Title: In re Child of James R.

State: maine

Issuer: Maine Supreme Court

Document:

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT 
Reporter of Decisions 
Decision: 
2018 ME 50 
Docket: 
Cum-17-436 
Submitted 
 
  On Briefs: 
February 26, 2018 
Decided: 
April 10, 2018 
 
Panel: 
ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ. 
 
 
IN RE CHILD OF JAMES R. 
 
 
HJELM, J. 
[¶1]  James R. appeals from an order of the District Court (Portland, 
Powers, J.) terminating his parental rights to his child based on the court’s 
conclusions that he is unfit because he is unable to “meet his son’s special needs 
and take responsibility for him in a reasonable time to meet those needs” and 
to “protect his son from jeopardy in a reasonable time to meet his needs,” and 
that termination is in the child’s best interest.  See 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(a), 
(b)(i)-(ii) (2017); M.R. App. P. 2B(c).  On appeal, the father contends that the 
court erred in its parental unfitness and best interest determinations and that 
he was denied due process.  We affirm the judgment.   
 
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I.  BACKGROUND 
[¶2]  After a two-day termination hearing, the court issued a judgment 
containing the following factual findings, which are supported by the record.  
See In re Evelyn A., 2017 ME 182, ¶ 4, 169 A.3d 914. 
[¶3]  The child was born premature and drug-affected.  He remained 
hospitalized in neonatal intensive care for six weeks after his birth.1  Upon 
discharge, he was placed in the custody of the Department of Health and Human 
Services and lived in foster care because his parents knew that they were 
unable to care for him.  He has resided in the same foster home since then.   
[¶4]  Up until several days before the child was born, the father had been 
using numerous drugs, including heroin, cocaine, amphetamines, and 
marijuana, in addition to alcohol.  Since then, he has maintained sobriety.  He 
attends Narcotics Anonymous meetings and has participated in substance 
abuse counseling since February of 2016.  The father has been diagnosed with 
post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, and depression, and, as part of a 
reunification plan, he has attended mental health counseling that has a 
domestic violence component.  Since May of 2016, the father has worked with 
a case manager to coordinate services that include a parenting coach who 
                                         
1  Although the child’s birth date is not specified in the judgment, the record indicates that the 
child was born in December of 2015.   
 
3 
began working with the father in January of 2016.  Overall, the father has been 
cooperative with the Department and has participated in the reunification 
services provided to him.   
[¶5]  The father has had regular visitation with the child, beginning with 
supervised contact at an agency and foster home, and progressing to some 
unsupervised contact, including overnights toward the end of 2016.  Because 
the visits went well and the father had demonstrated progress in services, in 
early 2017 the parties formulated a plan to allow greater unsupervised contact 
that would lead to a trial placement with the father beginning on January 27, 
2017.  The ultimate plan was reunification of the father and the child.   
[¶6]  The court described what happened next. 
Unfortunately, the serious incident of January 17, 2017 directly 
interfered with the reunification plan, and the trial placement has 
never occurred.  Around 11:00 a.m. on January 17, 2017 the 
father’s parent educator . . . appeared at the father’s apartment as 
part of the visit there between father and [the child].  [The parent 
educator] noticed that [the child] seemed normal acting.  
However, he then saw red bruising on both of [the child’s] cheeks.  
When he was asked about this, the father described two incidents 
the day before which might explain the bruises.  [The father] was 
putting a new chair together, and [the child] was pushing a toy and 
somehow fell.  The second involved both being in the shower and 
[the child] was at the back of the tub and slipped.  The father 
cannot recall seeing either event but was present and assumed 
two falls occurred from [the child’s] reaction.  The father was 
aware of the bruising on January 17 before [the parent educator] 
arrived.  The father did not believe either incident was serious 
 
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because [the child] slept all night thereafter.  He has denied 
slapping or otherwise causing the facial bruises since being 
questioned on January 17, 2017.  He was the only adult there when 
the bruising occurred.   
 
[The parent educator] called DHHS, which immediately scheduled 
an abuse evaluation for [the child] at the Spurwink Child Abuse 
Program.  That occurred on the afternoon of January 17, 2017, 
with a follow up visit that took place on January 20, 2017.  
Numerous photographs taken at the evaluation document the 
obvious bruising.  The father gave the clinic the same explanation 
for [the child’s] two falls.   
 
