Court Opinion

ID: 9349282
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-21 16:03:25.782421+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:46:35.755416
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                    No. 22-1446
                             Filed December 21, 2022

IN THE INTEREST OF A.G.,
Minor Child,

C.G., Father,
       Appellant.
________________________________________________________________

         Appeal from the Iowa District Court for          Pottawattamie County,

Charles D. Fagan, District Associate Judge.

         A father appeals the termination of his parental rights. AFFIRMED.

         Sara E. Benson of Meldrum & Benson Law, P.C., Council Bluffs, for

appellant father.

         Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Ellen Ramsey-Kacena, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee State.

         Maura C. Goaley, Council Bluffs, attorney and guardian ad litem for minor

child.

         Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Ahlers and Buller, JJ.
                                           2

BULLER, Judge.

       The legal father of a child appeals from an order terminating his parental

rights to A.G., born in 2020. A paternity test taken during the course of the

proceedings established that the legal father was not the biological father. Neither

the mother or biological father appeal termination. The legal father challenges

whether the termination hearing should have proceeded without him, but he does

not challenge the merits of termination. We find that the father did not ask to

personally participate in the termination proceedings. We therefore affirm.

       Much of the factual development below relates to the biological mother of

the child. Methamphetamine looms large in her life. By her own admission, she

is a lifelong methamphetamine user and repeatedly failed to complete both

outpatient and inpatient treatment during the life of the case.             She used

methamphetamine and marijuana while pregnant. And she could not provide a

suitable home for the child after birth, leading to a finding that the child was in need

of assistance and the termination proceedings that give rise to this appeal.

       The legal father is incarcerated in federal prison and has been throughout

the child-in-need-of-assistance and termination proceedings. So far as the record

discloses, it appears the legal father never met the child. The legal father remotely

participated in various proceedings by Zoom but, after learning that he was not the

biological father, he informed the juvenile court at the permanency hearing that he

intended to consent to termination. The record was left open for the legal father to

file a written consent to termination, but (for reasons unknown) that never

happened. The record is silent about why the legal father was not present at the

termination hearing by Zoom, but he makes no claim that he did not receive notice.
                                          3

Counsel for the legal father was present at the hearing. The legal father’s counsel

said nothing about the legal father’s desire to attend or participate, but counsel did

expressly relay that the legal father intended to consent to termination under Iowa

Code section 232.116(1)(a) (2022) (“The parents voluntarily and intelligently

consent to the termination of parental rights and the parent-child relationship and

for good cause desire the termination.”). The court found a lack of evidence to

terminate the legal father’s parental rights under section 232.116(1)(a) but did

terminate his rights under section 232.116(1)(e) and (h).

       The legal father’s sole challenge on appeal concerns his absence from the

termination hearing. The State contests whether error was preserved, focusing on

how the father’s legal counsel did not seek a continuance or any other remedy to

arrange for her client’s participation.    We conclude error was not preserved

because the father never indicated he wished to participate in the proceeding.

Without such a request, and a subsequent ruling by the juvenile court, we have

nothing   to   review.     See    Iowa    Code   §   602.5103(1)     (“The   court of

appeals . . . constitutes a court for the correction of errors at law.”); In re M.L.H.,

No. 16-1216, 2016 WL 4803999, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept. 14, 2016) (finding the

father did not preserve error on appeal after he failed to appear for the termination

hearing and his “attorney stated the father had essentially ‘given up’”).
                                         4

       We also note that, if the legal father’s absence at the termination hearing

implicated procedural due process, the fundamental obligation to afford a parent

notice and an opportunity for hearing was satisfied. See In re S.P., 672 N.W.2d

842, 845 (Iowa 2003). The father had notice, he appeared at prior hearings, and

his attorney conveyed his intent to consent to termination of his parental rights.

       AFFIRMED.