R.W.M. v. Dep't of Children & Families

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 18, 2015
Docket2D14-5630
StatusPublished

This text of R.W.M. v. Dep't of Children & Families (R.W.M. v. Dep't of Children & Families) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.W.M. v. Dep't of Children & Families, (Fla. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL

OF FLORIDA

SECOND DISTRICT

In the Interest of S.M. and M.M., children. ) ) ) R.W.M., ) ) Case Nos. 2D14-5630 Appellant, ) 2D15-2243 ) v. ) ) CONSOLIDATED DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN ) AND FAMILIES and GUARDIAN AD ) LITEM PROGRAM, ) ) Appellees. ) )

Opinion filed December 18, 2015.

Appeals from the Circuit Court for Manatee County; Scott Brownell, Judge.

R.W.M., pro se.

Stephanie C. Zimmerman, Statewide Director of Appeals, Bradenton, for Appellee Department of Children and Families.

Laura Lawson, Tavares, for Appellee Guardian Ad Litem Program.

BADALAMENTI, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, R.W.M., the father, appeals from a final

judgment terminating his parental rights and from an order denying his motion to set

aside the final judgment. The father contends that the trial court erred when it refused to set aside the final judgment on the ground that his failure to appear at the final

hearing was the product of excusable neglect. Accordingly, the father argues, he

should not have been deemed to have consented to the termination of his parental

rights. Because no clear and convincing evidence demonstrated that the father willfully

failed to appear, we reverse the order denying the motion to vacate the final judgment

and the final judgment of termination of parental rights. In so doing, we thus remand for

a new trial on the petition for termination of parental rights.

After the children, who had been in their mother's custody, were sheltered,

the Department of Children and Families filed an expedited petition for termination of

parental rights. As to the father, the Department cited abandonment under section

39.806(1)(b), Florida Statutes (2014), specifically alleging that, while being able, he

made no significant contribution to the children's care and maintenance, that he had not

supported them or contributed to their care, and that the children have failed to maintain

any relationship with him. In addition, the Department sought termination on the ground

that the father was an incarcerated parent under section 39.806(1)(d)(3) with a lengthy

criminal history who had not provided for the children's care, well-being, or physical,

mental, or emotional health.

At the advisory hearing, which he attended by telephone from the DeSoto

County Jail, the father stated that he had just received the termination papers. He

asserted that the mother had disappeared with his children and prevented him from

contacting them. The trial judge provisionally appointed an attorney for the father and

set a date for the trial. On more than one occasion during the advisory hearing, the

judge specifically told the father that if he was still in custody on the date of the

adjudicatory hearing, "they'll have you brought over, or make sure you appear by

-2- phone. Either way, however they want to do it." However, the father was adamant that

he would attend the hearing because the mother had taken the children and kept him "in

the dark" while they were "on the run." The judge's final admonition to the father was

that if he were released at the time of the hearing, he must personally appear at the trial

or the court would "establish the petition" without him. Based upon this, the father

clearly could have left that hearing with the impression that if he were incarcerated at

the time of the final hearing, he could appear by telephone.

A new attorney was appointed for the father shortly after this hearing. At

the commencement of the trial, the father's attorney informed the court that despite

extraordinary efforts to transport the father from the Pinellas County Jail to the Manatee

County Jail, the father did not appear in the Manatee County courtroom. The father's

attorney explained that he had conferred with his client a few days earlier and had given

him three options: (1) sign a surrender, which the father refused to do; (2) go to trial; or

(3) "go ahead and just refuse to come over," which would constitute a default or consent

by nonappearance. According to the bailiff, the father was at the jail but refused to

come over. The father's lawyer stated that he was prepared to go to trial. The trial

judge then declared that the father's nonappearance constituted a consent to the

termination of parental rights. After a brief trial, the court found that termination of

parental rights was in the children's manifest best interests and granted the petition.

After the father filed a pro se notice of appeal, the trial court appointed the

father's trial counsel as his appellate counsel. In case number 2D14-5630, counsel filed

an initial brief and raised, as the sole issue, that the trial court erred in entering a default

judgment based on the father's nonappearance without taking sworn testimony on the

reason the father failed to personally appear at the adjudicatory hearing. Counsel

-3- pointed out that the father's pro se notice of appeal indicated that the father felt that he

had the option to appear telephonically at the adjudicatory hearing if he were still

incarcerated. The father contended in his notice of appeal that he was available before

the start of the hearing and waited at the Manatee County Jail for the clerk of court to

call him so that he could appear.

Shortly thereafter, the father's counsel filed a motion to relinquish

jurisdiction from this court back to the circuit court, which this court granted. After an

evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied the motion to vacate the termination of

parental rights judgment, and the father appealed that order in case number 2D15-

2443. Appellate counsel ultimately moved to withdraw from both appeals pursuant to

N.S.H. v. Department of Children & Family Services, 843 So. 2d 898 (Fla. 2003),

certifying that he could find no meritorious grounds on which to base an appeal. The

father then filed pro se briefs in each case.

At the hearing on relinquishment, the Department called the Manatee

County Jail deputy who is in charge of telephonic hearings. The deputy regularly

observes five or six hearings a week, and she did not remember the father. She was

shown two documents,1 one of which was a request to have the inmate appear by

telephone, but apparently there was a note on that document indicating that if the father

were to be transported from Pinellas County, then he should be transported to the

hearing rather than appear telephonically. The deputy testified that an inmate

"automatically gets transported" in the face of conflicting requests, but she did not say

that the father was informed of that protocol. Although the deputy described what she

1 Although these documents were apparently accepted as exhibits at the hearing, they do not appear in our record.

-4- might do in a situation such as this, where the inmate insisted that he appear

telephonically, she did not actually recall what she did in this case. When recalled to

the stand at the conclusion of the hearing, the deputy testified that there have been

situations like the father's in the past, but she simply did not remember whether it

happened in his case or not.

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Bluebook (online)
R.W.M. v. Dep't of Children & Families, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rwm-v-dept-of-children-families-fladistctapp-2015.