Court Opinion

ID: 9960128
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-04-15 15:09:12.066448+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:19:12.309781
License: Public Domain

Supreme Court

                                        No. 2022-59-Appeal.
                                        (PJ 21-1688)

 In re N.D.               :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision
before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers
are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme
Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence,
Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or
Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov of any typographical
or other formal errors in order that corrections may be
made before the opinion is published.
                                                          Supreme Court

                                                         No. 2022-59-Appeal.
                                                         (PJ 21-1688)

               In re N.D.                  :

      Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.

                                    OPINION

      Justice Lynch Prata, for the Court. The petitioner, the Department of

Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF), appeals from an order of the Family Court

granting the motion of the respondent, the Court Appointed Special Advocate

(CASA), to adjudge DCYF in contempt on behalf of N.D. 1 for violating an order to

place N.D. in a residential facility that was appropriate for her level of need. DCYF

argues that the hearing justice erred in: (1) rejecting its defense that it was unable to

comply with the court’s order; (2) imposing a contempt sanction that was designed

to punish rather than coerce DCYF into compliance; and (3) ordering that the

contempt sanction be placed in a trust for N.D.’s benefit. For the reasons set forth

herein, we vacate the order of the Family Court.

1
  N.D. was a minor during the lower court proceedings. We refer to her using her
initials to respect her privacy.
                                      -1-
                                  Facts and Travel

      N.D. became involved with DCYF when the Pawtucket police found her with

a scarf around her neck, tied to a curtain rod. At the time, N.D. was sixteen years

old. Initially, N.D. was permitted to remain at home with a safety plan in place, but

on February 15, 2021, she locked herself in the bathroom and cut herself, requiring

twenty-one sutures.

      N.D. was subsequently admitted to Bradley Hospital, where she attempted

suicide multiple times and was often restrained by staff. Believing that N.D.’s

parents could no longer provide her with a minimum degree of care or supervision,

DCYF filed a dependency petition on May 25, 2021. Thereafter, the Family Court

granted DCYF temporary custody of N.D. She was originally placed at the North

American Family Institute,2 but she continued to struggle with self-harm and was

sent to Hasbro Children’s Hospital (Hasbro) three times due to self-inflicted injuries.

N.D. was re-admitted to Bradley Hospital on June 27, 2021.

      By July 2021, N.D. was ready for discharge, and DCYF began issuing

referrals for placements. Due to N.D.’s high level of need, she required placement

in a psychiatric residential treatment facility.    DCYF first looked for in-state

placements, but to no avail. DCYF expanded its search to the New England area,

2
 The North American Family Institute is a multi-service, multi-state agency that
operates residential, foster care, and community-based programs in Rhode Island.
About, NAFI Rhode Island, https://www.nafiri.org/about/ (last visited Apr. 3, 2024).
                                         -2-
but several of DCYF’s typical providers were not accepting new admissions and

others had extensive waiting lists. Meanwhile, N.D. began to grow frustrated about

her extended stay at Bradley Hospital. She expressed that, despite engaging in

treatment, she felt “like [her] head[] [was] underwater and [she was] just barely

breathing.” At the September 14, 2021 pretrial conference, the hearing justice noted

that “out of state and in state referrals have thus far been unsuccessful[,] additional

out of state referrals have been made * * *.” On September 22, 2021, and September

27, 2021, N.D. was brought to the Hasbro emergency room due to self-harm. At the

October 6, 2021 pretrial conference, the hearing justice noted that “the placement

search shall be expanded greatly * * *.” He further noted that N.D. had regressed.

      By November 2021, N.D. had improved. She had not been physically

restrained since November 11, 2021, and had not been given intramuscular

injections to calm her down since October 3, 2021. At the November 9, 2021 pretrial

conference, the hearing justice noted that she was once again ready for discharge

and instructed that N.D. be placed in an appropriate residential treatment facility.

Upon learning at the December 1, 2021 pretrial conference that DCYF was still

unable to find an appropriate placement, the hearing justice expressed his frustration

noting, “I’m a broken record – [o]rder a national search [and] report back.” On

December 6, 2021, a written order was entered memorializing the November 9, 2021

                                         -3-
directive that N.D. “be placed forthwith in a residential treatment facility that is

appropriate for her level of need.”

