State ex rel. G.M.A.

201 So. 3d 1014, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 405, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1762
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 2016
Docket16-405
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 201 So. 3d 1014 (State ex rel. G.M.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. G.M.A., 201 So. 3d 1014, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 405, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1762 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

KEATY, Judge.

LT.A.,1 the mother of two minor children, G.M.A. and K.K.A.,2 appeals a judgment permanently terminating her parental rights and certifying the children available for adoption as well as a judgment denying her motion for new trial. For the following reasons, we affirm both judgments.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

G.M.A., who was born on January 7, 2007, and K.K.A., who was born on August 5, 2012, were adjudicated in need of care on May 19, 2014.3 On July 1, 2015, the Louisiana Department- of Children and Family Services (the State or the DCFS) filed a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights and Certification for Adoption (the Termination Petition) regarding G.M.A. and K.K.A.

By way of background, the Termination Petition recited that the DCFS had previously sought the termination of T.A.’s parental rights to G.M.A. and two of her siblings, not including K.K.A., who had come into the State’s custody in November of 2010 after a validated complaint was filed against their parents, T.A. and G.Y., for physical abuse and neglect. K.K.A. was born in August of 2012, while T.A.’s three older children were in the State’s custody. In April of 2013, the DCFS filed a neglect/inadequate food complaint against T.A. concerning K.K.A. Nevertheless, after a September 27, 2013 hearing, T.A. was granted. custody of her three older children with the DCFS’s supervision. During that period of ^supervision, additional complaints were validated against T.A. concerning all four of her children. With regard to G.M.A. and K.K.A., those complaints were for neglect, while two complaints concerning one of T.A.’s other children were for physical abuse. All four of T.A.’s children were placed into the custody of the DCFS, in April of 2014. When G.M.A. and K.K.A. were adjudicated in need of care on May 19, 2014, the case plan goal for K.K.A. was unification, while the goal for G.M.A. and her two other siblings was adoption. After a termination trial was held in June of 2014 regarding K.K.A.’s older siblings, judgment was rendered on July 17, 2014, wherein the trial court decreed that it was not in G.M.A.’s best interest that T.A.’s parental rights to her be terminated at that time.4 When thé [1018]*1018instant Termination Petition was filed on July.l, 2015, G.M.A. and K.K.A. had been in the State’s custody for over one year, with G.M.A. having been ¡in custody for forty-eight of the previous fifty-five months.

T.A. and her counsel of record appeared before the trial court regarding this matter on September 4, 2015, at which time T.A. was served with a copy of the Termination Petition in open court, and trial was reset for October 22, 2015. Court minutes dated October 22, 2015, indicate that the matter was refixed for trial on December 1, -2015, and the clerk was ordered to notify T.A.’s counsel of record, who was not’ present, of the new trial date. Before the start of the December 1, 2015 trial on the merits, T.A.’s counsel informed the trial court that he had béen unable to contact her, despite repeated efforts, but that he had notified her of the trial date several times by letter and once in a conversation. Thereafter, counsel for T.A. made an oral motion to continue the trial based upon her absence. The DCFS |3objected to the matter being continued. The trial court denied the motion to continue on the basis that T.A. had knowledge of the trial and that the minors needed the proceeding to move forward.

Upon the start of the trial on the merits, the DCFS offered, and the trial court accepted into evidence, the records in which G.M.A. and K.K.A. were adjudicated children in need of care. The only witness to testify at the trial was Ms. Lazetter West, the foster care worker for G.M.A. and K.K.A. and their parents. At the close of the evidence, the trial court rendered oral reasons finding that the State had met its burden of proof and terminated T.A.’s parental rights to G.M.A. and ■ K.K.A. By written judgment dated December 4, 2015, the trial court granted the Termination Petition and decreed that T,A,’s parental rights to G.M.A. and KK,A..were “immediately permanently and irrevocably dissolved” and specifically finding that such action was in the best interest of G.M.A. and K.K.A. The trial court ordered G.M.A. and K.K.A. to remain in the custody of the DCFS and certified them free and eligible for adoption. T.A. timely filed a Motion for New Trial, which was denied in open court after a January 22, 2016 hearing and reduced to written judgment on January 29, 2016. T.A. appealed and is now before this court asserting the following assignments of error:5

I. The Trial Court erred by denying a Motion for Continuance when defendant [T.A.] (the natural mother of G.M.A & K.K.A.) was unable to attend the trial for Termination of her Parental Rights because the State (DCFS) failed to provide transportation to her for the trial and failed to notify her counsel that the State could not contact her to provide such transportation, despite [T.A.] ’s counsel having made the request over a week before trial.
II. The Trial Court erred by rendering a judgment of Termination of the Parental Rights of [T.A.] in her- absence when that absence | resulted by a breach of a promise by the State to provide transportation to [T.A.] for the hearing.
III. The Trial Court erred by rendering a judgment of Termination of the Parental Rights of [T.A.] on the record under the clear and convincing evidentiary standard.
IV. The Trial Court erred by denying the Motion for New Trial filed by [T.A.].

[1019]*1019DISCUSSION

Denial of the Motion to Continue

In her appellate brief, T.A. states that she “was prevented from appearing and testifying at the termination trial because of the failure of the State (DCFS) to provide her transportation to the trial.” T.A. contends that because the DCFS failed to give her counsel notice of that failure either prior to or on the day of trial, he was denied the opportunity , to facilitate T.A.’s transportation to the trial.

“The decision whether to grant or to deny a motion to continue rests within the trial court’s sound discretion, and a reviewing court will not disturb such a decision absent a clear abuse of discretion.” State in Interest of J.T., 11-1646, p. 8 (La.App. 4 Cir. 5/16/12), 94 So.3d 847, 853.

A perusal of the record reveals that it was not until T.A. filed her motion for,new trial that it was disclosed that her counsel had written to Ms. West informing her that T.A. had no means of transportation and requesting that Ms. West furnish T.A. transportation to the December 1, 2015 trial. Thus, when counsel for T.A. made the oral motion to continue the trial, the only information provided to the trial court was that T.A. had received notice of the December 1, 2015 trial date and that she was not present in court on that day. Given those circumstances, we find no abuse of discretion in .the trial court’s denial of the motion to continue. T.A.’s first assignment of error has no merit.

]^Rendition of Judgment Terminating Parental Rights in Parent’s Absence

T.A. contends that the trial court erred in terminating her parental rights in her absence because the State breached its promise to provide her with transportation to trial.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 So. 3d 1014, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 405, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-gma-lactapp-2016.