Romero v. Perez
This text of 205 A.3d 903 (Romero v. Perez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Barbera, C.J.
Children are a vulnerable cohort, uniquely susceptible to various forms of mistreatment. Their protection is of the utmost importance to all involved in governance and the administration of justice.
Consequently, numerous policies at both the federal and state level have been implemented to protect the safety and well-being of children in this country.
One such policy, the application of which is at issue here, is an immigration classification titled "Special Immigrant Juvenile ("SIJ") Status," which protects undocumented immigrant children residing in the United States from being reunified with an abusive parent in the child's home country.
See
Immigration and Nationality Act,
The present case was initiated in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. In a proceeding before that court, Celso Monterroso Romero, Petitioner, sought sole custody of his then seventeen-year-old son, R.M.P, an undocumented minor and Guatemalan native. 1 , 2 Petitioner further requested that the circuit court issue an order containing factual findings illustrating R.M.P.'s eligibility for SIJ status, namely that reunification with R.M.P.'s mother, Josefa Perez Carreto ("Perez"), was not viable due to neglect and that it was not in R.M.P.'s best interest to return to Guatemala, where Perez resides. 3 The circuit court granted Petitioner custody of R.M.P. but declined to find that reunification with Perez was not viable due to neglect. The circuit court was unclear about which "standard of proof" should apply to establish such a finding-"clear and convincing evidence" or merely "preponderance of the evidence." Nevertheless, the court ultimately determined that, under either standard, the undisputed evidence offered by Petitioner fell short of establishing that reunification with Perez was not viable due to neglect.
Petitioner noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. In a reported opinion, the intermediate appellate court determined preliminarily that the proper standard of proof in SIJ cases is not "clear and convincing evidence" but rather the lower "preponderance of the evidence" standard.
Romero v. Perez
,
Then, applying that standard to the record before it, the court concluded that, even under the lower standard, Petitioner had not provided sufficient evidence to support a finding of neglect.
Petitioner sought, and we granted, further review in this Court. On December 7, 2018, following oral argument, we issued a
per curiam
order reversing the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals and remanding the case to that court with instructions
to vacate the circuit court's order and remand the case to that court to enter an amended order that includes the requisite SIJ status findings.
Romero v. Perez
,
I.
The SIJ Status Process
We begin with an overview of the SIJ status process. 6 Congress created SIJ status to "provide humanitarian protection for abused, neglected, or abandoned child immigrants" who lack immigration status. 7 U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services ("USCIS"), Policy Manual , Vol. 6, Part J, Ch. 1, § A (current as of Jan. 23, 2019) (hereinafter, "USCIS Policy Manual"), https://perma.cc/2VMS-YTJD . SIJ status "is an immigration classification that may allow for these vulnerable children to immediately apply for lawful permanent resident status." USCIS, Immigration Relief for Abused Children: Information for Juvenile Court Judges, Child Welfare Workers, and Others Working with Abused Children (2014) (hereinafter, "USCIS Info for Juvenile Courts"), https://perma.cc/5CXB-85H7 .
The application process for SIJ status is set forth in the Federal Immigration and Nationality Act and involves two primary steps. First, the child, or, as here, someone acting on the child's behalf, must obtain a predicate order from a state juvenile court that includes certain factual findings regarding the "child's eligibility for SIJ status."
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Barbera, C.J.
Children are a vulnerable cohort, uniquely susceptible to various forms of mistreatment. Their protection is of the utmost importance to all involved in governance and the administration of justice.
Consequently, numerous policies at both the federal and state level have been implemented to protect the safety and well-being of children in this country.
One such policy, the application of which is at issue here, is an immigration classification titled "Special Immigrant Juvenile ("SIJ") Status," which protects undocumented immigrant children residing in the United States from being reunified with an abusive parent in the child's home country.
