Court Opinion

ID: 9945382
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-27 19:08:02.716398+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:25:28.022838
License: Public Domain

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by
                          Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

                                 STATE OF MINNESOTA
                                 IN COURT OF APPEALS
                                       A23-1227

              In the Matter of the Welfare of the Children of: M. M. M., Parent.

                                  Filed February 26, 2024
                                         Affirmed
                                      Wheelock, Judge

                               Hennepin County District Court
                                  File No. 27-JV-23-410

Brooke Beskau Warg, Hennepin County Adult Representation Services, Minneapolis,
Minnesota (for appellant A.A.A.)

Mary F. Moriarty, Hennepin County Attorney, Mary M. Lynch, Senior Assistant County
Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent Hennepin County Human Services)

Gemma Kirk, Minneapolis, Minnesota (guardian ad litem)

         Considered and decided by Slieter, Presiding Judge; Johnson, Judge; and Wheelock,

Judge.

                            NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

WHEELOCK, Judge

         In this appeal from the district court’s termination of his parental rights to three

children, appellant father argues that (1) he is entitled to reversal and remand because

service of notice of the admit-deny hearing by publication was not reasonably calculated

to reach him and thus violated his right to due process and (2) the evidence does not clearly

and convincingly establish that the department made reasonable efforts to rehabilitate him

and reunify him with the children. We affirm.
                                            FACTS

       Appellant father, A.A.A., is the adjudicated father of G.A.A. and the presumed

father of N.S.A. and T.M.A. (collectively, the children). Mother, M.M.M., was the

children’s sole legal and physical custodian until they were placed in foster care, and father

was not actively involved in the children’s care at that time. At the time father’s parental

rights to the children were terminated in May 2023, all three were under the age of five.

       Respondent Hennepin County Human Services (the department) filed a petition

requesting that the district court adjudicate the children as children in need of protection or

services (CHIPS) in November 2021. Because the department did not have an address for

father and believed he was living out of state, the department served father by publication.

       Shortly after the department filed the CHIPS petition, the children were placed in

relative foster care pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 260C.193, subd. 3 (2022), and the department

initiated a case plan for father. The assigned social worker reviewed the case plan with

father. Father’s case plan required him to meet with the social worker so that his needs

could be assessed for appropriate services; submit to random urinalysis tests to verify his

sobriety; after 30 days of verified sobriety, complete a combined parenting and

psychological assessment and follow recommendations pursuant to that assessment;

cooperate with the department and sign releases of information; obtain safe and suitable

housing for the children; establish paternity; and visit the children. In July 2022, the district

court adjudicated the children CHIPS because, as relevant to father, he was not involved

in caring for the children, the department could not locate him despite diligent efforts, and

he was not complying with his case plan.

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       In February 2023, the department filed a termination-of-parental-rights (TPR)

petition in which it alleged that father was “reportedly residing out of state.” Following a

hearing, the district court ordered father to appear in person for the admit-deny hearing and

noted that the department planned to serve him by publication. Pursuant to Minn. R. Juv.

Prot. P. 16.02, subd. 3, the department filed an affidavit of diligent efforts to locate father

stating that an attempt to serve him at his last known address in Illinois had failed, that the

department had conducted multiple searches, and that some searches returned no address

at all while other searches returned only former addresses, including one in Minneapolis,

Minnesota, one in Las Vegas, Nevada, and two in Illinois. The district court ordered

service by publication, but the record does not indicate that the district court explicitly

approved a location for service as the rule requires. To accomplish service on father, the

department published the summons and notice of the admit-deny hearing in Finance &

Commerce, a daily newspaper of general circulation in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

       Father did not appear at the admit-deny hearing on the TPR petition, and the

department moved the district court to proceed by default pursuant to Minn. R. Juv. Prot.

P. 18.01. Counsel for father appeared at the hearing and objected to proceeding by default,

on the grounds that father had emailed her earlier that week but did not respond when she

called him back. Father’s counsel then requested that the district court allow father to cure

the default by voluntarily terminating his parental rights and that the district court give

father an opportunity to file the necessary document to do so. Counsel for father did not

request a continuance of the hearing or object on the basis of ineffective service. The social

worker testified that she had spoken with father about the hearing earlier that week and had

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encouraged him to contact his attorney to discuss appearing remotely if he was still out of

state. She also testified that she had ensured he had access to a working cell phone and an

internet connection to attend the hearing.

