People in the Interest of A.W., and Concerning A.C

2015 COA 144
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 2015
Docket14CA1934
StatusPublished

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People in the Interest of A.W., and Concerning A.C, 2015 COA 144 (Colo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion


Colorado Court of Appeals Opinions || October 8, 2015

Colorado Court of Appeals -- October 8, 2015
2015 COA 144. No. 14CA1934. People in the Interest of A.W., and Concerning A.C.

 

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2015 COA 144

Court of Appeals No. 14CA1934
Mesa County District Court No. 14JV137
Honorable Valerie J. Robison, Judge


The People of the State of Colorado,

Petitioner-Appellee,

In the Interest of A.W., a Child, and Concerning A.C.,

Respondent-Appellant.


ORDER AFFIRMED

Division VI
Opinion by JUDGE FURMAN
Booras and Ashby, JJ., concur

Announced October 8, 2015


J. Patrick Coleman, County Attorney, Daniella C. Shively, Assistant County Attorney, Grand Junction, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellee

Garrett Forsgren, Guardian Ad Litem

Law Office of Patrick Gentzler, PC, Patrick K. Gentzler, Grand Junction, Colorado, for Respondent-Appellant

¶1         This case involves a juvenile court adjudicating an infant child, A.W., dependent and neglected. A.C., the mother of A.W., tried her case to a jury, which found that A.W. lacked proper parental care and that A.W.’s environment was injurious to her welfare.

¶2         On appeal, mother challenges the order of adjudication. She contends that the court committed reversible error in (1) denying her motion to continue the adjudicatory hearing; (2) permitting the Mesa County Department of Human Services (Department) to introduce evidence about her prior dependency and neglect case in violation of People v. Spoto, 795 P.2d 1314 (Colo. 1990); and (3) denying her motion for a new trial.

¶3         We reject each of mother’s contentions and affirm.

I. Adjudicatory Proceedings

¶4The Department obtained an emergency custody order concerning A.W. — who was in the neonatal intensive care unit at a local hospital due to respiratory problems — the day after A.W.’s birth. At the time, mother was homeless and had an active warrant for her arrest on welfare fraud charges.

¶5         Mother had eight children before A.W. Her parental rights to her seven oldest children had been terminated, and she maintained only limited, supervised visitation with the youngest child, who lived with his father.

¶6         On May 12, 2014, the Department filed a petition in dependency and neglect, alleging that A.W. lacked proper parental care and her environment was injurious to her welfare. Mother denied the allegations in the petition and requested an adjudicatory hearing. Mother’s ability to parent would obviously be a focal point of the hearing.

¶7         In preparation for the hearing, mother listed J.L. on her proposed witness list. Mother met J.L. at a homeless shelter. While there, she claims J.L. helped her create a food log in preparation for A.W.’s birth. And J.L. witnessed her caring for her eighth child while they were at the shelter.

¶8         Meanwhile, the Department filed a notice of intent to introduce evidence surrounding mother’s prior dependency and neglect case. The Department sought to use this evidence to show the prospective harm to A.W. if she were left in mother’s care without its involvement. Mother objected, arguing that this evidence was dissimilar and too remote in time, and did not meet the standards for admissibility under Spoto. After it found evidence that mother’s prior involvement with the Department met the standards for admissibility under Spoto, the court ruled this evidence was admissible, subject to a limiting instruction.

¶9         On June 18, 2004, at a pretrial conference five days before the adjudicatory hearing, mother requested a continuance because J.L. was not available. Mother did not have J.L. under subpoena, and the record does not reveal whether mother knew when or if J.L. would be available. Although mother did not provide a transcript of this hearing, the minute order shows that the juvenile court determined there was not “good cause” to continue the adjudicatory hearing.

¶10         At the adjudicatory hearing, the jury heard extensive evidence regarding mother’s past treatment of her older children — which led to her parental rights being terminated — including that she threw a phone at one child and failed to seek medical attention for the resulting injuries; that she left her younger children in the care of her eight-year-old son for at least an hour and a half; and that at least three of her children failed to thrive under her care. Before the jury heard this evidence, the juvenile court instructed the jury that “in certain instances, evidence may be admitted for a limited purpose only” and that the testimony from witnesses who spoke about mother’s prior adjudications “may be used as evidence for the purpose of showing [A.W.] lacks proper parental care and/or her environment is injurious to her welfare, but . . . should not [be] consider[ed] . . . as evidence for any other purpose.” As noted, the jury found that A.W. lacked proper parental care and was subject to an injurious environment.

¶11         After the jury’s verdict, mother filed a motion for new trial. Although she claimed that the Department stated or misstated facts not in evidence during closing arguments, she did not file an affidavit or court transcript supporting her claim. In response, the Department argued, among other things, that the motion should be denied because “[a]bsent an affidavit in support of Respondent’s request for a new trial, the [c]ourt is under no obligation to act.” The court denied mother’s motion.

¶12         Based on the jury’s findings, the court adjudicated A.W. dependent and neglected. At a subsequent dispositional hearing, the court adopted a treatment plan for mother.

II. Continuance

¶13         We first consider whether the juvenile court erred in denying mother’s motion to continue the adjudicatory hearing. We conclude it did not.

¶14         Two different standards guide our analysis. On the one hand, if the child is under six years of age at the time a petition is filed, section 19-3-505(3), C.R.S. 2015, provides that a continuance of the adjudicatory hearing beyond sixty days after service of the petition may be granted only on a finding that the continuance is in the best interests of the child. It states:

Adjudicatory hearings shall be held at the earliest possible time, [but]. . . if the child is under six years of age at the time a petition is filed . . . in no instance shall such hearing be held later than sixty days after service of the petition unless the court finds that the best interests of the child will be served by granting a delay.

On the other hand, Chief Justice Directive 96-08, Directive Concerning the Processing of Dependency and Neglect Cases, § 4 (December 1996) (hereinafter CJD) provides that all continuances “will be granted by a Judicial Officer only upon a finding that a manifest injustice would occur in the absence of a continuance.”

¶15         Whether to grant a continuance based on the best interests of the child or manifest injustice standard is necessarily a matter entrusted to the juvenile court’s discretion.

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