State v. Pigg

2016 OK 4, 368 P.3d 771, 2016 Okla. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 20, 2016
DocketNo. 113,110
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 2016 OK 4 (State v. Pigg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pigg, 2016 OK 4, 368 P.3d 771, 2016 Okla. LEXIS 6 (Okla. 2016).

Opinion

EDMONDSON, J.

1 1 The district court ordered the transfer of a minor child, S.A.W., to a foster-adoption home that was in compliance with the Indian Child Welfare Act and the Oklahoma Indian Child Welfare Act, and in the bests interests of the child. Foster mother, natural mother, father, child, and the State appealed. We hold the proper standard for a party showing a need for an ICWA-nonecompliant child placement is clear and convincing evidence; and the evidence presented by appellants was sufficient to satisfy their burden, regardless whether we apply abuse-of-discretion or clear-and-convineing standards. We hold the circumstances of this case do not warrant reversal of the judge's order based upon 10A 0.8. § 1-4-812. We hold appellants failed to satisfy their burden challenging natural father's status as mot a member of his tribe. The Cherokee Nation met its burden showing the child was subject to the Indian Child Welfare Act. We hold the evidence was sufficient to show an ICWA-noncompliant temporary placement as in the best interests of the child. We affirm the, district court's order in part and reverse in part.

12 In May 2018, the State placed two-year-old S.A.W. and her two older siblings in emergency protective custody in different homes and filed a petition to adjudicate the children as deprived due to neglect, lack of supervision and exposure to substance abuse. The natural mother is-a nop-Indian. S.A.W. was placed with foster mother and the placement was not compliant with the Indian Child Welfare Act, (ICWA), (25 U.S.C. §§ 1901-1963). The parties dispute whether the child's father is a member of the tribe and if the child's placement is governed by the ICWA.

€ 8 For nine months after the placement of S.A.W., the Oklahoma Department of Human Services (DHS) contacted extended family of both natural mother and natural father to [776]*776find an ICWA-compliant placement for S.A.W. The family members contacted were either unsuitable or not interested in a placement. DHS sought help from the Cherokee Nation in finding an ICWA-compliant placement for the child.

¶ 4 In February 2014, DHS recommended that a placement for the child should ultimately lead to a permanent placement because of a plan to seek termination of the parental rights of S.A.W 's parents. The Cherokee Nation had not had a family available for foster care, but did have an ICWA-compliant family that was interested in adoption of a~child. The parental rights of the parents had 'not been terminated.1 Visita tions started with this ICWA-compliant family in April 2014. Visitations ceased with this prospective family, and on the one-year anniversary of the child being taken into custody the Cherokee Nation filed a motion to transfer the child to an ICWA-compliant placement. The trial court held a hearing and on July 21, 2014, the trial court determined that appellants had failed to demonstrate a good cause to deviate from the ICWA placement preférences and also found that it was in the best interests of SAW. to move to an ICWA-compliant home.

T5 The State of Oklahoma, natural mother, natural father, foster mother, and S.A.W. appealed. The Court of Civil Appeals re: versed the trial court's décision, The Cherokee Nation sought certiorari from this Court to review the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals.. .We vacate the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals and. affirm the order of the District Court in part and reverse in part.

T6 On appeal, appellants argue the trial court (1) violated the rights of natural mother and natural father to participate in the care, custody, and maintenance of their child; (2) erronéously failed to find good cause to deviate from the ICWA's placement preferences, ordering removal of the child from the foster mother's home; (8) failed to address whether the child was an Indian child for the purposes of the ICWA; (4) failed to address whether the father was no longer a member of the tribe; (5) failed to give statutorily-required "great weight" to the foster mother's quest for custody; and (6) failed to place custody in accordance with the child's best interests.

T7 The Cherokee Nation responds (1) both parents were represented by counsel and participated in the trial court hearing where they expressed their opinions on the matter; and the trial court considered what they said; (2) no evidence showing good cause to deviate from the ICWA was presented to the trial judge; (8) the trial court did address whether the child was an Indian child for the purposes of the ICWA; and (4) the trial judge properly followed the ICWA and ordered placement according to the bests mter-ests of the chfld

I. Hearing in the District Court.

T8 A hearing was held on the Cherokee Nation's motion to move the child to an ICWA-compliant placement. A summary of the testimony is as follows.

A. . Natural Father

19 Natural father' testified by telephone with his counsel present. He agreed that he had been "incarcerated during the whole pendency of this case." He was aware of his child's placement with the foster mother, and she had brought the child to visit him twice at the facility where he was incarcerated. The foster mother sent him photos of the child and kept him informed of her activities. He gave an opinion that moving 'his child "would be harmful for her emotional well-being." He stated his preference that the child remain with the foster mother,

110 Natural father also testified he had "filed a tribal relinquishment form" which he had signed. He stated he had filed the form in April or May of 2014 because "I was informed that it would, uh-it would-well, it would help keep ... [the child] where she's at." (Name omltted and explanatlon added). He said "... it was in hopes that, uh, it would take the matter out of-out 'of the Tribe's hands." He said the foster mother visited him during his incarceration and [777]*777brought him the papers to sign and a notary to notarize them. He said he did what he thought was best for the child. He said if his parental rights and those. of the natural mother were terminated, then he would prefer the child to be adopted by the foster mother, . ©

{ 11 Natural father said he was willing to "disenroll" if it would help keep the child where she's at. He also said he was "definitely not" pressured in any way to sign the tribal relinquishment, and he had signed it of his own free will. He said the Cherokee Nation had brought him papers to enroll the child in the tribe when he had been incarcerated in the county jail, He said the Cherokee Nation had not informed him of the particular facts concerning its proposed placement of the child

112 When questioned whether he knew that DHS and the Cherokee Nation "had a dual certified home that is ICWA compliant" for the child, he responded that he was unaware of anything about this home. He said he did not know whether the child was "seeing any kind of a counselor or a therapist."

18 Counsel for the Cherokee Nation said "a child who is the subject of a custody proceeding cannot be unenrolied during the pendency of that proceeding." He also said that onee a person unenrolls, "it's a minimum of five years before you can reenroll." Natural father said he was unaware of these rules.

B. DHS Child Welfare Specialist

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Bluebook (online)
2016 OK 4, 368 P.3d 771, 2016 Okla. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pigg-okla-2016.