Court Opinion

ID: 9400519
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-08 15:13:54.459919+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:45.978037
License: Public Domain

2023 UT 11

                              IN THE
      SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH

       STATE OF UTAH, in the interest of C.D.S. and W.E.S.,
              persons under eighteen years of age.

                              A.S.,
                            Petitioner,
                                v.
                         STATE OF UTAH,
                           Respondent.

                          No. 20220580
                     Heard February 10, 2023
                        Filed June 8, 2023

           On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals

             Eighth District Juvenile, Uintah County
                The Honorable Ryan B. Evershed
                     Nos. 1178352, 1184710
                Utah Court of Appeals, Salt Lake
                        No. 20220100

                            Attorneys:
           K. Andrew Fitzgerald, Moab, for petitioner,
 Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Carol L. C. Verdoia, John M. Peterson,
         Asst. Atty’s Gen., Salt Lake City, for respondent
   Martha Pierce, Salt Lake City, Guardian ad Litem for C.D.S.
                           and W.E.S.

ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE PEARCE authored the opinion of the Court,
       in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE PETERSEN,
          JUSTICE POHLMAN, and JUDGE CORNISH joined.
Having recused herself, JUSTICE HAGEN does not participate herein;
          DISTRICT COURT JUDGE RITA M. CORNISH sat.
                       In re C.D.S. and W.E.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

   ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE PEARCE, opinion of the Court:
                         INTRODUCTION
    ¶1 The juvenile court terminated the parental rights of a mother
and father. They each had fifteen days to appeal. Father appealed
within that window. Mother filed her notice of appeal on the wrong
side of the deadline. The court of appeals dismissed Mother’s appeal
as untimely.
    ¶2 Mother argues that the court of appeals erred for a couple of
reasons. We reject Mother’s argument that a minute entry that came
after the court signed the final order restarted the clock on her time
to appeal. But we agree with her that Utah Rule of Appellate
Procedure 52(c)—together with Father’s timely appeal—extended
her time to file a notice of appeal. We reverse and remand to the
court of appeals.
                          BACKGROUND
   ¶3 In September 2019, the Division of Child and Family Services
(DCFS) petitioned the juvenile court to remove two-year-old Chester
from Mother and Father’s custody. At the time, Mother was
pregnant with their second child, Winnie. 1
    ¶4 The juvenile court placed Chester in the temporary custody of
his aunt and uncle. The court also ordered DCFS to provide Mother
and Father with reunification services.
   ¶5 After Winnie was born, DCFS initially allowed Winnie to stay
with Mother and Father. A few months after Winnie’s birth,
however, DCFS filed a “Motion for Expedited Placement and
Temporary Custody” for Winnie. From the beginning of 2020 to the
beginning of 2021, the juvenile court conducted several permanency
and review hearings for the children. At the end of 2020, the court
authorized Chester to live with Mother and Father in a trial home
placement.
   ¶6 At a hearing a few months later, the juvenile court determined
that, while Mother and Father had substantially complied with the
reunification plan, reunification was not likely to be appropriate
within the next ninety days. The court terminated DCFS’s
reunification services and changed the children’s primary
permanency goal from reunification to adoption.

_____________________________________________________________
   1   Chester and Winnie are pseudonyms.

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                        Opinion of the Court

