Court Opinion

ID: 9953365
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-21 21:14:44.731661+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:46:01.122079
License: Public Domain

2024 UT App 34

                THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

      IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF J.E., E.E., AND L.E.,
             PERSONS UNDER EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE.

                               K.E.,
                            Appellant,
                                 v.
                         K.M.L. AND L.L.L.,
                            Appellees.

                             Opinion
                        No. 20230162-CA
                       Filed March 14, 2024

          Third District Court, West Jordan Department
                 The Honorable Matthew Bates
                          No. 222900154

             Julie J. Nelson and Alexandra Mareschal,
                       Attorneys for Appellant
            Bradley A. Schmidt, Attorney for Appellees

  JUDGE DAVID N. MORTENSEN authored this Opinion, in which
     JUDGES RYAN D. TENNEY and JOHN D. LUTHY concurred.

MORTENSEN, Judge:

¶1      In connection with an adoption proceeding brought in
district court, the rights of a biological father were terminated. The
father now claims on appeal that the district court relied
impermissibly on generalized concerns of his minor children’s
need for permanence and that our recent decision in In re L.L.B.,
2023 UT App 66, 532 P.3d 592, compels reversal here. We agree
with the father and reverse.
                             In re J.E.

                        BACKGROUND

¶2     KML 1 (Mother) and KE (Father) have two minor children, 2
who are the subject of this appeal—EE, age sixteen, and LE, age
thirteen. For much of the children’s lives, Father has been
incarcerated. As relevant here, from 2013 to 2018, Father was
incarcerated. During that period, his time with EE and LE
“consisted of, at most, a weekly visit” with them at the prison.

¶3     In 2018, Father was released from prison on parole.
Sometime during this same period, Mother and Father divorced
and Mother married LLL (Stepfather). According to Father, after
the divorce, the parent-time arrangement allowed him visits
every other weekend. But Father saw EE and LE only once in the
summer of 2018. Beyond that visit, Father says he “tried to”
exercise his parent-time four times, but that each time he went to
Mother’s home for the exchange as required by the divorce
decree, Stepfather told him the decree required Father to text
Mother. Father disputes the texting requirement. The final time
Father attempted to visit the children, he found that they had
moved and the “house was empty.” Mother had not given him an
updated address or contact information. Father notified the law
enforcement officers whom Mother and Father used to
communicate with one another.

1. Regarding this opinion’s omission of periods following initials,
see A.W. v. Marelli, 2024 UT App 8, ¶ 1 n.1. This practice is
consistent with The Chicago Manual of Style, which states that if
“an entire name is abbreviated, spaces and periods can usually be
omitted.” The Chicago Manual of Style Online ¶ 10.12 (17th ed.
2017).

2. A third child, JE, was initially a part of these proceedings but
has since turned eighteen and is no longer included.

 20230162-CA                     2               2024 UT App 34
                             In re J.E.

¶4      In January 2020, Father returned to prison because of a
parole violation, and he remained there until December of that
same year. Following his release, he tried contacting Mother, but
when he called the “last phone number [he] had with her[,] . . .
there was nothing.” He asked his family to help him contact
Mother, but they had no way to reach her either. Father returned
to prison in November 2021 because of another parole violation.
While incarcerated, he tried to call the children but still did not
have updated contact information. Father says he also wrote
letters for the children but did not send them because he did not
have a current address for Mother.

¶5     In April 2022, Mother and Stepfather petitioned the district
court for termination of Father’s parental rights and Stepfather’s
adoption of the children. The court bifurcated the proceedings
and, following a hearing in November 2022, determined that
Father met the statutory ground of abandonment for termination
of parental rights.

¶6      In January 2023, during a second evidentiary hearing, the
district court determined that it was in the best interest of EE and
LE to terminate Father’s parental rights. The court determined
that the children presently had “no relationship” with Father.
Both children testified that they had “no memory of him, and they
would not recognize him if they saw him.” The court also
determined that for the last four years, Stepfather had “assumed
the role of natural father” to the children, including socializing
with them, playing with them, attending their school and
extracurricular activities, assisting with their schoolwork, and
caring for them, such as by driving them places and making them
meals. Both EE and LE “testified to the strong emotional bond”
they had with Stepfather and their desire to be adopted by him,
which the court gave some weight in consideration of their ages.
The court also determined that the “destruction of the relationship
between the children and [Father’s] extended family . . . [was] due
to [Mother’s] failure to respond to efforts” made by the family to

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                              In re J.E.

see the children. The court determined that Mother was “not
supportive of the relationship between the children and [Father’s]
family.” During the hearing, Father requested reconsideration of
the court’s abandonment finding. The court took new evidence on
the issue but ultimately did not alter its finding and terminated
Father’s parental rights.