      The same day, CASA, on behalf of N.D., filed a motion to adjudge DCYF in

willful contempt of the court’s order because she remained at Bradley Hospital and

was “at risk [of] decompensating due to the length of stay at [the] hospital.”

Thereafter, the hearing justice conducted an evidentiary hearing on CASA’s motion.

At the hearing, DCYF conceded that it had not complied with the Family Court’s

December 6, 2021 order and that N.D. remained at Bradley Hospital. Nevertheless,

DCYF argued that the hearing justice should deny CASA’s motion because it was

not possible for the agency to comply with the court’s order.

      The hearing justice heard testimony from two witnesses: Heather Warner,

Ph.D., an administrator in the children’s community services and behavioral health

division of DCYF, and Jennifer Sevigny, a social caseworker for the family services

unit at DCYF, who was assigned to N.D.’s case. Doctor Warner testified to the

efforts that she and her staff had undertaken in finding N.D. an appropriate

placement.    She first looked for in-state placements; but because of N.D.’s

aggression and self-injurious behavior, there were no placements in Rhode Island

that could meet her level of need. Doctor Warner testified that there were two

placements in Rhode Island available to boys with N.D.’s level of need, but that

                                        -4-
there were no similar placements available for girls.3 She stated that, at the time of

the hearing, there was a proposal to build a new psychiatric residential treatment

facility in the state. Nevertheless, until a new facility is built, there are no psychiatric

residential treatment facilities for young girls in Rhode Island. Doctor Warner

testified that DCYF typically uses out-of-state placements for girls with N.D.’s level

of need but that its usual providers had a freeze on admissions due to staffing

shortages. Accordingly, Dr. Warner made referrals in New England to placements

that contracted with DCYF and placements that did not. Doctor Warner expanded

her search outside of New England, conducting research to identify new out-of-state

placements. DCYF made approximately thirty referrals, but only one referral,

Mount Prospect Academy in New Hampshire, accepted N.D. Mount Prospect

Academy could not, however, immediately place N.D. because it had a three- to

four-month waiting list.

3
   Doctor Warner originally testified that St. Mary’s would be an appropriate
placement for girls with N.D.’s level of need if she had an individualized education
plan. Saint Mary’s is a nonprofit agency that cares for children facing psychiatric
illness, sexual abuse and trafficking, and special-education challenges. About Us, St.
Mary’s Home for Children, https://www.smhfc.org/about-us/ (last visited Apr. 3,
2024). However, Dr. Warner later admitted that even St. Mary’s would be unable
to meet N.D.’s level of need because, at times, she required medication by
intramuscular injection to subdue her.
                                          -5-
      Doctor Warner continued to conduct research to identify a placement for N.D.

after she was accepted into Mount Prospect Academy. However, she testified that

she was consistently hearing from placements that:

            “[E]verybody has a significant staffing concern * * * and
            so a lot of places have reduced capacity. Kids in every
            state * * * are not moving at the same rates that they would
            to be able to discharge, so it’s causing a backlog. And
            we’re seeing an increase in mental health in our
            adolescents, which is -- it’s kind of the perfect storm where
            we have an increase in need and a lot of programs with
            reduced capacity.”4

      After hearing testimony and arguments, the hearing justice issued a bench

decision. He found both witnesses to be credible and found that Dr. Warner and Ms.

Sevigny had made reasonable efforts to comply with the court’s order. However, he

found that DCYF, as an agency, had not made reasonable efforts to comply with the

court’s order because DCYF’s failure to provide adequate facilities to meet N.D.’s

level of need for boys, but not for girls, was not reasonable. He rejected DCYF’s

4
  As was acknowledged at oral argument, DCYF was attempting to find a placement
for N.D. during the COVID-19 pandemic, a time in which there was a nationwide
surge in mental-health problems among children and adolescents. In 2021, the
United States Surgeon General released an advisory on mental health among youths,
citing an “alarming increase in the prevalence of certain mental health challenges”
in young people. Office of the Surgeon General, Protecting Youth Mental Health:
The U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory 3 (2021), https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/
files/surgeon-general-youth-mental-health-advisory.pdf. For more information on
the breadth of this problem see Lakshmi Radhakrishnan et al., Pediatric Emergency
Department Visits Associated with Mental Health Conditions Before and During the
COVID-19 Pandemic—United States, January 2019–January 2022, 71 Morbidity
Mortal Wkly. Rep. 319 (2022).
                                        -6-
defense that it was not presently possible to place N.D., stating that it was DCYF’s

statutory mandate to provide for the children under its care. He also reasoned that

the existence of the facilities for boys with the same level of need as N.D. showed

that DCYF had the ability to create an appropriate program, but had willfully

declined to do so. He further noted that the Children’s Bill of Rights requires that