   ¶7 In November 2021, the juvenile court held a trial. At the trial’s
conclusion, the court indicated that it would enter an order
terminating Mother’s and Father’s parental rights.
    ¶8 The juvenile court entered the written termination order
(Termination Order) on January 7, 2022, which terminated Mother’s
and Father’s parental rights. In it, the court detailed the grounds it
relied upon to terminate Mother’s and Father’s parental rights. The
juvenile court found that DCFS made reasonable efforts to provide
reunification services to Mother and Father, and found that it was in
the best interest of the children for Mother’s and Father’s parental
rights to be terminated and for the children to be adopted.
   ¶9 The Termination Order stated: “This is a final and appealable
order. There will be no further order after this as related to the
parent’s [sic] parental rights.” It also informed Mother and Father
that they had “15 days from the signing of this order to file a Notice
of Appeal with the Juvenile Court.”2
     ¶10 On January 10, 2022, the juvenile court filed a minute entry
titled “Minutes.” 3 The Minutes contained a condensed recitation of
what had occurred at trial. Among other particulars, it detailed who
was present in the courtroom, the names of those who testified, and
the exhibits the court entered into evidence. The Minutes also
contained several findings of fact and ordered the termination of
Mother’s and Father’s parental rights.
   ¶11 On January 24, 2022, Father filed his notice of appeal. 4 On
January 25, Mother’s trial counsel filed a notice of appeal.
   ¶12 The court of appeals determined that Mother’s appeal was
not filed within fifteen days of the Termination Order, as Utah Rule
_____________________________________________________________
   2  The Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure provide the fifteen-day
timeline in child welfare proceedings. Rule 52(a) states that in this
setting, a notice of appeal “must be filed within 15 days of the entry
of the order appealed from.” UTAH R. APP. P. 52(a).
   3As we march through our analysis, we will refer to this
document as both the minute entry and the Minutes.
   4  The fifteenth day was Saturday, January 22, 2022. By operation
of rule 22(a) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, which does
not require parties to file on Saturdays and Sundays, the time for
filing the petition was extended to the following Monday, January
24. See UTAH R. APP. P. 22(a).

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                        In re C.D.S. and W.E.S.
                         Opinion of the Court

of Appellate Procedure 52(a) requires. The panel dismissed the
appeal for lack of jurisdiction. This court granted certiorari review.
    ¶13 Mother contends that her appeal was timely filed for at least
one of two reasons. Mother first points to the Minutes that the court
filed several days after it entered the written termination order.
Mother argues that the minute entry constitutes a new appealable
order and that she had fifteen days from the entry of that order to
file her notice of appeal. The State and the guardian ad litem
disagree.
   ¶14 Mother next asserts that the Utah Rules of Appellate
Procedure allow her to file a notice of appeal within five days of
Father’s timely filed notice. Rule 52(c) states that after a party files a
notice of appeal, “any other party” may file its notice of appeal
within five days. Mother asserts that she is “any other party” within
the rule’s meaning. The State largely agrees with Mother’s argument.
The guardian ad litem does not.
                      STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶15 “Whether jurisdiction is proper is a legal question that we
review for correctness . . . .” State ex rel. A.C.M., 2009 UT 30, ¶ 6, 221
P.3d 185. The court of appeals based its decision on an interpretation
of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure. “The interpretation of a
rule of procedure is a question of law that we review for
correctness.” Arbogast Family Tr. v. River Crossings, LLC, 2010 UT 40,
¶ 10, 238 P.3d 1035 (cleaned up).
                              ANALYSIS
      I. THE MINUTE ENTRY DID NOT EXTEND MOTHER’S
                     TIME TO APPEAL
    ¶16 The court of appeals held that it lacked jurisdiction over
Mother’s appeal because it was filed outside the fifteen-day
timeframe that Utah Rule of Appellate Procedure 52(c) provides.
Mother argues that the court of appeals erred when it calculated the
fifteen-day period from the entry of the Termination Order and not
the subsequently entered Minutes. Mother argues that she is entitled
to appeal from the Minutes and that her notice of appeal of that
ruling was timely filed.
   ¶17 The State and the guardian ad litem argue that the court of
appeals correctly held that the minute entry was not a separately
appealable order. The State claims that the Minutes were “a mere
ministerial document from which the judgment must be drawn” and
that the minute entry was not an appealable order because it “was a

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                         Opinion of the Court

belated entry that did not modify or change the substance of the
Termination Order.” The guardian ad litem similarly argues that the
Termination Order “triggered the timing for the notice of appeal”
and that the minute entry was an inconsequential “after-the-fact
ministerial document[].”
    ¶18 The clock to file a notice of appeal starts when “the court
directs that no additional order need be entered.” Giusti v. Sterling
Wentworth Corp., 2009 UT 2, ¶ 35, 201 P.3d 966. There can be no
doubt that the Termination Order met this test. The Order stated:
“There will be no further order after this as related to the parent’s
[sic] parental rights,” and informed Mother and Father that they had
fifteen days to appeal. 5
    ¶19 This statement in the Termination Order alone, of course,
does not answer the question this case presents. Mother asks what
the effect is of a subsequently entered order on the same topic as a
final appealable order. This is a question that we answered long ago.
If one order starts to run the time for appeal, the entry of another
order does not restart the clock if the later entry does not change the
substance of the first.
    ¶20 For example, in Adamson v. Brockbank, we held that the
defendants could file their appeal from an order amending an
original judgment, even though the date to file a timely appeal from
the original order had already passed. Adamson v. Brockbank, 185 P.2d
264, 268 (Utah 1947). The amended order corrected an inconsistency
in the original judgment. Id. This correction clarified the liability of a
defendant, an alteration we held was significant enough to change
the character of the judgment. Id. We articulated the principle that,
“where a belated entry merely constitutes an amendment or