       The district court granted the department’s motion to proceed by default but agreed

that father could cure the default by submitting voluntary-termination paperwork within

one week; it later extended the time for father to file that paperwork by an additional ten

days. The admit-deny hearing proceeded, and the department presented testimony from

the social worker and the guardian ad litem in support of the TPR petition.

       The social worker testified that father reportedly had engaged in some

chemical-health treatment in Chicago shortly after the children were adjudicated CHIPS,

but she was unable to verify that father completed outpatient treatment because father did

not provide releases of information for the treatment facilities. She tried to arrange

urinalysis tests in Chicago multiple times, but father’s frequent moves complicated these

efforts. She gave father the option to work with providers of his choosing and sign releases

for urinalysis test results, but father did not comply with those requests.

       The social worker also testified that she had been able to meet with father in person

only three times in the nearly one and a half years since the CHIPS petition had been filed,

that phone calls and text-message contact with him were sporadic, and that father had not

met with the children during that entire time despite being offered in-person or virtual

visitation at his convenience. He had been working as an over-the-road truck driver and

had been out of state in Illinois, Georgia, and Wisconsin at various times during the

proceedings. In addition, father had not consistently provided information about where he

                                              4
was living, and the department had never been able to serve him personally with any

petitions or documents. The social worker also testified that father had an active warrant

for his arrest in Minnesota. She said that she had attempted to assess father’s ability to care

for the children, but he never completed a mental-health and parenting assessment, even

though the department paid for the assessment and arranged for it to take place in Illinois,

where father was believed to be living at the time.

       Father’s communication with the social worker was “tangential,” “rambling,” and

sometimes threatening. He did not inquire with the social worker or the children’s foster

parents about the children’s well-being, instead expressing his frustration and anger about

the case. He equivocated as to his position on the termination of his parental rights, at

times suggesting that he would voluntarily terminate his rights and that the children were

in a good place with their foster parents and at other times stating that he wanted to “fight

for” the children. In addition, the guardian ad litem who was appointed between the CHIPS

adjudication and the TPR proceedings testified that she never had been able to contact

father successfully during her time working on the case.

       After the admit-deny hearing, father never submitted voluntary-termination

paperwork, notwithstanding his counsel’s request, and the district court ultimately filed an

order terminating father’s parental rights as to all three children. In its order, the district

court found that father had notice of the admit-deny hearing and was served by publication.

The district court made extensive factual findings about the department’s efforts to

rehabilitate father and reunite him with the children and about father’s hindrance of those

                                              5
efforts. Father did not move for amended findings or a new trial after the district court

filed its order.

       Father appeals.

                                         DECISION

       Father argues that the district court’s order terminating his parental rights should be

reversed and remanded because the district court (1) violated his right to due process by

allowing service by publication that was not reasonably calculated to reach him and

(2) erred by finding that the evidence clearly and convincingly established that the

department made reasonable efforts to rehabilitate father and reunite him with the children.

I.     Father forfeited his argument that service was ineffective by failing to raise it
       in district court.

       Father first argues that his right to due process was violated because he was not

properly served with notice of the admit-deny hearing in the TPR proceedings. 1 He does

not challenge the district court’s decision to approve service by publication; rather, he

argues only that service by publication in a Minneapolis newspaper was ineffective because

1
  Father suggests that the allegedly ineffective service resulted in part from the district
court’s failure to set a location for service by publication as required by Minn. R. Juv. Prot.
P. 16.02, subd. 3. While the record does not indicate that the district court explicitly set a
location, father’s failure to object precludes appellate review. See Scroggins v. Solchaga,
552 N.W.2d 248, 253 (Minn. App. 1996) (“On appeal of a default judgment, the party in
default may not . . . raise procedural irregularities not raised below, if adequate relief was
available by motion to the district court.”), rev. denied (Minn. Oct. 29, 1996). We note,
however, that rule 16.02, subdivision 3, states that “[s]ervice by publication shall be
completed in a location approved by the court.” While we may infer that the district court
approved the location because it found that the department accomplished service by
publication, it is a better practice for the district court to approve the location expressly on
the record.
                                               6
he was not living in Minnesota and thus it was not reasonably calculated to reach him.

