Court Opinion

ID: 4506148
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-02-10 18:03:00.837406+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:35:12.667617
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                                                    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
                                                              February 10, 2020

                                     2020 CO 10

No. 18SC919 People in Interest of A.R.—Juvenile Court—Dependency and Neglect—
Termination of Parent-Child Legal Relationship—Ineffective Assistance of Counsel.

      This case requires the supreme court to decide a number of issues relating

to claims of ineffective assistance of counsel in the context of a dependency and

neglect proceeding.

      The court first concludes that in a direct appeal from a judgment terminating

parental rights, an appellate court may consider a claim of ineffective assistance of

counsel based on counsel’s performance at an adjudicatory hearing only when the

party claiming ineffective assistance did not have a full and fair opportunity to

assert such a claim immediately after his or her child was adjudicated dependent

and neglected. Next, the court concludes that the proper test for prejudice in the

context of a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in a dependency and neglect

proceeding is the test for prejudice set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.

668, 694 (1984).   Accordingly, to establish prejudice from counsel’s deficient

performance in a dependency and neglect proceeding, a party must show that
there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the

result of the proceeding would have been different. Id. Last, the court concludes

that an appellate court may vacate a juvenile court’s decision in a dependency and

neglect proceeding on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel without

remanding for further fact-finding when either (1) the record is sufficiently

developed to allow the appellate court to decide the question of counsel’s

ineffectiveness or (2) the record establishes presumptive prejudice under the

standard set forth in United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 656–62 (1984).

      Applying these determinations to the facts and claims before it, the court

concludes that respondent mother (1) had a full and fair opportunity to appeal the

adjudication entered after the adjudicatory hearing and thus cannot now raise her

claim that her counsel was ineffective at that hearing; (2) has not established a basis

for presuming prejudice in this case and has not shown that her counsel was

ineffective in allowing the Pueblo County Department of Human Services to

proceed by way of an offer of proof at the termination hearing; and (3) has

established that her counsel was ineffective in not properly litigating the issue of

less drastic alternatives to termination and therefore a remand for further

proceedings is warranted and appropriate.
      Accordingly, the supreme court affirms the judgment of the division below,

albeit on different grounds, and remands this case for further proceedings

consistent with this opinion.
                 The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
                 2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203

                                  2020 CO 10

                     Supreme Court Case No. 18SC919
                   Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
                    Court of Appeals Case No. 17CA2038

                                  Petitioner:

                                     A.R.,

                                      and

                                  Petitioner:

                     The People of the State of Colorado,

                       In the Interest of Minor Child:

                                     A.R.,

                                       v.

                                 Respondent:

                                      D.R.

                             Judgment Affirmed
                                   en banc
                              February 10, 2020

Attorneys for Petitioner A.R.:
Anna N.H. Ulrich Attorney at Law, L.L.C.
Anna N.H. Ulrich, Guardian ad litem
      Crestone, Colorado

Attorneys for Petitioner the People of the State of Colorado:
Gradisar Trechter Ripperger Roth
David A. Roth
      Pueblo, Colorado

Attorneys for Respondent:
Jordan Juvenile and Family Law, LLC
Melanie Jordan
      Golden, Colorado

Attorneys for Amicus Curiae National Association of Counsel for Children:
Brooke Silverthorn
Christopher Church
      Denver, Colorado

Attorney for Amicus Curiae Office of Respondent Parents’ Counsel:
Ruchi Kapoor
      Denver, Colorado

Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Office of the Child’s Representative:
Sheri Danz
Cara Nord
      Denver, Colorado

JUSTICE GABRIEL delivered the Opinion of the Court.

                                       2
¶1       This case requires us to decide a number of issues relating to claims of

ineffective assistance of counsel in the context of a dependency and neglect

proceeding. Specifically, we are asked to decide (1) whether, in a direct appeal

from a judgment terminating parental rights, an appellate court may consider a

claim of ineffective assistance of counsel based on counsel’s performance at an

adjudicatory hearing; (2) the correct standard for determining whether a parent in

a dependency and neglect proceeding was prejudiced by counsel’s ineffective

performance; and (3) whether an appellate court may vacate a juvenile court’s

decision in a dependency and neglect proceeding on the ground of ineffective

assistance of counsel without remanding the case for further evidentiary

development.1

1   Specifically, we granted certiorari to review the following issues:
         1. Whether the court of appeals, in departing from the decisions of
            other divisions of the court of appeals, correctly designated
            “fundamental fairness” as the best means to apply the second
            prong of the analysis described in Strickland v. Washington,
            466 U.S. 668 (1984), when assessing whether a parent’s trial court
            counsel was ineffective in an appeal from a termination order in a
            dependency and neglect case.
         2. Whether an appellate court may vacate a trial court’s decision in a
            dependency and neglect case without remanding the case to the
            trial court to make findings under Strickland’s two-part test.

                                            3
¶2    Addressing these issues in turn, we first conclude that in a direct appeal

from a judgment terminating parental rights, an appellate court may consider a

claim of ineffective assistance of counsel based on counsel’s performance at an

adjudicatory hearing only when the party claiming ineffective assistance did not

have a full and fair opportunity to assert such a claim immediately after his or her

child was adjudicated dependent and neglected (e.g., by filing a timely direct

appeal from the adjudication). Next, we conclude, contrary to the division below,

that the proper test for prejudice in the context of a claim of ineffective assistance

of counsel in a dependency and neglect proceeding is the test for prejudice set

forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 694 (1984), and not a fundamental

fairness test.   Accordingly, to establish prejudice from counsel’s deficient

performance in a dependency and neglect proceeding, a party must show that

there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the

result of the proceeding would have been different. Id. Last, we conclude that an

appellate court may vacate a juvenile court’s decision in a dependency and neglect

proceeding on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel without remanding

      3. Whether an appellate court, in a direct appeal from a judgment
         terminating parental rights, may consider a claim of ineffective
         assistance of counsel based on counsel’s performance at an
         adjudicatory hearing.

                                          4
for further fact-finding when either (1) the record is sufficiently developed to allow

the appellate court to decide the question of counsel’s ineffectiveness or (2) the

record establishes presumptive prejudice under the standard set forth in United

States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 656–62 (1984).

¶3    Applying these determinations to the facts and claims now before us, we

conclude that respondent D.R. (“mother”) (1) had a full and fair opportunity to

appeal the adjudication entered after the adjudicatory hearing and thus cannot

now raise her claim that her counsel was ineffective at that hearing; (2) has not

established a basis for presuming prejudice in this case and has not shown that her

counsel was ineffective in allowing the Pueblo County Department of Human

Services (the “Department”) to proceed by way of an offer of proof at the

termination hearing; and (3) has established that her counsel was ineffective in not

properly litigating the issue of less drastic alternatives to termination and therefore

a remand for further proceedings is warranted and appropriate.

