State ex rel. CYFD v. Gerald H.

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 11, 2023
DocketA-1-CA-40593
StatusUnpublished

This text of State ex rel. CYFD v. Gerald H. (State ex rel. CYFD v. Gerald H.) 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. Gerald H., (N.M. Ct. App. 2023).

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 Refer to Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished decisions.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-40593

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

Petitioner-Appellee,

v.

GERALD H.,

Respondent-Appellant,

and

VIVION H.,

Respondent,

IN THE MATTER OF JEREMY H.,

Child.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LUNA COUNTY Jarod K. Hofacket, District Court Judge

Mary E. McQueeney, Chief Children’s Court Attorney Santa Fe, NM Kelly P. O’Neill, Assistant Children’s Court Attorney Albuquerque, NM

for Appellee

The Law Offices of Nancy L. Simmons, P.C. Nancy L. Simmons Albuquerque, NM for Appellant

Rio Law Firm Francis J. Rio, III Clovis, NM

Guardian Ad Litem

MEMORANDUM OPINION

IVES, Judge.

{1} Father appeals a district court judgment terminating his parental rights to Child. This Court issued a notice of proposed summary disposition, proposing to affirm. Father responded to our notice with a memorandum in opposition in which he complained about the inadequacy of both the docketing statement and this Court’s summary calendar process. We issued an order allowing appellate counsel an extension of time to obtain the audio recording of the termination hearing and to file an amended memorandum in opposition making use, as counsel deemed necessary, of whatever facts that recording contained. Appellate counsel has now filed an amended memorandum in opposition. Having duly considered that memorandum, we remain unpersuaded that error occurred below.

{2} This Court’s notice proposed that although the termination order on appeal contains some findings consistent with a termination based upon presumptive abandonment, pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 32A-4-28(B)(3) (2005, amended 2022), the dispositive conclusions recited in the termination order parallel the requirements of Subsection (B)(2) of that statute, which authorizes termination based upon abuse or neglect that is unlikely to be remedied in the foreseeable future. [2 RP 448-49] Father’s amended memorandum agrees that the district court did not find a presumptive abandonment. [AMIO 12-18] Father, nonetheless, asserts that by “borrowing findings from [Subsections] (B)(2) and (B)(3) and then mixing them together,” the judgment somehow “fail[ed] to sustain the deterioration of Father’s bond while incarcerated as evidence to support termination pursuant to [Subs]ection (B)(2).” [AMIO 18] It is unclear how this argument is responsive to our proposed disposition, which did not suggest that evidence regarding a “deterioration of Father’s bond while incarcerated” was a necessary element of termination pursuant to Subsection (B)(2). Instead, we explicitly noted that although this finding might have supported a termination pursuant to Subsection (B)(3), the actual termination that occurred in this case relied upon different findings and conclusions, which were consistent with a termination pursuant to Subsection (B)(2). [CN 2] Accordingly, our notice proposed that termination was appropriately based upon abuse or neglect, the causes of which are unlikely to be remedied in the foreseeable future, despite the reasonable efforts of Children, Youth and Families Department (the Department), “rather than a presumptive abandonment pursuant to [S]ubsection (B)(3).” [CN 3] {3} Father’s amended memorandum agrees that a termination pursuant to Subsection (B)(2) requires the Department to establish and the district court to find that:

(1) the child was abused or neglected; (2) the conditions and causes of abuse or neglect are unlikely to change in the foreseeable future; and (3) [the Department] has made reasonable efforts to assist the parent in adjusting the causes and conditions which render him or her unable to properly care for the child.

[AMIO 19] On appeal, Father does not challenge the district court’s finding of neglect. [2 RP 424; CN 4]

{4} With regard to whether the conditions and causes leading to that neglect are likely to change, Father asserts that the Department failed to establish this fact by clear and convincing evidence. [AMIO 20] Of relevance to the likelihood of change, our notice pointed out that Father’s docketing statement did not challenge certain findings made in the district court’s order:

That order finds that between May of 2021 and July of 2022, Father corresponded only three times with Child, despite the Department providing addressed and stamped envelopes so that Father could write to Child. [2 RP 428] That order also finds that Father has refused to sign a release of information that would allow the Department to assess his progress and compliance with the treatment plan. [2 RP 437] Apparently as a result of that refusal, there was conflicting evidence regarding whether Father completed a self-control program or a functional literacy program while incarcerated. [2 RP 434] Nonetheless, the district court found that there was no dispute that “he only completed one of the two and neither of them are sufficient in themselves to ready [him] to parent [Child].” [Id.]

[CN 5]

{5} With regard to Father’s correspondence with Child, Father’s amended memorandum directs our attention to a permanency planning report filed with the district court prior to the termination hearing, which recites he had written “several letters” to Child, including “drawings such as a truck and another of a cartoon.” [AMIO 36; DS 6; 2 RP 279] Father does not assert that this planning report was received in evidence at the hearing, but does assert that it “strongly suggests Father was sending more than three letters, whether [the Department] tracked them or not.” [AMIO 36] We note that a caseworker’s statement that Father sent several letters does not contradict the district court’s finding that he corresponded with Child three times. And, more importantly, Father’s amended memorandum does not assert that the evidence actually received at the termination hearing—testimony that Father sent one letter and two pictures—failed to support the more specific finding made by that court. [AMIO 36-37] {6} With regard to the ambiguous evidence of programs completed while incarcerated, Father’s amended memorandum informs us, based upon a review of the audio transcript, that the testimony “tends to support that Father completed a literacy program.” [AMIO 34] However, as the district court noted, “[w]hether he completed the Functional Literacy class or the Self Control class is not particularly material; it is undisputed he only completed one of the two.” [2 RP 434] Of more significance, Father refused to sign a release of information—as required by his treatment plan—that would have allowed the Department access to this information as well as the results of a psychosocial evaluation that was also required by his treatment plan. [AMIO 28] As a result, it is unclear whether the psychosocial evaluation took place. [Id.] Father’s amended memorandum suggests various ways in which the Department could have made greater efforts to assist Father in obtaining a psychosocial evaluation. [AMIO 28- 30] That memorandum, however, does not suggest any way in which the Department could have overcome the obstacle created by Father’s refusal to sign a release that would have allowed access to the results of any such an evaluation.

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Bluebook (online)
State ex rel. CYFD v. Gerald H., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cyfd-v-gerald-h-nmctapp-2023.