Title: In re Child of Nathaniel B.

State: maine

Issuer: Maine Supreme Court

Document:

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT 
Reporter of Decisions 
Decision: 
2019 ME 120 
Docket: 
Som-19-66 
Submitted 
On Briefs: July 18, 2019 
Decided: 
July 25, 2019  
 
Panel: 
SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HJELM, JJ. 
 
 
IN RE CHILD OF NATHANIEL B. 
 
 
PER CURIAM 
[¶1]  Nathaniel B. appeals from a judgment of the District Court 
(Skowhegan, Nale, J.) terminating his parental rights to his child.1  In accordance 
with the procedure outlined in In re M.C., 2014 ME 128, ¶¶ 6-7, 104 A.3d 139, 
counsel for the father filed a brief indicating that there are no arguable issues 
of merit for appeal.  We entered an order permitting the father to personally 
file a supplemental brief on or before May 15, 2019, but he did not do so.  We 
affirm the judgment.   
 
[¶2]  The Department of Health and Human Services filed a petition for 
child protection and preliminary protection orders two days after the child was 
born in March 2018.  The petition alleged, among other things, that the child 
                                         
1  The parental rights of the child’s mother were terminated by the same judgment, but the mother 
does not appeal; we focus on the procedural history and findings pertaining to the father.  The father 
and mother both have other children, but those children are not the subject of this child protection 
action.    
 
 
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was in circumstances of jeopardy because of the father’s unstable housing, 
frequent encounters with law enforcement, history of domestic violence, 
involvement with unsafe people, and inability to care for his other children 
safely.  The court (Benson, J.) issued a preliminary protection order granting the 
Department custody of the child, and the child was placed in foster care.  The 
father waived his right to a summary preliminary hearing, see 22 M.R.S. 
§ 4034(4) (2018), and he later agreed to the entry of an order finding jeopardy 
to the child based on his recent arrest for theft, failure to participate in any 
scheduled drug screens, lack of involvement with the child, and inability to 
attend to the child’s needs, see 22 M.R.S. § 4035 (2018).  In September 2018, the 
Department petitioned for the termination of the father’s parental rights to the 
child.    
[¶3]  At the hearing on the termination petition in January 2019, the 
father’s attorney was present, but the father did not appear even though the 
court found that he had received notice of the hearing.  Based on the evidence 
presented at the hearing and the prior orders in the case, the court (Nale, J.) 
orally stated its conclusion that the State had proved by clear and convincing 
evidence that the father was parentally unfit pursuant to three of the statutory 
 
 
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definitions of unfitness and that termination of the father’s parental rights was 
in the best interest of the child.   
[¶4]  A week later, the court issued a written judgment and made the 
following findings of fact by clear and convincing evidence.    
 
As an initial matter, the Court has no trouble whatsoever 
concluding the Department made reasonable efforts to rehabilitate 
and reunify the family, as well as reasonable efforts to finalize the 
permanency plan.  The evidence was overwhelming that the 
parents were offered all conceivably necessary services and that 
the Department went above and beyond.   The crux of the problem 
was the parents’ failure to engage.    
 
 
The Court found the testimony of [a] former D.H.H.S. 
caseworker . . . particularly credible in this regard.  The parents 
were provided with, inter alia, D.H.H.S. social worker services, 
safety assessment and planning, family team meetings, supervised 
visitation, and referrals for outside services, but they largely 
squandered these opportunities to participate, alleviate jeopardy, 
and take responsibility for raising [the child].  In this sense, their 
failure to appear for trial was consistent with their performance 
throughout much of this child protection case, when they missed 
family team meetings, [the child’s] appointments, and even 
opportunities to visit with her.  The fact that the visits that did 
occur were largely positive makes it all the more tragic that neither 
parent’s visit attendance was acceptable, and that the parents 
sometimes chose to depart early from the visits that did occur.  By 
the time of trial, it appears neither parent had visited with the child 
since the foster mother brought her to the hospital just prior to the 
mother’s surgery last fall.  (It should be noted that the father was 
invited to this visit and failed to appear, although he had led the 
foster mother to believe that he was coming.)   
 
 
For his part, the father participated in only about fifteen 
minutes of a two-hour counseling assessment and no other 
 
 
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services whatsoever.  The Jeopardy Order had warned him that 
missed screens would count as positive screens, but he never 
participated in a single substance screen scheduled by the 
Department. . . .  
 
 
Had the parents, or either one of them, actually gotten 
engaged in a productive manner, this case could and should have 
been on track for a successful reunification.  It should be noted that 
both parents have other children to whom their parental rights 
have not needed to be terminated. . . .  The father’s sons are with 
their mother, and the father is able to visit with them under safe 
circumstances at his parents’ home.  However, in this particular 
case both parents failed to live up to their responsibilities in a 
timely fashion, and that constitutes unfitness within the framework 
the Legislature has provided in the Child Protection Act.   
 
 
The parents were also unduly difficult for the D.H.H.S. 
caseworkers to reach and remain in communication with, often 
declining to inform the Department where they were living, 
staying, or working at any given time.  They remained in a 
relationship with one another throughout much of the case, but 
there appeared to be chaos constantly swirling around them as 
they dealt with one arrest or criminal prosecution after another 
and moved from place to place without keeping the necessary 
parties informed of their whereabouts or how to reach them.   
 
 
. . . . 
 
 
. . . [The father] evidently texted the foster mother on the 
morning of the [termination] hearing indicating he was opting not 
to take the taxi ride to court because he did not like his chances at 
trial and because he apparently was not even certain whether [the 
child] was his, biologically.    
 
 
 
Under the circumstances, this Court concludes, to the 
clear-and-convincing standard, that: 
 
 
 
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a) The parents are unwilling and unable to protect the child 
from jeopardy, and these circumstances are unlikely to 
change within a time reasonably calculated to meet the 
child’s needs; 
 
b) The parents have been unwilling and unable to take 
responsibility for the child within a time reasonably 
calculated to meet the child’s needs; and 
 
c) Most compellingly, the parents have failed to make a good 
faith effort to rehabilitate and reunify with the child pursuant 
to 22 M.R.S. § 4041.   
 
Having concluded that the parents are unfit within the 
statutory framework, the Court proceeds to find that termination 
of parental rights is in the child’s best interest.  Like all children, 
[the child] is in need of protection and permanency.  [This child] in 
particular has been in foster care since shortly after her birth.  She 
has been in the same home with her foster mother and foster father 
and three older foster brothers since that time, and this home has 
been for her a safe harbor where she has been loved and cherished.  
The guardian ad litem, who has great credibility with the Court, 
reports that all [the child’s] needs are met in the foster home, 
where she is thriving, and that it has been a joy to see her grow, 
develop, and blossom there.  Had the parents given any indication 
whatsoever that they were willing or able to do the hard work 
necessary to reunify, the Court could have entertained a longer 
reunification period, but a[s] this matter presently stands, with no 
alleviation of jeopardy in sight, the Court is left to conclude that 
termination now is in this child’s best interest.   
 
 
[¶5]  These findings, all of which are supported by competent record 
evidence, are sufficient to support the court’s determination that the father is 
unwilling or unable to protect the child from jeopardy or to take responsibility 
for her within a time that is reasonably calculated to meet her needs, and that 
 
 
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he failed to make a good faith effort to rehabilitate and reunify with the child.  
See 22 M.R.S. §§ 4041(1-A)(B), 4055(1)(B)(2)(b)(i)-(ii), (iv) (2018); In re C.P., 
2013 ME 57, ¶¶ 9-10, 67 A.3d 558.  The findings are also sufficient to support 
the court’s determination that termination of the father’s parental rights is in 
the child’s best interest.  See 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(a) (2018); In re Caleb M., 
2017 ME 66, ¶¶ 33-34, 159 A.3d 345.    
The entry is: 
Judgment affirmed. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Harold J. Hainke, Esq., Hainke & Tash, Whitefield, for appellant father 
 
The Department of Health and Human Services did not file a brief 
 
 
Skowhegan District Court docket number PC-2018-24 
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY