Court Opinion

ID: 9387502
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-04-18 12:04:19.199149+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:13.896782
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

                                      No. COA22-591

                                 Filed 18 April 2023

Alamance County, No. 19 JT 42

IN THE MATTER OF: K.J.E.

      Appeal by respondent-father from order entered 18 April 2022 by Judge

Frederick B. Wilkins, Jr., in Alamance County District Court. Heard in the Court of

Appeals 8 March 2023.

      Kelly Fairman for petitioner-appellee mother.

      Sean P. Vitrano for respondent-appellant father.

      DILLON, Judge.

      This appeal is the second in this matter. In this appeal, Respondent (“Father”)

challenges the order entered on remand from the first appeal terminating his

parental rights to K.J.E. (referred herein by the pseudonym “Keith”). We affirm the

adjudication portion of the order in which the trial court determined that Father had

willfully abandoned Keith. However, we also vacate the order’s disposition portion

terminating Father’s parental rights, and we remand the matter to the trial court.

                                 I.       Background

      In 2019, Keith’s mother (“Mother”) filed a petition seeking the termination of

Father’s parental rights to their son Keith, based, in part, on willful abandonment.
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                                   Opinion of the Court

      The procedure to terminate one’s parental rights involves two distinct stages,

namely, the adjudication stage (where the trial court determines whether one or more

of the statutory grounds for termination exist), and the disposition stage (where the

trial court determines whether termination of the parent’s rights is in the child’s best

interest). In re Montgomery, 311 N.C. 101, 110, 316 S.E.2d 246, 252 (1984).

      In 2020, after a hearing on the matter, the trial court entered its first order

terminating Father’s parental rights. In the adjudication portion of this 2020 order,

the trial court determined that one of the statutory grounds for termination existed,

specifically, that Father had willfully abandoned Keith in 2019 for more than six

months immediately prior to the filing of the petition. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-

1111(a)(7) (2019). In the order’s disposition portion, the trial court determined it was

in Keith’s best interests that Father’s parental rights be terminated. The trial court

relied in part on a report from Keith’s court-appointed guardian ad litem (the “GAL”).

      A year later, in 2021, our Supreme Court vacated the trial court’s 2020 order

and remanded the matter on the basis that there were insufficient findings to support

its adjudication portion. In re K.J.E., 378 N.C. 620, 624, 862 S.E.2d 620, 623 (2021).

      In 2022, after the hearing on remand, the trial court entered its second order,

making additional findings regarding adjudication and terminating Father’s parental

rights. During that hearing, the trial court re-appointed the GAL to represent Keith’s

interests. However, the trial court denied Father’s motion to receive new evidence.

Rather, the trial court relied solely on the record from the 2020 hearing to enter its

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                                   Opinion of the Court

2022 order. The trial court entered this new order “out of session nunc pro tunc [to]

16 September 2020”. Father timely appealed.

                                      II.   Analysis

      In 2022 order being appealed, the trial court addressed both the adjudication

stage and the disposition stage. A trial court is allowed to consider both stages at the

same hearing and to enter a single order addressing both stages. See In re S.M.M.,

374 N.C. 911, 915, 845 S.E.2d 8, 12 (2020) (“Although the dispositional evidence [is]

intertwined with adjudicatory evidence, a trial court is not required to bifurcate the

hearing into two distinct stages.”)

      In this appeal, Father only challenges the disposition portion of the 2022 order.

He makes no challenge to the adjudication portion. Therefore, we affirm the order’s

adjudication portion, which again determining that Father had willfully abandoned

Keith for the relevant period in 2019.

      Turning to the disposition portion of the 2022 order, Father argues that the

trial court was required to enter a new disposition order rather than simply re-

adopting its disposition determination it made in its 2020 order.

      We note that when our Supreme Court vacated the 2020 order, it necessarily

vacated its disposition portion.      We agree with Father that the trial court was

required on remand during the disposition stage (assuming that the trial court

determined in the adjudication stage that a statutory ground for termination existed)

to determine the best interests of the child at or near the time of the 2022 hearing.

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The trial court has broad, but not unlimited, discretion to decide whether to hear new

evidence at a remand hearing. See In re R.D., 376 N.C. 244, 253, 852 S.E.2d 117, 126

(2020) ([T]he trial court [has] broad discretion regarding the receipt of evidence in its

quest to determine the best interests of the child . . . [a]lthough this reservoir of

discretion is not limitless[.]”) That is, it is not per se error for a trial court to base its

best-interest determination at a remand hearing on the record from an earlier

hearing, for instance, where no one attempts to offer new evidence.

       Here, however, the trial court entered its 2022 order nunc pro tunc to 2020,

evidencing that the trial court did not believe it was required to make the “best-

interest” determination as of 2022. The trial court’s belief is also reflected in many

of its findings. For instance, the trial court found in its 2022 order that Keith was

four years old, as it found in 2020.

       Our Supreme Court has instructed that a trial court’s authority to enter an

order nunc pro tunc to an earlier date is limited. See State v. Eley, 326 N.C. 759, 765,

392 S.E.2d 394, 397 (1990).      And we have held that a judge cannot use a nunc pro

tunc “to accomplish something which ought to have been done but was not done”:

              “[t]he power of the court to open, modify, or vacate the
              judgment rendered by it must be distinguished from the
              power of the court to amend records of its judgments by
              correcting mistakes or supplying omissions in it, and to
              apply such amendment retroactively by an entry nunc pro
              tunc.”

Rockingham County v. Tate, 202 N.C. App. 747, 751-52, 689 S.E.2d 913, 917 (2010).

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We conclude that entering the 2022 order nunc pro tunc to 2020 was an inappropriate

use of a nunc pro tunc order. The trial court was not simply correcting the order to

reflect findings that it had, in fact, made in 2020. Rather, the trial court added

findings it failed to make at the 2020 hearing. See In re V.T., 269 N.C. App. 474, 837

S.E.2d 215 (2020) (noting that designating an adjudication and disposition order nunc

pro tunc to the prior year was “not a proper nunc pro tunc order”) (unpublished).

      Accordingly, we vacate the disposition portion of the 2022 order and remand

the matter for a new disposition hearing. At that hearing, the trial court must

exercise its discretion to determine whether it is then in Keith’s best interests that

Father’s parental rights be terminated. See In re K.N.K., 374 N.C. 50, 57, 839 S.E.2d

735, 740 (2020) (trial court’s best-interest determination is reviewed for abuse of

discretion). In the remainder of this opinion, we address other issues raised by Father

in this appeal, as they are likely to come up on remand.

      We first address Father’s argument that the trial court abused its discretion

by failing to allow Father to introduce certain evidence of matters that had arisen

since the 2020 hearing, which he claims bears on Keith’s best interest.

      Unlike the adjudication stage, “the disposition stage of a termination

proceeding is not adversarial.” In re R.D., 376 N.C. 244, 253, 352 S.E.2d 117, 125

(2020). Rather, the stage is “more inquisitorial[.]” Id. Accordingly, the trial court is

not bound by the Rules of Evidence during this second stage, but it is vested with

“broad discretion” to consider “whatever evidence the trial court believes is most

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‘relevant, reliable, and necessary’.” Id. And a trial court has discretion concerning

evidentiary matters in a remand hearing.        See, e.g., In re K.N., 373 N.C. 274, 285,

837 S.E.2d 861, 869 (2020) (stating that “[o]n remand, the trial court shall have the

discretion to determine whether the receipt of additional evidence is appropriate”);

In re N.D.A., 373 N.C. 71, 84, 833 S.E.2d 768, 777 (2019) (stating in its an opinion

vacating a termination order that “[t]he trial court may [on remand], in the exercise

of discretion, receive additional evidence on remand if it elects to do so.”)

      Mother, though, notes our Supreme Court did not state in its 2021 mandate

that the trial court had discretion to take new evidence, but rather, merely instructed

the trial court to make additional findings. However, our Supreme Court has recently

recognized that a trial court does have such discretion on remand in a termination

case where the appellate court was silent in its mandate on receiving new evidence

at the remand hearing. See In re S.M.M., 374 N.C. at 914, 845 S.E.2d at 11-12 (noting

the “opinion was silent as to whether the trial court should take new evidence on

remand, and therefore, the [appellate court] left that decision to the trial court’s

sound discretion”).

      Our Supreme Court held in 1984 that a trial court must generally hear any

evidence relevant to the best-interest determination if the evidence is not cumulative.

             “Whenever the trial court is determining the best interest
             of a child, any evidence which is competent and relevant to
             a showing of the best interest of the child must be heard
             and considered by the trial court, subject to the
             discretionary powers of the trial court to exclude

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             cumulative testimony.”

In re Shue, 311 N.C. 586, 597, 319 S.E.2d 567, 574 (1984).

      In July 2020, citing Shue, our Supreme Court suggested that a trial court

might abuse its discretion when it refuses to consider new evidence bearing on the

trial court’s best-interest determination, provided the motion forecasts more than

mere speculation that facts may have changed since the original order was entered:

             “Mere speculation that some facts may have changed in the
             eighteen months since the court originally heard evidence
             is not sufficient to demonstrate that the trial court abused
             its discretion in denying respondent’s motion to reopen the
             evidence on remand.

             Absent any forecast of relevant testimony or other evidence
             bearing upon the [trial court’s] ultimate determination of
             the child’s best interests, the trial court’s decision to refrain
             from reopening the record is entirely consistent with [our
             Supreme Court’s] general admonition that a trial court
             must always hear any relevant and competent evidence
             concerning the best interests of the child. In this case there
             was simply no evidence to be heard by the trial court on
             remand.”

In re S.M.M., 374 N.C. at 915, 845 S.E.2d at 12 (citing In re Shue, 311 N.C. at 597,

319 S.E.2d at 576).

      Later in 2020, our Supreme Court described a trial court’s discretion on

evidentiary questions to be broad, but not unlimited:

             “[T]he focus during the dispositional stage is entirely on
             ascertaining the best interests of the child by utilizing
             whatever evidence the trial court believes is most ‘relevant,
             reliable, and necessary.’ N.C.G.S. § 7B-1110(a). This
             statute gives the trial court broad discretion regarding the

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             receipt of evidence in its quest to determine the best
             interests of the child under the particular circumstances of
             the case… the reservoir of discretion [however] is not
             limitless[.]”

R.D., 376 N.C. at 253, 852 S.E.2d at 125-26.

      Almost a year later, in September 2021, our Supreme Court, citing its 2020

R.D., found no abuse of discretion where the trial court had curtailed the respondent-

parent’s testimony during the disposition stage, emphasizing that N.C. Gen. Stat. §

7B-1110(a) states that a judge “may consider evidence . . . that the court finds

relevant, reliable, and necessary to determine the best interests of the juvenile.” In

re. M.Y.P., 378 N.C. 667, 680, 863 S.E.2d 773, 782 (2021). Our Court has since cited

M.Y.P. to recognize that a trial court has wide discretion to determine whether “to

admit or deny evidence at the dispositional phase[.]” In re M.T., __ N.C. App. __, __,

877 S.E.2d 732, 768 (2022).

      Father listed several matters in his motion to reopen evidence at the 2022

hearing, and his attorney represented to the trial court that Father has interacted

with Keith since 2020. However, Father was not allowed to make an offer of proof

concerning his evidence on these matters. Accordingly, we make no holding as to

whether it was an abuse of discretion for the trial court not to allow the evidence.

However, we conclude the trial court has a duty to hear any relevant evidence

concerning Keith’s best interests, it has wide discretion to determine what evidence

is “relevant, reliable, and necessary” on this question, and the trial court must not

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abuse its discretion by denying a party the ability to present such evidence.

       We now address Father’s contention that the trial court erred by failing to

continue the hearing to allow the GAL to visit with Keith, Mother, and Father, and

then make a new “best-interest” report to the trial court. Indeed, one of the functions

of the GAL is to provide information to the trial court to aid the trial court’s decision

regarding the child’s best interest. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-601(a) (2022).

      At the 2022 hearing, the GAL told the trial court that since she had just been

reappointed, she had nothing new to add from her 2020 report concerning Keith’s

best interest, and as a result, a 30-day continuance would be important to allow her

to reassess the situation and report her findings to the trial court.

      It could be argued that the trial court’s refusal to allow the GAL to reassess

the information was an abuse of discretion. A trial court, though, also has broad

discretion to determine whether to grant a continuance. See In re S.M., 375 N.C. 673,

681, 850 S.E.2d 292, 300 (2020) (trial court has discretion to determine whether good

cause exists to grant a continuance of a termination hearing). While a trial court has

the discretion to deny a party from developing evidence based on speculation that

matters may have changed since the prior hearing. S.M.M., 374 N.C. at 915, 845

S.E.2d at 12. our Supreme Court has suggested a trial court should not begin to make

a determination before the GAL can perform her duties. See In re W.K., 376 N.C. 269,

274, 852 S.E.2d 83, 88 (2020). We make no determination as to whether the trial

court abused its discretion on this issue at the 2022 hearing. We, however, point out

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that when this matter comes back on for hearing, the trial court will be making a

best-interest determination with information from 2020. It would seem to be an

abuse of discretion if the trial court, on remand from our opinion today, made a best-

interest determination based on 2020 information where the court could access newer

information. If, however, the trial court determines in its discretion not to allow

additional evidence at that hearing or an updated GAL report, we urge the court to

make detailed findings concerning why it believes new evidence would not be

relevant, reliable, and necessary to the child’s best interest.

      Finally, we address Father’s argument that he should have been allowed to

make an offer of proof of the evidence he would have offered at the 2022 hearing.

Mother argues that offers of proof are not appropriate in termination proceedings.

However, our Supreme Court has recognized that a party to a termination proceeding

should be allowed to make an offer of proof of the evidence he would have offered to

protect the record. See M.Y.P., 378 N.C. at 679-80, 862 S.E.2d at 782. Accordingly,

we conclude that it was error for the trial court not to allow Father to make his offer

of proof he was prepared to make at the 2022 hearing.

                                   III.   Conclusion

      We affirm the adjudication portion of the trial court’s 2022 order. However,

we vacate the order’s disposition portion and remand the matter for a new disposition

hearing. On remand and as explained herein, the trial court has broad, but not

unlimited, discretion to determine what new evidence to hear to aid in making its

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best-interest determination.

      AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED.

      Judges TYSON and GORE concur.

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