T.R.-B. v. DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 26, 2022
Docket21-1716
StatusPublished

This text of T.R.-B. v. DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES (T.R.-B. v. DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.R.-B. v. DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES, (Fla. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed January 26, 2022. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D21-1716 Lower Tribunal No. 17-15351 ________________

T.R.-B., Appellant,

vs.

Department of Children and Families, et al., Appellees.

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Vivianne del Rio, Judge.

Jay & Campbell, PLLC, and Katie Jay (Stuart), for appellant.

Karla Perkins, for appellee Department of Children and Families; Sara Elizabeth Goldfarb and Laura J. Lee (Tallahassee), for appellee Guardian ad Litem.

Before FERNANDEZ, C.J., and HENDON, and BOKOR, JJ.

FERNANDEZ, C.J. Appellant/petitioner below T.R-B. (“the petitioner”) appeals the trial

court’s final order denying her amended motion to intervene as an interested

party in her minor grandson’s underlying dependency proceeding. Because

the trial court erred in denying the petitioner’s motion, we reverse the order

on appeal and remand to the juvenile court for further proceedings consistent

with this opinion.

The petitioner is the maternal grandmother and custodian of D.W., the

minor child in the underlying dependency case. On May 26, 2017, Florida’s

Department of Children and Families (“DCF”) sheltered D.W. Immediately,

the petitioner sought custody of D.W. DCF initially objected to the trial court

placing D.W. with the petitioner due to the thirty-year-old criminal conviction

of petitioner’s husband, D.W.’s step-grandfather. Almost thirty years ago, the

step-grandfather was convicted of grand theft and cocaine

distribution/possession and served ten years in jail.

On October 22, 2018, D.W.’s mother’s parental rights were terminated,

and D.W has no legal father. Thereafter, the petitioner obtained a home

study. The home study was positive and indicated that the step-grandfather

had lived the past twenty years as an “upstanding citizen.” The home study

showed that the step-grandfather had a stable and respectable job for the

last twenty years and was able to financially care for his children with his

2 wife, the petitioner; he was a role model to his children and society; and D.W.

was very safe with him and was very well cared for and loved by the step-

grandfather. Thus, the home study found that the step-grandfather’s criminal

history should not be a deterrent for the adoption to proceed. The home

study further indicated that D.W. is bonded to the petitioner, his step-

grandfather, and petitioner’s family, namely: the petitioner’s mother (D.W.’s

great grandmother), the petitioner and her husband’s biological daughter

who lives with them and is approximately D.W.’s age (D.W.’s aunt), and the

petitioner and her husband’s biological son who lives with them and is fifteen-

year-old (D.W.’s uncle).

In August 2017, the trial court overruled DCF’s objection and awarded

custody of D.W. to the petitioner and the petitioner’s mother, C.G., who lives

with the petitioner and her family. The trial court found it was in D.W.’s best

interest to be placed in the custody of his grandmother (the petitioner). DCF

or GALP have never sought to remove D.W. from the petitioner’s home.

The petitioner then applied to adopt D.W. On August 27, 2020, DCF’s

Adoption Applicant Review Committee (“AARC”) denied the petitioner’s

application, mainly due to the petitioner’s husband’s criminal record. The

AARC also cited an alleged lack of a bond between the petitioner and D.W.

as another reason for denying the petitioner’s application. Instead, the AARC

3 approved the application submitted by D.M., a non-relative caregiver of

D.W.’s infant biological sibling, A.W. D.W. has never resided with D.M. 1

The petitioner claims that although DCF was aware that the petitioner

wanted to adopt D.W., DCF failed to provide her with notice of hearings and

meetings and/or ask for her input, as is required by section 39.4087, Florida

Statute (2021). Accordingly, on September 21, 2020, the petitioner filed a

formal complaint with the Family Resource Center listing the statutory

violations.

On December 28, 2020, the petitioner filed her petition in the family

court division to adopt D.W. In her adoption petition, the petitioner requested

that, pursuant to section 63.062(7), Florida Statute (2021), the trial court find

that DCF was unreasonably withholding its consent to her adoption of D.W.

On January 11, 2021, DCF asked the court for unsupervised weekly

visitation between D.W. and A.W. to be supervised by D.M., the approved

adoptive applicant, which the trial court granted on January 12, 2021. 2 The

petitioner alleges neither she nor her counsel were notified. On January 20,

2021, the petitioner filed her Amended Petition for Adoption by Relative. On

1 The petitioner filed an administrative appeal of the AARC’s decision, which has been stayed since the time the petitioner filed the adoption petition. 2 DCF later agreed to stay the visitation order until the petitioner’s motion to intervene could be heard by the court.

4 January 29, 2021, the petitioner filed her “Motion to Intervene as an

Interested Party and to Stay 01/12/2021 Visitation Order.”

On February 17, 2021, after the petitioner moved to have the family

adoption case transferred to the juvenile division, the trial court in the family

division transferred the adoption case to the Unified Children’s Court Division

and ordered that a “juvenile adoption case” be created and assigned through

the Office of the Clerk of the Courts, Juvenile Division.

In March 2021, the petitioner moved to waive DCF’s consent to

adoption. In preparation for the hearing before the trial court on this motion,

in April 2021, the petitioner gave notice in the adoption proceeding to the

GALP for the virtual depositions of the certified guardian ad litem and the

GALP assistant circuit director. On April 29, 2021, the GALP filed an

emergency motion to quash notice of taking deposition and motion for

protective order and requested an emergency hearing. The GALP filed this

motion in the dependency case, in which the GALP was a party but in which

the petitioner was not. The GALP argued that the petitioner intended to

depose the GALP’s employees in the adoption matter to which the GALP

was not a party but to which the trial court retained exclusive jurisdiction. In

addition, it argued only parties may take depositions, and the petitioner was

not a party to the dependency action, only a participant.

5 On May 3, 2021, the petitioner filed her “Emergency Motion to Stay

Hearing.” The trial court denied the stay. The next day, the trial court held

the hearing on the GALP’s motion to quash the petitioner’s notice of

deposition. The trial court acknowledged that on June 8, 2021, it would

address the issue of whether DCF unreasonably withheld consent for the

petitioner to adopt D.W., decided to give both parties more time to research

the deposition issue, and thus rescheduled the hearing to May 18, 2021.

Over the petitioner’s objection, the trial court directed her to file her response

in the dependency action to the GALP motion to quash.

Thereafter, at the May 18, 2021 hearing, the trial court found that

adoption proceedings initiated under Chapter 39 are exempt from the

jurisdiction of section 63.087, as that section dealt with the termination of

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T.R.-B. v. DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tr-b-v-department-of-children-and-families-fladistctapp-2022.