N.D. not be deprived of her civil rights without due process of law, 5 but that there

had been a lack of due process in keeping N.D. in “de facto incarceration” until an

appropriate placement was found. Finding that DCYF failed in its obligation to

place N.D. in an appropriate residential placement within a reasonable time, the

hearing justice found DCYF in contempt and sanctioned it $1,000 per day until she

was placed in a “residential facility that is appropriate for her level of need * * *.”

He further ordered that the sanction be retroactive from the date of the order to place

N.D. and that, once the child had been placed, the contempt would be purged.6

      After the finding of contempt, DCYF remained unable to find an appropriate

placement for N.D. Instead, in February 2022, N.D. was discharged from Bradley

5
  The Children’s Bill of Rights, codified at G.L. 1956 § 42-72-15, provides in
pertinent part that “[n]o child placed or treated under the supervision of [DCYF] in
any public or private facility shall be deprived of any personal property or civil
rights, except in accordance with due process.” Section 42-72-15(a).
6
  As will be explained infra, there is some disagreement regarding the date the
hearing justice ordered N.D. to be placed. Although the instruction that N.D. be
placed “forthwith in a residential treatment facility” first appeared on a November
9, 2021 Dependency and Neglect Action (DNA) Hearing Sheet, the formal order
instructing the same was not entered until December 6, 2021.
                                         -7-
Hospital to her mother with wraparound, in-home services.7 This arrangement lasted

nearly two months, before N.D. was readmitted to Bradley Hospital following a

suicide attempt. On December 22, 2021, DCYF filed a timely appeal of the contempt

order. 8

                                 Standard of Review

       “Both the Legislature and this Court have recognized that the Family Court,

although a statutory court, has inherent power to punish contempt of its authority

7
   The wraparound process involves “‘wrapping’ a comprehensive array of
individualized services and support networks ‘around’ young people in the
community, rather than forcing them to enroll in predetermined, inflexible treatment
programs.” Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Wraparound
Process 1 (Apr. 2014), https://ojjdp.ojp.gov/model-programs-guide/literature-
reviews/wraparound_process.pdf. When providing wraparound services, a care
coordinator organizes the development of a customized treatment program with
input from the child, the family, and the child’s service providers, and then
coordinates across agencies to implement the treatment program in the community.
Id. at 2-3. Wraparound services can include things like in-home therapy, medication
management, psychiatric assessment, family therapy, and substance abuse
counseling. Id. at 1.
8
  DCYF filed its notice of appeal on December 22, 2021, after the December 10
contempt hearing, but before the contempt order was entered on January 5, 2022.
However, although DCYF filed its notice of appeal prior to the entry of the Family
Court’s order, “it is well settled that ‘this Court will treat a premature appeal as if it
had been timely filed.’” State v. Baillargeron, 58 A.3d 194, 197 n.5 (R.I. 2013)
(brackets omitted) (quoting Azevedo v. State, 945 A.2d 335, 337 n.4 (R.I. 2008)).
Therefore, DCYF’s notice of appeal, filed before the contempt order was entered,
was timely. See id. This Court will not, however, consider an issue on appeal “for
which a notice of appeal never was filed.” State v. Hallenbeck, 878 A.2d 992, 1020
(R.I. 2005). Accordingly, although DCYF takes issue with the hearing justice
ordering that the sanction be placed in an escrow account for the benefit of N.D. on
March 17, 2022, that issue is not properly before the Court because that is a separate
order from which DCYF has not appealed. See id.
                                           -8-
* * *.” Porter v. Porter, 684 A.2d 259, 261 (R.I. 1996); see also G.L. 1956 § 8-6-1

(codifying the Superior Court’s power to punish those in contempt of its authority);

G.L. 1956 § 8-10-38(a) (conferring like powers upon the Family Court “as are

conferred upon the [S]uperior [C]ourt by the provisions of § 8-6-1”). “A contempt

finding requires a party to demonstrate, ‘by clear and convincing evidence, that a

sufficiently specific order of the court has been violated.’” Harris v. Evans, 250 A.3d

