People in the Interest of S.T., and Concerning Q.W

2015 COA 147
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 2015
Docket14CA2347
StatusPublished

This text of 2015 COA 147 (People in the Interest of S.T., and Concerning Q.W) 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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People in the Interest of S.T., and Concerning Q.W, 2015 COA 147 (Colo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion


Colorado Court of Appeals Opinions || October 8, 2015

Colorado Court of Appeals -- October 8, 2015
2015 COA 147. No. 14CA2347. People in the Interest of S.T., and Concerning Q.W.

 

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2015 COA 147

Court of Appeals No. 14CA2347
El Paso County District Court No. 13JV1071
Honorable G. David Miller, Judge


The People of the State of Colorado,

Petitioner-Appellee,

In the Interest of S.T., a Child, and Concerning Q.W.,  

Respondent-Appellant.


ORDER VACATED AND CASE
REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

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

Announced October 8, 2015


Amy R. Folsom, County Attorney, Cara L. Nord, Assistant County Attorney, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellee

Nancy J. Walker-Johnson, Guardian Ad Litem

Davide C. Migliaccio, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for Respondent-Appellant

¶1         In this dependency and neglect case, the juvenile court entered an order allocating parental responsibilities (APR order) for S.T to maternal grandparents. The court entered this order despite father, Q.W., prevailing at the adjudicatory hearing.

¶2         On appeal, father challenges the APR order. He contends that the juvenile court had no basis to enter this order because the court’s subject matter jurisdiction terminated after he prevailed at the adjudicatory hearing. We agree. We thus vacate the APR order and remand with directions for the court to discharge father and S.T. from any existing temporary orders entered prior to the adjudicatory hearing.

I. The Dependency and Neglect Petition

¶3         The El Paso County Department of Human Services (the Department) became involved in this case after it received a call from someone who was concerned that mother was abusing prescription pills and not properly supervising S.T., an infant. The Department’s investigation revealed that mother and her child were staying in a friend’s unsanitary apartment. One day, S.T.’s uncle and a family friend went to the apartment and found S.T. alone, asleep on the floor, with an open container of pills next to him. When mother returned to the apartment, they transported her to “detox” because her lips were blue, she could not walk straight, and she appeared confused. Although S.T. was not injured, the Department obtained an emergency custody order and placed S.T. with his maternal grandparents. At the time, father was living in North Carolina, and his paternity as to S.T. had not been established.

¶4         The Department filed a dependency and neglect petition. The petition alleged that mother was “struggling with an addiction” to prescription medications Xanax, Adderall, and Percocet, “which places the welfare of the subject child at risk.” When the Department filed the petition, S.T.’s biological father was unknown. So, the petition listed three possible respondent-fathers: father (mother claimed his last name was unknown), J.T., and another unknown father. As to father, the petition stated that he had “met the child once,” “provided financial assistance for the care of the [c]hild twice,” and “failed to intervene in the circumstances described above, which places the welfare of the subject child at risk.”

¶5         Mother admitted to the petition’s allegation that S.T.’s environment was injurious to his welfare. Based on this admission, the juvenile court adjudicated S.T. dependent and neglected.

¶6         Following a paternity test, the juvenile court determined that father was the biological father of S.T. Father denied the allegations in the petition and requested a contested adjudicatory hearing.

¶7         The juvenile court subsequently conducted the adjudicatory hearing because father waived his jury trial right. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court found:

  • the Department had not proven the few allegations as to father by a preponderance of the evidence — and, in fact, the allegations were not true;
  • father did “all he could to establish a relationship with his child” despite mother’s attempts “at keeping him out of the picture”; and
  • it could not “find any fault on his part in failing to intervene.”

¶8         The court then dismissed the petition. But, it did not award custody of S.T. to father. Instead, the court maintained jurisdiction over S.T. based on mother’s admission. The court found that it was in S.T.’s best interests for him to remain in placement with his maternal grandparents. The court also found that father was not “fit” to assume custody of S.T. due to his lack of a significant relationship with S.T. and his inability to meet S.T.’s emotional needs.

¶9         Father did not appeal the adjudicatory order. Nine months later, he moved for an order allocating parental responsibilities. He also moved for summary judgment on his allocation motion, contending that the juvenile court should have awarded him custody of S.T. after the court dismissed the dependency and neglect petition.

¶10         The juvenile court denied father’s motion for summary judgment. But, it held a hearing on his allocation motion. The court first heard evidence about father’s fitness for assuming custody of S.T. based on whether father “has now developed a relationship with his child — such that he is now able, at a minimum, to provide nurturing and safe parenting sufficiently adequate to meet his child’s physical, emotional, and mental health needs and conditions.” After determining that father did not prove he was fit for assuming custody of S.T., the court heard evidence about allocating parental responsibilities for S.T. to someone else. At the conclusion of this hearing, the court entered the APR order, which allocated parental responsibilities for S.T. to maternal grandparents.

II. Our Jurisdiction

¶11         Initially, the Department and the child’s guardian ad litem (GAL) contend that father’s appeal should be dismissed. They base their contention on father not timely appealing the adjudicatory order. We disagree.

¶12         Section 19-1-109(2)(c), C.R.S. 2015, provides that an order decreeing a child to be dependent or neglected shall be a final and appealable order only after the entry of a dispositional order. Because the juvenile court dismissed the petition, it did not enter a dispositional order involving father. Thus, the adjudicatory order involving S.T. and father was not final and appealable. See People in Interest of T.R.W., 759 P.2d 768, 770 (Colo. App. 1988). But the APR order is a final appealable order because it left nothing further for the court to decide. See People in Interest of E.C., 259 P.3d 1272, 1276 (Colo. App. 2010).

¶13         In any event, we may consider at any time whether the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter an APR order. Sullivan v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs, 692 P.2d 1106, 1108 (Colo.

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