Case Title: In re Adoption of Shayleigh S.

Citation: 

Docket Number: 2018 ME 165

State: maine

Court: Maine Supreme Court

Date: 2018-12-20T00:00:00Z

Document:
MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT 
Reporter of Decisions 
Decision: 
2018 ME 165 
Docket: 
Ken-18-238 
Submitted 
On Briefs: November 28, 2018 
Decided: 
December 20, 2018 
 
Panel: 
SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ. 
 
 
ADOPTION OF SHAYLEIGH S. et al. 
 
 
PER CURIAM 
[¶1]  The father of S.S. and P.S. appeals from judgments entered by the 
Kennebec County Probate Court (E. Mitchell, J.) terminating his parental rights 
in anticipation of an adoption pursuant to 18-A M.R.S. § 9-204(a)-(b) (2017)1 
and 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(A)(2), (B)(2)(a), and (B)(2)(b)(ii) (2017).  He contends 
that the court erred in its use of statements made by S.S. during an in camera 
interview and that there was insufficient evidence to support the court’s finding 
of parental unfitness as to both children.  We affirm the judgments. 
I.  CASE HISTORY 
 
[¶2]  This appeal arises from private adoption proceedings and petitions 
to terminate the father’s parental rights brought by the mother and stepfather 
of S.S. and P.S. in the Kennebec County Probate Court.  The petitions sought to 
                                         
1 Title 18-A will be revised and recodified as Title 18-C effective July 1, 2019.  See P.L. 2017, ch. 402.  
 
 
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terminate the parental rights of the children’s biological father, thereby freeing 
the children for adoption by their stepfather.  A one-day hearing was held on 
the mother and stepfather’s petitions on May 16, 2018, at which the mother and 
father testified.  On the same day, the court interviewed S.S. in camera.    
 
[¶3]  On May 30, 2018, the court issued two judgments, one for each child, 
terminating the father’s parental rights.  In its judgments, the court recited the 
testimony of the witnesses and also issued what it explicitly characterized as 
findings, applying the requisite clear and convincing evidence standard of 
proof.  See In re Child of Portia L., 2018 ME 51, ¶ 2, 183 A.3d 747.  Because a 
court’s findings will be affirmed on appeal if they are supported by any evidence 
in the record, see Adoption of Isabelle T., 2017 ME 220, ¶ 30, 175 A.3d 639, the 
recitation of testimony in a judgment is unnecessary and could be viewed as 
limiting the support for certain findings to the recited testimony.  If a court 
accepts a fact stated in testimony and the fact is important to the judgment, it 
is best stated as an affirmative finding rather than as a reference to testimony.   
[¶4]  In both judgments the court made the following findings of fact, 
which are supported by competent evidence in the record: 
 
Based upon clear and convincing evidence presented at the 
hearing, this Court concludes that termination of the parental 
rights of [the father], thereby freeing the child for adoption by the 
petitioners, would be in the child’s best interests.  This Court 
 
 
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specifically finds that the [father]’s failure to make any attempt to 
establish a family relationship with the child, or contribute in any 
way toward the child’s financial support, constitutes clear and 
convincing evidence that the [father] has been unwilling or unable 
to take responsibility for the child within a time reasonably 
calculated to meet the child’s needs.  
 
 
In reaching its decision, this Court has considered carefully 
the needs of this child, the child’s age and relationship with the 
[father] and with the petitioners, and the amount of time spent with 
each of the parties and the child’s ability to integrate into the 
petitioner’s home.  
 
. . . . 
 
 
The parents of [S.S.] and [P.S.] were divorced on 
July 20, 2015.  [The father] was awarded visits every 3rd weekend 
and three weeks in the summer.  He also was ordered to pay child 
support of $87.50 weekly for his two children.  [The father] had 
both children for a visit at his mother’s home in August of 2015.  He 
testified that he attempted to visit his children in September of 
2015 but found no one home when he arrived.  He testified that 
after a second unsuccessful attempt to visit, he ceased efforts to 
visit and pay child support.  For almost three years, the father failed 
to make responsible attempts to establish a relationship with his 
children and did not contribute to their financial support.  The 
disability needs of his young son [P.S.] make this absence more 
damaging.    
 
. . . .   
 
 
Both parents acknowledged the father’s criminal mischief 
complaint for destruction of many household items with an axe.  
Both the mother and the daughter [S.S.] testified that these events 
caused them to be fearful.    
 
 
 
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[¶5]  In its judgment regarding S.S., the court made the following 
additional findings: 
 
Daughter [S.S.] is 17 years old.  She testified in camera that 
she does not want her father in her life and fears for herself and her 
little brother.  She testified that she wants to continue her current 
family structure and to be adopted by her stepfather.  She testified 
that he is supportive of her successes in school and knows how to 
take care of her brother’s special needs.  She views her stepfather 
as her father.    
 
. . . . 
 