553, 560 (R.I. 2021) (quoting Town of Coventry v. Baird Properties, LLC, 13 A.3d

614, 621 (R.I. 2011)). We accord “‘great deference to a trial justice’s finding of

contempt,’ and we will not disturb those findings unless they are clearly wrong or

the trial justice abused his or her discretion.” Id. (brackets omitted) (quoting Town

of Coventry, 13 A.3d at 621). “Nor will this Court ‘substitute our reading of the

evidence for that of the trial justice if the record supports the [trial] justice’s

findings.’” Id. (quoting Now Courier, LLC v. Better Carrier Corp., 965 A.2d 429,

434 (R.I. 2009)). “Findings of fact in a contempt hearing will not be disturbed unless

they are clearly wrong or the trial justice abused his or her discretion.” Durfee v.

Ocean State Steel, Inc., 636 A.2d 698, 704 (R.I. 1994).

      When reviewing the sanction imposed for civil contempt, this Court’s review

“is limited to a review of the order to ensure that the terms are reasonable.” Moran

v. Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers, 506 A.2d 542, 544 (R.I.

                                         -9-
1986). “We apply a de novo standard of review, however, to questions of law

* * *.” State v. Lead Industries Association, Inc., 951 A.2d 428, 464 (R.I. 2008).

                                      Discussion

      As an initial matter, this Court must address the apparent confusion regarding

which order DCYF was adjudged to have willfully violated. The Office of the Child

Advocate (OCA),9 CASA, and N.D.’s mother assert that DCYF was adjudged in

contempt of the court’s November 9, 2021 order, while DCYF asserts that it was

adjudged in contempt of the court’s December 6, 2021 order. At oral argument,

DCYF further represented to the Court that it is a common practice in the Family

Court for a written decree or order to enter several weeks after the hearing date, with

the understanding that it relate back to the hearing date.

      A review of the record reveals that there was no formal order entered on

November 9, 2021, the date of the hearing. Instead, a Dependency and Neglect

Action (DNA) Hearing Sheet was entered on the docket, which was signed by the

hearing justice and included the handwritten instruction that the child was “ready for

discharge * * * [and] shall be placed forthwith in a residential treatment facility that

9
  The Office of the Child Advocate (OCA) consists of an appointed child advocate
and staff who are responsible for reviewing DCYF operations. G.L. 1956 §§
42-73-1 to -7. The OCA’s duties include reviewing the facilities where children are
placed and recommending changes in the procedures for providing childcare and
treatment. Section 42-73-7(4), (5). The OCA is authorized to “[t]ake all possible
action including * * * formal legal action, to secure and ensure the legal, civil and
special rights of children * * *.” Section 42-73-7(6).
                                         - 10 -
is appropriate for her level of need.” 10 The handwritten instructions appeared under

the subheading “Decree or Order” and in the section for “Other Conditions.” These

instructions were not reduced to a formal, written order and entered by the court until

December 6, 2021.

      The November 9, 2021 DNA Hearing Sheet and the December 6, 2021 order

do not differ in substance but do contain slightly different language. Under the

“Other Conditions” section of the DNA Hearing Sheet, the hearing justice wrote

“child is ready for discharge – notice to child advocate child shall be placed forthwith

in a residential treatment facility that is appropriate for her level of need.” The DNA

Hearing Sheet also stated under the “Reason for Continuance” section that “DCYF

to fund independently any facilities requiring self-referral, not an issue (insurance).”

By comparison, the December 6, 2021 order stated:

             “[I]t is hereby:

             “ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED

             “1. That [N.D.] is placed at Bradley Hospital and is ready
             for discharge.
             “2. That [N.D.] shall be placed forthwith in a residential
             treatment facility that is appropriate for her level of need.
             “3. That DCYF shall fund directly any appropriate
             program that requires self-referral.
             “4. That the Child Advocate’s office shall be notified
             regarding the circumstances of this case.

10
  DNA Hearing Sheets are utilized by the hearing justice in dependency and neglect
matters. The document is handwritten and signed by the hearing justice and kept in
the court’s record.
                                      - 11 -
             “5. That the case is continued for further review on
             November 16, 2021.
             “6. That a permanency hearing is scheduled on May 3,
             2022.