See
Immigration and Nationality Act,
The present case was initiated in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. In a proceeding before that court, Celso Monterroso Romero, Petitioner, sought sole custody of his then seventeen-year-old son, R.M.P, an undocumented minor and Guatemalan native. 1 , 2 Petitioner further requested that the circuit court issue an order containing factual findings illustrating R.M.P.'s eligibility for SIJ status, namely that reunification with R.M.P.'s mother, Josefa Perez Carreto ("Perez"), was not viable due to neglect and that it was not in R.M.P.'s best interest to return to Guatemala, where Perez resides. 3 The circuit court granted Petitioner custody of R.M.P. but declined to find that reunification with Perez was not viable due to neglect. The circuit court was unclear about which "standard of proof" should apply to establish such a finding-"clear and convincing evidence" or merely "preponderance of the evidence." Nevertheless, the court ultimately determined that, under either standard, the undisputed evidence offered by Petitioner fell short of establishing that reunification with Perez was not viable due to neglect.
Petitioner noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. In a reported opinion, the intermediate appellate court determined preliminarily that the proper standard of proof in SIJ cases is not "clear and convincing evidence" but rather the lower "preponderance of the evidence" standard.
Romero v. Perez
,
Then, applying that standard to the record before it, the court concluded that, even under the lower standard, Petitioner had not provided sufficient evidence to support a finding of neglect.
Petitioner sought, and we granted, further review in this Court. On December 7, 2018, following oral argument, we issued a
per curiam
order reversing the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals and remanding the case to that court with instructions
to vacate the circuit court's order and remand the case to that court to enter an amended order that includes the requisite SIJ status findings.
Romero v. Perez
,
I.
The SIJ Status Process
We begin with an overview of the SIJ status process. 6 Congress created SIJ status to "provide humanitarian protection for abused, neglected, or abandoned child immigrants" who lack immigration status. 7 U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services ("USCIS"), Policy Manual , Vol. 6, Part J, Ch. 1, § A (current as of Jan. 23, 2019) (hereinafter, "USCIS Policy Manual"), https://perma.cc/2VMS-YTJD . SIJ status "is an immigration classification that may allow for these vulnerable children to immediately apply for lawful permanent resident status." USCIS, Immigration Relief for Abused Children: Information for Juvenile Court Judges, Child Welfare Workers, and Others Working with Abused Children (2014) (hereinafter, "USCIS Info for Juvenile Courts"), https://perma.cc/5CXB-85H7 .
The application process for SIJ status is set forth in the Federal Immigration and Nationality Act and involves two primary steps. First, the child, or, as here, someone acting on the child's behalf, must obtain a predicate order from a state juvenile court that includes certain factual findings regarding the "child's eligibility for SIJ status."
Judge Zarnoch, writing for the Court of Special Appeals in
Simbaina v. Bunay
,
Federal regulations define "juvenile courts" as "court[s] ... having jurisdiction under State law to make judicial determinations about the custody and care of juveniles."
The Court of Special Appeals has held, and we agree, that when a party requests SIJ status findings in his or her
pleadings, the circuit court
must
undertake the fact-finding process (hear testimony and receive evidence) and issue "independent factual findings regarding" the minor's eligibility for SIJ status.
14
Simbaina
,
Under federal law, a minor is eligible for SIJ status "if he or she is present in the United States, unmarried, under the age of 21," and
(i) ... has been declared dependent on a juvenile court located in the United States or whom such a court has legally committed to, or placed under the custody of, an agency or department of a State, or an individual or entity appointed by a State or juvenile court located in the United States, and whose reunification with 1 or both of the immigrant's parents is not viable due to abuse, neglect, abandonment, or a similar basis found under State law [and]
(ii) for whom it has been determined in administrative or judicial proceedings that it would not be in the alien's best interest to be returned to the alien's or parent's previous country of nationality or country of last habitual residence.
(1) The minor is presently in the U.S., unmarried, and under the age of 21; 15
(2) The minor is dependent on the court or has been placed under the custody of a state agency/department or individual/entity appointed by the court;
(3) The presiding court has jurisdiction under Maryland law to make determinations about the minor's custody and care;
(4) Reunification with one or both of the minor's parents is not viable due to abuse, neglect, abandonment, or a similar basis under state law; 16 and (5) It is not in the minor's best interest to return to his or her country of nationality or last habitual residence.
See
II.