_____________________________________________________________
   5  Mother questions whether our precedent on the finality of
orders applies to child welfare proceedings. It generally does,
though our rules and precedent make some distinction between
child welfare and non-child welfare cases. For example, rule 58A of
the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure requires that “[e]very judgment
and amended judgment must be set out in a separate document.”
There is no such requirement in child welfare proceedings. See UTAH
R. APP. P. 52(a); State ex rel. A.C.M., 2009 UT 30, ¶ 10, 221 P.3d 185.
But no rule or precedent alters the conclusion that a belated entry or
modification that does not change the substance of a final order does
not create a new final and appealable order.

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                       In re C.D.S. and W.E.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

modification not changing the substance or character of the
judgment, such entry . . . relates back to the time the original
judgment was entered.” Id.
   ¶21 We relied on this holding in State v. Garner, 2005 UT 6, 106
P.3d 729. There, a modification to an original judgment clarified the
nature of the defendant’s conditional plea in greater detail. Id. ¶ 12.
But this was “a redundant addition, not a material change” and thus
did not extend the time for Garner’s appeal. Id.¶¶ 11, 13.
   ¶22 Here, the Minutes did not amend or modify the substance of
the Termination Order. The Minutes recited short findings of fact
and repeated the conclusion that the parental rights be terminated. It
did not change the parents’ rights or the children’s status. The
minute entry did not amend or modify the Termination Order, so the
time to appeal ran from the entry of the Termination Order. The
court of appeals did not err when it rejected Mother’s argument.
       II. RULE 52(C) EXTENDED MOTHER’S TIME TO APPEAL
   ¶23 Mother also argues that the court of appeals incorrectly
concluded that Father’s appeal, filed one day before Mother’s, did
not extend Mother’s time to appeal. The court of appeals held that
rule 52(c) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure “relates to cross-
appeals, i.e., appeals filed by someone who has already been made a
party to the appeal.” The court, therefore, held that Mother was
“required to file her own timely appeal” because she “was not a
party to Father’s appeal.”
   ¶24 Mother argues that rule 52(c) allows a party five days to file
a notice of appeal from the date another party to the case files its
notice of appeal. 6 The State agrees with Mother and contends the
court of appeals incorrectly determined that “rule 52(c) did not
render Mother’s notice of appeal timely.” 7 The State expresses
_____________________________________________________________
   6Rule 52(c) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, titled
“Time for cross-appeal,” reads:
      If a timely notice of appeal is filed by a party, any other
      party may file a notice of appeal within 5 days after the
      first notice of appeal was filed, or within the time
      otherwise prescribed by paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
      rule, whichever period last expires.
   7 The State—both in its briefs and during oral argument—
acknowledges that rule 52(c)’s plain language supports Mother’s
argument. We commend the State for its candor.

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                         Opinion of the Court