¶7      In February 2023, the district court held a hearing
concerning Stepfather’s adoption of EE and LE, during which
Father asked the court to stay the adoption pending appeal.
Following arguments from each party, the district court
proceeded with the adoption, determining that it was “in the best
interests of the [children] that [the] adoption go forward.”

¶8     Father appeals.

             ISSUE AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

¶9     On appeal, Father argues that the district court erred by
deciding that termination of Father’s parental rights was in the
best interest of EE and LE. “Whether a parent’s rights should be
terminated presents a mixed question of law and fact.” In re B.R.,
2007 UT 82, ¶ 12, 171 P.3d 435. “A lower court’s best-interest
ruling is reviewed deferentially,” but we do not limit our review
to considering whether any relevant facts have been left out; we
also “assess whether the court’s determination that the clear and
convincing standard had been met goes against the clear weight
of the evidence.” In re L.L.B., 2023 UT App 66, ¶ 16, 532 P.3d 592
(cleaned up).

                            ANALYSIS

¶10 “The right of parents to raise their children is one of the
most important rights any person enjoys.” In re D.S., 2023 UT App
98, ¶ 16, 535 P.3d 843 (cleaned up), cert. granted, Jan. 25, 2024 (No.

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                               In re J.E.

20230877). Before terminating parental rights, a district court must
find that (1) “one or more of the statutory grounds for termination
are present” and (2) “termination of the parent’s rights is in the
best interests of the child.” In re L.L.B., 2023 UT App 66, ¶ 17, 532
P.3d 592 (cleaned up). A district court “must make both of these
findings . . . by clear and convincing evidence and the burden of
proof rests with the petitioner.” Id. (cleaned up). Father has not
challenged the district court’s ruling that statutory grounds for
termination existed, so we turn to the best-interest analysis.

¶11 Our supreme court recently determined that a “court must
start the best interest analysis from the legislatively mandated
position that wherever possible, family life should be
strengthened and preserved.” In re B.T.B., 2020 UT 60, ¶ 66, 472
P.3d 827 (cleaned up). 3 Relying nearly entirely on In re L.L.B., 2023

3. In the same case, our supreme court determined that a court
may terminate parental rights only “when it concludes that a
different option is in the child’s best interest and that termination
is strictly necessary to facilitate that option.” In re B.T.B., 2020 UT
60, ¶ 66, 472 P.3d 827 (emphasis added). The district court here
made the legal determination that the legislature intended a
strictly necessary requirement to apply to the Utah Adoption Act
(UAA) for district courts. Yet, the court did not make any
subsidiary findings or give reasoned analysis as to whether
termination was strictly necessary here; instead, it simply noted
in the order’s conclusion that it was strictly necessary to terminate
Father’s rights to allow the adoption to proceed. Both parties
make arguments on appeal whether the district court erred in this
conclusion but neither addresses whether the strictly necessary
requirement is even appropriate to apply.
         The UAA applies to district courts and reads as follows:
“The district court may terminate an individual’s parental rights
in a child if . . . the individual’s parental rights are terminated on
grounds described in Title 80, Chapter 4, Termination and
                                                         (continued…)

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                               In re J.E.

UT App 66, 532 P.3d 592, a recent decision from our court in which
we reversed the termination of a father’s parental rights, Father
argues that the court erred when it determined that termination
and adoption was in the best interest of EE and LE. Father does
not claim that the court’s findings were erroneous; instead, he
asserts that the facts taken together do not support the court’s
ruling. “The best-interest inquiry is intended as a holistic
examination of all of the relevant circumstances that might affect
a child’s situation.” Id. ¶ 21 (cleaned up); see also In re D.S., 2023
UT App 98, ¶ 18 (“The best-interest inquiry is wide-ranging and
asks a court to weigh the entirety of the circumstances of a child’s