The Present Case
A. Circuit Court Proceedings.
This case began in September 2015 when Petitioner, a Baltimore City resident, filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City seeking sole legal and physical custody of his son, R.M.P. Petitioner simultaneously filed a separate motion requesting the court to render the requisite SIJ status factual findings for R.M.P. Petitioner alleged that it was in R.M.P.'s best interest to remain in Maryland under Petitioner's custody and care, and that reunification with Perez was not viable because she had neglected him. Perez, who currently resides in Guatemala, did not respond to these filings, and the case proceeded to a default hearing.
Petitioner and R.M.P. testified at the October 2016 hearing. Their testimony was uncontroverted. The testimony revealed that R.M.P. was born to Petitioner and Perez in San Juan Ostuncalco, Quetzaltenango, Guatemala, in 1998. The parties separated in 2000, and Petitioner immigrated to the United States around 2004. R.M.P. lived with Perez after Petitioner left Guatemala, but Petitioner remained in weekly contact with R.M.P. and attempted to support him financially, though Perez misappropriated those funds.
In 2008, when R.M.P. was ten years old, Perez began forcing R.M.P. to work in dangerous conditions. In addition to mandating farm labor (planting potatoes and "moving earth"), Perez also required R.M.P. to journey barefoot into the mountains, unsupervised and surrounded by venomous snakes, to gather heavy loads of firewood. Perez would punish R.M.P. if he did not haul enough wood. In 2012, R.M.P. fell and injured his wrist. Perez did not seek medical attention for her son and the injury persisted.
The forced labor occurred daily for seven years and ceased only when R.M.P. fled to the United States in 2015. R.M.P.'s education suffered; he was unable to complete his homework and fell behind grade level in all subjects. 18 Since arriving in the United States, R.M.P. has lived a stable life with Petitioner. R.M.P. expects to graduate high school soon and has dreams of pursuing a college degree thereafter.
In response to this testimony, the circuit court found that Petitioner was "fit and proper to have custody of his son and that ... [it is] in [R.M.P.'s] best interest" to remain with Petitioner. The court therefore granted Petitioner's request for sole legal and physical custody of R.M.P.
The court next considered Petitioner's motion for the requisite SIJ status findings. The court easily found that "the child is 18, under 21. The child's not married [and is] [p]resently living in the United States." The court also found that "it's not in [the child's] best interest to return to Guatemala." The court, however, was confused about whether to apply the "preponderance of the evidence" or "clear and convincing" burden of proof to "make a finding against reunification with" Perez. The court noted that there was no set burden of proof for establishing such a finding and that the court believed the "clear and convincing" standard applied. The court ultimately determined that, regardless of which burden of proof it applied, the court was "50/50" on the issue of neglect, and "at that level of evidence," the court "can't make a finding" that R.M.P.'s reunification with Perez was not viable due to neglect. Consequently, the court denied Petitioner's motion for an order that included all requisite SIJ status findings.
Petitioner filed a motion to alter or amend that judgment, which the circuit court denied. Petitioner then appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, arguing that the circuit court erred in applying the elevated clear and convincing evidence standard to Petitioner's SIJ status motion.
Romero
,
B. The Appeal.
The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the circuit court's decision.
Romero
,
Petitioner subsequently filed a petition for writ of certiorari, which we granted on July 12, 2018,
Romero v. Perez
,
III.
Standard of Review
Maryland Rule 8-131(c) provides that "[w]hen an action has been tried without a jury, the appellate court will review the case on both the law and the evidence." It is well-established that we review the trial court's factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions
de novo
.
Nesbit v. Gov't Emps. Ins. Co.
,
IV.
Discussion
A. The Burden of Proof in SIJ Status Proceedings.
We first address a novel issue for this Court, that is, the appropriate burden of proof in SIJ status cases. The Court of Special Appeals held that the preponderance of the evidence standard is the appropriate burden of proof.
Romero
,
To start, we commend the
Romero
court's insightful analysis on this issue. The court reached the correct result despite operating "on a blank slate," as "neither federal law nor existing Maryland law" dictates what burden of proof should apply.