¶4    Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the division below, albeit on

different grounds, and we remand this case for further proceedings consistent

with this opinion.

                         I. Facts and Procedural History

¶5    In the evening of July 9, 2016, petitioner A.R.’s (the “child’s”) paternal

step-grandmother took him to the emergency room at St. Mary Corwin Medical

                                           5
Center in Pueblo to receive treatment for scabies. A physician who treated the

then-six-month-old child determined that the degree of scabies on the child

evinced a case of neglect, and, later that night, another doctor confirmed that the

child also had a skull fracture.    The psychiatric liaison at the hospital thus

contacted the Department, and a crisis caseworker arrived soon thereafter.

¶6    The step-grandmother reported to the crisis caseworker that the child and

his parents had stayed with her for about six weeks, from late April through May

2016, and that, in her view, the child’s parents were not caring for the child

appropriately.   The step-grandmother further stated that the child appeared

behind developmentally and that his parents were not working, sleeping all day,

and using drugs.

¶7    While the crisis caseworker was speaking to the step-grandmother, a Pueblo

police officer arrived and stated that she was taking custody of the child due to

concerns of neglect.   Thereafter, the child was transferred to the Children’s

Hospital in Denver for treatment of his skull fracture.

¶8    The next afternoon, pursuant to the step-grandmother’s instruction, mother

contacted the crisis caseworker.      The crisis caseworker explained that the

Department had custody of the child and what the concerns were. Mother denied

that she abused substances or that she had abused or neglected her child in any

                                         6
way, and she expressed surprise when she was told that her child had a skull

fracture, stating that she did not know how the child had sustained that injury.

¶9    The Department subsequently initiated this dependency and neglect

proceeding, and the juvenile court granted the Department continued custody of

the child and ordered the child placed with the step-grandmother.

¶10   Three months later, the juvenile court held an adjudicatory hearing with

respect to both parents. When mother did not appear, her counsel told the court

that he had made arrangements with mother to attend the hearing. Counsel

indicated that he did not know why mother was not present. Counsel then stated,

“I did advise my client [of] the status of the ma[t]ter and the position of The

Department and it—it may just well be that she determined that was a result that

she might be okay with and I’ll let the County Attorney go forward on that [sic].”

Counsel added, “[S]o I’m going to proceed in my client’s best interests . . . .”

¶11   Apparently in an effort to move the case forward, and after speaking with

counsel for both mother and the child’s father (who also did not appear), the

Department asked the court for leave to amend the Department’s dependency and

neglect petition to include an allegation that the child was dependent or neglected

through no fault of the child’s parents and to allow the Department to rest on the

Report of Investigation filed with the petition. The Department sought to proceed

in this fashion because it had “issues regarding [its] witnesses, as well.”

                                          7
¶12   Mother’s counsel responded, “I think, it would be in my client’s best

interests for me . . . [t]o accept [a no-fault adjudication] and the treatment plan

[that the Department had proposed].” The child’s guardian ad litem (“GAL”)

agreed with this procedure, stating that it was in the child’s best interests to “move

forward,” and the court therefore entered a no-fault adjudication and approved

the proposed treatment plan. Mother did not appeal this adjudication.

¶13   The matter proceeded, and at a hearing that took place approximately four

months later, the Department indicated that mother had just begun to get involved

in the case and wanted to become engaged in it but that the Department

nonetheless intended to file a motion for termination of parental rights based on

mother’s general noncompliance with her treatment plan.            Mother’s counsel

replied by confirming that mother was “trying to [b]ecome involved” in the case,

and he noted that mother had handed him a document indicating that she wanted

the child to be placed with the child’s maternal grandmother (the child was still

placed with his paternal step-grandmother at that time). Counsel, however, does

not appear to have filed any motions or briefs requesting such a placement.

¶14   One month later, the Department filed its motion for termination of parental

rights. In this motion, the Department alleged, as pertinent here, that (1) mother

had not reasonably complied with her treatment plan and the treatment plan had

not been successful; (2) mother’s conduct or condition was unlikely to change

                                          8
within a reasonable period of time; (3) mother was unfit; (4) continuation of the

parent-child legal relationship was likely to result in a grave risk of death or

serious injury to the child; and (5) it would be in the child’s best interests to

terminate the parent-child relationship between child and mother.

¶15   Thereafter, the child’s maternal grandmother, acting pro se, moved to

intervene and requested custody of the child “if mother is unable to regain

[custody] of him.” At that point, mother’s counsel filed what he called a “Notice

of Deposit” with an attached handwritten letter from mother requesting that the

maternal grandmother “get temp[o]rary custody of [the child] just for the time

being till [sic] he[’]s back in my custody.”

¶16   The court does not appear to have acted on counsel’s so-called “Notice of

Deposit.”   In response to the maternal grandmother’s motion for leave to

intervene, however, the court issued an order stating, in pertinent part, “[B]ased

upon the nature of the pleadings the Court believes the pleadings are a Request

for Placement with Family Members pursuant to C.R.S. 19-3-605 and will treat the

request as such.” In light of this interpretation, the court never ruled on the

maternal grandmother’s motion for leave to intervene, and the case proceeded to

a termination hearing without her having become a party.

¶17   Mother did not appear at the termination hearing, but the maternal

grandmother was present. Apparently believing (albeit incorrectly) that the court

                                          9
had granted the maternal grandmother’s motion for leave to intervene, mother’s

counsel told the court, “Your Honor, where I’m going to come from on behalf of

my client is through the Intervenor. I presume she’ll be able to make a statement.”

Mother’s attorney further stated that the maternal grandmother was “a

long[-]term placement for the child, and she doesn’t need to adopt the child to care

for the child, and she would be a good adoptive resource.”

¶18   The court then asked the Department whether it had considered the

maternal grandmother as a potential placement. The caseworker responded that

it had done so but that “there’s no relationship between her and the child. She has

not had any contact with the child, and the child doesn’t know her.”            The

Department thus stated that it was “going with” the child’s current placement

with the step-grandmother because the child was “very bonded and attached there

and thriving.”

¶19   In light of the foregoing, the court stated that it was willing to go forward

with the termination hearing but that it would set a separate hearing to address

placement of the child because of the “request from a grandparent to have custody

of the child.” The court noted, “There seems to be a lot of legislative preference

for that placement.”