             “ENTERED as a Decree of this Honorable Court this 6th,
             day of December 2021[.]”

      This Court has frowned upon the use of event hearing sheets as decrees or

orders because such a practice lacks clarity. See In re Ephraim L., 862 A.2d 196,

199 n.6 (R.I. 2004). In this case, the Family Court entered formal decrees in some

instances, while in other instances it relied upon its hearing sheets to issue

instructions to the parties.11 DCYF contends that it is the practice of the Family

Court to rely upon hearing sheets as orders and to apply its formal decrees

retroactively to the date of the hearing. This practice is neither prohibited nor

authorized by the Rhode Island Rules for Juvenile Proceedings. However, in the

context of a contempt proceeding, “[i]t is well settled that for a restraining order to

be enforceable * * * it should be clear and certain and its terms should be sufficient

to enable one reading the writ or order to learn therefrom what he may or may not

do thereunder.” Biron v. Falardeau, 798 A.2d 379, 382 (R.I. 2002) (internal

11
   A review of the record reveals that prior to the finding of contempt, the Family
Court issued instructions to the parties by means of DNA Hearing Sheets seven
times, and formal orders were issued only three times. In some instances, the orders
replicated the instructions written on an earlier DNA Hearing Sheet, but in other
instances, the formal orders contained additional items not appearing on the DNA
Hearing Sheet. None of the orders, including the December 6, 2021 order, were
entered nunc pro tunc.
                                       - 12 -
quotation marks and brackets omitted). “Clarity is a guiding principle in the scheme

of judicial contempt, and ‘derives from the concepts of fairness and due process.’”

In re Court Order Dated October 22, 2003, 886 A.2d 342, 349 (R.I. 2005) (quoting

Project B.A.S.I.C. v. Kemp, 947 F.2d 11, 17 (1st Cir. 1991)). “The question of clarity

does not even arise if one is not put on notice that the order is in place.” Id.

      In the instant case, the November 9, 2021 DNA Hearing Sheet reflects that

the hearing justice clearly instructed the parties that the “child shall be placed

forthwith in a residential treatment facility that is appropriate for her level of need.”

This instruction was a “[c]ondition[]” of the hearing justice’s “Decree or Order,” and

it was signed by the hearing justice and filed with the court. Further, the parties do

not contend that they were unaware of the court’s instructions on the November 9,

2021 DNA Hearing Sheet.

      Although the hearing justice clearly expected his order to be followed as of

November 9, 2021, no court order was entered until December 6, 2021. See Vecchio

v. Women & Infants Hospital, 293 A.3d 842, 848 (R.I. 2023) (noting that the court

speaks through its orders, rather than other informal means). When the order was

entered, it was not entered nunc pro tunc, and it was not identical to the instructions

that were given on the November 9, 2021 DNA Hearing Sheet. We are troubled by

the lack of consistency in the record regarding the use of DNA Hearing Sheets, the

failure to enter orders nunc pro tunc, and the discrepancies between the court’s

                                         - 13 -
instructions on the DNA Hearing Sheets and its subsequent orders. 12 For this Court

to conduct any meaningful review of a civil contempt finding, an order must be

entered. See In re Court Order Dated October 22, 2003, 886 A.2d at 349 (“The

question of clarity does not even arise if one is not put on notice that the order is in

place.”). Therefore, the order of December 6, 2021, is the controlling document.

      DCYF argues that the hearing justice erred in finding DCYF in contempt for

failing to meet is statutory obligations, rather than violating the court’s order. It

further contends that the hearing justice erred in finding DCYF in contempt for

failing to develop a psychiatric residential treatment facility for girls in Rhode Island

because, while the development of such a facility is a long-term goal of the agency,

it did not have the present power to do so. DCYF argues that, because the hearing

justice found that Dr. Warner and Ms. Sevigny had made reasonable efforts to

comply with the court’s order, it established its present inability to comply with the

court’s order. Further, DCYF argues that the evidence otherwise demonstrated that

compliance was not within its power because N.D.’s particular needs and the lack of

facilities providing psychiatric residential treatment created a “‘perfect storm’

during the mid-COVID period.” In response, CASA and N.D.’s mother argue that

12
  In this case, there was no question that all parties, CASA, N.D.’s mother, and the
OCA, were all interested in holding DCYF’s feet to the fire relative to the placement
order, and yet there was significant delay in entering the court’s order. When the
order was entered, it was not entered nunc pro tunc; therefore, it did not apply
retroactively to the November 9, 2021 hearing date.
                                        - 14 -
the hearing justice did not err because inconvenience, annoyance, adverse economic

impact, and good-faith efforts do not show that compliance was not possible. They

further argue that DCYF cannot claim that it was unable to place N.D. in an

appropriate placement when it has the statutory obligation to do so.

