People Ex Rel. Drw

91 P.3d 453, 2004 WL 439531
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 2004
Docket03CA0559
StatusPublished

This text of 91 P.3d 453 (People Ex Rel. Drw) 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.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Drw, 91 P.3d 453, 2004 WL 439531 (Colo. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

91 P.3d 453 (2004)

The PEOPLE of the State of Colorado, Petitioner-Appellee,
In the Interest of D.R.W., a Child, and
Concerning J.R.J., Respondent-Appellant.

No. 03CA0559.

Colorado Court of Appeals, Div. I.

March 11, 2004.
Rehearing Denied April 8, 2004.

*454 Furman, Kerns, & Bauer, LLC, Steven M. Furman, Clayton B. Farrell, Fort Morgan, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellee.

Law Office of Douglas J. Marston, Douglas J. Marston, Fort Morgan, Colorado, for Respondent-Appellant.

Opinion by Judge WEBB.

J.R.J. (father) appeals from a judgment terminating the parent-child relationship between him and his child, D.R.W. (child). Because the trial court terminated father's parental rights without having conducted a dispositional hearing after the child was adjudicated dependent and neglected as to father, we reverse and remand.

The child's guardian contacted the Washington County Department of Social Services (Department) in the fall of 2000 when she could not control the child, who was then three years old. On November 13, 2000, the Department filed a petition in dependency and neglect and began to assess the child's particular mental health needs.

According to the petition, termination of the parent-child legal relationship was "a possible remedy." Attached to the petition was a "NOTICE — LEGAL RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES," which included the statement: "If the child is adjudicated dependent or neglected, the court shall enter dispositional orders.... [F]urthermore, the court shall order an appropriate treatment plan involving the child and each respondent ... or find that no appropriate treatment plan can be devised for a particular respondent."

The Department prepared and filed a treatment plan on November 20, 2000. As to *455 father, who was then incarcerated on bad check charges, the plan required only that he aid the Department in providing the child with appropriate treatment, that he provide the Department with information and documents in aid of treatment, that he sign releases for necessary information, and that he keep the Department advised of his incarceration status. The Department never proposed any changes to this treatment plan, nor did father ever request any changes.

The child was placed at a residential treatment center on March 1, 2001. As of March 14, 2001, the single permanency goal in the Department's family services plan was permanent kinship placement. During the child's year-long stay at the treatment center, his maternal grandmother participated in his treatment and became his primary attachment figure.

On April 4, 2001, father, who remained incarcerated, signed a stipulation to continue the adjudication, which the court accepted by a written order that approved both the treatment plan and the recommendations in the Department's family services plan. The stipulation provided that the court would review the matter in six months and that, if father successfully complied with the conditions of the continued adjudication, which included the treatment plan, or there was no need for continued court involvement, "the matter shall be dismissed."

On July 25, 2001, the court adopted the Department's revised family services plan, which reflected the same primary permanency goal of guardianship or permanent custody and a new concurrent goal of permanent placement with relatives through adoption. Father took no action in response to this change in the family services plan.

On September 17, 2001, the court reviewed the matter and, after a hearing, entered an adjudication of dependency and neglect over father's objection. The parties agreed that father had complied with the minimal conditions of the continued adjudication. Nevertheless, based on the child's serious ongoing behavioral problems, the court entered an adjudication order because continuing court involvement was required. The court did not hold a dispositional hearing, either in connection with the adjudication hearing or at any time thereafter.

In February 2002, the child was discharged from the residential treatment center and placed with his maternal grandmother. Father then informed the Department that although he agreed with the placement and did not intend to seek custody, he was unwilling to relinquish his parental rights because he hoped to exercise visitation with the child. The Department referred father for a psychological evaluation to determine whether he could learn the needed parenting skills, in light of the child's unusual needs. The Department told father that following the evaluation it would either work with him to devise and implement a treatment plan consistent with his continued incarceration or seek termination of his parental rights.

On April 19, 2002, after father's evaluation identified serious psychological problems, the Department moved to terminate his parental rights under § 19-3-604(1)(b)(I), C.R.S.2003. The Department asserted that no appropriate treatment plan could be devised to address father's unfitness in a reasonable time, based on his mental condition and in light of the ongoing physical, mental, and emotional needs of the child. The Department never asserted that father posed a threat to the child's health or safety.

Father opposed termination, arguing that at the time he entered into the stipulation to continued adjudication in April 2001, the Department's only permanency goal was permanent placement with relatives through guardianship or permanent custody. According to father, because he did not object to the relative placement he then had no reason to demand, and the Department never thereafter offered, a treatment plan reasonably calculated to reunite him with his child.

Father was released from DOC to a halfway house in late 2002. The Department forbade visitation. Father filed a motion for visitation, which the Department opposed. At the January 30, 2003, termination hearing, father testified that he would be released from the halfway house on March 8, 2003.

In its decree of termination, the court rejected father's assertion that he had been *456 misled, finding that the Department had made reasonable efforts at reunification and that "termination was at least on the table as a potential option when the permanency planning was conducted on June 25, of 2001."

The court further found that father was a virtual stranger to the child because of his incarceration since the child's birth; that father's treatment plan was appropriate because he had been incarcerated until shortly before the hearing and therefore "did not have the ability to engage in any treatment or therapy"; that the child has profound needs beyond the ability of most parents; that because of father's psychological illness, no treatment plan could be devised which would establish the necessary parenting skills within a reasonable time; and that given the child's attachment to the maternal grandmother, his best interests required termination of father's parental rights. The court explained that merely awarding permanent custody to the maternal grandmother, and not terminating father's parental rights, would create future problems for both her and the child.

I.

Father challenges the termination of his parental rights on the basis that the trial court did not hold a dispositional hearing after adjudication, at which an appropriate treatment plan should have been considered and adopted, unless the court then determined that no appropriate plan could be devised.

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