Randall v. Children & Family Services

11 Am. Tribal Law 72
CourtColville Confederated Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 2012
DocketNo. AP12-005
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Am. Tribal Law 72 (Randall v. Children & Family Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colville Confederated Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randall v. Children & Family Services, 11 Am. Tribal Law 72 (Colo. 2012).

Opinion

DUPRIS, C.J.

SUMMARY OF PROCEEDINGS

On April 12, 2012, CCT/CFS filed for temporary custody of TR, a minor child of Randall and LaCourse, Appellants herein. The Temporary Custody Petition alleged the child was in immediate danger of harm if she remained with Appellants. This allegation was based on the father’s history of physical abuse of the mother, as well as the police acting on information from a CCT caseworker that the parents were violating a no-eontact order. The Tribes also alleged TR should be taken into temporary custody because of another case in which TR’s sibling, BR, was found to be a Minor-In-Need-of-Care (MINOC). The Tribes was granted temporary custody.

On April 30, 2012 the Tribes filed a Petition for MINOC regarding TR. The allegations are identical to the allegations in the Petition for Temporary Custody. The adjudicatory hearing was held on May 21, 2012 at 2:00 p.m. Neither parent was present at the beginning of the hearing. The mother’s spokesman was present and stated on record he did not have contact with his client, nor did he know where she was at the time. The spokesman for the father did not appear for the hearing. From the record it appears he was appointed to represent the father only three (3) days before the hearing.

The Trial Judge proceeded with the hearing without the presence of the parents and took testimony from a caseworker, who was not the investigating caseworker, regarding the allegations in the Petition. The Trial Judge adjudicated TR to be a MINOC at the conclusion of the caseworker’s testimony. At the conclusion of the Judge’s findings and order on record finding the child to be a minor-in-need-of-care, both parents and Mr. Rodrigues, the spokesman for the father, appeared. Mr. Rodrigues alleges he was in other court proceedings at the start of the adjudicatory hearing herein, and arrived at 2:15 p.m., at which time he was told the hearing was over and the minor was declared a MINOC. The record does not indicate that either parent nor Mr. Rodri-gues addressed the Court, on the record, and asked for the hearing to be reopened.

The parents, Appellants herein, filed an Interlocutory Appeal and a request for a Writ of Mandamus on May 22, 2012. [75]*75Thereafter, on May 29, 2012, the Trial Judge entered a written order from the adjudicatory hearing.1 The written findings acknowledged that both parents appeared after the Court made its ruling, even though such finding was not put on the record.

On June 15, 2012, at the Initial Hearing we found cause to grant the appeal and noted that it is not an Interlocutory Appeal because the Trial Judge made a final decision on the issue of MINOC. We also found cause to vacate the MINOC Order, and remand for a new hearing.2 We further found cause to- dismiss the request for a Writ of Mandamus in that no party in attendance knew' why it had been filed nor could they present any argument for its acceptance.

ISSUES
1) Did the Trial Court err in not going back on the record to allow7 the parents an opportunity to be heard when they appeared at the end of the hearing?
2) Did the Trial Court err in finding the minor child herein to be a Minor-In-Need-Of-Care based on the evidence presented?

STANDARD OF REVIEW

The first issue necessitates a review of the judge’s actions in managing the case. We review this issue under the abuse of discretion standard. Under this standard we presume the trial judge’s decision to be correct unless it is shown that the decision was manifestly unreasonable, or made on untenable grounds, or made for untenable reasons. Grunlose v. CCT, 5 CCAR 26, 3 CTCR 25, 27 ILR 6033, - Am. Tribal Law -, 1999 WL 35016007 (1999); Marchand v. CCT, 8 CCAR 18, 4 CTCR 19, 32 ILR 6012, - Am. Tribal Law -, 2005 WL 6462797 (2005).

The second issue goes directly to the trial judge’s review of the evidence (facts) and application of the law to the facts. It is a mixed question of facts and law. The appropriate standard of review for a mixed question may be determined by reference to the principles which underlie the established rules of standard of review jurisprudence: when the concerns of judicial administration favor the trial judge, his determination should be subject to clearly erroneous review, and when the concerns of judicial administration favor the appellate court, the trial judge’s determination should be subject to de novo review. CCT v. Naff, 2 CCAR 50, 2 CTCR 08, 22 ILR 6032 (1995).

We have set out standards and guidelines for the trial court to follow when assessing facts in MINOC cases. As we will show in our opinion below, these standards and guidelines are not always being followed in MINOC cases, including the instant case. This alone supports a finding that the concerns of judicial administration favor the Court of Appeals. We review the second issue de rumo.

DISCUSSION

1. Did the Trial Court err in not going back on the record to allow the parents an opportunity to be heard when they appeared at the end of the hearing?

This is the second time we have been asked to review a judgment entered [76]*76against parents in a MINOC ease where the parents arrived late for the proceedings and were not allowed to present evidence. See, Rosas and Stanger v. Children and Family Services, 11 CCAR 28, 6 CTCR 06, 10 Am. Tribal Law 211 (2012) 3. In Rosas the parents notified the Court, through their spokesmen, both who were present, they were on their way but would be late. The Trial Court, after a short recess, went back on record and granted the Tribes’ request for a default on the MINOC Petition. The parents appeared just minutes after the Court adjourned. The Trial Judge refused to go back on record, and entered an order finding the children to be Minors-In-Need-Of-Care. In Rosas the Judge, who is the same judge in this case, did not even allow the spokesmen for the parents to speak for their clients in the absence of their clients’ attendance.

In this case one spokesman did not have contact with his client before the hearing, and the second spokesman had only been appointed three days before the hearing, and had not yet met with his client. The Order From Adjudicatory Hearing (Order) dated May 29, 2012 notes the Court put on record that neither parent was present, nor asked for a delay or continuance. The Order further notes both the parents appeared at the end of the hearing. Neither of these findings are supported by the oral record of the hearing. The oral record shows the Clerk of the Court was asked if the mother, Appellant LaCourse, had notice, to which the Clerk replied “she was aware of [the hearing].” No inquiry was made by the Court or any of the parties present if the father, Appellant Randall, had notice of the hearing.

There is paucity of information on the record to indicate why the judge chose not to allow the parents/Appellants to go on record when they appeared within minutes, i.e. less than twenty (20) minutes from the time the hearing began. In Ro-sas, supra, the parents’ attorneys were present but not allowed to represent their clients to avoid a default judgment. The Trial Court, in Rosas found the minor to be a MINOC just based on the allegations in the Petition without taking any evidence on the record.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rosas v. Children & Family Services
10 Am. Tribal Law 211 (Colville Confederated Court of Appeals, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Am. Tribal Law 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-v-children-family-services-colvctapp-2012.