Restoration of Parental Rights, and termination is in the best
interests of the child.” Utah Code § 78B-6-112(5)(e).
        Comparatively, the Termination of Parental Rights Act
applies to juvenile courts and reads as follows: “[I]f the juvenile
court finds termination of parental rights, from the child’s point
of view, is strictly necessary, the juvenile court may terminate all
parental rights with respect to the parent if the juvenile court finds
any one of the [listed grounds for termination].” Id. § 80-4-301(1)
(emphasis added).
        The case in which our supreme court stated that the best
interest of the child analysis includes the strictly necessary
requirement was an appeal from juvenile court. See In re B.T.B.,
2020 UT 60, ¶ 1. The supreme court has not yet addressed whether
this analysis also applies to appeals from a district court—
particularly given the absence of the “strictly necessary” language
in the UAA.
        Our court recently acknowledged, but did not answer, this
same question in In re L.L.B. when it determined that it did not
need to address the issue because “even without considering the
strictly necessary part of the best-interest analysis . . . there [was]
not clear and convincing evidence supporting the district court’s
conclusion that termination of Father’s parental rights was in [the
child’s] best interest.” 2023 UT App 66, ¶ 18, 532 P.3d 592. We
conclude the same and will not address the issue further.

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                              In re J.E.

situation . . . .” (cleaned up)). A district court undertakes this
analysis from the child’s perspective and must consider the
child’s “physical, intellectual, social, moral, and educational
training and general welfare and happiness.” In re L.L.B., 2023 UT
App 66, ¶ 21 (cleaned up). To support his argument that the
district court erred, Father argues that the “facts and legal analysis
are almost identical” between his case and In re L.L.B. This is an
overstatement of the cases’ factual parallels, and we are quick to
point out where the two cases diverge; however, we still conclude
that In re L.L.B. is factually similar enough to be helpful in
reaching our ultimate conclusion that the district court did err.

¶12 In In re L.L.B., like the situation in the case before us, the
district court terminated the father’s rights in order to allow a
stepfather to adopt a child. Id. ¶ 15. Our court reversed. Id. ¶ 35.

¶13 In that case, less than a week after the birth of his child, the
father left due to a drug relapse. Id. ¶ 2. Over the course of the
next year, the father saw the child only twice. Id. A paternity
agreement then granted the mother sole custody and awarded
parent-time to the father. Id. ¶ 3. Three years later, the mother
married the stepfather, with whom she and the child lived from
that point on. Id. ¶ 4. For approximately five years, the father used
his parent-time, but then the parents got into an argument. Id.
Around that same time, the father and child were in a four-
wheeling accident, which the mother suspected had been caused
by the father’s alcohol use. Id. In the months that followed, the
father’s parent-time was supervised because the mother was
concerned that he was using drugs and alcohol around the child.
Id.

¶14 About two years later, the mother and stepfather filed a
petition in district court for termination of the father’s parental
rights and the stepfather’s adoption of the child. Id. ¶ 5. At trial,
the mother testified that in the nearly two-year period leading up
to the proceedings, the father had attempted to contact the child

 20230162-CA                      7                2024 UT App 34
                               In re J.E.

only twice. Id. ¶ 7. She also testified that he was severely behind
on child support payments, and he had never been involved in
the child’s education. Id. The guardian ad litem testified that the
child did not have a relationship with the father due to his absence
and that, in contrast, the stepfather was “an excellent father” who
had a “great bond” with the child. Id. ¶ 13 (cleaned up). Over the
course of the case, the father relapsed, went to jail, and got sober.
Id. ¶ 12. At the time of trial, he had a job and was again paying
child support. Id.

¶15 The mother admitted that since filing the termination
petition, she had not responded to the father’s requests to see the
child. Id. ¶ 7. The father’s mother testified that she had tried “to
stay in contact” with the child but had “difficulty getting
responses” from the mother. Id. ¶ 9. After the termination petition
had been filed, the father had seen the child once and had written
letters to the mother, sent a gift, and emailed the child. Id. ¶ 11.

¶16 The district court concluded that the child deserved a
“healthy, stable family relationship” with the stepfather, who was
the child’s father figure, and that it was in the child’s best interest
for the adoption to go forward. Id. ¶ 15 (cleaned up). Because the
adoption could not occur without termination of the father’s
parental rights, the district court determined “by clear and
convincing evidence that it [was] ‘strictly necessary’” to terminate
the father’s rights. Id. Our court reversed because the district
court’s conclusion that termination was in the child’s best interest
went “against the clear weight of the evidence.” Id. ¶ 34. We will
discuss some of the applicable reasoning from In re L.L.B. in our
ensuing analysis.