 
The issue of continuity for caring for his disabled son and for 
parenting his teenage daughter do go to the child’s best interest 
standard.  In light of the father’s lack of participation in any way in 
the care or financial support of both of his children for almost three 
years, the Court finds that it is in the daughter’s best interest to 
formalize her relationship with her stepfather.  [S.S] acts as an 
important care taker of her brother.  The father has consistently 
demonstrated a lack of understanding and appreciation of the 
special needs of his son and has difficultly dealing with his 
daughter’s interactions with her brother.  He is highly critical of 
[S.S.]’s treatment of her brother.    
 
 
The daughter [S.S.] can petition for this adoption on her own 
in just a year when she reaches 18.  She stated unequivocally that 
she wants adoption now based on her past experiences with her 
biological dad and her recent experiences with her stepfather.    
 
[¶6]  In its judgment regarding P.S., the court made the following 
additional findings: 
 
[A pediatric center] diagnosed [P.S.] with [serious 
disabilities].  Although the father had the names of providers of 
services to his son, he made no effort to reach out to see what 
 
 
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assistance he could provide or to contribute financially.  He made 
no inquiries to the mother about the son’s well-being.    
 
 
The mother testified that the son’s issues require structured 
care and careful transitions.  When the father’s attorney asked him 
what plans for reunification he had for his 7 year old son, [the 
father] testified that if the court took too long to decide, he would not 
wait for a gradual reintroduction but would just take him, in spite of 
hearing the testimony about his son’s difficultly with transitions.    
 
. . . [T]he stepfather of this child[] has been in his life since 
marriage to his mother in 2015 after her divorce.  He is a retired 
veteran who provides all the care to the disabled son while [the] 
mother works full time.  He takes the child to all his medical 
appointments and follows the instructions for assisting the child 
both in school and at home.  No evidence was presented to the court 
that he was unsuitable to parent this child.    
 
. . . . 
 
 
The issue of continuity of care for [the father’s] disabled son 
does go to the child’s best interest standard.  In light of the father’s 
lack of participation in any way in the care or financial support of a 
severely disabled son for almost three years and his testimony that 
he would not consider a reunification period before re-entering his 
son’s life should the Court delay its opinion, the Court finds that it 
is this child’s best interest to remain legally in a secure, sensitive 
and consistent environment.  The father has consistently 
demonstrated a lack of understanding and appreciation of these 
special needs.    
 
(emphasis added). 
 
 
[¶7]  Following the judgments, the father timely appealed.  See 18-A 
M.R.S. § 9-309 (2017); M.R. App. P. 2B(c)(1).    
 
 
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II.  LEGAL ANALYSIS 
A. 
Interview with S.S. 
 
[¶8]  The father challenges the court’s use of the statements S.S. made 
during her in camera interview.  He argues that the statements were not made 
under oath and that he did not have the opportunity to cross-examine S.S.  He 
contends that the court’s use of the statements “as evidence of a pertinent fact 
is beyond the intent of the in camera interview statute” because “[a] plain 
reading of the [authorizing] statute would seem to state that it is only the 
adoptee’s attitudes and desires that a court may take into account.”    
 
[¶9]  In adoption proceedings, a probate judge must interview a potential 
“adoptee who is 12 years of age or older, outside the presence of the 
prospective adoptive parents to determine the adoptee’s attitudes and desires 
about the adoption and other relevant issues.”  18-A M.R.S. § 9-305(a) (2017).  
In this case, the court interviewed S.S. in camera during the hearing on the 
petitions for termination of parental rights and discussed, among other things, 
an incident where her father picked her up by her neck.  In its two judgments 
terminating the father’s rights to S.S. and P.S. respectively, the court said that 
S.S. “testified in camera that her father did pick her up with a choke hold.”    
 
 
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[¶10]  While the statements S.S. made regarding the choking incident 
ostensibly fall within the “other relevant issues” part of statute, the court 
exceeded the scope of the statute by relying on these statements for more than 
just context that explained the attitudes and desires of S.S.  Accordingly, it was 
error for the court to refer to the unsworn statements made by S.S. as 
testimony.   
[¶11]  The father, however, has failed to demonstrate how he was 
prejudiced by the court’s use of the statements, and it is highly probable that 
the statements did not affect the outcome of the case.  See In re M.B., 
2013 ME 46, ¶ 34, 65 A.3d 1260; see also Greaton v. Greaton, 2012 ME 17, ¶ 7, 
36 A.3d 913 (“In appealing a judgment, it is not enough to challenge procedural 
errors allegedly made by the trial court without also showing actual error in 
the judgment.”); In re A.M., 2012 ME 118, ¶ 25, 55 A.3d 463 (“The mother’s 
failure to explain on appeal how her absence or the officer’s testimony 
[concerning her absence] could have affected the trial or its outcome is relevant 
in determining on appeal whether she has been deprived of due process.”).   
[¶12]  The mother’s testimony, including her testimony about the 
choking incident involving S.S., was substantively the same as what S.S. said 
in camera and was subject to cross-examination by the father.  See In re Elijah R., 
 
