Court Opinion

ID: 4378714
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-03-20 15:03:42.307207+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:37:00.782956
License: Public Domain

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
                              FOURTH DISTRICT

                             N.A., the mother,
                                Appellant,

                                     v.

            DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN & FAMILIES and
                 GUARDIAN AD LITEM PROGRAM,
                          Appellees.

                              No. 4D18-3374

                             [March 20, 2019]

  Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, St.
Lucie County; Charles A. Schwab, Judge; L.T. Case No. 562018DP000187.

  Antony P. Ryan, Regional Counsel, and Paul O’Neil, Assistant Regional
Counsel, Office of Criminal Conflict and Civil Regional Counsel, West Palm
Beach, for appellant.

   Andrew Feigenbaum of Children’s Legal Services, West Palm Beach,
and Laura J. Lee of Florida Statewide Guardian ad Litem Program,
Tallahassee, for appellees.

GERBER, C.J.

   The mother appeals from the circuit court’s “Order of Adjudication,
Disposition, Acceptance of Case Plan, and Termination of Supervision and
Jurisdiction.” The order required the mother to complete a “maintain and
strengthen” case plan, even though the order permanently placed the child
with the father and terminated jurisdiction.

    The mother argues that the circuit court’s order was improper as a
matter of law for two reasons: (1) by placing the child with the father and
terminating jurisdiction, the circuit court lacked any statutory authority
to require the mother to complete a case plan; and (2) if the circuit court’s
intent was to require the mother to complete a case plan after having
placed the child with the father, then the circuit court could not require
the mother to complete a “maintain and strengthen” case plan.

   We agree with both arguments and reverse.
                           Procedural History

   The Department filed a shelter petition seeking to remove the child from
the mother’s custody due to domestic violence occurring in the child’s
presence between the mother and her boyfriend, as well as the other issues
regarding the mother’s behavior.

   The circuit court entered an order finding probable cause to remove the
child from the mother’s custody. The circuit court later entered an order
placing the child with the biological father, who lived elsewhere in the
state.

    The Department filed a dependency petition based on the same
allegations contained in the shelter petition. The mother executed a
written consent to the dependency petition.

   The Department proposed a “maintain and strengthen” case plan for
the mother, even though the child had been placed with the father. The
case plan included five tasks: (1) complete parenting classes; (2) maintain
safe and stable housing; (3) complete domestic violence therapy and
education; (4) complete a mental health evaluation and any recommended
treatment; and (5) visit her case manager at least once per week.

   The circuit court held a dependency hearing. At the hearing, the
Department presented the “maintain and strengthen” case plan. The
mother objected to the “maintain and strengthen” case plan, and instead
requested reunification as the case plan’s goal.

    At the end of the dependency hearing, the circuit court entered an order
adjudicating the child dependent, directing that the child’s placement
continue with the father, and permitting the mother to have supervised
visitation with the child. The circuit court’s order noted: “The Case Plan
is currently under development and will be submitted and presented to
the Court for acceptance at a later date.” The circuit court also requested
the parties to provide case law regarding the Department’s case plan goal
and termination request.

   At a later “case plan acceptance” hearing, the Department requested
the circuit court to enter a final order: (1) permanently placing the child
with the father, (2) terminating jurisdiction, and (3) requiring the mother
to complete the “maintain and strengthen” case plan.

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   The mother again objected to the Department’s request. The mother
argued that Chapter 39, Florida Statutes (2018), mandated that if the
circuit court intended to permanently place the child with the father and
terminate jurisdiction, then the circuit court could not require the mother
to complete a case plan which the circuit court was not overseeing. The
mother further argued that if the circuit court intended to order the mother
to complete a case plan, then the case plan’s goal must be reunification,
not “maintain and strengthen,” and the court must keep jurisdiction to
oversee the case plan.