uncertainty on whether Mother has initiated her own appeal or must
be limited to the issues presented in Father’s appeal, but it still
concludes that the “plain language of appellate rule 52(c) means that
Mother has, at least, successfully initiated a cross-appeal.” 8
    ¶25 “When we interpret a procedural rule, we do so according
to our general rules of statutory construction.” Arbogast Family Tr. v.
River Crossings, LLC, 2010 UT 40, ¶ 18, 238 P.3d 1035. In statutory
construction, “our primary goal is to evince the true intent and
purpose of the Legislature,” the “best evidence” of which “is the
plain language of the statute itself.” Zilleruelo v. Commodity
Transporters, Inc., 2022 UT 1, ¶ 18, 506 P.3d 509 (cleaned up). Thus,
“[w]e interpret court rules, like statutes and administrative rules,
according to their plain language.” Arbogast Family Tr., 2010 UT 40,
¶ 18 (cleaned up). Although we do this with the added wrinkle that,
when we interpret the Utah Rules of Procedure, the intent we most
often attempt to discern through the text is ours, and not the
Legislature’s.
    ¶26 Rule 52(c) is straightforward: “If a timely notice of appeal is
filed by a party, any other party may file a notice of appeal within 5
days after the first notice of appeal was filed.” UTAH R. APP. P. 52(c).
Nothing in the language of the rule itself limits the phrase “any other
party” the way the court of appeals did. That is, nothing in the plain
text limits the rule’s reach to a party who is already part of the
appeal.
    ¶27 The court of appeals’ reading of rule 52(c) appears to have
been influenced by the rule’s title. We put the label “Time for cross-
appeal” on that subsection. However, we have noted that “[t]he title
of a statute is not part of the text of a statute, and absent ambiguity,
it is generally not used to determine a statute’s intent.” Blaisdell v.
Dentrix Dental Sys., Inc., 2012 UT 37, ¶ 10, 284 P.3d 616 (cleaned up).
We are in what some would consider good company with that
proposition. A prominent treatise on the topic counsels that a “title
or heading should never be allowed to override the plain words of a
text.” ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE
INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 222 (2012). 9

_____________________________________________________________
   8The guardian ad litem disagrees for reasons we will discuss and
dismiss in a page or two.
     That is not to say that titles are irrelevant. When “we need help
       9

understanding an ambiguous provision, titles are persuasive and can
                                                        (continued . . .)

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                        In re C.D.S. and W.E.S.
                         Opinion of the Court

     ¶28 It nevertheless appears the court of appeals relied on this
title and imported the language “party to this appeal” into the rule,
such that it would read: “If a timely notice of appeal is filed by a
party, any other party [who was made party to the appeal] may file a
notice of appeal within 5 days after the first notice of appeal was
filed.” UTAH R. APP. P. 52(c).
   ¶29 As Mother points out, “[t]he rules do not define ‘a party’ as
something different than those who were parties to the proceedings
before the district or juvenile court.” The court of appeals’ dismissal
incorrectly “would define ‘a party’ in the lower courts as different
than ‘a party’ before the appellate courts on the same matter.”
   ¶30 Our reading of the rule is buttressed by how we understand
rule 52(c) came to be. It is based on rule 4 of the Utah Rules of
Appellate Procedure, which is, in turn, based on rule 4(a)(3) of the
Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. 10 See UTAH RULES OF
APPELLATE PROCEDURE: WITH NOTES OF THE SUPREME COURT
ADVISORY COMMITTEE 14 (1984) (on file with the Utah State Law
Library) (stating that rule 4(d) “adopts substantially the time period
and concept of cross-appeal in Rule 4(a)(3)” of the Federal Rules of
Appellate Procedure).
   ¶31 Rule 4(a)(3) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure
gives a party fourteen days after another party appeals to file its
appeal. 11 Wright and Miller’s treatise on federal procedure explains
that rule 4(a)(3) allows any party to take advantage of the additional

aid in ascertaining the statute’s correct interpretation and
application.” Graham v. Albertson’s LLC, 2020 UT 15, ¶ 24, 462 P.3d
367 (cleaned up). We just don’t use titles to create ambiguity. This is
because titles are generally shorthand descriptions of what is to
follow and can miss some of the complexities of the text to come.
   10 Utah Rule of Appellate Procedure 4 states, in relevant part: “If
a timely notice of appeal is filed by a party, any other party may file
a notice of appeal within 14 days after the date on which the first
notice of appeal was filed.” UTAH R. APP. P. 4(d). Unlike rule 52(c), it
gives “any other party” fourteen days (instead of five) to file an
appeal. In addition, rule 4(d) is titled “Additional or cross-appeal”
rather than “Time for cross-appeal.” Compare UTAH R. APP. P. 4(d),
with UTAH R. APP. P. 52(c).
   11 The federal rule bears the title “Multiple Appeals.” FED. R. APP.
P. 4(a)(3).

