The summaries of the Colorado Court of Appeals published opinions constitute no part of the opinion of the division but have been prepared by the division for the convenience of the reader. The summaries may not be cited or relied upon as they are not the official language of the division. Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opinion should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion.
SUMMARY January 25, 2018
2018COA10
No. 17CA0255, People In Interest of M.R.M. — Juvenile Court — Dependency and Neglect — Appeals — Final Appealable Order
In this dependency and neglect proceeding, mother appeals
from the order dismissing the dependency and neglect proceeding
concerning her children. A division of the court of appeals
concludes that the order from which mother seeks to appeal is not a
final and appealable order. Instead, the final appealable order that
mother seeks relief from is an order allocating parental
responsibilities, which was entered approximately two weeks prior
to the order dismissing the dependency and neglect
proceeding. The division concludes that because mother’s notice of
appeal was not filed within twenty-one days after the entry of the
order that was final and appealable, her appeal is untimely. For that reason, the division dismisses the appeal for lack of
jurisdiction. COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2018COA10
Court of Appeals No. 17CA0255 Garfield County District Court No. 16JV21 Honorable Denise K. Lynch, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Petitioner-Appellee,
In the Interest of M.R.M., M.M.M., and M.M.M., Children,
and Concerning M.M.A.,
Respondent-Appellant.
APPEAL DISMISSED
Division II Opinion by JUDGE WELLING Dailey and Hawthorne, JJ., concur
Announced January 25, 2018
Tari L. Williams, County Attorney, Heather K. Beattie, Assistant County Attorney, Glenwood Springs, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellee
Cassie L. Coleman and Luisa V. Berne, Guardians Ad Litem
Debra W. Dodd, Berthoud, Colorado, for Respondent-Appellant ¶1 In this dependency and neglect proceeding, M.M.A. (mother)
appeals from the order dismissing the dependency and neglect
proceeding concerning M.R.M., M.M.M., and M.A.M. (the children).
We conclude that the order from which mother seeks to appeal is
not a final and appealable order, and that because her notice of
appeal was not filed within twenty-one days after the entry of the
order that was final and appealable, her appeal is untimely.
Therefore, we dismiss the appeal.
I. Background
¶2 In March 2016, the Garfield County Department of Human
Services (the Department) sought and received temporary custody
of eleven-year-old M.R.M., six-year-old M.M.M., and three-year-old
M.A.M. based on concerns that the children had been exposed to
drugs, violence in the home, and an injurious environment.
¶3 Shortly after the children were removed from mother’s home,
the Department filed a petition in dependency and neglect, naming
mother and M.M. (father of M.R.M. and M.M.M., and stepfather to
M.A.M.; hereafter father M.M.) as respondents. The Department
acknowledged that father M.M. was not M.A.M.’s biological father
and that J.H., a resident of Florida, was suspected to be her father.
1 A caseworker contacted J.H. in Florida and learned that he had
some mental health issues. The caseworker then discussed the
situation with J.H.’s mother, who was his primary caretaker.
¶4 Although the court entered an order requiring genetic testing
of J.H., and the Department said that it was “in the process of
conducting a genetic test to determine paternity,” no genetic test
results appear in the record, and J.H. was never determined to be
M.A.M.’s father or named as a party to the case.
¶5 The court initially placed the children with their maternal
grandmother. However, father M.M. moved from Florida to
Colorado and sought custody of all three children soon after the
case began. He said that he shared custody of the older two
children with mother under a domestic relations order, and he
asserted that he should have custody of M.A.M. because he was her
psychological parent. The court placed the children with him,
under the protective supervision of the Department, at the end of
March.
¶6 In May, father M.M. entered into a stipulated agreement for
continued adjudication under section 19-3-505(5), C.R.S. 2017, and
the court adjudicated the children dependent and neglected with
2 respect to mother after a trial. A division of this court affirmed the
adjudication with respect to mother in People in Interest of M.R.M.,
(Colo. App. No. 16CA1845, Nov. 16, 2017) (not published pursuant
to C.A.R. 35(e)).