   The circuit court initially appeared to understand the mother’s
argument. The circuit court asked the Department’s counsel:

      [I]f we go ahead and use . . . what your interpretation of the
      statute is, mom goes ahead and completes a case plan,
      everything has been closed out, but there really is no bite to
      maintain and strengthen because now mom has to go back in,
      fight out in family court whether or not she should have her
      child back.

   The Department responded that if the circuit court permanently placed
the child with the father, then Chapter 39 mandated the circuit court must
terminate jurisdiction. The Department later argued that the reason for
ordering the mother to complete the “maintain and strengthen” case plan,
even if the circuit court permanently placed the child with the father and
terminated jurisdiction, was as follows:

      [I]n order for mom to have a change in family court, she has
      to be able to establish a substantial change in circumstances.
      When she petitions family court for modification, she has case
      plan in hand and says, here, I’ve now remedied the
      circumstances that caused the Department to get involved in
      my life to begin with. That’s the substantial change in
      circumstances . . . what she needs to be able to get into family
      court. So it is really important to have a good, well thought
      out case plan at the time the Court terminates supervision
      and jurisdiction.

   The circuit court apparently was convinced by the Department’s
argument. The circuit court orally stated that it was going to permanently
place the child with the father, terminate jurisdiction, and yet order the
mother to complete the “maintain and strengthen” case plan. Similar to
the Department, the circuit court told the mother:

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      And what does that ultimately mean at this point in time,
      mom? Well, here’s the deal, [the] Department’s gonna be out
      of your life, okay. They’ve made the referral [for services],
      you’re doing all of your things. Complete those things and as
      silly as it might sound, you’re gonna walk from this courtroom
      to the courtroom across the hall or in 60 days this courtroom
      [and] . . . file for reunification with your child.

   The circuit court later codified its oral pronouncement in an “Order of
Adjudication, Disposition, Acceptance of Case Plan, and Termination of
Supervision and Jurisdiction.”

                               This Appeal

    This appeal followed. The mother argues that the circuit court’s order
was improper as a matter of law for two reasons: (1) by placing the child
with the father and terminating jurisdiction, the circuit court lacked any
statutory authority to require the mother to complete a case plan; and (2)
if the circuit court’s intent was to require the mother to complete a case
plan after having placed the child with the father, then the circuit court
could not require the mother to complete a “maintain and strengthen” case
plan.

   Ordinarily, “[a] termination of protective supervision order is reviewable
under an abuse of discretion standard.” T.S. v. Guardian ad Litem, 49 So.
3d 341, 341 (Fla. 4th DCA 2010). However, because it appears the circuit
court’s order, and the mother’s arguments on appeal, both rest upon the
interpretation of Chapter 39’s requirements, our review is de novo. See
State, Dep’t of Children & Families v. B.D., 102 So. 3d 707, 709 (Fla. 1st
DCA 2012) (statutory interpretation of section 39.621 is reviewed de novo).

  Applying de novo review, we agree with the mother’s arguments on
appeal. We address each argument in turn.

   1. After the Circuit Court Removed the Child from the Mother, the
      Circuit Court Lacked Statutory Authority to Both Terminate
      Jurisdiction and Order the Mother to Complete a Case Plan

    When a court decides to place a dependent child with the non-offending
parent, Chapter 39 provides a court with two options which are exclusive
to one another. Those options are provided in section 39.521(3)(b), Florida
Statutes (2018), which states, in pertinent part:

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      If there is a parent with whom the child was not residing at
      the time the events or conditions arose that brought the child
      within the jurisdiction of the court who desires to assume
      custody of the child, the court shall place the child with that
      parent upon completion of a home study, unless the court
      finds that such placement would endanger the safety, well-
      being, or physical, mental, or emotional health of the child. .
      . . If the court places the child with such parent, it may do
      either of the following:

      1. Order that the parent assume sole custodial
      responsibilities for the child. The court may also provide for
      reasonable visitation by the noncustodial parent. The court
      may then terminate its jurisdiction over the child.

      2. Order that the parent assume custody subject to the
      jurisdiction of the circuit court hearing dependency matters.
      The court may order that reunification services be provided to
      the parent from whom the child has been removed, that
      services be provided solely to the parent who is assuming
      physical custody in order to allow that parent to retain later
      custody without court jurisdiction, or that services be
      provided to both parents, in which case the court shall
      determine at every review hearing which parent, if either, shall
      have custody of the child. The standard for changing custody
      of the child from one parent to another or to a relative or
      another adult approved by the court shall be the best interest
      of the child.

§ 39.521(3)(b), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphasis added).

    Here, the circuit court erred because it proceeded under both
subsections (3)(b)1. and (3)(b)2. by placing the child with the father and
terminating jurisdiction, and requiring the mother to complete a case plan.
According to the statute, the circuit court was required to proceed under
either subsection (3)(b)1. or subsection (3)(b)2.

   We recognize that section 39.521(3)(b)’s use of the phrase “may do
either,” taken by itself, may be interpreted to mean “may do either but not
both” or “may do either or both.”

   However, we conclude that 39.521(3)(b)’s use of the phrase “may do
either,” when taken in context of the two options which follow, logically
can be interpreted only as “may do either but not both.” That is because

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the two options, on their face, are exclusive to one another. See Forsythe
v. Longboat Key Beach Erosion Control Dist., 604 So. 2d 452, 455 (Fla.
1992) (“It is axiomatic that all parts of a statute must be read together in
order to achieve a consistent whole.”) (emphasis in original).

    Under the first option, the non-offending parent assumes sole custodial
responsibilities for the child, the noncustodial parent may be given
visitation, neither parent receives services, and the circuit court may
terminate its jurisdiction over the child.

    Under the second option, the non-offending parent assumes custody
subject to the circuit court’s continuing jurisdiction, during which the
circuit court may order that services be provided to either parent or both,
with the circuit court later determining which parent shall have custody
of the child.

   Our conclusion that section 39.521(3)(b)’s use of the phrase “may do
either” logically can be interpreted only as “may do either but not both” is
consistent with the Fifth District’s conclusion on this issue. In K.E. v.
Department of Children and Families, 958 So. 2d 968 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007),
our sister court summarized section 39.521(3)(b) as follows:

      [O]nce the trial court decides to place the dependent child with
      a non-offending parent, it may do one of two things: it may
      order the non-offending parent to assume sole custodial
      responsibility and terminate its jurisdiction over the child, or
      the court may place the child with the non-offending parent,
      provide services to one or both parents, and retain jurisdiction
      to determine the better placement for the child as the
      dependency progresses.

Id. at 971 (emphasis added).

   Our conclusion that 39.521(3)(b)’s use of the phrase “may do either”
logically can be interpreted only as “may do either but not both,” also is
consistent with common sense. By terminating jurisdiction while ordering
the mother to complete a case plan, the court lacked any mechanism to
oversee the mother’s completion of the case plan. The circuit court initially
appeared to understand the lack of logic to such an outcome, commenting
“there really is no bite” if the circuit court were to terminate jurisdiction
while ordering the mother to complete a case plan.

   It appears the Department’s response to the circuit court’s question on
this issue led the circuit court astray, by convincing the circuit court that

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the mother’s attempt to complete the case plan without court supervision
would aid the mother in regaining custody at a later date. While ordering
the mother to complete a case plan without court supervision may have
been intended to aid the mother, such an order nevertheless lacked
statutory authority once the court placed the child with the father and
terminated jurisdiction.

   In the answer brief, the Department, perhaps sensing the possibility of
error, nevertheless argues that any error was harmless because “[the
circuit court’s] approval of the maintain and strengthen case plan only
benefitted the Mother. Also, because the [circuit] court terminated
supervision and jurisdiction, the Mother is not legally obligated to comply
with the services and tasks provided for her in the approved maintain and
strengthen case plan if she does not wish to do so.” (internal citations
omitted).