      The OCA argues that the hearing justice did not err because, pursuant to

Fortin v. Commissioner of Massachusetts Department of Public Welfare, 692 F.2d

790 (1st Cir. 1982), evidence of efforts to comply is not proof that compliance was

not possible. It thus contends that DCYF’s evidence that it made nationwide

referrals, followed up, and updated placements with medical records, was

insufficient to show that it was not possible to obtain a placement through further

efforts. Relying on Palmigiano v. DiPrete, 700 F. Supp. 1180 (D.R.I. 1988), the

OCA further argues that DCYF should not be permitted to claim it was unable to

comply because it was on notice of the lack of adequate facilities for adolescent girls

with N.D.’s needs. It contends that this notice, coupled with DCYF’s statutory

obligation to attend to the mental-health needs of all children in its care, precludes

DCYF’s ability to claim that complying with the court’s order was not possible.

      “A finding of civil contempt must be based on a party’s lack of substantial

compliance with a court order, which is demonstrated by the failure of a party to

‘employ the utmost diligence in discharging its responsibilities.’” Gardiner v.

Gardiner, 821 A.2d 229, 232 (R.I. 2003) (brackets and deletion omitted) (quoting

                                        - 15 -
Durfee, 636 A.2d at 704). In the instant case, DCYF admitted that it had not

complied with the court’s December 6, 2021 order. Therefore, the issue before this

Court is whether the hearing justice erred in rejecting DCYF’s defense that

compliance was not possible. “It has generally been accepted that inability to

perform in accordance with an order * * * is an excuse or justification that will

prevent the holding of a party in contempt.” Ross v. Ross, 511 A.2d 987, 988 (R.I.

1986). “[I]n order to avoid an order of the court, an individual must demonstrate

that he or she is literally unable to comply because compliance is not presently within

his or her power.” Zannini v. Downing Corporation, 701 A.2d 1016, 1018 (R.I.

1997). The burden of proving a present inability to comply with a court order “is a

heavy one, and mere inconvenience or annoyance is insufficient.” Id. Evidence of

the noncomplier’s diligence and good faith in attempting to comply is relevant, but

not conclusive, in determining whether that party had the present ability to comply.

See Fortin, 692 F.2d at 796-97.

      There is no question that the state, through DCYF, has “a basic obligation to

promote, safeguard and protect the social well-being and development of the

children of the state through a comprehensive program providing for * * * [s]ocial

services and facilities for children who require guidance, care, control, protection,

treatment, or rehabilitation * * *.” G.L. 1956 § 42-72-2(2). It is equally apparent

that DCYF was aware of its ongoing challenges in finding appropriate placements

                                        - 16 -
for Rhode Island girls who presented with N.D.’s level of need. While there are two

psychiatric residential treatment programs in Rhode Island for boys who present

with N.D.’s level of aggression and self-injurious behavior, there are none for girls.

As a result, N.D. languished for nearly eight months, vacillating between

improvement and regression, before DCYF was forced to discharge her home to her

mother, instead of an appropriate psychiatric residential treatment facility because,

even after months of looking far and wide, there were no beds available. In light of

this disparity, the hearing justice found that it “shocks the conscience” to have two

psychiatric residential treatment facilities for boys, but none for girls. We share in

the hearing justice’s frustration.