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                          Opinion of the Court

time to file a notice of appeal. “The 14-day provision is not limited to
cross-appeals, and plainly encompasses appeals by other parties
such as co-parties or third-party defendants.” 16A CHARLES ALAN
WRIGHT & ARTHUR R. MILLER, FEDERAL PRACTICE & PROCEDURE:
JURISDICTION § 3950.7 (5th ed. 2022) (Westlaw). 12
   ¶32 This interpretation reflects the views of the advisory
committee. When the committee recommended a substantive
amendment to this rule, it noted:
        The added time which may be made available by the
        operation of the provision is not restricted to cross
        appeals in the technical sense, i.e., to appeals by parties
        made appellees by the nature of the initial appeal. The
        exception permits any party to the action who is
        entitled to appeal within the time ordinarily prescribed
        to appeal within such added time as the sentence
        affords.
Advisory Committee Note to 1966 Amendments to Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 73(a), 39 F.R.D. 69, 131 (1966) (amending then rule
73(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a rule later
incorporated into the appellate rules).
    ¶33 In other words, if Mother were in federal court, or in a non-
child welfare case in a Utah court, her appeal would undoubtedly be
timely filed under rules that in all aspects—other than title and time
frame—mirror rule 52(c). The only part of rule 52(c) that suggests a
different result is the title, and, as we have noted, we don’t use titles
that way.

_____________________________________________________________
   12  Other treatises echo this understanding. See, e.g., JAMES WM.
MOORE ET AL., MOORE’S FEDERAL PRACTICE: CIVIL § 304.11 (2023)
(LexisNexis) (“This provision is not restricted, however, to parties
named as appellees in the initial appeal.”); 18 BENDER’S FEDERAL
PRACTICE FORMS, COMMENT ON APPELLATE RULE 4 (2022) (LexisNexis)
(“This provision is not restricted to parties named as appellees in the
initial appeal. Any party to the action is entitled to the benefit of the
additional 14-day period.”). This is also the way several federal cases
have interpreted the rule. See, e.g., N. Am. Sav. Ass’n v. Metroplex Dev.
P’ship, 931 F.2d 1073, 1077–78 (5th Cir. 1991); Melton v. Frank, 891
F.2d 1054, 1056 n.1 (2d Cir. 1989); Jackson Jordan, Inc. v. Plasser Am.
Corp., 725 F.2d 1373, 1374–76 (Fed. Cir. 1984).

                                    9
                        In re C.D.S. and W.E.S.
                         Opinion of the Court

   ¶34 And here, there is additional reason to believe that we did
not intend to use the rule’s title to work a substantive limitation on
the rule’s text. In 2003, the Advisory Committee on the Utah Rules of
Appellate Procedure heard from an assistant attorney general in the
Child Welfare Division who “described child welfare proceedings
and the need to expedite appeals from parental rights terminations”
to “help stabilize” children’s lives. Approved Minutes, SUPREME
COURT’S ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON THE UTAH RULES OF APPELLATE
PROCEDURE, ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS (hereinafter
Approved Minutes, SUPREME COURT’S ADVISORY COMMITTEE) (Nov. 19,
2003).
    ¶35 The need for speed was reiterated at a 2017 committee
meeting, which discussed amendments to rule 52 and other child
welfare appellate rules. The minutes of that meeting laid out that
“[t]he purpose of these amendments is to expedite adoption and
termination of parental rights appeals from the district courts and
put them on the same footing as appeals from child welfare
proceedings in the juvenile courts.” Approved Minutes, SUPREME
COURT’S ADVISORY COMMITTEE (Sept. 7, 2017).
    ¶36 The rules committee also discussed the relationship between
rule 52 and rule 4 when a member “proposed, and the committee
agreed, that Rule 52 should be amended to make it consistent with
the recent changes that were approved to Rule 4(b).” Approved
Minutes, SUPREME COURT’S ADVISORY COMMITTEE (May 5, 2016). Thus,
it appears the drive behind these rules was not to have rule 52(c)
exclude certain appeals that rule 4 includes but to maintain the
structure of rule 4 while expediting child welfare proceedings.13
    ¶37 The guardian ad litem offers a different interpretation of the
rule than Mother, the State, and the court of appeals. She avers that
Mother was a party to her own termination proceedings but was
never, even at the district court level, a party to Father’s termination
proceedings. The guardian ad litem thus contends that Mother was
not “any party” in the context of the rule because she was not a party
to the proceedings Father appealed.
   ¶38 The guardian ad litem supports this argument with
something we said in State ex rel. A.C.M. There, we noted that we
_____________________________________________________________
   13 We encourage the Advisory Committee on the Utah Rules of
Appellate Procedure to look at clarifying the title so it better reflects
the rule’s language and intent.