   We conclude the error was not harmless. After the circuit court placed
the child with the father and terminated jurisdiction, the circuit court
plainly lacked the statutory authority to order the mother to complete a
case plan. The case plan order also may have been confusing to the
mother, because the order was premised on the unsubstantiated
suggestion that completing the case plan, without the circuit court’s
supervision, would assist the mother to obtain a future modification from
a different court. Cf. A.L. v. Dep’t of Children & Families, 53 So. 3d 324,
328 (Fla. 5th DCA 2010) (“[T]he possibility of a future modification is not
an excuse for utilizing confusing goals and procedures and failing to allow
a parent a reasonable opportunity to complete a case plan.”).

   2. After the Circuit Court Removed the Child from the Mother, the
      Circuit Court Lacked Statutory Authority to Require the
      Mother to Complete a “Maintain and Strengthen” Case Plan

   If the circuit court had correctly followed its initial instinct to keep
jurisdiction in order to require the mother to complete a case plan, then
the court nevertheless lacked the statutory authority to require the mother
to complete a “maintain and strengthen” case plan after having removed
the child from the mother and placing the child with the father.

   Section 39.621(2), Florida Statutes (2018), authorizes a “maintain and
strengthen” case plan in only three circumstances:

      (a) If a child has not been removed from a parent, even if
      adjudication of dependency is withheld, the court may leave

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      the child in the current placement with maintaining and
      strengthening the placement as a permanency option.

      (b) If a child has been removed from a parent and is placed
      with the parent from whom the child was not removed, the
      court may leave the child in the placement with the parent
      from whom the child was not removed with maintaining and
      strengthening the placement as a permanency option.

      (c) If a child has been removed from a parent and is
      subsequently reunified with that parent, the court may leave
      the child with that parent with maintaining and strengthening
      the placement as a permanency option.

§ 39.621(2), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphasis added).

   Here, subsection (2)(a) does not apply because the child had been
removed from the mother. Subsection (2)(c) does not apply because the
child has not been reunified with the mother.

   That leaves subsection (2)(b). Subsection (2)(b)’s first clause initially
appears tempting as a means to order a “maintain and strengthen” case
plan for the mother, as subsection (2)(b) may be applied “[i]f a child has
been removed from a parent and is placed with the parent from whom the
child was not removed,” which occurred here.

    However, subsection (2)(b)’s second clause does not provide the means
to order a “maintain and strengthen” case plan for the mother. The second
clause provides that “the court may leave the child in the placement with
the parent from whom the child was not removed with maintaining and
strengthening the placement as a permanency option.” Applied here,
subsection (2)(b)’s second clause authorizes a “maintain and strengthen”
case plan for the father, because the child has been placed with the father,
not with the mother.

   Thus, if the circuit court’s intent was to require the mother to complete
a case plan after having placed the child with the father, the court lacked
statutory authority to order a “maintain and strengthen” case plan for the
mother. Rather, a case plan in the form which the court ordered –
requiring the mother to complete parenting classes, maintain safe and
stable housing, complete domestic violence therapy and education,
complete a mental health evaluation and any recommended treatment,
and visit her case manager at least once per week – may have been better
couched as a “reunification” case plan.

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                               Conclusion

   Based on the foregoing, we reverse the circuit court’s “Order of
Adjudication, Disposition, Acceptance of Case Plan, and Termination of
Supervision and Jurisdiction.” On remand, if the circuit court maintains
its decision to have the child placed with the father and terminate
jurisdiction, then the circuit court shall not order the mother to complete
a case plan. However, if the circuit court’s intent is to require the mother
to complete a case plan, then the circuit court must maintain jurisdiction
and oversee a case plan permitted under Chapter 39. In reaching our
decision, we take no position on which action the circuit court should
pursue.

   Reversed and remanded.

TAYLOR and KUNTZ, JJ., concur.

                           *         *         *

   Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

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