¶7 The court adopted treatment plans for both mother and father
M.M. But a few weeks after the court approved mother’s plan,
father M.M. moved to modify the existing order under which he
shared custody of the children with mother and to dismiss the
dependency and neglect case. In support of his request for custody
of M.A.M., as well as the older two children, he submitted a letter
asserting that he was M.A.M.’s father because he was the only
father she had ever known, and that he was willing to take full
responsibility for her.
¶8 In November, the juvenile court entered an order allocating
parental responsibilities for all three children between father M.M.
and mother (the APR order). The court made no findings as to
whether J.H. or father M.M. was M.A.M.’s legal father. Instead, the
court concluded that it had jurisdiction to allocate parental
responsibilities regarding M.A.M. to father M.M. under section 14-
10-123(1)(d), C.R.S. 2017, which provides that a proceeding
3 concerning the allocation of parental responsibilities may be
commenced by a person other than a parent who has been
allocated parental responsibilities through a juvenile court order.
¶9 Approximately two weeks after the court entered the APR
order, the court entered an order terminating its jurisdiction and
closing the case. Mother now appeals from that order.
II. Finality, Appealability, Timeliness, and Jurisdiction
¶ 10 “Unless a notice of appeal is timely filed, the court of appeals
lacks jurisdiction to hear the appeal.” People in Interest of A.J., 143
P.3d 1143, 1146 (Colo. App. 2006). Because an appellate court
must satisfy itself that it has jurisdiction to hear an appeal, it may
raise jurisdictional defects nostra sponte. People v. S.X.G., 2012 CO
5, ¶ 9. We asked the parties to file supplemental briefs addressing
whether mother’s appeal was timely. After reviewing their briefs, we
conclude that the appealable order was the APR order; mother’s
notice of appeal was not timely with respect to that order; and,
therefore, we lack jurisdiction to consider her appeal.
¶ 11 Ordinarily, a final order or judgment, for purposes of appeal, is
one that ends the action, leaving nothing further to be done to
4 determine the parties’ rights. People in Interest of O.C., 2012 COA
161, ¶ 8, aff’d, 2013 CO 56.
¶ 12 In a dependency and neglect proceeding, a post-dispositional
order that neither terminates parental rights nor declines to
terminate them generally does not end the proceeding and is not
deemed a final, appealable order. See, e.g., E.O. v. People, 854 P.2d
797, 801 (Colo. 1993) (order approving permanency plan that did
not effectuate any change in permanent custody or guardianship or
terminate parental rights held not final and appealable; order
expressly contemplated further court proceedings).
¶ 13 However, section 19-1-104(6), C.R.S. 2017, authorizes a
juvenile court to enter an order allocating parental responsibilities
for a child who is the subject of a dependency and neglect
proceeding if requested to do so by a party to the case, and if no
child custody action concerning the same child is pending in a
district court. Section 19-1-104(6) further provides that following
the entry of such an order, the court shall file a certified copy of the
order in the county where the child will permanently reside, and
thereafter, such order “shall be treated in the district court as any
other decree issued in a proceeding concerning the allocation of
5 parental responsibilities.” Thus, by entering an APR order as
authorized by section 19-1-104(6) and ordering that a copy of the
order be filed in the district court of the county where the child is to
reside, the juvenile court ends the dependency and neglect
proceeding and transfers jurisdiction over the child to the district
court. Such an APR order is final and appealable. See People in
Interest of E.C., 259 P.3d 1272, 1276 (Colo. App. 2010) (entry of
permanency planning order allocating parental responsibilities to
aunt, followed by transfer of jurisdiction to the district court, ended
the dependency and neglect proceedings; thus, the permanency
planning order was a final and appealable order); see also C.A.R.
3.4(a) (expressly recognizing an order allocating parental
responsibilities pursuant to section 19-1-104(6) as an appealable
order).
¶ 14 Once a final and appealable judgment, decree, or order has
been entered in a dependency and neglect proceeding, a party who
wishes to appeal must file a notice of appeal within twenty-one
days. C.A.R. 3.4(b)(1).
