State Ex Rel. State Offices for Services to Children & Families v. Dennis

25 P.3d 341, 173 Or. App. 604, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 595
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 25, 2001
DocketJ91-0324B; CA A110767
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 25 P.3d 341 (State Ex Rel. State Offices for Services to Children & Families v. Dennis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. State Offices for Services to Children & Families v. Dennis, 25 P.3d 341, 173 Or. App. 604, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 595 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*606 BREWER, J.

Father appeals from the trial court’s denial of his amended motion to set aside a stipulated judgment for termination of his parental rights to child. Father assigns error on statutory, constitutional, and other grounds that are all generally related to his unanticipated inability to have ongoing contact with child following entry of the stipulated judgment. We review the record de novo. ORS 419A.200. We review the trial court’s procedural rulings for abuse of discretion, State ex rel SOSCF v. Williams, 168 Or App 538, 540, 7 P3d 655 (2000), rev allowed 331 Or 633 (2001), and its legal conclusions for errors of law, see State ex rel Upham v. McElligott, 326 Or 547, 553-56, 956 P2d 179 (1998). We affirm.

Mother and father have never been married and currently do not share a residence. Child has been in the custody of Children’s Services Division and its successor agency, State Office of Services to Children and Families (SCF), 1 since 1993, when she and her half-sister were removed from the custody of her mother. 2 Child and her half-sister lived with father and his wife and their children for approximately eight months in 1995. SCF removed child from father’s care in November 1995 based, in part, on allegations of sexual abuse by father.

In 1998, after exploring and rejecting various custodial options, SCF determined that child and her half-sister could not be integrated into either mother’s or father’s home. SCF then filed petitions to terminate both parents’ rights. 3 Shortly before trial, both parents agreed to allow relatives of mother to adopt child and her half-sister. Father entered into a “Post-Adoption Communication Agreement” (the post-adoption agreement) with the putative adoptive parents for him to retain minimal visitation rights with child both before and after the adoption was completed.

*607 On December 15, 1998, father stipulated to a judgment terminating his parental rights. Father testified that, at the time he stipulated to the judgment, he believed that the judgment was contingent upon the performance of the post-adoption agreement. In early to mid-1999, after entry of the stipulated judgment terminating father’s parental rights, SCF removed child and her half-sister from the home of the putative adoptive parents. SCF subsequently decided not to approve the adoption of the children by the putative adoptive parents.

In December 1999, father filed a motion to set aside the stipulated judgment terminating his parental rights to child on various grounds relating to the failure of the putative adoption and the resulting failure of the post-adoption agreement between father and the putative adoptive parents. The trial court then granted father a right of limited participation under ORS 419B.115 and appointed counsel for father. After hearing testimony, the trial court denied father’s motion. Father appeals from that order and judgment. We first consider father’s statutory arguments, followed by his arguments under the United States Constitution.

In his first assignment of error, father argues that the trial court erred in deciding his motion solely under ORS 419B.420. 4 According to father, the trial court was required to proceed under ORCP 71. 5 SCF asserts that the court did not err because, consistently with ORCP 1 A, 6 ORCP 71 does not apply in juvenile court proceedings under ORS chapter 419B.

*608 Ordinarily, we determine the applicability or inapplicability of a rule of civil procedure in a particular context under ORCP 1 A as a matter of law. See, e.g., State ex rel Upham, 326 Or at 553-56 (concluding, as a matter of law, that, where ORS 419C.400 provided that a proceeding for determining whether a youth is in the jurisdiction of the juvenile court under ORS 419C.005 “shall be held * * * without a jury,” the juvenile court erred in empaneling an advisory jury as provided in ORCP 51); Gage v. Maass, 306 Or 196, 201, 759 P2d 1049 (1988) (“if there were a conflict between” the ORCP and a statute governing the conduct of habeas corpus proceedings, under ORCP 1 A, the latter would prevail). Here, however, although the trial court concluded that ORCP 71 did not apply, it nevertheless was guided by criteria set out in that rule in determining whether the stipulated judgment should be set aside. Father has not identified any manner in which the trial court’s conduct of the hearing or its decision on his motion to set aside the termination judgment would have differed had the court determined that ORCP 71 was applicable as a matter of law. In short, the trial court’s error, if any, was harmless and does not require reversal. ORS 19.415(2). Father’s first assignment of error fails.

In his third and fourth assignments of error, father asserts that SCF was involved in his decision to mediate the terms of his post-adoption relationship with the putative adoptive parents, including participating as a party in an “agreement to mediate”; that the resulting post-adoption agreement and the stipulated judgment terminating father’s parental rights were executed at approximately the same time and concerned the same subject matter; and that SCF received a benefit from the execution of the post-adoption agreement between father and the putative adoptive parents, namely, his stipulation to termination of his parental rights. Therefore, father argues, the post-adoption agreement and the stipulated judgment of termination were “mutually binding”; SCF, in effect, breached the latter agreement when it removed child from the home of the putative adoptive parents; and SCF should be estopped from receiving the benefit of his stipulation to terminate his parental rights. Alternatively, father argues that the failure of the putative *609 adoption constituted a “condition subsequent” that extinguished his obligation under the stipulated judgment of termination. SCF responds that it was not a party to the post-adoption agreement between father and the putative adoptive parents and that the stipulated judgment of termination, to which it was a party, was not contingent upon the execution or performance of the post-adoption agreement. SCF also responds that it is not estopped from implementing the stipulated judgment, because father has not demonstrated the necessary elements of estoppel.

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Bluebook (online)
25 P.3d 341, 173 Or. App. 604, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-offices-for-services-to-children-families-v-dennis-orctapp-2001.