      Nevertheless, the systemic failure to develop a psychiatric residential

treatment facility for girls is not dispositive of the narrow issue of whether DCYF

had the present ability to comply with the court’s order as of the December 10, 2021

hearing date. See Zannini, 701 A.2d at 1018. Unlike the situation in Fortin and

Palmigiano, here the hearing justice was not tasked with deciding whether DCYF

was in contempt of an order requiring it to bring its operations into compliance with

its statutory or constitutional obligations. See Fortin, 692 F.2d at 792-94;

Palmigiano, 700 F. Supp. at 1182, 1190-92.           Fortin and Palmigiano were

class-action suits alleging that an agency had failed to meet certain statutory or

constitutional mandates. See Fortin, 692 F.2d at 792; Palmigiano, 700 F. Supp. at

                                        - 17 -
1182-83. Therefore, the issue in those cases was whether the agencies had the ability

to comply with their constitutional or statutory obligations—as set forth in the

courts’ respective orders—given that the agencies had years of notice that their

operations were deficient. See Fortin, 692 F.2d at 792-93; Palmigiano, 700 F. Supp.

at 1182-83, 1190-91. In the instant case, the sole issue was whether DCYF had the

present ability to place a single child, N.D., 13 in light of the particular circumstances

of her case. See Zannini, 701 A.2d at 1018; Ross, 511 A.2d at 988.

      The hearing justice rejected DCYF’s inability defense because he found that

it was DCYF’s statutory mandate to provide for the children under its care and

because there were appropriate facilities for boys but not for similarly situated girls.

By examining whether DCYF should have been able to comply with the court’s

order in light of its statutory obligations, rather than whether DCYF had the present

ability to find an appropriate placement for N.D. in the unique circumstances of this

case, the hearing justice erred as a matter of law. See Zannini, 701 A.2d at 1018;

Ross, 511 A.2d at 988.

13
   The Court is cognizant that N.D. was not the only child whom DCYF was unable
to place during this time, having heard oral argument on a similar case—DCYF’s
appeal of a contempt order holding it in contempt for failing to place another child,
N.B., in the fall of 2021—on the same day. These two cases were being heard in the
Family Court contemporaneously. Nevertheless, no class of aggrieved children was
formed, and no special master was appointed to investigate DCYF’s operations in
either case.
                                       - 18 -
      The hearing justice found that Dr. Warner and Ms. Sevigny had both expended

reasonable efforts in complying with the court order. He noted the difficulty that

DCYF faced finding N.D. a placement due to her high level of need—specifically

“the fact that she has needed intramuscular medication or injections in order to

subdue her aggressive behavior.” He further credited Dr. Warner’s testimony that

N.D. was repeatedly denied from placements because of her history of self-injurious

behavior. He found that there are no facilities in Rhode Island that would take a girl

with N.D.’s level of need and that DCYF was forced to look out of state. He

acknowledged that the other states had waiting lists, and that the only facility that

accepted N.D. had a waiting list of approximately three to four months. Moreover,

he found credible Dr. Warner, who testified that staffing concerns, low discharge

rates, and an increase in mental-health issues among adolescents created a “perfect

storm” whereby programs had an increase in need, but a reduction in capacity.

      Therefore, taking into account the hearing justice’s findings, to which we must

give deference, DCYF demonstrated that it was “literally unable to comply because

compliance [was] not presently [in its] power[,]” given the unavailability of an

appropriate placement due to N.D.’s needs, ongoing staffing issues, and the increase

in mental-health problems among adolescents. See Zannini, 701 A.2d at 1018;

Durfee, 636 A.2d at 704. Accordingly, although DCYF was in technical violation

of the Family Court’s December 6, 2021 order, we determine that the agency was

                                        - 19 -
unable to comply. Therefore, we need not address the remaining issues raised by

DCYF.

                                    Conclusion

      For the foregoing reasons, the order of contempt is vacated, and the papers are

remanded to the Family Court for further proceedings.

                                       - 20 -
                                         STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
                                     SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
                                           Licht Judicial Complex
                                             250 Benefit Street
                                           Providence, RI 02903

                                 OPINION COVER SHEET

Title of Case                        In re N.D.

                                     No. 2022-59-Appeal.
Case Number
                                     (PJ 21-1688)

Date Opinion Filed                   April 15, 2024

                                     Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and
Justices
                                     Long, JJ

Written By                           Associate Justice Erin Lynch Prata

Source of Appeal                     Providence County Family Court

Judicial Officer from Lower Court    Associate Justice Felix E. Gill

                                     For Petitioner:

                                     Lauren E. Jones
                                     Department of Children, Youth and Families
                                     For Respondent:
Attorney(s) on Appeal
                                     Andrew J. Johnson
                                     Court Appointed Special Advocate

                                     Diana C. Robbins
                                     Office of the Child Advocate

SU-CMS-02A (revised November 2022)