V.D. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services

991 P.2d 214, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 151
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1999
DocketS-8980
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 991 P.2d 214 (V.D. v. State, Department of Health & Social 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
V.D. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, 991 P.2d 214, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 151 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

V.D. appeals an order adjudicating her six boys as children in need of aid under former AS 47.10.010(a)(6). The superior court determined that the children were in need of aid because V.D. left them with Mends who, after three months, could no longer afford to care for them. V.D. also claims that she was denied her right to counsel and that the state failed to make active efforts to prevent the breakup of her Indian family. We reverse because we conclude that the state failed to prove that V.D.’s children were in need of aid at the time of the adjudication hearing.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On April 9,1997, Roy Lenny Frye, a social worker for the Division of Family and Youth Services (DFYS) in Kenai, took emergency custody of V.D.’s six children. 1 In January 1997 V.D. had left the children with a close Mend, Theresa Larson, and her husband, George, who had agreed to keep them for a month while V.D. found work and a home in Florida. Because of money problems, V.D. did not retrieve her children as planned; they stayed with the Larsons through February and March.

In early April V.D. sent money for the four youngest children to fly to Seattle accompanied by her Mend Kenneth Bowen. 2 V.D. also purchased bus tickets for the children to travel with Bowen from Seattle to Florida. But the bus tickets did not arrive in Seattle raí time, and the Larsons had to raise money to fly the children back to Alaska. Later that week, the Larsons brought the children to DFYS, stating that they could no longer afford to care for them without state assistance.

Frye took custody of V.D.’s six boys and filed a petition requesting the superior court in Kenai to adjudicate them as children in need of aid (CIÑA). The court held a temporary custody hearing on April 10, which V.D. attended by telephone from Florida. The court found probable cause to believe that the children were in need of aid because V.D. lived out of state and the Larsons were no longer willing or able to care for them. Without inquiring into the feasibility of immediately reuniting V.D. with her family, the court authorized placement of the children with relatives in Unalakleet and Nikiski. 3

At the state’s prompting, the court then advised V.D. of her right to counsel. After V.D. said she wanted an attorney, the trial court informed her that she would need to fill out and submit a form that the court would send her. It then scheduled an adjudication hearing for May 23.

Three days later, the court sent V.D. a form to establish her financial eligibility for courLappointed counsel; the form was returned for insufficient address, and the court sent it again on April 28. Because V.D. had not yet returned the form by May 23, the court postponed the adjudication hearing until June 27. When V.D.’s paperwork still had not arrived by then, the court provisionally appointed a public defender. After several further continuances, the court held the adjudication hearing in December 1997, eight months after the state took custody of the children.

*216 At the adjudication hearing, the parties and the' court focused almost exclusively on the situation that existed when the state assumed emergency custody — that is, V.D.’s conduct in leaving the children with the Lar-sons for three months. Based on evidence that merely elaborated on these earlier circumstances, the court ruled that the children were in need of aid because their mother had physically neglected them. The court scheduled a disposition hearing and ordered the children to remain in state custody pending disposition. 4

Following disposition, V.D. filed this appeal.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

In a CINA case, we will overturn the superior court’s findings of facts if they are clearly erroneous. 5 Whether the trial court’s findings comport with the requirements of the CINA statutes and rules is a question of law that we review de novo. 6

B. The Adjudication Hearing

At the December adjudication hearing the superior court found that V.D. had neglected her children by leaving them with the Larsons and that they were therefore children in need of aid under former AS 47.10.010(a)(6). 7 Because the parties focused on whether the children needed aid when the state took custody in April, the court based its adjudication order on the children’s status at that time. It heard almost no evidence concerning their need for assistance- — -or V.D.’s ability to provide for them — at the time of the adjudication hearing.

In our view, this approach is problematic. When the state takes protective custody of a child and files a petition for adjudication, it asserts that adjudication is necessary because the child needs state assistance. It follows that the relevant question at adjudication should be whether the child is presently at risk, not whether a risk existed some months earlier.

The present-tense wording of our CINA adjudication statutes supports this proposition. For example, former AS 47.10.010(a)— which applies to this case — provides for adjudication “when the court finds the minor to he a child in need of aid.” 8 Likewise, former AS 47.10.080 directs the court, upon concluding an adjudication hearing, to “enter a judgment that the child is or is not a child in need of aid.” 9 This statutory language plainly calls for the court to base its adjudication orders upon proof of a present need for state intervention.

Our case law reinforces this plain meaning. In D.H. v. State, Department of Health and Social Services, for example, we upheld a CINA adjudication based on proof that a child’s mother had neglected her between the time the state took custody and the adjudication hearing months later. 10 Moreover, in In re J.A. we stated in the setting of a temporary custody hearing that the trial court must consider the totality of the circumstances — not just the isolated event that resulted in emergency custody — to determine “whether, at the time of the hearing, probable cause exists to believe that the child is a *217 child in need of aid.” 11 These holdings imply that the relevant inquiry at adjudication is whether the child is then in need of aid as a result of conduct alleged in the petition.

Our recent decision in O.R. v. State, Department of Health and Social Services

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Related

Bruce L. v. W.E.
247 P.3d 966 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2011)
D.M. v. State, Division of Family & Youth Services
995 P.2d 205 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2000)
Dm v. Dfys
995 P.2d 205 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
991 P.2d 214, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vd-v-state-department-of-health-social-services-alaska-1999.