It is well established that "preponderance of the evidence [is] the standard of proof generally applicable in civil actions" in Maryland. 20
Shurupoff v. Vockroth
,
The heightened clear and convincing standard of proof only applies in "certain limited circumstances."
See
Coleman
,
No "unusual coercive action" occurs in SIJ status cases. That is because those proceedings do
not
involve any termination
of parental rights; they merely entail judicial
fact finding about the viability of a forced reunification between a parent and a child.
See
J.U. v. J.C.P.C.
,
B. The Legal Standard for Abuse, Neglect, and Abandonment in SIJ Status Cases.
Our holding above does not resolve the present matter. Instead, we are left to address the proper legal standard for identifying mistreatment in SIJ status cases, or, stated differently, what an SIJ petitioner must establish by a preponderance of the evidence to merit the requisite findings. For guidance, amicus refers us to two recent decisions from the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. We summarize those decisions in turn and adopt the approach set forth therein. In doing so, we incorporate much of what the Court of Special Appeals held in In re Dany G .
1. Recent D.C. Court of Appeals SIJ Status Decisions.
The D.C. appellate court's principal SIJ status case is
J.U. v. J.C.P.C.
,
Despite uncontested evidence illustrating that the father abandoned C.J.P.U. (e.g., he never provided clothes, food, shelter, care, or financial support), the trial court determined that the mother and child had "minimized" the father's role in C.J.P.U.'s life.
In its opinion, the D.C. Court of Appeals emphasized that "the trial court applied too demanding a standard of both 'viability' and 'abandonment.' "
not the abstract question [of] whether the minor has been neglected or abandoned by the [parent]. Rather, it is whether reunification with [the parent]
in [the country of origin] is "viable" due to "abandonment[,]" [abuse, or neglect]. It calls for a realistic look at the facts on the ground in the country of origin and a consideration of the entire history of the relationship between the minor and the parent in the foreign country.
Months later, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals reaffirmed the standard it had established in
J.U.
, in
Benitez v. Doe
,
The appellate court again emphasized that the trial court had applied " 'too demanding a standard of ... abandonment.' "
23
2. The SIJ Status Standard in Maryland and the Role of Trial Courts in these Proceedings.
We find the cases from the D.C. Court of Appeals persuasive and hold that in SIJ status cases in Maryland, the terms "abuse," "neglect," and "abandonment" should be interpreted broadly when evaluating whether the totality of the circumstances indicates that the minor's reunification
with a parent is not viable, i.e., workable or practical, due to prior mistreatment.
24
See
B.R.L.F. v. Sarceno Zuniga
,
In applying this standard, circuit courts should consider factors such as (1) the lifelong history of the child's relationship with the parent (i.e., is there credible evidence of past mistreatment); (2) the effects that forced reunification might have on the child (i.e., would it impact the child's health,
education, or welfare); and (3) the realistic facts on the ground in the child's home country (i.e., would the child be exposed to danger or harm).
See
J.U.
,
In so holding, we reiterate what our colleagues on the Court of Special Appeals have observed: trial judges are
not
gatekeepers tasked with determining the legitimacy of SIJ petitions; that is exclusively the job of USCIS.
See
Simbaina
,
That said, trial judges should not abdicate their responsibility as fact finders; judges should assess witness credibility and discredit evidence when warranted.
See
In re J.J.X.C.
,
3. Application to the Present Case.
We now turn to how this standard applies in the present matter. In doing so,
we express our agreement with the Supreme Court of New Jersey that, in SIJ status cases, Maryland courts are to apply Maryland law, and not the law of the child's home country.
H.S.P. v. J.K.
,
In rendering SIJ status findings, therefore, "trial judges are to determine whether the child would be considered abused, neglected, or abandoned under Maryland law without regard to where the child lived" when the mistreatment occurred.
In re Dany G.
,
The ultimate inquiry here, therefore, is whether R.M.P.'s reunification with Perez is not viable because Perez's prior conduct constituted neglect under Maryland law.
In reaching the opposite conclusion, the circuit court applied a far too demanding and rigid standard.
See
Related
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