Father acknowledges that he did not raise this issue to the district court but asserts that it is

properly before this court under the modified scope of review that applies when no posttrial

motion is made; in the alternative, he asks us to review it in the interest of justice.

Therefore, we first address whether the question of service of notice is properly before us

on these facts.

       Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection Procedure 21.03 and 22.02 direct a party

seeking relief from a final order to move the district court for relief via amended findings,

a new trial, or “such other relief as may be just.” When no posttrial motion is made, the

scope of our review is limited to “whether the evidence sustains the findings of fact[,]

whether such findings sustain the conclusions of law and the judgment,” and “substantive

legal questions . . . properly raised during trial.”     In re Welfare of Child of S.S.W.,

767 N.W.2d 723, 733 (Minn. 2009) (quotation omitted). A posttrial motion “gives the

court time to consider the context of the objection and the effect the error may have had on

the outcome of the case.” Alpha Real Est. Co. of Rochester v. Delta Dental Plan of Minn.,

664 N.W.2d 303, 310 (Minn. 2003). “This permits the court to more fully develop the

record for appellate review or to correct its own mistake and alleviate the need for appellate

review.” Id.

       Here, to the extent father’s argument implicates a question of law, he did not raise

it to the district court at the time the parties discussed the method of service; before or after

the notice was published; or at trial by default, when father’s counsel objected to

proceeding with the admit-deny hearing. Because father did not raise the issue, we

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conclude that he forfeited his argument about whether publication in a Minneapolis

newspaper was reasonably calculated to reach him.            See In re Welfare of C.L.L.,

310 N.W.2d 555, 557 (Minn. 1981) (declining, in a TPR appeal, to address a constitutional

argument made for the first time on appeal); State v. Vasko, 889 N.W.2d 551, 559 n.6

(Minn. 2017) (citing C.L.L.).

       Father nevertheless argues that we should exercise our discretion to grant relief

under Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 103.04, which permits us to review and decide matters that

were not raised in the district court “as the interest of justice may require.” We consider

several factors when determining whether to exercise our discretion under rule 103.04,

including whether doing so would prejudice other parties. See Miller v. Soo Line R.R. Co.,

925 N.W.2d 642, 653 (Minn. App. 2019).

       Here, remanding to the district court to address the propriety of service would only

cause further delay, contravening the legislature’s clear mandate that the best interests of

the children are paramount in juvenile-protection proceedings.             See Minn. Stat.

§§ 260.012(a), 260C.001, subds. 2(a), 3, 260C.301, subd. 7 (2022); In re Welfare of Child

of A.M.C., 920 N.W.2d 648, 661 (Minn. App. 2018) (stating that the child’s “paramount

best interests . . . would not be advanced by further delay of a safe and permanent

placement”); In re Welfare of S.R.A., 527 N.W.2d 835, 839 (Minn. App. 1995) (stating that

“the best interests of this child outweigh the technical violation of appellant’s right to due

process”), rev. denied (Minn. Mar. 29, 1995).

       At the time of the district court’s order terminating father’s parental rights, the

children had been out of the home without a permanent placement for more than 500 days.

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And in making its decision to allow the TPR hearing to proceed by default, the district

court explicitly recognized that the children had been in out-of-home placement for a

lengthy time, stating that father was “well aware” of the pending matters in the CHIPS and

TPR proceedings and had “multiple opportunities” to appear at hearings and be in contact

with the department. 2 We conclude that the interest of justice would not be served by

allowing further delay, and we therefore decline to remand this issue for factual findings

and a determination by the district court as to whether service was proper.

II.    The district court did not err by determining that the department made
       reasonable efforts to rehabilitate father and reunite him with the children.

       Next, father argues that the department failed to provide clear and convincing

evidence that it made reasonable efforts to rehabilitate him and reunite him with the

children. Rule 21.03 provides:

              [t]he question of sufficiency of the evidence to support the
              findings may be raised whether or not the party raising the
              question has made in the district court an objection to the
              findings or has made a motion to amend the order.

