Ted W. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services

204 P.3d 333, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 51, 2009 WL 792750
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 2009
DocketS-13130
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 204 P.3d 333 (Ted W. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ted W. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services, 204 P.3d 333, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 51, 2009 WL 792750 (Ala. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal arises from the superior court's decision to allow a mother to revoke the Indian custodian status for her child's *335 father, whose own parental rights to the child had already been terminated. The father's status as the child's Indian custodian under the Indian Child Welfare Act was based solely on the mother's temporary transfer of physical care and custody of the child to the father after termination of his parental rights. After the Office of Children's Services (OCS) removed the child from the father and became the child's temporary legal custodian, the mother joined in OCS's motion to terminate the father's status as the child's Indian custodian. The superior court correctly reasoned that because the Indian custodianship was created solely by the mother's temporary placement of the child with the father, that custodianship could be revoked by the mother who acted in concert with OCS as the child's legal custodian. We therefore affirm the superior court's decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Danny was born in November 1998 to Ted and Joanne. 1 Danny is a member of the Native Village of Fort Yukon. 2

Ted's parental rights to Danny, as well as to Danny's half-sister Teena, were terminated in April 2001. 3 Joanne's parental rights remained intact. In affirming the termination of Ted's parental rights, we described Ted's "long history of aleohol abuse, violence, and incarceration," including convictions for manslaughter, malicious destruction of property, and criminal mischief as well as multiple convictions for assaulting Joanne in the children's presence and assaulting Teena's mother while she was pregnant. 4 Ted appears to have stopped drinking in 2004, but he relapsed on at least one occasion in the fall of 2007 when he was arrested and incarcerated for driving under the influence.

With Joanne's permission, Ted began having unsupervised visits with Danny during weekends in 2002. By 2007 Danny was spending most weekends at Ted's home, from the time Ted picked him up at school on Friday until Ted dropped him off on Sunday night. In late spring of 2007, Ted tried to return Danny to Joanne's care, but no one was home. OCS had taken temporary custody of four of Danny's half-siblings who had been living at the home that Joanne shared with the half-siblings' father. Ted recalled that shortly before OCS told him to not return Danny to Joanne, Joanne asked him to keep Danny because "she didn't want the state involved with [Danny's] life." Danny continued to live with Ted on a full-time basis until August 2007 when OCS removed Danny from Ted's care and filed an emergency petition for adjudication of child in need of aid (CINA) and for temporary custody. A few days after Danny was placed in emergency foster care, he moved to the home of his paternal aunt and supervised visits were arranged for Ted and Joanne.

B. Proceedings

On August 8, 2007, OCS removed Danny from Ted's home, and the next day, it filed an emergency petition for adjudication of child in need of aid and for temporary custody. Noting that Ted's parental rights to Danny had been terminated and that OCS had substantiated that Ted sexually abused his daughter in 2002, the petition concluded that OCS believed that Danny was a child in need of aid because Joanne had left him with "someone who has no legal rights and is a known sexual offender."

Superior Court Master William Hitchcock held the first hearing on the petition on August 10. OCS requested that the trial court appoint counsel to represent Ted and that it determine whether Ted was Danny's *336 Indian custodian under the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA). OCS also requested that the probable cause hearing be continued until Ted was represented. OCS later stipulated that Ted was an Indian custodian under ICWA:

We're presented with the somewhat unusual situation of a father, who has previously had his parental rights terminated, deemed, according to the language of ICWA, as someone who a parent transferred temporary physical care, custody and control to. Today, the department is agreeing that [Ted] is an Indian custodian under that definition.

Joanne remarked that she did "not oppose the father being an Indian custodian." The superior court granted Ted's request to be an Indian custodian in September 2007, basing its order "upon an agreement by all parties."

In October 2007 the individual case plans for Ted and Joanne had been established, requiring both of them to obtain substance abuse evaluations and treatments, attend parenting classes, and participate in other activities tailored to their needs. By May 2008 Ted had completed all aspects of his case plan except for obtaining a sex offender assessment and following the subsequent recommendations. By then Joanne had been working towards completing her case plan and assuming sole physical and legal custody of Danny, but she had yet to find affordable housing.

In a hearing before the master in December 2007, Ted requested a trial because he planned to contest that Danny was a child in need of aid. In February 2008 Superior Court Judge Sen K. Tan held a pre-trial conference, where OCS argued that it was not necessary to hold a trial to adjudicate whether Danny was a child in need of aid. Joanne supported OCS's position. OCS explained that Ted, the only party contesting Danny's status as a child in need of aid, should be removed as a party to the case because his Indian custodianship had "dissolve[d]." During the pre-trial conference, the parties and the court agreed that they would brief the issue of dismissing Ted as a party to the case. Soon after, Joanne, OCS, and Danny's guardian ad litem filed a stipulation that Danny was a child in need of aid. That stipulation was accepted by the superior court.

In March 2008 OCS filed a motion requesting that Ted's designation as Danny's Indian custodian be terminated. Joanne joined the motion. Danny's guardian ad litem did not oppose the motion on the condition that Danny would have supervised visits with Ted. In the guardian ad litem's view, it was in Danny's best interests to continue visitation with Ted because they had a relationship with each other. Ted opposed OCS's motion to terminate his status as an Indian custodian. The superior court granted the motion to terminate Ted's Indian custodianship in May 2008, reasoning that OCS and Joanne had effectively withdrawn Ted's Indian custodian status because they were in agreement on the issue and "together they have sole legal and physical custody of [Danny]." The trial court further concluded that a parent and an Indian custodian cannot both be parties to a CINA case in which ICWA applies.

Ted appeals.

III STANDARD OF REVIEW

We review on a de novo basis such questions of law as the superior court's interpretation of "Indian custodian" under ICWA. 5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 P.3d 333, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 51, 2009 WL 792750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ted-w-v-state-department-of-health-social-services-office-of-alaska-2009.