¶ 15 Here, the juvenile court entered an APR order, and ordered
that the APR order be certified into an existing custody proceeding
6 in the district court as to the older two children, and certified into a
new domestic relations case as to the youngest child. Under E.C.,
the APR order was appealable. However, mother did not appeal
from that order.
¶ 16 After the court entered the APR order, the Department moved
to terminate the jurisdiction of the juvenile court and close the
dependency and neglect case. The Department reported that the
APR order had been certified into the existing domestic relations
case as to the older two children, and into a new domestic relations
case as to the youngest child, as the court had directed. The
Department argued that there were no further child welfare issues
in the dependency and neglect proceeding that required
intervention by the court, and that it was in the children’s best
interests that the court terminate its jurisdiction and close the case.
The court agreed and entered an order that purportedly terminated
its jurisdiction and closed the dependency and neglect case. That is
the order from which mother appeals.
¶ 17 Because mother’s notice of appeal was filed more than twenty-
one days after the entry of the APR order, we conclude that her
appeal was untimely, and that accordingly, we lack jurisdiction to
7 hear the appeal. However, mother contends that the juvenile court
lacked jurisdiction to enter the APR order, or, if it did have
jurisdiction, the APR order was not final and appealable. She
maintains that the order that ended the case was the order that
terminated the court’s jurisdiction and closed the case; that her
notice of appeal was timely with respect to that order; and that,
accordingly, this court has jurisdiction to hear her appeal. We find
her arguments unpersuasive.
A. Juvenile Court Jurisdiction, Finality, and Appealability of the APR Order
1. Jurisdiction Under Section 19-1-104(6)
¶ 18 Mother contends that the APR order cannot be deemed a final,
appealable order because the juvenile court did not have
jurisdiction to make the findings needed to grant APR to a non-
parent, and, indeed, did not have jurisdiction to enter an APR order
at all for M.A.M. She argues that because the court had not
adjudicated M.A.M. dependent and neglected, with respect to her
father, J.H., and the adjudication of the two older children with
respect to father M.M. was still in “deferred” status, the APR order
was invalid.
8 ¶ 19 However, the question before us is not whether the court had
jurisdiction to enter the order, but, rather, whether the order was
final and appealable. Even an order entered without jurisdiction
may be a final, appealable order if it ends the action, leaving
nothing further to be done to determine the rights of the parties.
See, e.g., People in Interest of S.T., 2015 COA 147 (appeal from APR
order entered after trial court found that the allegations of the
dependency and neglect petition were not proven as to one parent;
order vacated for lack of subject matter jurisdiction).
¶ 20 Under E.C. and C.A.R. 3.4(a), an APR order entered under
section 19-1-104(6) is final and appealable. And because mother
did not file a timely appeal from that order, we must dismiss the
appeal.
2. Jurisdiction Under Section 19-4-130(1), C.R.S. 2017
¶ 21 Citing S.T., mother also contends that “without commencing a
paternity action, the juvenile court did not have independent
jurisdiction under the Uniform Parentage Act to enter an order
allocating parental responsibilities.” Here, too, we note that the
issue before us is not whether the court had jurisdiction to enter an
APR order, but whether the APR order was final and appealable,
9 and whether mother filed a timely appeal from that order. Having
concluded that the APR order was final and appealable, and that
mother’s appeal was not timely, our inquiry is at an end because we
lack appellate jurisdiction. And this is so even when, as here, the
issue being raised on appeal is a challenge to the subject matter
jurisdiction of the trial court. Cf. Garcia v. Kubosh, 377 S.W.3d 89,
107 n.41 (Tex. App. 2012) (“And when a party attempts to challenge
a judgment or order but fails to timely file a notice of appeal, we
generally dismiss the appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction
regardless of whether the appeal involves a challenge to the trial
court’s subject-matter jurisdiction.”).