¶17 Here, the district court based its decision that termination
was in the best interest of EE and LE primarily on two categorical
concerns. First, the court stated that the children needed
permanency by reasoning that it was “in the best interest of the
children to have a normal family life and a permanent home and

 20230162-CA                       8                2024 UT App 34
                               In re J.E.

to have a positive nurturing family relationship with a mother
and father.” Second, the court reasoned that Father’s absence
while incarcerated required termination of his rights because
“weekly visits at the prison . . . are not an adequate substitute to a
father in the home and do little to maintain the bond between
parent and child.” But categorical concerns such as these are not
enough to overcome the legislative presumption that it is in the
best interest of children to be raised by their natural parents. We
now address why these concerns are insufficient grounds to
terminate Father’s rights.

                           I. Permanency

¶18 “As our supreme court has explained, categorical concerns
about the lack of permanence of an option other than adoption are
not enough, otherwise termination and adoption would be strictly
necessary across the board.” In re L.L.B., 2023 UT App 66, ¶ 23, 532
P.3d 592 (cleaned up). Just as in In re L.L.B., while we understand
the concern about what Stepfather’s legal rights may be regarding
the children if Mother dies or Mother and Stepfather divorce, 4 this
concern is present in many termination cases, and it does not lead
us to the conclusion here “that termination of a parent’s rights is
in the [children’s] best interest.” Id.

4. The legislature might wish to consider that our court frequently
sees this issue raised by stepparents who are concerned over what
their legal role will be in a child’s life if their spouse—the child’s
natural parent—dies. A statute addresses this concern for
grandparents, but no such legal protections exist for stepparents.
See Utah Code § 30-5-2(4); see also In re S.T.T., 2006 UT 46, ¶ 30, 144
P.3d 1083 (upholding the statute recognizing that the death of one
parent creates potential conflict between the surviving parent and
the “in-law” grandparents and, accordingly, providing “an
avenue for grandparents and grandchildren to maintain their
relationship” through visitation rights).

 20230162-CA                       9                2024 UT App 34
                              In re J.E.

¶19 Relatedly, Father argues that the district court erred
because it did not find that “the present quality of the [c]hildren’s
relationship with Stepfather would be changed by adoption.” We
agree and see no evidence on the record that—excluding a
tragedy like Mother’s death—the adoption will change the living
situation or custody of the children. The absence of such a change
“is a factor that may weigh against termination in some cases.” In
re B.T.B., 2018 UT App 157, ¶ 56, 436 P.3d 206 (cleaned up), aff’d,
2020 UT 60, 472 P.3d 827. Just as in In re L.L.B., we see no findings
from the district court that EE and LE’s “current living situation
[is] not healthy and stable” or that their living situation will
change in any way if Stepfather does not adopt them. See 2023 UT
App 66, ¶ 27. Indeed, we see no evidence, or even an assertion,
that Stepfather’s love, care, or attachment would change in the
absence of an adoption decree.

¶20 Thus, the categorical concern of stability and permanency
does not support the court’s decision to terminate Father’s
parental rights.

                          II. Incarceration

¶21 Because Father has been in and out of prison for much of
the children’s lives, the district court relied on the categorical
concern of his incarceration to support its termination decision.
While it is true that it is much harder for incarcerated parents to
be engaged in their children’s lives, the legislature’s policy that
we must begin with an assumption that it is in the best interest of
children “to be raised under the care and supervision of [their]
natural parents” does not support a categorical rule that
incarcerated parents’ rights should be terminated. In re D.S., 2023
UT App 98, ¶ 18, 535 P.3d 843 (cleaned up), cert. granted, Jan. 25,
2024 (No. 20230877). In In re D.S., our court recently reversed a
juvenile court’s termination of parental rights in the case of a
father who was incarcerated at the time. Id. ¶ 33. The father there
expressed “a desire to have a stronger relationship” with his

 20230162-CA                     10               2024 UT App 34
                               In re J.E.

children. Id. ¶ 11 (cleaned up). This court determined that “a
parent’s desire to build and maintain—coupled with efforts to
actually maintain—a meaningful relationship with a child is a
factor that will often weigh in favor of . . . a determination that it
is in the child’s best interest to keep the relationship intact.” Id.
¶ 27. Our court also explained that the father’s desire to have
visitation with his children upon his release should also be
“viewed positively” in the best-interest inquiry. Id.