¶20   The Department then stated that it was “prepared to, if counsel would

allow, to proceed by offer of proof.” Mother’s attorney responded, “I don’t have

                                        10
any objection to that, Judge,” and the Department thus proceeded to describe how

the caseworker would have testified had she been called as a witness.           The

Department concluded its proffer by arguing that all of the requirements for

termination had been satisfied, including that there were no less drastic

alternatives to termination, and that termination was appropriate in this case. The

Department also moved to admit certain exhibits that it had discussed in its

proffer, including, among other things, mother’s substance abuse evaluation and

letters that the caseworker had sent to mother in an attempt to engage her in

treatment. Mother’s counsel indicated that he had no objections to the exhibits,

and the court admitted them.

¶21   Following the Department’s offer of proof, the court asked mother’s

counsel, “[I]s there anything else you’d like to add?” and noted that the court

understood counsel’s “concern about the biological grandmother.”           Counsel

responded, “[n]o,” but “[w]ith regard to these other matters, the best interests,

Your Honor, I maintain the same position that I don’t agree with that but that’s for

that other procedure that I think we’re going to be scheduling.”

¶22   At the conclusion of the foregoing presentations and discussions, the court

stated that it would “tentatively grant the request to terminate parental rights.”

The court did not enter a judgment, however, because “if the Court decided to

place the child with . . . the grandparent in the case, that would be a less drastic

                                        11
alternative to termination.” The court then set a review hearing to “hear how the

Department’s going to deal with that issue involving the grandparent,” including

visitation and contact with the child.

¶23   The review hearing took place several months later. Mother again did not

appear. At this hearing, the Department indicated that it would like to award sole

allocation of parental responsibilities to the step-grandmother with whom the

child had been living since the beginning of the case and that it would allow visits

with the maternal grandmother. The GAL stated, however, that in her opinion,

the best interests of the child necessitated termination. Mother’s attorney then

reiterated that mother wanted the child to be placed with the maternal

grandmother, but he did not request an evidentiary hearing to determine whether

such a placement would have been viable or whether it would have afforded a less

drastic alternative to termination.

¶24   The court decided to give the parties an opportunity to meet, to see if they

could find a resolution that would allow both sides of the family to maintain

contact with the child. The court thus set another hearing without entering

judgment terminating mother’s parental rights.

¶25   The next hearing occurred nine days later. At this hearing, the Department

requested that the court issue the order terminating mother’s parental rights. Only

then did mother’s counsel request a hearing regarding placement with the

                                         12
maternal grandmother, who, according to counsel, was the child’s only blood

relative. The court responded, “Well, I’m gonna deny a request for a hearing. I

already had the hearing.” The court then signed the order terminating mother’s

parental rights, ordered that the maternal grandmother have visits with the child,

and set another hearing to discuss the child’s placement.

¶26   Mother appealed, alleging, as pertinent here, that she had received

ineffective assistance of counsel at both the adjudicatory and termination hearings

and that the juvenile court had erred in finding no less drastic alternatives to

termination.

¶27   Notably, several months later, at a hearing to discuss the child’s placement,

the juvenile court supplemented its above-noted termination order, stating:

      The order terminating the parental rights of Respondents is currently
      on appeal. The Court may have dropped the ball on this case early
      on. The child has extended family on both sides. There is a less
      drastic alternative to termination. Until the appeals court enters a
      ruling, this court will hold off on issuing any orders as it relates to the
      permanent placement of this child. Should the appeals court overturn
      the termination order, the court will look at maintaining the
      relationship between the minor child and his extended family.

¶28   Thereafter, the court issued a minute order stating, “[H]ad court known of

extended family, it is likely court would have denied” the motion to terminate

mother’s parental rights.

¶29   In a unanimous, published decision, a division of the court of appeals

subsequently reversed the judgment terminating mother’s parental rights and
                                          13
remanded the case for further proceedings. People in Interest of A.R., 2018 COA

177, ¶¶ 102–04, __ P.3d __. In reaching this conclusion, the division addressed, as

pertinent here, three interrelated questions: (1) whether a claim of ineffective

assistance of counsel at the adjudicatory phase may be raised in an appeal of the

termination order; (2) what standard should be applied to determine whether

counsel in a dependency and neglect proceeding was ineffective; and (3) whether

an appellate court can vacate a termination or adjudication order based on

presumptive prejudice set out in the parties’ briefs, or whether it must remand for

further evidentiary development. Id. at ¶¶ 42–56, 67–68, 71–79.

¶30   Answering these questions, the division concluded that a claim of

ineffective assistance of counsel during the adjudicatory phase is cognizable on

direct appeal from a termination order if a parent alleges sufficient facts in his or

her opening appellate brief. Id. at ¶ 79. Specifically, the division noted that the

parent must allege facts that, if proved, would allow the juvenile court on remand

to conclude that counsel rendered deficient performance at the adjudicatory

hearing and that due to that deficient performance, “there was not substantial

compliance with the requirements for establishing a child’s status as dependent or

neglected.” Id. The division further concluded that the proper standard for

determining prejudice on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in a

dependency and neglect case was not the familiar Strickland standard. Id. at

                                         14
¶¶ 42–46. Rather, the division opined that prejudice should be measured under a

“fundamental fairness” standard. Id. at ¶¶ 47–56. Under this standard, a party

asserting ineffective assistance of counsel must show that counsel’s deficient

performance prejudiced the party by rendering the proceeding fundamentally

unfair or unreliable. Id. at ¶ 57. And the division determined that when a

reviewing court concludes that “counsel’s deficient performance was so likely to

prejudice the parent that the termination proceeding was presumptively unfair

and unreliable,” then counsel has failed to subject the opposing party’s case to

meaningful adversarial testing, and the appellate court can determine the

ineffective assistance issue without remanding the case for further proceedings.

Id. at ¶¶ 67–68 (citing Cronic, 466 U.S. at 658–59).

¶31   Applying these principles to the case before it, the division concluded that

counsel’s performance at the adjudicatory hearing was deficient because counsel

(1) stated without providing a basis that it was in mother’s best interest for the

court to enter a no-fault adjudication in mother’s absence; (2) did not advocate for

mother’s position but instead represented his own idea of her best interests; and

(3) allowed the court to adjudicate the child dependent or neglected without

requiring the Department to prove its allegations by a preponderance of the

evidence or ensuring that mother was making a knowing and voluntary

admission.    Id. at ¶¶ 82–85.    The division further determined that counsel’s

                                          15
performance at the termination hearing was deficient because, among other

things, counsel agreed to the Department’s request to proceed by way of an offer

of proof. Id. at ¶¶ 89–95.

