State Ex Rel. CYFD v. Donna E. & Harley E.

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 27, 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Ex Rel. CYFD v. Donna E. & Harley E. (State Ex Rel. CYFD v. Donna E. & Harley E.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. CYFD v. Donna E. & Harley E., (N.M. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

This decision of the New Mexico Court of Appeals was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Refer to Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished decisions. Electronic decisions may contain computer- generated errors or other deviations from the official version filed by the Court of Appeals.

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

No. A-1-CA-37727

STATE OF NEW MEXICO ex rel. CHILDREN, YOUTH & FAMILIES DEPARTMENT,

Petitioner-Appellee,

v.

DONNA E. and HARLEY E.,

Respondents-Appellants,

and

IN THE MATTER OF SARAI E.,

Child.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LEA COUNTY Raymond L. Romero, District Judge

Children, Youth & Families Department Rebecca J. Liggett, Chief Children’s Court Attorney Santa Fe, NM Kelly P. O’Neill, Children’s Court Attorney Albuquerque, NM

For Appellee

Rabern Law Trace L. Rabern Santa Fe, NM

for Appellants Jared G. Kallunki Roswell, NM

Guardian Ad Litem

DECISION

DUFFY, Judge.

{1} This is the second appeal in this nine-year-long abuse and neglect case. See State ex rel. Children, Youth & Families Dep’t v. Donna E., 2017-NMCA-088, 406 P.3d 1033. Respondents Donna E. and Harley E. (Parents) filed this appeal seeking review of two orders entered by the district court after we remanded the matter for further proceedings. The first is the district court’s order denying their motion seeking recusal of the trial judge. The second is the district court’s order on the best interest hearing regarding S.E. (Daughter), in which the court awarded custody of Daughter to the Children, Youth, and Families Department (CYFD) and ordered that contact between Parents and Daughter shall not be reestablished. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

{2} This case began in 2010 when CYFD filed a petition alleging that Parents abused and neglected their children, Daughter and Stephen E. (Son). The district court terminated Parents’ parental rights as to Daughter in August 2015. In Parents’ first appeal, we reversed the district court’s TPR order and remanded to the district court with instructions to decide on a custody arrangement for Daughter based on Daughter’s best interests. Id. ¶¶ 65-70, 74.

{3} Our mandate to the district court issued on November 16, 2017. Shortly thereafter, Parents filed a motion seeking recusal of the district judge, arguing that they had filed a separate federal lawsuit in which the district judge may be called as a witness, and suggested that the district judge’s impartiality may be questioned after having been reversed by this Court. The district court denied the motion. In April 2018, pursuant to our mandate, the district court conducted a two-day hearing to determine a custody arrangement in the best interests of Daughter. Following the hearing, the district court entered forty-seven pages of findings and conclusions and ultimately determined that (1) extraordinary circumstances exist; (2) Parents exhibited serious parental inadequacies; (3) Parents have engaged in gross misconduct; (4) contact between Parents and Daughter has been so minimal that Daughter has significantly bonded with her foster parents; and (5) a healthy psychological relationship between Parents and Daughter cannot be restored. Based on these findings, the court determined that maintaining Daughter in the custody of CYFD was in Daughter’s best interest, and further ordered that contact between Parents and Daughter shall not be reestablished. We discuss additional facts as they become relevant to our analysis.

DISCUSSION I. Parents’ Due Process Arguments

{4} On appeal, Parents do not challenge the district court’s decision to award custody of Daughter to CYFD, but instead, ask us to reverse the no-contact provision of the district court’s order so they can “be in the life of [Daughter].” Parents raise a variety of arguments with respect to the district court’s handling of the case on remand, all framed as violations of their right to due process. As we understand them, Parents’ arguments are that (1) due process requires that Parents be given an opportunity to re- establish a parent-child relationship with Daughter; (2) CYFD never provided fair notice of what specific changes Parents needed to make to alleviate the causes and conditions of neglect; (3) extraordinary circumstances that are not the fault of Parents do not suffice to justify continued or permanent no-contact; and (4) aside from the deterioration of the parent-child relationship as a result of the lack of contact, Parents argue that all other evidence presented in this case to justify the no-contact provision was eight years’ stale.

A. The Best Interests Standard

{5} We begin by addressing Parents’ argument that due process requires that they be permitted to re-establish contact with Daughter. In their supplemental brief, Parents argue that “[it] cannot comport with constitutional due process for the [district] court judge to be able to do with this ‘best interest’ hearing what he did not have adequate basis to do under the [termination of parental rights] statute—to doom the parent-child relationship.” Parents, in essence, suggest the district court had no discretion to withhold contact or custody on remand, or, stated differently, that following a reversal of an order terminating parental rights, a parent must be reunified with or permitted contact with their child as a matter of law in order to allow the parent to preserve the parent- child relationship.

{6} Our Supreme Court, however, has considered and rejected this position. In New Mexico, “[a] finding that parental rights were improperly terminated does not mechanically result in the award of custody to the biological parents.” In re Adoption of J.J.B., 1995-NMSC-026, ¶ 57, 119 N.M. 638, 894 P.2d 994 (“The termination of parental rights and the determination of custody are different issues and must be addressed separately.”). Instead, in cases where a termination order is reversed, the district court must consider what custody arrangement is in the child’s best interests. Donna E., 2017-NMCA-088, ¶ 66. Our Supreme Court rejected an approach in which “the child’s best interests are defined entirely by the rights of the natural parents when parental rights have been improperly terminated.” Id. ¶ 56. Instead, we have acknowledged that “an automatic return of a child to his or her parent following a reversal . . . is [not] necessarily in the child’s best interests, particularly where, as in the present case, the parent has not had actual custody of [the c]hild for a number of years.” State ex rel. Children, Youth & Families Dep’t. v. Benjamin O., 2007-NMCA-070, ¶ 35, 141 N.M. 692, 160 P.3d 601. {7} Even though Parents argue that they have fundamental rights and privileges as Daughter’s biological parents, Daughter’s best interests nevertheless take precedence. J.J.B., 1995-NMSC-026, ¶ 58 (“Custody based upon the biological parent-child relationship may be at odds with the best interests of the child. When that happens, the best interests of the child must prevail.”); Donna E., 2017-NMCA-088, ¶ 66 (stating that “any such parental right is secondary to the best interest and welfare of [the child]”). Whether Parents were entitled to custody of or contact with Daughter following our remand ultimately turned on the district court’s evaluation of whether that contact was in Daughter’s best interests.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State Ex Rel. CYFD v. Donna E. & Harley E., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cyfd-v-donna-e-harley-e-nmctapp-2019.