The experienced nurse practitioner at the child abuse clinic that 
evaluated [the child] is “very convinced” that the father’s 
explanation for the bruises’ existence is not correct.  Spurwink 
concluded that the location and appearance of the bruising “is 
most consistent with an inflicted injury.”  The nurse practitioner 
cannot state the mechanism of injury except to say that it is 
typically caused by a flexible slap or strike, which can be by hand.  
The [nurse practitioner] told the father at the evaluation that his 
explanations are not plausible, and [the father] had no further 
comment.  Thus, accidental falls suggested by [the father] are 
highly unlikely.  The clinic expressed concern for further injury to 
the child if the child went with his father, and [the child] was 
placed in foster care.  The clinic recommended supervised contact 
between father and son.  The court finds the child abuse expert’s 
opinions persuasive and seriously concerning as to this child’s 
safety. 
 
[¶7]  After this development, the Department informed the father that it 
could provide him with appropriate services, including services related to 
anger management, if he took responsibility for the injuries.2  The father, 
                                         
2  During her testimony, the Department’s caseworker explained that although the agency had 
provided “strong support” to the father, his unwillingness to acknowledge his responsibility for the 
 
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however, has never admitted wrongdoing regarding the child’s injuries and in 
fact testified at the termination hearing that he was not responsible for them.  
Because the child was injured while in the father’s care, the father’s subsequent 
contact with the child has been supervised.   
[¶8]  Since coming into the Department’s custody at six weeks old, the 
child has lived with an experienced foster parent.  With support in the record, 
the court found that the child “has not been easy to raise under all the 
circumstances.”  When the child was discharged from the hospital after his 
birth, he was hypertonic and overstimulated, and cried a lot and slept little.  He 
has received occupational and physical therapy.  He continues to have problems 
with food sensitivity and impulse control, although the latter is improving.   
II.  DISCUSSION 
 
[¶9]  We address in turn the father’s challenges to the court’s 
determination of parental unfitness and the child’s best interest and his 
contention that he was denied due process.    
                                         
child’s injuries meant that the Department could not provide services that would address the reasons 
underlying the assaultive conduct.  She testified that, as a result, “I kind of had my hands tied, so I had 
to move forward.  Especially given how long we had been involved with the family.”   
 
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A. 
Grounds for Termination 
 
[¶10]  The father first argues that the court erred by concluding that he 
is unfit as a parent to the child.   
 
[¶11]  Absent a parent’s consent to termination, in order to terminate 
parental rights the court must find, by clear and convincing evidence, at least 
one of the four statutory grounds of parental unfitness.  See 22 M.R.S. 
§ 4055(1)(B) (2017).  Here, the court concluded that the Department proved 
two forms of parental unfitness: that the father has been unable to protect the 
child from jeopardy and will be unable to do so within a time reasonably 
calculated to meet the child’s needs; and that the father has been unable to meet 
the child’s special needs and take responsibility for him within a time 
reasonably calculated to meet those needs.  See id. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(b)(i), (ii).  
We review for clear error the court’s findings of fact on parental unfitness.  See 
In re Hope H., 2017 ME 198, ¶ 8, 170 A.3d 813.  We “will reverse a finding only 
if there is no competent evidence in the record to support it, if the fact-finder 
clearly misapprehends the meaning of the evidence, or if the finding is so 
contrary to the credible evidence that it does not represent the truth and right 
of the case.”  In re Cameron B., 2017 ME 18, ¶ 10, 154 A.3d 1199 (quotation 
marks omitted); see also In re Evelyn A., 2017 ME 182, ¶ 31, 169 A.3d 914.   
 
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[¶12]  The court concluded, with support in the evidence, that the father 
“does not have the temperament control and good judgment needed to parent 
[the child] safely. . . . That [the father] remains untrustworthy and at risk of 
inflicting harm on [the child] is the bottom line in this case.”  In its judgment, 
the court acknowledged the father’s “partial progress toward reunification” 
from the time of the child’s birth until the January 2017 incident where the child 
was injured while in his exclusive care—and merely days away from a trial 
placement of the child in his residence.  The court reasoned, however, that the 
progress made by the father did “not overcome the danger he still poses to [the 
child] were they to be alone.”  This assessment is grounded on the court’s 
rejection of the father’s claim that he was not responsible for the injuries, 
because the father’s explanations were “unsupported by the physical evidence” 
and because “[t]he evidence clearly shows he was the only plausible cause of 
his son’s inflicted facial injuries in January 2017, despite his denials.”3  The 
                                         
3  Although the court’s judgment included a statement that it was “probable” that the father 
inflicted injuries on the child, the judgment, read as a whole, makes clear that the court made its 
findings based on the correct standard of proof, namely, clear and convincing evidence, see 22 M.R.S. 
§ 4055(1)(B)(2) (2017), which means persuasion to a high level of probability.  See In re Thomas D., 
2004 ME 104, ¶ 21, 854 A.2d 195.  In particular, the court found that the father’s benign explanation 
for the injuries was “highly unlikely” and that the evidence “clearly” established that the father 
inflicted the injuries.  And the court ultimately and explicitly concluded that the Department proved 
the father’s unfitness overall by clear and convincing evidence.  
 
The father also challenges an isolated finding that the father was not candid in his testimony about 
the reason he was told to leave a sober housing.  There is evidence, however, that the father was not 
fully forthright with the guardian ad litem about that situation, and in any event, the judgment makes 
 
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evidence fully supports the court’s assessment of the evidence, which includes 
expert testimony that the injuries were inflicted and could not have happened 
as described by the father.  See Adoption of T.D., 2014 ME 36, ¶ 16, 87 A.3d 726 
(stating that “credibility determinations are left to the sound judgment of the 
trier of fact” (quotation marks omitted)); In re Cameron B., 2017 ME 18, ¶ 10, 
154 A.3d 1199.   
 
[¶13]  Given these and other findings made by the court, the court did not 
err by determining that the father is unable to “meet his son’s special needs and 
take responsibility for him in a reasonable time to meet those needs” and is 
unable to “protect his son from jeopardy in a reasonable time to meet his 
needs.”  See 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(b)(i), (ii); In re Damein F., 2017 ME 205, 
¶¶ 5, 12, 171 A.3d 1149 (affirming a court’s decision to terminate parental 
rights even where the father had “done remarkably well” in his efforts to 
reunify but could not, in a time reasonably calculated to meet the child’s needs, 
take responsibility for or protect the child from jeopardy (quotation marks 
omitted)).    
                                         
evident that the court found that the father was responsible for the child’s injuries—which is the 
central factual aspect of this case—because the medical evidence was persuasive.  Therefore, even if 
the court’s view of the evidence relating to the father’s sober housing was incorrect, the error is 
harmless.  See In re Caleb M., 2017 ME 66, ¶¶ 24-26, 159 A.3d 345.   
 
9 
 
[¶14]  The father also challenges the court’s determination that 
termination of parental rights is in the child’s best interest.  With respect to a 
best interest determination, “we review the court’s factual findings for clear 
error and its ultimate conclusion for an abuse of discretion.”  In re C.A., 2015 ME 
34, ¶ 12, 113 A.3d 1098.  In a termination case, the court weighs “the best 
interest of the child, the needs of the child, including the child’s age, the child’s 
attachments to relevant persons, periods of attachments and separation, the 
child’s ability to integrate into a substitute placement or back into the parent’s 
home and the child’s physical and emotional needs.”  22 M.R.S. § 4055(2) 
(2017).  The purposes of the termination statute include “[e]liminat[ing] the 
need for children to wait unreasonable periods of time for their parents to 
correct the conditions which prevent their return to the family” and 
“[p]romot[ing] the adoption of children into stable families rather than 
allowing children to remain in the impermanency of foster care.”  22 M.R.S. 
§ 4050(2), (3) (2017).   
 
[¶15]  Here, the court determined the permanency plan for the child to 
be adoption.  Although finding that the father had made some strides toward 
reunification, the court ultimately found that “[h]e has not generated trust in 
his ability to maintain control and provide safe care for his very needy son,” a 
 
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finding supported by competent record evidence.  Given the child’s 
circumstances—including the father’s demonstrated inability to appropriately 
and safely care for the child, as shown by an act of violence against the child 
committed by the father after having received services for a considerable 
period and shortly before a planned trial placement; the child’s placement in 
foster care for all but the first six weeks of his life; and, as the court found, the 
importance of providing this child with a “stable, safe, and caring home”—the 
court did not abuse its discretion by concluding that termination of parental 
rights is in the child’s best interest.   
B. 
Due Process 
 
[¶16]  The father finally argues that the termination judgment should be 
set aside because he was denied due process in two respects.  The father did 
not raise these issues below and thereby deprived the trial court of an 
opportunity to address any challenge of merit, and therefore he has not 
preserved a due process challenge for appellate review except, at most, for 
obvious error.  In re Anthony R., 2010 ME 4, ¶ 8-9, 987 A.2d 532.  Nonetheless, 
even if the father had preserved his due process contentions and allowed for de 
novo review, see In re Robert S., 2009 ME 18, ¶ 12, 966 A.2d 894, those claims 
would be unavailing because they are without merit.   
 