¶32   Turning to the question of prejudice, the division determined that counsel’s

performance    at   both     the   adjudicatory   and   termination   hearings   was

presumptively prejudicial because on both occasions, counsel failed to subject

mother’s case to meaningful adversarial testing, thereby rendering the entire

termination proceeding fundamentally unfair and unreliable. Id. at ¶¶ 86, 95. The

division thus concluded that reversal of the termination judgment and remand for

further proceedings was required. Id. at ¶ 96.

¶33   Finally, the division noted mother’s claims that the juvenile court had erred

in finding no less drastic alternative to termination and that her counsel had not

effectively litigated placing the child with maternal grandmother as a less drastic

alternative to termination. Id. at ¶ 97. The division concluded, however, that it

did not need to address these issues because it was otherwise remanding for a new

termination hearing. Id. Nonetheless, the division observed that because the

juvenile court had indicated that it likely would have denied the Department’s

motion to terminate parental rights had it considered less drastic alternatives, “in

the interest of judicial economy, the juvenile court may consider maternal

grandmother as a less drastic alternative before conducting a full evidentiary

                                          16
termination hearing.” Id. at ¶ 101. The division stated that if the juvenile court

were to conclude that placement with the maternal grandmother was not a viable

less drastic alternative, then the court must hold a new evidentiary termination

hearing and allow mother to present evidence and argument in opposition. Id. at

¶ 103.

¶34      The division thus reversed the judgment terminating mother’s parental

rights and remanded the case for further proceedings. Id. at ¶ 102.

¶35      The GAL filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, in which the Department

subsequently joined, and we granted that petition.

                                     II. Analysis

¶36      We begin by setting forth the applicable standard of review. We then

address the timeliness of mother’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel at the

adjudicatory hearing, and we conclude that this portion of mother’s appeal was

untimely. Last, we address mother’s claim that her counsel provided ineffective

assistance at the termination hearing, and after discussing the proper legal

standards to be applied, we conclude that counsel was ineffective in not properly

litigating the issue of less drastic alternatives to termination.

                              A. Standard of Review

¶37      A determination of the proper legal standard to be applied in a case and the

application of that standard to the particular facts of the case are questions of law

                                          17
that we review de novo. Carousel Farms Metro. Dist. v. Woodcrest Homes, Inc., 2019

CO 51, ¶ 18, 442 P.3d 402, 407; State ex rel. Weiser v. Castle Law Grp., LLC, 2019 COA

49, ¶ 35, __ P.3d __ ; In re Marriage of Krejci, 2013 COA 6, ¶ 3, 297 P.3d 1035, 1037.

We also review de novo the application of the pertinent statute of limitations, and

we consider, as a matter of law, whether the facts alleged, if true, could constitute

justifiable excuse or excusable neglect to overcome an untimely filing. Close v.

People, 180 P.3d 1015, 1019 (Colo. 2008); State ex rel. Weiser, ¶ 96.

           B. Ineffective Assistance at the Adjudicatory Hearing

¶38   The GAL contends that the division erred in concluding that a claim of

ineffective assistance based on counsel’s performance at an adjudicatory hearing

is cognizable in a direct appeal from a judgment terminating parental rights when

the parent makes sufficient allegations of deficient conduct and prejudice. We

agree that this determination was error.

¶39   Upon the filing of a petition alleging that a child is dependent or neglected,

the court will generally conduct an adjudicatory hearing to consider whether the

petition’s allegations are supported by a preponderance of the evidence.

§ 19-3-505(1), C.R.S. (2019). If the court finds that the petition’s allegations are not

supported by a preponderance of the evidence, then the court shall order the

petition dismissed and the child and his or her parents, guardian, or legal

custodian discharged from any detention or restriction previously ordered.

                                           18
§ 19-3-505(6). If, conversely, the court finds that the petition’s allegations are

supported by a preponderance of the evidence, then the court shall sustain the

petition and make an order of adjudication setting forth whether the child is

dependent or neglected. § 19-3-505(7)(a). The court shall then hold a dispositional

hearing. § 19-3-505(7)(b).

¶40   At the dispositional hearing, the court hears evidence concerning the proper

disposition best serving the interests of the child and the public. § 19-3-507(1)(a),

C.R.S. (2019). The court must then enter a decree of disposition. § 19-3-508(1),

C.R.S. (2019). In most cases, the court will then approve an appropriate treatment

plan involving the child and each named respondent, unless no appropriate

treatment plan can be devised as to a particular respondent. § 19-3-508(1)(a)–(e).

“The purpose of the treatment plan is to provide services to the family, to prevent

unnecessary out-of-home placement of the child, and to facilitate reunification of

the child and family.”       A.M. v. A.C., 2013 CO 16, ¶ 14, 296 P.3d 1026, 1031.

Thereafter, if the treatment plan has not been reasonably complied with or has

been unsuccessful, and if certain other statutory prerequisites have also been

satisfied, then the Department may seek to terminate the respondent’s parental

rights. §§ 19-3-602(1), -604(1)(c), C.R.S. (2019).

¶41   In light of the foregoing, the result of an adjudicatory hearing is significant

because the order that the court enters after that hearing determines how—and,

                                           19
indeed, even if—the case should proceed. See § 19-3-505(6). Accordingly, our

legislature has provided that “[a]n order decreeing a child to be neglected or

dependent shall be a final and appealable order after the entry of the disposition

pursuant to section 19-3-508.” § 19-1-109(2)(c), C.R.S. (2019). And subject to

limited exceptions, the failure to file a timely notice of appeal from the

adjudication will generally result in the dismissal of an appeal of the adjudication

order. See In the Interest of C.A.B.L., 221 P.3d 433, 438–39 (Colo. App. 2009) (noting

that the timely filing of a notice of appeal is a jurisdictional prerequisite to

appellate review, although in certain limited circumstances, the court may apply

the so-called “unique circumstances doctrine” to extend the deadline for filing a

notice of appeal); People in Interest of E.H., 837 P.2d 284, 287 (Colo. App. 1992)

(concluding that a mother’s attempt to argue on appeal of a termination order the

substantive merits of a dependency and neglect adjudication was untimely and

that therefore mother’s appeal as to such issues should be dismissed).

¶42   Concluding otherwise and allowing a party to wait until an appeal of a

termination order to challenge counsel’s performance at the earlier adjudicatory

proceeding would create a regime in which parties could litigate a dependency

and neglect proceeding through the termination of parental rights (which may

well take substantial time and effort), only to be forced to relitigate the case from

near its beginning. Such an outcome, however, would undermine the Colorado

                                         20
Children’s Code’s goal of ensuring permanency for children. See, e.g.,

§ 19-1-102(1.5)(a)(I), (III), C.R.S. (2019) (“The general assembly declares that it is in

the best interests of the child who has been removed from his own home to have

the following guarantees: (I) To be placed in a secure and stable environment; . . .

and (III) To have assurance of long-term permanency planning.”); § 19-1-109(1)

(providing that appeals from final orders, decrees, or judgments entered under the

Children’s Code “shall be advanced on the calendar of the appellate court and

shall be decided at the earliest practical time”); see also People in Interest of D.G.,

140 P.3d 299, 305 (Colo. App. 2006) (noting “the omnipresent concern with

permanence and stability for children”).

¶43   Applying the foregoing principles here, we conclude that mother’s effort to

appeal her counsel’s performance at the adjudicatory hearing was untimely.

Mother was aware (or reasonably should have been aware) of the facts giving rise

to any claim of ineffective assistance at the adjudicatory hearing at or shortly after

that hearing. Mother, however, made no effort to file a timely appeal from the

adjudication order. Nor does the record disclose any factual or legal impediments

to mother’s ability to pursue a timely appeal.

¶44   In this regard, we are not persuaded by mother’s contention that she was

unable to file a timely appeal from the adjudication order because the court did

not enter a written adjudication order. To the extent that mother perceived that

                                           21
she had viable appellate issues but lacked a written order, she could have asked

the juvenile court to enter such an order, and mother’s failure to do so (and her

proceeding throughout this case without contesting the validity and finality of the

adjudication order) undermines any assertion of good cause or unique

circumstances excusing mother’s belated appeal.         See E.H., 837 P.2d at 287

(concluding that a mother should have raised her claims of error arising from the

adjudicatory hearing in a timely appeal from the adjudication decrees); cf. People

in Interest of A.J., 143 P.3d 1143, 1148–50 (Colo. App. 2006) (concluding that when

a mother timely communicated to her counsel her decision to appeal the

termination of her parental rights and counsel did not timely perfect such an

appeal, mother had established good cause for extending or suspending the filing

deadline); People in Interest of A.J.H., 134 P.3d 528, 531–32 (Colo. App. 2006)

(concluding that when a trial court’s ambiguous ruling caused the confusion that

resulted in a father’s untimely appeal of a termination order, the unique

circumstances doctrine authorized the appellate court to accept the father’s belated

appeal).

           C. Ineffective Assistance at the Termination Hearing

¶45   We turn next to mother’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel at the

termination hearing. We begin by addressing the standards to be applied in

deciding mother’s claims. We then discuss several procedural considerations that

                                        22
are pertinent to an appellate court’s review of such claims, including whether and

when the court may decide those claims without a remand. Finally, we apply the

pertinent standards to the case before us.

                        1. The Proper Test for Prejudice
¶46   The GAL contends that the division erred in adopting a fundamental

fairness test for prejudice in the context of ineffective assistance of counsel claims

in dependency and neglect cases, rather than applying the test for prejudice set

forth in Strickland. We agree.

¶47   In Colorado, the right to appointed counsel in termination proceedings is

secured by statute, not constitutional mandate. See § 19-1-105(2), C.R.S. (2019);

C.S. v. People, 83 P.3d 627, 636 (Colo. 2004). Specifically, the Children’s Code

provides that respondent parents have “the right to be represented by counsel at

every stage of the proceedings[] and the right to seek the appointment of counsel

through the office of respondent parents’ counsel . . . if the respondent is unable to

financially secure counsel on his or her own.”          § 19-3-202(1), C.R.S. (2019).

Notwithstanding the fact that the right to counsel in these cases is statutory and

not constitutional, Colorado courts allow parents to challenge an order of

termination on the ground that they did not receive the effective assistance of

counsel, recognizing that in a termination proceeding, as in a criminal case in

which the right to counsel is constitutionally mandated, counsel is necessary to

                                         23
protect the parents’ right to a fair proceeding. See Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745,

753–54 (1982) (noting that parents’ fundamental liberty interest in the care,

custody, and management of their children requires states to afford respondent

parents fundamentally fair procedures when seeking to terminate parental rights);

People in Interest of C.H., 166 P.3d 288, 290 (Colo. App. 2007) (noting that although

a parent’s right to appointed counsel in termination proceedings is statutory and

not constitutional, Colorado courts allow the parent to challenge an order of

termination on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel).

¶48   In order to prove the ineffective assistance of counsel in the context of a

dependency and neglect case, Colorado appellate courts appear to agree that the

party asserting that counsel was ineffective must show that counsel’s performance

was outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance. See, e.g., C.H.,

166 P.3d at 290–91 (citing Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687). Divisions of the court of

appeals have divided, however, as to the appropriate standard for determining

the requisite prejudice in such a case.

¶49   The majority of divisions appear to have applied the prejudice standard that

was set forth in Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, and that applies in criminal cases. See,

e.g., D.G., 140 P.3d at 308 (“To establish prejudice, a parent must show there is a

reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s deficient performance, the outcome

of the hearing would have been different.”).

                                          24
¶50   In the present case, however, the division rejected that standard for

dependency and neglect cases and concluded that to establish the requisite

prejudice in this context, a party must show that counsel’s deficient performance

rendered the proceeding fundamentally unfair or unreliable. A.R., ¶¶ 56–57. The

division reasoned that this was a more appropriate standard for dependency and

neglect cases because (1) fundamental fairness “has long been the hallmark of due

process in termination of parental rights proceedings”; (2) fundamental fairness

“has also been the benchmark by which [the Colorado Supreme Court] has

measured the sufficiency of procedures afforded to parents in termination

proceedings”; and (3) fundamental fairness is better suited to the “highly

discretionary nature of termination proceedings” because the extent of discretion

afforded to the juvenile court makes assessing the impact of counsel’s performance

on the court’s decision “problematic, if not impossible,” such that an appellate

court “can only speculate on the extent to which counsel’s performance affected

the juvenile court’s decision to terminate parental rights.” Id. at ¶¶ 47–55.

¶51   For a number of reasons, we respectfully disagree with the division’s

decision to adopt a fundamental fairness test and conclude instead that the

Strickland test for prejudice applies here.

                                          25
¶52   First, the fundamental fairness test strikes us as too broad and inherently

subjective. As a result, we believe that such a test would be difficult to apply and

could lead to inconsistent results.

¶53   For example, the division states that a judgment terminating parental rights

may be unreliable if, due to counsel’s deficient performance, (1) the court did not

receive essential information favorable to the parent that directly related to the

statutory termination criteria or (2) the parent was deprived of a significant

procedural safeguard to which the law entitled him or her. Id. at ¶ 61. What

constitutes “essential information,” however, is undefined and may well vary

depending on the facts of a particular case. Thus, the existence of a relative who

might be an appropriate placement option could be essential in a given case. In a

different case, however, the evidence might definitively show that the relative

would not have been a viable placement option. In such a case, we do not believe

that counsel’s failure to introduce evidence of the possible (but ultimately not

viable) placement option would render the proceeding fundamentally unreliable

or unfair.

¶54   Likewise, a parent might be denied a “significant procedural safeguard” in

a case if the parent was indigent and his or her counsel did not ask the court to

appoint an expert witness for that parent.        See § 19-3-607(1), C.R.S. (2019)

(providing that an indigent parent has the right to have appointed one expert

                                        26
witness of his or her own choosing at the state’s expense). In a different case,

however, the evidence might show, beyond dispute, that the parent has not

successfully completed any part of his or her treatment plan, has chosen to have

no contact with his or her child, has not participated in any part of the dependency

and neglect proceedings, and, by any definition, is an unfit parent, such that the

appointment of an expert would have been a pointless exercise. It is not clear to

us that counsel’s failure to request the appointment of an expert in such a case

could be said to have resulted in a fundamentally unreliable or unfair proceeding.

¶55   Second, we are not persuaded that the different legal bases for the rights to

counsel in criminal cases and dependency and neglect proceedings warrant

different standards of prejudice. In both scenarios, parties are entitled to counsel

to protect their fundamental right to a fair proceeding. See, e.g., Strickland, 466 U.S.

at 684 (noting that the Sixth Amendment right to counsel exists and is needed to

protect the fundamental right to a fair trial); Santosky, 455 U.S. at 753–54 (noting

that parents’ fundamental liberty interest in the care, custody, and management of

their children requires states to afford respondent parents fundamentally fair

procedures in termination proceedings).

¶56   Third, we do not accept the premise that the Strickland and fundamental

fairness standards would, in practice, necessarily be materially different. To the

contrary, we perceive the Strickland standard as ultimately seeking to protect a

                                          27
party’s right to a fair and reliable proceeding, Strickland, 466 U.S. at 684, and this

seems to be the focus of the fundamental fairness test as well. Thus, the New

Jersey Supreme Court has noted that it saw “little practical difference between the

standards” and that “[a]lthough [cases following the fundamental fairness

standard] may be slightly more flexible than Strickland, the distinction is, to us,

inconsequential.” N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. B.R., 929 A.2d 1034, 1038

(N.J. 2007).

¶57   Fourth, we do not agree that the legal standards governing dependency and

neglect proceedings are so discretionary that it would be problematic, if not

impossible, to discern the impact of counsel’s deficient performance on the court’s

exercise of discretion. Before terminating parental rights in a case like the one

before us, the juvenile court must find, by clear and convincing evidence, that

(1) the child was adjudicated dependent or neglected; (2) the parent has not

complied with or successfully completed an appropriate treatment plan approved

by the court; (3) the parent is unfit; and (4) the parent’s conduct or condition is

unlikely to change within a reasonable time. § 19-3-604(1)(c)(I)–(III). In addition,

the court must consider and eliminate less drastic alternatives to termination.

People in Interest of M.M., 726 P.2d 1108, 1122 (Colo. 1986). And to assist a court in

making these findings, the Children’s Code provides a number of factors that the

                                         28
court must consider in determining unfitness, conduct, or condition for purposes

of section 19-3-604(1)(a). § 19-3-604(2)(a)–(m).

¶58   Unlike the division, we are not convinced that the foregoing standards

would make it problematic, if not impossible, to discern the impact of counsel’s

deficient performance on the court’s findings in a termination case. By way of

example, we can readily envision a case in which it is undisputed that (1) a child

was adjudicated dependent or neglected because of a parent’s severe and chronic

drug addiction, unemployment, and homelessness and (2) by the time of the

termination proceeding, the parent had made no effort to comply with his or her

treatment plan and had remained homeless, unemployed, and addicted to drugs,

with no prospect for any change in his or her condition in the foreseeable future.

In such a case, counsel’s conduct may have been deficient in several ways, but the

application of the law to the undisputed facts would likely require termination of

the parent’s parental rights, despite counsel’s conduct. See, e.g., People in Interest of

T.M.S., 2019 COA 136, ¶¶ 57–64, 454 P.3d 375, 384 (concluding that a mother was

not prejudiced by her counsel’s failure to secure the attendance of her witnesses

on the third day of her termination hearing because she did not explain how the

missing witnesses’ testimony would have affected the outcome of the case, nor did

she suggest that these witnesses’ testimony would have refuted the testimony of

her therapist, which supported termination of her parental rights); People in Interest

                                           29
of S.L., 2017 COA 160, ¶¶ 57–65, 421 P.3d 1207, 1219–20 (concluding that a father

was not prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to meet discovery and disclosure

deadlines for an expert witness, which resulted in the father’s being precluded

from calling the witness as an expert, because the witness ultimately was

permitted to give lay testimony regarding the father’s interaction with his children

and it was not apparent to the division that the trial court would have ruled

differently had the witness been permitted to testify as an expert).

¶59   Finally, we agree with the New Jersey Supreme Court that “Strickland is

clear, familiar to lawyers and judges, and carries with it a developed body of case

law” and that the majority of state courts that have addressed the issue of

ineffective assistance of counsel in termination of parental rights cases have

employed the Strickland standard. N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs., 929 A.2d at

1038. Accordingly, we are not convinced that the Strickland standard cannot

readily be applied in the present context as well.

¶60   For these reasons, we conclude that the Strickland test for prejudice applies

in the dependency and neglect context. Thus, to establish prejudice from counsel’s

deficient performance in a dependency and neglect proceeding, a party must show

that there is a reasonable probability that but for counsel’s unprofessional errors,

the result of the proceeding would have been different.

                                         30
                          2. Procedural Considerations

¶61   Having determined the proper test for prejudice to be applied for claims of

ineffective assistance of counsel in dependency and neglect cases, we must next

determine when, if ever, an appellate court can decide such an ineffective

assistance of counsel claim without remanding the case for further factual

development.

¶62   This presents a difficult question in the context of dependency and neglect

proceedings because of the differences between the procedures employed in

criminal cases and those used in dependency and neglect proceedings. In criminal

cases, Crim. P. 35(c) provides for postconviction proceedings in which a party may

raise, among other things, an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. See Crim. P.

35(c)(2)(I) (providing for a postconviction claim that a criminal defendant’s

conviction was obtained or his or her sentence was imposed in violation of the

Constitution or laws of the United States or of Colorado); see also Ardolino v. People,

69 P.3d 73, 77 (Colo. 2003) (noting that Crim. P. 35(c) provides a criminal

defendant with an adequate opportunity to develop the required record to

establish ineffective assistance). Indeed, in the criminal context, a defendant is

generally not permitted to raise a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on

direct appeal because such a claim ordinarily requires the development of a factual

record that will not have been developed in the trial court. Ardolino, 69 P.3d at 77.

                                          31
If a defendant pleads ineffectiveness with sufficient specificity, then he or she is

entitled to a hearing in the district court to make a record of the facts supporting

his or her allegation. See id. (noting that a motion for postconviction relief under

Crim. P. 35(c) may be denied without an evidentiary hearing only when “the

motion, files, and record in the case clearly establish that the allegations presented

in the defendant's motion are without merit and do not warrant postconviction

relief”).

¶63    In contrast, Colorado law provides no specific mechanism for challenging

the effectiveness of counsel in a termination of parental rights case. C.H., 166 P.3d

at 291. Thus, a parent must employ one of the general procedures available in civil

cases, such as a direct appeal. Id. As a result of such a procedure, however, the

record may be insufficient to allow the appellate court to decide the issue. Id. In

that scenario, an appellate court will generally remand the case for further factual

findings. Id. A remand is only required, however, if the parent’s allegations are

sufficiently specific to constitute a prima facie showing of ineffective assistance of

counsel.    Id.   If the parent’s allegations lack sufficient specificity, then the

ineffective assistance of counsel claim may be summarily denied. Id.

¶64    This leaves the question of whether the appellate court must remand for

further factual findings in every case in which a party alleges sufficient facts to

establish a facially viable ineffective assistance of counsel claim. We think not.

                                         32
Rather, we conclude that an appellate court in a dependency and neglect

proceeding may decide an ineffective assistance of counsel claim without

remanding the case for further factual development in two circumstances.

¶65   First, in a given case, the record may be sufficiently developed to allow an

appellate court to decide the question of counsel’s ineffective assistance. For

example, the underlying facts of both the case and of counsel’s allegedly deficient

conduct may be undisputed, such that the only matter before the appellate court

is a question of law. See People v. Valdez, 969 P.2d 208, 211 (Colo. 1998) (“When the

controlling facts are undisputed, the legal effect of those facts constitutes a

question of law which is subject to de novo review.”); Camp Bird Colo., Inc. v. Bd. of

Cty. Comm’rs, 215 P.3d 1277, 1281 (Colo. App. 2009) (noting that appellate courts

review de novo the application of law to undisputed facts). The appellate court

would likely be able to resolve such an ineffective assistance of counsel claim

without a remand.

¶66   Second, in a dependency and neglect proceeding, as in a criminal case,

prejudice may sometimes be presumed. In the criminal context, the Supreme

Court has observed that a court may presume prejudice if counsel “entirely fails to

subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful adversarial testing.” Cronic, 466 U.S.

at 659 (emphases added). As the Court and our court have since made clear, this

presumption of prejudice applies only in relatively narrow circumstances, as, for

                                         33
example, when counsel was not made available, was prohibited by the trial court

from participating in a critical aspect of the proceeding, or was acting under a

conflict of interest. See Roe v. Flores-Ortega, 528 U.S. 470, 483 (2000) (noting that no

specific showing of prejudice is required when a defendant is, either actually or

constructively, completely denied the assistance of counsel because, in such

circumstances, the adversary process is presumptively unreliable); Ybanez v.

People, 2018 CO 16, ¶ 25, 413 P.3d 700, 706 (noting that the Supreme Court has

previously presumed prejudice “only in a few narrow circumstances,” namely,

“where counsel was not made available, was prohibited by the trial court from

participating in a critical aspect of the proceeding, or acted under a conflict of

interest”). In our view, the same standard for presumed prejudice should apply

in the termination of parental rights context, and an appellate court will generally

be able to resolve an ineffective assistance of counsel claim involving such

presumed prejudice without a remand.

¶67   Absent these circumstances, which we anticipate will arise infrequently, a

remand for factual development will ordinarily be necessary.

                                   3. Application

¶68   Having set forth the applicable legal standards that govern in this case, we

now turn to mother’s specific claims.          Mother asserts that her counsel was

ineffective at the termination hearing because he (1) did not object to the court’s

                                          34
admitting exhibits containing inadmissible hearsay statements; (2) agreed to

proceed by way of an offer of proof; and (3) did not properly litigate placing the

child with maternal grandmother as a less drastic alternative to termination. We

address these contentions in turn.

¶69   With respect to the exhibits, we agree with the division’s conclusion that

mother did not make a sufficient showing of ineffective assistance of counsel based

on counsel’s having made no objection to the admission of exhibits allegedly

containing hearsay. As the division observed, mother did not explain which

exhibits contained inadmissible hearsay or how the admission of such exhibits

prejudiced her in any way. A.R., ¶ 88.

¶70   With respect to mother’s assertions regarding counsel’s allowing the

Department to proceed by way of an offer of proof, we first conclude that an

attorney’s agreeing to allow the Department in an adjudicatory or termination of

parental rights hearing to proceed by way of an offer of proof does not establish

deficient conduct per se. In dependency and neglect proceedings, “[h]earings may

be conducted in an informal manner,” § 19-1-106(2), C.R.S. (2019), and we perceive

no reason to preclude, as a matter of law, proceeding by way of an offer of proof,

see also Colo. Bar. Ass’n Ethics Comm., Formal. Op. 114 (modified June 19, 2010)

(“The attorney may agree to, or not object to, the presentation of evidence by offers

of proof if the client is not present at court, even if the attorney has no recent or

                                         35
unambiguous directions from the client.”) (footnote omitted). To the contrary,

proceeding by way of an offer of proof may be perfectly appropriate in a case in

which the facts are undisputed. And even in a case involving disputed facts,

proceeding by way of an offer of proof, subject to the right of the respondent to

call the Department’s witnesses for cross-examination or to introduce rebuttal

evidence, might be a perfectly appropriate way to proceed.

¶71      Nor do we agree with the division that counsel’s decision to allow the

Department to proceed by way of an offer of proof in this case established

presumptive prejudice because, by doing so, counsel did not subject the

Department’s case to meaningful adversarial testing. A.R., ¶ 95.

¶72      Here, the central facts established by way of the Department’s offer of

proof—namely, that mother had not successfully completed her treatment plan

and had visited her child only once over the past year—appear to have been

undisputed. Accordingly, even had mother’s counsel objected to the offer of proof

and demanded witness testimony, we cannot discern how the facts before the

court would have changed. And mother does not indicate what she believes

cross-examination or further inquiry of the caseworker would have revealed had

her counsel refused to allow the Department to proceed by way of an offer of

proof.

                                        36
¶73   In these circumstances, we conclude that mother has not established that she

received ineffective assistance based on her counsel’s agreeing to allow the

Department to proceed by way of an offer of proof at the termination hearing.

¶74   This leaves the issue of counsel’s performance regarding the issue of less

drastic alternatives. Although, based on its disposition of the case, the division

ultimately did not address this issue, we believe that the record is sufficiently

developed to allow us to do so.

¶75   As noted above, to decide whether counsel was ineffective, we must first

consider whether counsel’s performance fell below the level of reasonably

competent assistance. D.G., 140 P.3d at 308. We conclude that it did here.

¶76   Although counsel several times mentioned the maternal grandmother as a

possible placement option, he filed no motion or brief making such an argument,

seeking an allocation of parental responsibilities to the maternal grandmother or

asserting that placement with her provided a less drastic alternative to

termination. Indeed, it does not appear that counsel ever presented an argument

to the juvenile court specifically relating to less drastic alternatives as a defense

against termination.

¶77   Nor did counsel respond to the maternal grandmother’s motion for leave to

intervene.   Instead, counsel filed what he deemed a “Notice of Deposit,”

submitting a handwritten letter from mother requesting that the maternal

                                         37
grandmother obtain temporary custody until the child was returned to mother. A

“Notice of Deposit” is not a proper method for asking a court for relief. Nor do

we believe that this “Notice of Deposit” would have alerted the court (or anyone

else) that mother was seeking placement with the maternal grandmother as a less

drastic alternative to termination. Even had the court interpreted this document

as a request for some sort of relief, however, the document appeared to be a

request for temporary placement with the maternal grandmother while mother

continued to try to complete her treatment plan (i.e., a temporary placement prior

to termination, as opposed to an allocation of parental responsibilities as a less

drastic alternative to termination).

¶78   Moreover, when the matter proceeded to the termination hearing, counsel

appeared to believe—albeit incorrectly—that the court had granted the maternal

grandmother leave to intervene, and counsel suggested that his plan for the

termination hearing was, in essence, to ride the nonexistent intervenor’s coattails

at the hearing. In our view, it was not reasonable for counsel to have assumed that

the court had granted the maternal grandmother’s motion for leave to intervene.

Counsel of record are expected to keep abreast of the proceedings in their cases,

and certainly with respect to court orders. Accordingly, here, had counsel planned

to let the maternal grandmother take the lead, then he should have taken action to

                                        38
support her motion for leave to intervene, seeking a hearing on that motion if

necessary.

¶79   Lastly, at the termination hearing, counsel made no motion for placement

with or an allocation of parental responsibilities to the maternal grandmother, nor

did he argue as a defense to termination that the maternal grandmother (or anyone

else) afforded a less drastic alternative to termination.    Moreover, when the

Department took the position that the child’s step-grandmother, with whom the

child had been placed, might have been a potential placement option, mother’s

counsel does not appear to have objected to that, notwithstanding the fact that his

client had made clear to him that she wanted the child placed with the maternal

grandmother.

¶80   On these facts, we conclude that mother’s counsel rendered deficient

performance in not properly litigating the question of whether placement with the

maternal grandmother offered a less drastic alternative to termination.

¶81   The question thus becomes whether the record establishes prejudice from

counsel’s deficient conduct. We conclude that it does because the juvenile court

itself observed that had the issue of less drastic alternatives been litigated

properly, the result would have been different. Specifically, as noted above, after

issuing its termination order in this case, the court issued two subsequent orders

                                        39
stating that had it known of the extended family, it would not have entered the

termination order because there was a less drastic alternative to termination.2

¶82   In these unusual circumstances, we conclude that mother has established

that she was denied the effective assistance of counsel in connection with the

litigation of the termination hearing. Accordingly, like the division below, we

conclude that a remand to the juvenile court is warranted and appropriate.

¶83   On remand, the juvenile court should reconsider the issue of less drastic

alternatives. If the court finds that less drastic alternatives to termination exist,

then the court should enter appropriate orders, subject to the parties’ rights of

further appeal from those orders. If the court finds that the current record does

not establish less drastic alternatives to termination, then the court must provide

mother with an opportunity to present evidence and argument as to less drastic

alternatives and must reconsider the question of the propriety of termination of

parental rights in light of such evidence.

2 In fairness to mother’s counsel, we acknowledge that the parties had discussed
the potential placement of the child with either the paternal step-grandmother or
the maternal grandmother, and, at least at one point prior to entering the
termination order, the court appeared to recognize the relevance of such a
placement to the question of less drastic alternatives to termination. Nonetheless,
it was the parties’ obligation to litigate that issue properly.

                                         40
                                 III. Conclusion

¶84   For these reasons, we reach four principal conclusions in this case.

¶85   First, we conclude that in a direct appeal from a judgment terminating

parental rights, an appellate court may consider a claim of ineffective assistance of

counsel based on counsel’s performance at an adjudicatory hearing only when the

party asserting the claimed ineffective assistance did not have a full and fair

opportunity to bring such a claim immediately after his or her child was

adjudicated dependent and neglected (as, for example, by way of a direct appeal

of the adjudication order).

¶86   Second, we conclude that the proper test for prejudice in the context of a

claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in a dependency and neglect proceeding

is the test for prejudice set forth in Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, and not the

fundamental fairness test adopted by the division below.         Thus, to establish

prejudice from counsel’s deficient performance in a dependency and neglect

proceeding, a party must show that there is a reasonable probability that but for

counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been

different.

¶87   Third, we conclude that an appellate court may vacate a juvenile court’s

decision in a dependency and neglect proceeding without remanding for further

fact-finding when either the record is sufficiently developed to allow the appellate

                                         41
court to decide the question of counsel’s ineffectiveness or the record establishes

presumptive prejudice under the standard set forth in Cronic, 466 U.S. at 656–62.

¶88   Finally, we conclude that mother has established that but for counsel’s

deficient performance in litigating the question of less drastic alternatives, there is

a reasonable probability that the juvenile court would not have terminated her

parental rights.

¶89   Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the division below, albeit on

different grounds than those on which the division relied, and we remand this case

to the court of appeals with instructions to return the case to the juvenile court for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                          42