Minn. R. Juv. Prot. P. 21.03; see also S.S.W., 767 N.W.2d at 733 (stating that when no

posttrial motion is made, the scope of our review includes “whether the evidence sustains

the findings of fact and whether such findings sustain the conclusions of law and the

judgment” (quotation omitted)). Therefore, a party does not forfeit a challenge to the

2
  We note that Minn. R. Juv. Prot. P. 32.03 provides that “[i]t shall be the responsibility of
each party to inform the court administrator of any change of address.” Because the parties
did not raise the issue to the district court and do not raise it on appeal, we do not consider
the effect an interested party’s failure to comply with this rule might have on the issues in
this appeal.
                                              9
sufficiency of the evidence in a juvenile-protection matter when they do not object or move

for amended findings of fact in district court. Minn. R. Juv. Prot. P. 21.03. However, the

preferred procedure would have been for father to file a posttrial motion in district court

for amended findings pursuant to rule 21.03. See Bliss v. Bliss, 493 N.W.2d 583, 589

(Minn. App. 1992) (stating that posttrial motions for amended findings are encouraged

even when they are not mandatory).

       On appeal from an order terminating parental rights, we “closely inquire into the

sufficiency of the evidence to determine whether it was clear and convincing.” In re

Welfare of Child of J.K.T., 814 N.W.2d 76, 87 (Minn. App. 2012) (quotation omitted).

“Ultimately, however, we review the factual findings for clear error . . . .” Id. “A finding

is clearly erroneous if it is manifestly contrary to the weight of the evidence or not

reasonably supported by the evidence as a whole.” Id. (quotation omitted). We address

father’s sufficiency claim with this standard in mind.

       A district court may order the termination of parental rights when (1) there is “at

least one statutory ground for termination,” (2) the “termination is in the best interests of

the child,” and (3) the department “has made reasonable efforts to reunite the family.” 3 In

re Welfare of Child. of S.E.P., 744 N.W.2d 381, 385 (Minn. 2008) (citations omitted).

When determining whether the department made reasonable efforts to reunite the family,

the district court considers whether services to the family were

                     (1) selected in collaboration with the child’s family and,
              if appropriate, the child;

3
 Alternatively, a district court may determine that reasonable efforts are not required.
Minn. Stat. § 260C.301, subd. 8 (2022).
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                     (2) tailored to the individualized needs of the child and
              child’s family;
                     (3) relevant to the safety, protection, and well-being of
              the child;
                     (4) adequate to meet the individualized needs of the
              child and family;
                     (5) culturally appropriate;
                     (6) available and accessible;
                     (7) consistent and timely; and
                     (8) realistic under the circumstances.

Minn. Stat. § 260.012(h) (2022). In making this determination, “the child’s best interests,

health, and safety must be of paramount concern.” Minn. Stat. § 260.012(a).

       Father argues that there is little or no evidence in the record that the services

provided were culturally appropriate, the case plan was jointly developed with father, the

services were provided in a timely manner, or the department provided services to help

father secure safe and stable housing. To obtain relief on appeal, a party must show both

error and prejudice. Midway Ctr. Assocs. v. Midway Ctr., Inc., 237 N.W.2d 76, 78 (Minn.

1975); In re Welfare of Child. of J.B., 698 N.W.2d 160, 166 (Minn. App. 2005) (citing this

aspect of Midway Center in a child-protection matter).

       Contrary to father’s assertion, the record here amply supports the district court’s

determination that the department made reasonable efforts. “What constitutes reasonable

efforts depends on the facts of each case.” A.M.C., 920 N.W.2d at 663 (quotation omitted).

The evidence before the district court demonstrated that the department made reasonable

efforts to evaluate father’s ability to parent the children and to address his substance use.

The department accommodated his frequent moves by offering services outside Minnesota

and coordinating remote visitation with the children, but father did not avail himself of

                                             11
these services or meet the reasonable requirements of his case plan. Instead, father evaded

the department’s continuous efforts to assist him. We therefore conclude that the record

contains sufficient evidence that the department made reasonable efforts.

       In sum, because father failed to object to the method of service of notice or file a

posttrial motion, he forfeited his argument about notice, and because we are not persuaded

to review that issue in the interest of justice, we decline to grant relief on that basis. And

because the district court’s determination that the department made reasonable efforts to

rehabilitate father and reunite him with the children is based on clear and convincing

evidence in the record, the evidence is sufficient, and we affirm the district court’s

termination of father’s parental rights.

       Affirmed.

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