3. Paternity and Finality
¶ 22 Mother argues that the APR order was not a final, appealable
order because it did not fully resolve the rights and liabilities of the
parties as to paternity, support, and parental responsibilities with
respect to M.A.M. We perceive no error.
a. Law
¶ 23 Under the Uniform Parentage Act (UPA), sections 19-4-101
to -130, C.R.S. 2017, a man is presumed to be the natural father of
a child if, as relevant here, “genetic tests or other tests of inherited
10 characteristics have been administered . . . and the results show
that the alleged father is not excluded as the probable father and
that the probability of his parentage is ninety-seven percent or
higher.” § 19-4-105(1)(f), C.R.S. 2017. A presumption of paternity
may arise under other circumstances as well, as provided by
section 19-4-105(1)(a)-(e). For example, a presumption of paternity
arises if, while the child is under the age of majority, a man receives
the child into his home and openly holds out the child as his
natural child. § 19-4-105(1)(d).
¶ 24 If two or more presumptions of paternity arise which conflict
with each other, and none has been rebutted by clear and
convincing evidence, “the presumption which on the facts is
founded on the weightier considerations of policy and logic
controls.” § 19-4-105(2)(a); People in Interest of J.G.C., 2013 COA
171, ¶ 22.
¶ 25 Section 19-4-107, C.R.S. 2017, addresses who may bring an
action under the UPA, for what purpose, and when. As relevant
here, a child’s natural mother may bring an action to determine the
existence of the father and child relationship even if the child has
no presumed father. See § 19-4-107(3).
11 ¶ 26 If a paternity issue arises in a dependency and neglect
proceeding, a paternity action may be joined with the dependency
and neglect proceeding to resolve the issue. J.G.C., ¶ 10. In that
situation, the juvenile court must follow the procedures outlined in
the UPA, as its failure to do so will deprive the court of subject
matter jurisdiction to decide paternity. Id. at ¶ 11. As relevant
here, the UPA provides that each man presumed to be the father of
a child and each man alleged to be the natural father must be made
a party to the paternity proceeding, or, if not subject to the personal
jurisdiction of the court, must be given notice of the action and an
opportunity to be heard. § 19-4-110, C.R.S. 2017; J.G.C., ¶ 12.
b. Efforts to Determine M.A.M.’s Paternity
¶ 27 As an initial matter, we note that M.A.M. had no presumed
father. Although mother alleged that J.H. was M.A.M.’s biological
father, and there are indications in the record that J.H. had actual
notice of the dependency and neglect proceeding through
communications with the caseworker, he did not appear in the
case; he did not seek a relationship with the child; and his
biological relationship to the child was never established. Thus, at
all times relevant to this proceeding, J.H. was simply an “alleged
12 father” of the child, not a presumed father under the UPA. Nor was
father M.M. a presumed father. Although he asserted that he was
M.A.M.’s psychological father, he never claimed to have held her out
as his own or that he was otherwise entitled to the status of
“presumptive father.” Thus, there was no need for a paternity
proceeding to determine which of two presumptive fathers should
be recognized as the child’s legal father.
¶ 28 Of course, a paternity proceeding may be initiated for
purposes other than making a choice between two (or more)
presumptive fathers. In this case, the Garfield County Department
of Human Services Child Support Services Unit had opened a case
in 2015 to determine the paternity of all three children. The court
determined that Father was the oldest child’s father, but not
M.A.M.’s father. In that case, too, J.H. did not cooperate in taking a
genetic test to determine whether he was the child’s father despite
the fact he was “made aware” of the proceeding. Eventually the
court dismissed the 2015 paternity case with respect to M.A.M.
¶ 29 In October 2016, in a renewed attempt to resolve the problem
of M.A.M.’s paternity, the Department filed a petition to determine
whether J.H. was her father. But the Department quickly withdrew
13 the petition after concluding that the court did not have personal
jurisdiction over J.H.
¶ 30 A few days after the Department withdrew the petition to
determine M.A.M.’s paternity, the juvenile court entered the APR
order. Thus, the question of M.A.M.’s paternity was never resolved.
c. Finality of the APR Order
¶ 31 Mother argues that the APR order was not final because it did
not fully resolve the rights and liabilities of the parties. But, insofar
as she contends that the order did not fully resolve her own rights
and liabilities, she does not explain what was left to be decided in
an order that addressed her rights to visitation, parenting time, and
other matters relevant to the allocation of parental responsibilities
between her and father M.M. Nor did she attempt to initiate a
paternity proceeding herself, as she might have done under section
19-4-107, if she believed that resolving the issue of M.A.M.’s
paternity was necessary to protect her rights.
¶ 32 Insofar as mother contends that the order did not resolve the
rights and liabilities of other parties, including but not limited to
J.H., we conclude that she lacks standing to raise the issue. See,
e.g., People in Interest of J.A.S., 160 P.3d 257, 261 (Colo. App. 2007)
14 (one parent does not have standing to raise issues that concern only
the other parent’s rights).
4. Possibility of Revision
¶ 33 Mother argues that the APR order was not final because it was
subject to revision. However, once the juvenile court entered the
APR order and directed that it should be certified to the district
court, jurisdiction to modify the order under sections 14-10-129
and 14-10-131, C.R.S. 2017, was transferred to the district court,
leaving nothing further for the juvenile court to do. See § 19-1-
104(6). In addition, we note that under sections 14-10-129 and 14-
10-131, all orders concerning parenting time and decision-making
responsibility may be modified if a sufficient showing is made that
circumstances warrant a change. Nevertheless, APR orders are
considered final and appealable, as recognized in C.A.R. 3.4(a).
5. Unresolved Issues in the Dependency and Neglect Proceeding
¶ 34 Mother contends that the APR order was not final because
when it was entered, the paternity summons for J.H. was still
outstanding, father M.M.’s deferred adjudication had not been
addressed, and the court had not dismissed the case. We are not
persuaded.
15 ¶ 35 As discussed above, we conclude that under section
19-1-104(6), the entry of the APR order ended the dependency and
neglect proceeding and transferred jurisdiction over the allocation of
parental responsibilities to the district court. Therefore, there was
no longer any need to address father M.M.’s deferred adjudication.
Nor was there any need to enter an additional order to dismiss the
case where the APR order served as the case-ending order.
¶ 36 As for the paternity summons, the record does not reveal
whether it was still outstanding when the court entered the APR
order, as mother asserts. But, even if it was, mother cites no
authority for the proposition that the existence of an outstanding
summons is sufficient to prevent the court from closing the case in
which the summons was issued, and we are aware of no such
authority.
B. Indian Child Welfare Act
¶ 37 Mother raises an issue as to whether the provisions of the
Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA), 25 U.S.C. §§ 1901-1963
(2012), and applicable Bureau of Indian Affairs regulations and
guidelines for implementing ICWA were complied with by the
Department and the juvenile court after she asserted that she had
16 Indian heritage. She contends that the Department failed to comply
with ICWA when it failed to investigate or send notices to tribes
after she and the children’s maternal grandmother stated that
mother had a tribal affiliation and the children’s great-grandmother
had been enrolled in an Indian tribe. The parties disagree as to
whether we can address this issue notwithstanding our
determination that the appeal is untimely. We conclude that we
cannot. The untimeliness of the appeal deprives us of jurisdiction
as to all of the issues raised in the appeal, including the ICWA
issues.
¶ 38 However, we note that under 25 U.S.C. § 1914 (2012), a
parent “may petition any court of competent jurisdiction” to
invalidate an action for foster care placement or termination of
parental rights upon a showing that such action violated any of
several sections of ICWA, including section 1912, concerning notice
to tribes. And, in People in Interest of K.G., 2017 COA 153, ¶¶ 12-
18, a division of this court recently concluded that in some
circumstances a proceeding to allocate parental responsibilities is a
child custody proceeding covered by ICWA. Thus, mother may be
able to raise the issue of ICWA compliance in the juvenile court.
17 But the availability of such a collateral attack on the APR order in
the juvenile court does not vest us with jurisdiction to address the
ICWA issue in the first instance as part of this appeal.
III. Conclusion
¶ 39 The appeal is dismissed with prejudice for lack of an
appealable order.
JUDGE DAILEY and JUDGE HAWTHORNE concur.