 
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620 A.2d 282, 285-86 (Me. 1993) (holding that admission of inadmissible 
evidence was harmless when the information was “duplicated by other sources 
in the record”).  The father was also able to present his contradictory testimony 
after the mother testified.2  Therefore, the errors the court made with regard to 
the statements given by S.S. during the in camera interview were harmless.  See 
In re M.B., 2013 ME 46, ¶ 34, 65 A.3d 1260; In re A.M., 2012 ME 118, ¶ 25, 
55 A.3d 463.   
B. 
Sufficiency of the Evidence 
 
[¶13]  The father argues that the evidence does not support the court’s 
finding in both judgments that his “failure to make any attempt to establish a 
family relationship with the child, or contribute in any way toward the child’s 
financial support, constitutes clear and convincing evidence that [he] has been 
unwilling or unable to take responsibility for the child within [a] time 
reasonably calculated to meet the child’s needs.”  Specifically, his complete 
argument is as follows: 
 
The evidence showed and the court found that the father did 
have a visit in August of 2015 after the divorce.  The father testified 
that when he went to see the children in September, no one was 
home although he checked more than once between 3 and 6.  The 
mother testified that she moved to a new residence without 
                                         
2  The father admitted to picking up S.S. by the neck when she was twelve, but asserted that it was 
by the back of her neck and he only did so because she was hurting her younger brother, P.S.   
 
 
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notifying the father despite the explicit language in the Divorce 
Judgment that she do so.  The father also testified that he attempted 
during September of 2017 to see the children in accordance with 
his parental rights and was told to talk to her attorney.  It is 
therefore clear that the father has wanted a relationship but was 
hindered by the petitioner and is not “unable to protect the child 
from jeopardy[.]”3 
 
(citations omitted).   
 
[¶14]  “When the burden of proof at trial is clear and convincing evidence, 
our review is to determine whether the fact-finder could reasonably have been 
persuaded that the required findings were proved to be highly probable.”  
Adoption of L.E., 2012 ME 127, ¶ 11, 56 A.3d 1234.  The father does not take 
issue with the court’s best interest findings.   
 
[¶15]  The court here heard evidence, much of it through the father’s own 
admissions, supporting a finding by clear and convincing evidence that he 
neither sought nor had meaningful contact with his children for more than two 
years.  While the father blames the mother for this lack of contact, he took no 
affirmative steps available through the judicial system to remove any perceived 
impediments to maintaining relationships with his children, choosing instead 
                                         
3  In his last sentence, the father misstates the grounds upon which the court found that he was an 
unfit parent.  We infer from the issue statement in his brief that he is challenging the court’s findings 
that he was “unable or unwilling to take responsibility for the child[ren] in a time reasonably 
calculated to meet [their] needs.”    
 
 
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to withhold any child support payments despite having the ability to pay.  He 
admitted that he never contacted the mother when he found that the children 
were not home when he expected to have a visit in the fall of 2015.  
Furthermore, the mother testified that the father’s visits were sporadic and he 
was supposed to call first.    
[¶16]  Although the mother moved without telling the father, she testified 
that she did so in December 2016, more than a year after his last attempted 
visit, and that she kept the same phone number.  After the mother and 
stepfather filed their petitions to terminate the father’s parental rights—two 
years after his last visit with the children—the father sent a text message to the 
mother requesting a visit with the children, but, when she asked him to contact 
her attorney, he never did.  In light of this and other evidence in the record, the 
court reasonably could have been persuaded that it was highly probable that 
the father is unwilling or unable to take responsibility for his children in a time 
reasonably calculated to meet their needs.   
C. 
Sequence of Fact-finding 
[¶17]  Although not raised by the father on appeal, one other aspect of 
the court’s decision requires comment.  In its orders, the court addressed the 
children’s best interests before making a finding of parental unfitness.  We have 
 
 
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previously stated that, notwithstanding the sequence of issues stated in 
22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2), the trial court must find parental unfitness before it 
proceeds to consider the best interests of the children.  See Adoption of Hali D., 
2009 ME 70, ¶¶ 4-5, 974 A.2d 916; In re Michelle W., 2001 ME 123, ¶ 11, 
777 A.2d 283.  
[¶18]  Because the father does not challenge the court’s misallocation of 
fact-finding, our review is for obvious error.  See In re Joshua B., 2001 ME 115, 
¶ 9, 776 A.2d 1240.  Here, the trial court made the required finding of parental 
unfitness by finding by clear and convincing evidence that the father is unable 
or unwilling to take responsibility for his children in a time reasonably 
calculated to meet their needs.  As such, the father was not deprived of a fair 
trial and was not treated unjustly as a result of the trial court’s erroneous 
sequence of its fact-finding.  See id. ¶ 12.  
The entry is: 
Judgments affirmed. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Randy G. Day, Esq., Garland, for appellant father 
 
Justin E. French, Esq., Ranger Copeland French, P.A., Brunswick, for appellees 
mother and stepfather 
 
Kennebec County Probate Court docket numbers A2017-4635-1 and A2017-4636-1 
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY