schock and Lum, JJ., concur

NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced May 21, 2026

Jeffrey A. Garcia, County Attorney, Kathryn Cherry, Assistant County Attorney, Castle Rock, Colorado, for Appellee

Josie L. Burt, Guardian Ad Litem

Patrick R. Henson, Office of Respondent Parents’ Counsel, Justin Twardowski, Office of Respondent Parents’ Counsel, Denver, Colorado, for Appellant ¶1 S.J. (father) appeals the judgment entered on a jury verdict

adjudicating A.J. (the child) dependent and neglected. Father also

appeals the juvenile court’s dispositional order adopting a treatment

plan for him. We affirm the adjudication and dismiss as moot the

portion of the appeal challenging the treatment plan.

I. Background

¶2 In September 2022, the Douglas County Department of

Human Services received a referral that the child’s two-month-old

sibling had suffered a fatal “non-accidental” head injury while in

father’s care. The Department then filed a petition in dependency

and neglect alleging concerns of physical abuse and neglect of the

child.

¶3 Father denied the allegations and requested an adjudicatory

jury trial. After a three-day trial, the jury returned special verdicts

finding that the child lacked proper parental care as a result of

father’s acts or failures to act and that her environment was

injurious to her welfare. See § 19-3-102(1)(b), (c), C.R.S. 2025.

Based on the verdicts, the juvenile court adjudicated the child

1 dependent and neglected. Two years later, the juvenile court

adopted a treatment plan for father without objection.1

II. Jury Instructions

¶4 Father contends that the juvenile court erred by giving the

jury an instruction defining “abuse” and “child abuse or neglect.”

We decline to address this argument because it isn’t preserved.

¶5 During the adjudicatory hearing, father’s counsel asked the

juvenile court to instruct the jury that “[a] medical diagnosis of

child abuse by a medical provider differs from the legal element of

the criminal offense of child abuse.” Father’s counsel also

acknowledged that “the jury’s [going to] be told what the definition

of ‘abuse’ is.” The Department proposed the following instruction:

“Abuse” or “child abuse or neglect” means an act or omission in one of the following categories that threatens the health or welfare of a child: any case in which a child exhibits evidence of skin bruising, bleeding,

1 The juvenile court initially found that no appropriate treatment

plan could be devised for father. See § 19-3-508(1)(e)(I), C.R.S. 2025 (permitting a court to find that an appropriate treatment plan cannot be devised due to a parent’s unfitness under section 19-3- 604(1)(b), C.R.S. (2025)); § 19-3-604(1)(b)(IV) (listing “[s]erious bodily injury or death of a sibling due to proven parental abuse or neglect” as a basis for parental unfitness). Following father’s acquittal on all criminal charges related to the sibling’s death, however, the court adopted a treatment plan for him.

2 malnutrition, failure to thrive, burns, fracture of any bone, subdural hematoma, soft tissue swelling, or death and either: Such condition or death is not justifiably explained; the history given concerning such condition is at variance with the degree or type of such condition or death; or the circumstances indicate that such condition may not be the product of an accidental occurrence.

See § 19-1-103(1)(a)(I), C.R.S. 2025. Father’s counsel objected to

the proposed instruction because it (1) was not a “stock”

instruction; (2) “overemphasiz[ed] the term . . . ‘child abuse’”; and

(3) was unnecessary. The juvenile court determined that if it

provided the jury with father’s proposed instruction —

distinguishing the medical definition of child abuse — it would still

need to define child abuse for the jury. The court then provided the

jury with the Department’s proposed instruction over father’s

objection.

¶6 The Department and the child’s guardian ad litem assert that

father didn’t preserve this argument. We agree.

¶7 To be sure, as father asserts, he objected to the Department’s

proposed instruction. But the objections he raised were inadequate

to preserve the contentions father advances on appeal —

specifically, that the definition of “child abuse or neglect” given to

3 the jury only applies to a narrow portion of the Children’s Code and

was inapplicable in the adjudicatory proceeding, see § 19-1-

103(1)(a) (limiting the definition of “child abuse or neglect” to “part 3

of article 3” of the Children’s Code), and thus, confused the jury

and prejudiced father as a result.

¶8 Father asserts that these arguments are the “natural logical

conclusions” of the arguments raised to the juvenile court because

“the Colorado Supreme Court may not have approved the jury

instruction which the court used because the statute (and by

implication, the [general assembly]) expressly limited that

definition’s application.” In other words, we interpret father’s

argument to say that objecting to the proposed instruction on the

basis that it wasn’t a pattern instruction sufficiently presented, and

gave the juvenile court an opportunity to rule on, the arguments he

advances on appeal, including his argument that the instruction

didn’t accurately state the law. But while objecting to the proposed

instruction, father’s counsel conceded that it was “based on the

statute.” Martinez v. People, 2015 CO 16, ¶ 14 (noting that an

objection must be “specific enough to draw the trial court’s

attention to the asserted error”). At no point did father raise to the

4 juvenile court the arguments that the proposed instruction

inaccurately stated the law, prejudiced father, or would cause

confusion for the jury.

¶9 Thus, we decline to address this issue. See People v. Ujaama,

2012 COA 36, ¶ 37 (“An issue is unpreserved for review when . . .

an objection or request was made in the trial court, but on grounds

different from those raised on appeal . . . .”) (citations omitted); see

also Gebert v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 2023 COA 107, ¶ 25 (“In civil

cases, arguments never presented to, considered by, or ruled upon

by a district court may not be raised for the first time on appeal.”).

III. Treatment Plan

¶ 10 Father next contends that the juvenile court erred by adopting

the treatment plan objective requiring him to “address any potential

mental health issues (anger/negative behaviors).” We conclude that

this portion of father’s appeal is moot and, therefore, dismiss it.

¶ 11 “Because we must always satisfy ourselves that we have

jurisdiction to hear an appeal,” we may raise potential jurisdictional

defects — such as mootness — nostra sponte. People v. S.X.G.,

2012 CO 5, ¶ 9. “A case is moot when a judgment would have no

practical legal effect on the existing controversy.” Diehl v. Weiser,

5 2019 CO 70, ¶ 10.

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Related

Martinez v. People
2015 CO 16 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2015)
Diehl v. Weiser
2019 CO 70 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2019)
in Interest of M.B
2020 COA 13 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2020)
In re R.G.B.
98 P.3d 958 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2004)
People ex rel. B.C.
122 P.3d 1067 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2005)
People v. S.X.G.
2012 CO 5 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2012)
People v. Ujaama
2012 COA 36 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2012)
Jacqueline Gebert v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.
2023 COA 107 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2023)

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