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                         Opinion of the Court

“treat the termination of each parent’s rights separately for purposes
of finality and appealability.” State ex rel. A.C.M., 2009 UT 30, ¶ 12,
221 P.3d 185. The guardian ad litem in A.C.M. claimed that the order
terminating the father’s parental rights was not a final order because
the mother’s rights had not yet been terminated. Id. We reasoned
that the order terminating the father’s rights was “final and
appealable because it constitute[d] a change in the child’s status”
with respect to the father. Id. That also prompted the observation on
which the guardian ad litem relies.
    ¶39 We stand by the observation that we can treat the
termination of each parent’s rights separately for the purposes of
finality and appealability. But that is not to say that parents cannot
be parties to the same case. And A.C.M. says nothing about the
applicability of rule 52(c) when the system adjudicates both parents’
rights in the same action and addresses them in the same order.
   ¶40 The guardian ad litem claims that there was one termination
proceeding for Father and a separate one for Mother—and that the
juvenile court consolidated these cases without making either parent
party to the other’s case. The record before us does not bear that out.
A separate case was initiated relating to each child. Mother and
Father were parties in both cases. The juvenile court consolidated
Chester’s case and Winnie’s case, though each case maintained its
own case number. The court did not—indeed, it could not—
consolidate the parents’ cases, because those cases did not exist. The
court conducted a single trial in which both Mother and Father
presented evidence and arguments. That trial resulted in a single
order that lists both Mother and Father as parties.
   ¶41 On these facts, we have no trouble concluding that Mother
was “another party” within the meaning of Utah Rule of Appellate
Procedure 52(c) and is entitled to the additional five days to file a
notice of appeal. 14
_____________________________________________________________
   14 There is logic underlying rule 52(c). There may be occasions
when a party’s calculus on whether to file an appeal may be
impacted by another party’s decision to appeal. Using the facts of
this case, for example—and we stress that this is a hypothetical and
not a reflection of what we think actually occurred—it is entirely
possible that a person in Mother’s position might decide not to
appeal the termination of her parental rights if she thinks it will only
delay adoption of the children. Mother’s thinking could dramatically
change if her co-parent appeals and the possible outcomes include
                                                        (continued . . .)

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                       In re C.D.S. and W.E.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

        III. WE DECLINE TO ADDRESS MOTHER’S CLAIMS OF
               INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
   ¶42 Mother spends a considerable portion of her brief arguing
that her appeal should be considered timely because her counsel was
ineffective for filing past the fifteen-day deadline. Mother also
argues she was prejudiced by her denial of the right to appeal.
    ¶43 Mother asked us to grant certiorari review on this issue. We
did not. We note for future reference that an order that does not
grant certiorari on an issue is a pretty good signal that we do not
intend to address the question. 15
                           CONCLUSION
    ¶44 The court of appeals correctly ruled that the time for Mother
to file her appeal ran from the entry of the Termination Order and
not the subsequent Minutes. The court of appeals erred when it
concluded that Utah Rule of Appellate Procedure 52(c) only applied
to parties filing a cross-appeal. Mother timely filed her notice of
appeal. We reverse and remand to the court of appeals to consider
Mother’s appeal.

not only adoption, but restoration of Father’s parental rights and not
hers. In that case, it makes sense that our rules would give Mother a
few additional days to assess the changed landscape and decide
whether to appeal.
   15  The guardian ad litem advocates that we task our rules
committee with considering a new rule that would “reinstate the
time for appeal in child welfare cases where a parent’s right to
effective counsel is implicated.” We have previously recognized that
a trial court may extend the time for appeal in a proceeding on
termination of parental rights if a parent was denied effective
assistance of counsel. State ex rel. M.M., 2003 UT 54, ¶¶ 6, 9, 82 P.3d
1104. But this is not the same as a rule that says the court shall
reinstate the time for appeal when a parent can show that they have
been denied effective representation. We encourage the Advisory
Committee on the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure to explore
such a rule, and we thank the guardian ad litem for the excellent
suggestion.

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