¶22 Here, Father is currently incarcerated and has not, at the
present, turned his life around like the father in In re L.L.B, 2023
UT App 66, ¶ 30, 532 P.3d 592. However, Father has expressed
that he misses the children and has a desire to “support them in
their daily lives, their school, [and] their personal affairs.” Father
said that he is “glad that they are living a decent” life, but he still
wants to be a part of that life. We acknowledge and credit Father’s
desire to build a relationship with the children despite his
incarceration. Additionally, from 2013 to 2018, Father interacted
with the children in the only avenue available to him as an
incarcerated parent—through “at most, a weekly visit” at the
prison. And though these visits did not continue during his
subsequent periods of incarceration, it was at this point that
Father had no means of contacting his children due to Mother’s
actions.

¶23 Furthermore, there is no evidence that Father’s
relationship with EE and LE is harmful to them—just as in In re
L.L.B. where there was no finding that the father’s presence
“affirmatively harmed” the child or that the father’s “attempts to
exercise his parental rights” in any way “negatively affected or
disrupted” the child’s life. 2023 UT App 66, ¶ 24; see also In re D.S.,
2023 UT App 98, ¶ 24 (reversing termination of an incarcerated
father’s parental rights in part because there was “no indication
that [the father’s] continuing relationship” with the children was
“harmful to them, rather than merely perhaps inconvenient”).
Here, neither party has raised any concerns about Father ever

 20230162-CA                      11                2024 UT App 34
                               In re J.E.

posing a threat to or endangering the children. This is important.
Even in In re L.L.B., though the father had turned his life around,
there were instances in the past of concern for the child’s safety,
such as the four-wheeling accident and supervised visits over fear
of the father’s substance abuse. See 2023 UT App 66, ¶ 4. We note
that in In re L.L.B our court emphasized that courts must weigh
parental conduct in the past against later conduct and that the
father was a “presently fit and capable” parent. Id. ¶ 29 (cleaned
up). We only point to this concern to emphasize that no such
circumstance exists here.

¶24 Thus, not only is the district court’s reliance on the fact of
Father’s incarceration unsupported in this case, but the creation
of such a categorical rule goes against Utah’s statutes and caselaw.

                         III. Other Concerns

¶25 Mother and Stepfather, in an effort to distinguish In re
L.L.B. from the present case, point to the fact that, unlike Father,
the father in that case made “many” attempts to communicate
with the children after his incarceration. 2023 UT App 66, ¶ 29,
532 P.3d 592. However, Father’s argument is well-taken that the
district court determined this lack of communication was “largely
the result of Mother and Stepfather’s interference.” Mother
moved the children without telling Father or providing any
means of contacting them. This lack of communication should not
be held wholly against Father as it was the result of Mother’s
actions; to do so would certainly encourage other parents to
prevent communication in an effort to similarly strengthen their
cases for termination of parental rights.

¶26 Relatedly, any lack of relationship—or as the court put it
“destruction” of the relationship—between the children and
Father’s extended family was due to Mother’s lack of support and
her “failure to respond to [the extended family’s] efforts . . . to see
the children.” Mother’s failure to respond to these efforts should
likewise not be held against Father.

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                              In re J.E.

¶27 Thus, looking holistically at the evidence presented, as
courts are required to do, see id. ¶ 21, we conclude that the
evidence does not clearly and convincingly demonstrate that
termination of Father’s parental rights was in EE’s and LE’s best
interest. In our view, the primary bases for the district court’s
decision were its categorical conclusions about the need for
permanency and the insubstantial nature of a parent/child
relationship when a parent is incarcerated. We view Utah
precedent as precluding reliance on such categorical concerns.
And we view the remainder of the district court’s findings to be
insufficient to meet the required burden of proof once these bases
are removed from the analysis. Given our legislature’s clear
expression that, “as a matter of state policy, the default position is
that it is in the best interest and welfare of a child to be raised
under the care and supervision of the child’s natural parents,” id.
¶ 31 (cleaned up), we must reverse.

¶28 The court’s order in the adoption decree relied on the
termination of all Father’s “rights, duties and responsibilities,
including residual parental rights.” Accordingly, with our
reversal of the termination order, we also reverse the adoption
decree. While this decision is final, it does not preclude the
possibility of future termination and adoption proceedings if
there is a material change in circumstances.

                          CONCLUSION

¶29 The district court’s conclusion that the termination of
Father’s parental rights was in the best interest of EE and LE was
against the clear weight of the evidence. As a consequence of this
error, the court also erred when it granted Stepfather’s adoption
of the children in reliance on termination of Father’s rights. We
therefore reverse.

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