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[¶17]  In termination cases, where fundamental interests are at stake, 
“due process requires: notice of the issues, an opportunity to be heard, the right 
to introduce evidence and present witnesses, the right to respond to claims and 
evidence, and an impartial fact-finder.”  Id. ¶ 14 (quotation marks omitted).    
[¶18]  The father first contends that he was denied due process because 
his parental rights were terminated based largely on evidence of the incident 
where he injured the child, which, he asserts, had not been adjudicated as a 
jeopardy issue.  As a factual matter, the father is wrong because the 
January 2017 incident was subject to judicial adjudication before the 
termination petition was even filed.  On February 7, 2017—three weeks after 
the incident—the father agreed to a judicial review and permanency planning 
order, see 22 M.R.S. §§ 4036, 4038 (2017), that expressly referred to the child’s 
“injuries that were found by Spurwink to be inflicted.”  Further, the 
Department’s termination petition, filed in early March of 2017, explicitly 
invoked the January 2017 incident as a ground for terminating the father’s 
parental rights.  And at the termination hearing itself, which was held in August 
of 2017, the father had full opportunity to challenge the Department’s evidence 
that he inflicted the injuries and to present his own evidence on that point.  He 
did both.   
 
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[¶19]  More importantly, however, the basis for a termination 
determination is not artificially limited to circumstances, frozen in time, that 
existed at some earlier date.  As we have stated, the focus of the termination 
hearing is “not on the original reason for the children’s removal from the 
parents’ home, but on the parents’ actions since that time and their ability, 
contemporaneous with the termination hearing and into the future, to provide 
safe care for [their children].”  In re Scott S., 2001 ME 114, ¶ 15, 775 A.2d 1144.  
The scope of the Department’s evidence forming the basis for the judgment and 
the father’s full participation at the hearing were fully consistent with the 
father’s right to due process.4 
 
[¶20]  The father also argues that he was denied due process when the 
Department “abruptly wrote [him] off” after the allegations in the Spurwink 
report surfaced and, “without a cease reunification order from the court, 
stymied [his] reunification process.”  Again, the father is wrong. 
[¶21]  Absent a court order to the contrary, the Department is required 
to “make reasonable efforts to rehabilitate and reunify the family” of a child 
removed from the home.  22 M.R.S. § 4036-B(4) (2017).  The Department is 
                                         
4  In fact, the protections afforded a parent are greater in a termination proceeding than in the 
jeopardy phase of a child protection case, because the clear and convincing standard of proof 
necessary for termination is greater than the preponderance standard applicable at a jeopardy 
hearing.  Compare 22 M.R.S. § 4035(2) (2017), with 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2). 
 
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permitted to “make any appropriate changes in that plan” after reviewing the 
progress of the plan with the parent.  Id. § 4041(1-A)(A)(4) (2017).  Any failure 
by the Department to provide adequate reunification services is not by itself a 
basis for the court to deny a termination petition, although it is a factor the 
court may consider in evaluating allegations of the parent’s unfitness.  In re 
Thomas D., 2004 ME 104, ¶ 28, 854 A.2d 195.   
[¶22]  In its judgment terminating the father’s parental rights, the court 
found that the Department had made reasonable efforts to prevent the child’s 
removal from the home by providing an array of services to both parents.5  That 
finding is supported by the evidence, including testimony from a departmental 
caseworker that even after the January 2017 incident, the Department 
continued to provide services to the father and that the father continued to visit 
with the child, albeit with supervision.  Additionally, in the February 2017 
order—again, issued after the incident that caused the child’s injuries—the 
father agreed that the Department had made reasonable efforts to rehabilitate 
him and reunify the family.  And throughout this proceeding, the father had the 
                                         
5  Each of the reunification plans, which were issued by agreement, required the father to engage 
in services, which included—among others—parenting skills and understanding the effect of 
domestic violence on the child.  The last reunification plan, which was issued in June of 2016, recited 
that he needed to “recognize when [he is] struggling and need[s] help,” “demonstrate appropriate 
problem-solving skills and the ability to adapt to difficult situations,” and “not behave violently 
toward others.”  Further, the February 2016 jeopardy order explained that, as to the father, jeopardy 
was based in part on his anger management issues.   
 
14 
opportunity, pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4041(1-A)(A)(4), to challenge any changes 
in the reunification plan, but he did not do so.   
[¶23]  To the extent that the extent of reunification services implicates a 
parent’s due process rights, the father has demonstrated no error here. 
The entry is: 
Judgment affirmed. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Amy McNally, Esq., Woodman Edmands Danylik Austin Smith & Jacques, P.A., 
Biddeford, for appellant father 
 
Janet T. Mills, Attorney General, and Meghan Szylvian, Asst. Atty. Gen., Office of 
the Attorney General, Augusta, for appellee Department of Health and Human 
Services 
 
 
Portland District Court docket number PC-2015-107 
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY