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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
No. 14-FS-352
IN RE: PETITION OF J.J.;
T.R., APPELLANT
Appeal from the Superior Court
of the District of Columbia
(ADA-36-11)
(Hon. Errol R. Arthur, Trial Judge;
Hon. Jennifer A. Di Toro, Reviewing Judge)
(Argued December 2, 2014 Decided March 26, 2015)
Ronald A. Colbert for appellant T.R.
Gary P. Jacobs filed a statement in lieu of a brief for appellant J.B.,
supporting appellant T.R.
Anthony R. Davenport for appellee J.J.
Dennis Eshman for appellee J.R.
Aisha Lewis, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Irvin B. Nathan,
Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Todd S. Kim, Solicitor General, and
Loren L. Alikahn, Deputy Solicitor General, were on the brief, for appellee District
of Columbia.
Before GLICKMAN and BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Associate Judges, and REID,
Senior Judge.
2
BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Associate Judge: This case involves a challenge to a
court-ordered waiver of parental consent to the adoption of child J.R by appellee-
foster parent J.J., after a magistrate judge found that appellants, T.R. and J.B., the
biological mother and father, had withheld their consent against the best interests
of the child. T.R. contends that there was insufficient evidence to support the
magistrate judge‘s decision to waive her consent to adoption, and that the
reviewing associate judge therefore abused her discretion by affirming. J.B. joins
without making additional claims. 1 We discern no abuse of discretion and affirm.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
J.R. was born on February 28, 2008, to mother T.R. and father J.B., but has
lived continuously with her adoptive mother J.J., a licensed foster parent, since
October 28, 2008. J.R. came into J.J.‘s care at approximately eight months old,
after J.R. was committed to the custody of the District of Columbia upon
allegations that T.R. failed to provide proper formula, used a sanitary napkin for a
diaper, and engaged in an act of prostitution with J.R. present. J.B. is not actively
1
J.B. did not file a notice of appeal from the trial court‘s order, and
presumably waived his right to do so, but he nonetheless filed a statement in lieu of
a brief through court-appointed counsel. We consider J.B.‘s statement supporting
T.R.‘s appeal in equity. See D.C. Code § 11-721 (2012 Repl.).
3
involved in J.R.‘s life, but has provided occasional financial support and visited
J.R. several times before and after his incarceration for second degree assault from
June 2011 through October 2012.
At J.R.‘s adoption hearing, three social workers who have worked with J.R.
testified in support of J.J.‘s adoption petition. Dr. Seth King, a psychologist
qualified as an expert witness, also testified in favor of J.J.‘s adoption petition after
individually evaluating T.R. and J.J. and observing their interactions with J.R. The
magistrate judge presiding over the hearing concluded that J.J. had established by
clear and convincing evidence that T.R. and J.B. had withheld their consent to
adoption against J.R.‘s best interests,2 and granted J.J.‘s petition for adoption on
May 8, 2013. A final decree of adoption followed.
T.R. and J.B. filed motions for review of the magistrate judge‘s order in the
trial court, pursuant to D.C. Fam. Ct. R. D (e)(1). Specifically, T.R. alleged that
the magistrate judge granted J.J.‘s adoption petition without making sufficient
factual findings, pursuant to D.C. Code § 16-2353 (b) (2012 Repl.), to establish by
2
See D.C. Code § 16-304 (e) (2012 Repl.) (―The court may grant a petition
for adoption without any of the consents specified in this section, when the court
finds, after a hearing, that the consent or consents are withheld contrary to the best
interest of the child.‖).
4
clear and convincing evidence that: (i) T.R. withheld her consent to J.R.‘s
adoption contrary to J.R.‘s best interests, (ii) T.R. suffers from physical, mental, or
emotional impairments that prevent her from parenting, or (iii) J.R. has an opinion
regarding her custodian. Additionally, J.B. alleged that the magistrate judge
granted J.J.‘s adoption petition without first finding that he was unfit or adequately
considering his request to place J.R. with him, thereby depriving him of his
constitutional right to maintain a relationship with J.R.3
On review, the associate judge concluded that the magistrate judge did not
abuse his discretion in finding clear and convincing evidence to waive T.R.‘s
consent to adoption, pursuant to D.C. Code § 16-304 (e) (2012 Repl.).4 In reaching
this conclusion, the associate judge noted the following findings of the magistrate
judge: J.R. has lived with J.J. for most of her life, and that J.J. provides ―excellent
care‖ and a stable environment in a ―clean and ‗kid-friendly‘‖ two-level home,
where J.R. is an integrated part of J.J.‘s family. J.J. meets J.R.‘s educational and
medical needs, including administering epilepsy medication, takes J.R. to dance
and music lessons, and makes an effort to facilitate interaction with T.R. and J.B.
3
J.B. did not renew these claims on appeal to this court. See supra note 1.
4
See supra note 2.
5
Dr. King testified that J.R. was accustomed to the stability of J.J.‘s care, and social
worker Kimberly Beard testified that J.R. needed the permanency of living with
J.J. J.J. has maintained J.R.‘s physical, mental, and emotional health, and properly
responded to an incident in which J.R. sustained a serious burn injury in T.R.‘s
care by taking J.R. to the hospital for treatment, whereas T.R. did not do so.5
On the other hand, the associate judge noted that T.R.‘s relationship with
J.R. is less developed and her visits with J.R. have been inconsistent.6 Dr. King
individually assessed J.J. and T.R., and their respective relationships with J.R., and
opined that T.R. did not demonstrate insight into the need to comply with mental
health treatment, in spite of her history of mental health treatment and therapy and
5
According to J.J.‘s testimony regarding this incident, in July 2010, J.R.
received serious burns to her upper and lower arm while on an unsupervised visit
with T.R. When J.J. arrived to pick up J.R., T.R. told J.J. that the burns were
―sunburn.‖ T.R. did not take J.R. to the hospital for treatment. J.J. did not think
that the burns looked like sunburn because J.R.‘s skin was loose and blackened, so
J.J. took J.R. to the emergency room where the burns were cleaned and J.R.
received pain medication. The burns healed within four to five weeks. The court
considered this event in its decision to order supervised visitation and, on October
27, 2010, to revise J.R.‘s permanency goal from ―reunification‖ to ―adoption.‖
6
Two social workers testified at the adoption hearing that T.R. visited J.R.
consistently until February 2012, then visited only three times between February
2012 and October 2012, after failing to show up for eight visits. From October
2012 through the date of testimony, T.R. attended six visits out of eleven visits
offered, citing sickness and not wanting to take her other children out in bad
weather.
6
her ongoing ―emotional distress and impulse control problems.‖ Dr. King
observed that T.R. seemed to focus on her own needs when interacting with J.R.
and that J.R. did not readily comply with T.R.‘s instructions and demonstrated a
less secure attachment with T.R., even asking for ―mommy‖ during their
interaction. On the other hand, Dr. King concluded that J.J. demonstrated
emotional stability and an ability to be a positive role model. J.R. regards J.J. as
her ―mother figure,‖ and their interaction was natural and ―bi-directional.‖ After
reviewing these findings of the magistrate judge, the associate judge inferred J.R.‘s
preference to remain with J.J., and concluded that T.R. suffers from various
―physical, emotional, and mental health impairments that would prevent her from
parenting [J.R.].‖
The associate judge also reviewed the magistrate judge‘s findings related to
J.B. Prior to J.B.‘s incarceration in June 2011, his visits with J.R. were limited,
and he made no effort to contact J.R. during his incarceration. After his release in
October 2012, J.B. waited for two months to visit J.R., and did so only twice
before the adoption hearing, although eleven visits were offered. Other than
visitation, J.B. has made minimal effort to contact J.R. As a result, J.B‘s
relationship with J.R. is ―less well-developed‖ than J.J.‘s relationship with J.R.
Further, J.B. has provided little financial support and has never attempted to
7
become familiar with addressing J.R.‘s epilepsy. Accordingly, the associate judge
concluded that the magistrate judge did not abuse his discretion in determining,
based on clear and convincing evidence, that J.B. waived his consent to J.R.‘s
adoption. The associate judge further concluded that J.B. had ―failed to grasp his
opportunity interest‖7 after his incarceration and that the magistrate judge was not
required to make an explicit finding that J.B. was ―unfit‖ in order to waive his
consent to adoption. See In re C.L.O., supra note 7, 41 A.3d at 512; In re J.C.F.,
73 A.3d 1007, 1015 n.4 (D.C. 2013) (affirming waiver of biological father‘s
consent ―even though the magistrate judge did not mention [the father‘s]
opportunity interest in the written findings of fact and conclusions of law [because]
the record supplied clear and convincing evidence supporting the waiver‖). On
this same basis, the associate judge concluded that the magistrate judge did not
need to make a finding with regard to J.B.‘s request that J.R. be placed with him,
and determined that J.R.‘s best interests lay with J.J. rather than her father, ―with
whom she had never lived and whose contact was limited.‖ This appeal followed.
7
See In re C.L.O., 41 A.3d 502, 511-12 (D.C. 2012) (internal citations and
quotation marks omitted) (―The court will invoke the presumption or preference in
favor of a fit, unwed, noncustodial father only when the court finds that he timely
grasped his constitutional ―liberty‖ interest — now commonly called his
‗opportunity interest‘ — protected by due process. That is to say, the father must
have early on, and continually, done all that he could reasonably have been
expected to do under the circumstances to pursue that interest in developing a
custodial relationship with his child.‖).
8
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
Procedurally, our role is to review the ruling of the associate judge, in which
it reviewed the magistrate judge‘s order for errors of law, abuse of discretion, and
clear lack of evidentiary support. In re C.L.O., supra note 7, 41 A.3d at 510
(citation omitted). Nonetheless, we are not limited to the associate judge‘s ruling
and may review the trial court as a whole, ―look[ing] to the findings and
conclusions of the fact finder on which that ruling is based.‖ Id. at 510 (citation
omitted). Thus, in reviewing the trial court‘s determination, we apply the same
standard of review that the associate judge applied to the magistrate judge‘s order
and may ―review the magistrate judge‘s factual findings as the findings of the trial
judge . . . for abuse of discretion or a clear lack of evidentiary support.‖ Id.
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted).8 Our review of legal conclusions,
however, is de novo. Id. (citations omitted).
8
See D.C. Fam. Ct. R. D (e)(5) (―The standard of review by the associate
judge of a magistrate judge‘s final order or judgment shall be the same as applied
by the Court of Appeals on appeal of a judgment or order of an associate judge of
the Superior Court. In accordance with this standard a magistrate judge‘s finding
of fact may not be set aside unless clearly erroneous; nor may the magistrate
(continued . . .)
9
―The determination whether a birth parent‘s consent to the adoption of a
child has been withheld contrary to the child‘s best interest is confided to the trial
court‘s sound discretion.‖ In re J.G., 831 A.2d 992, 999 (D.C. 2003) (citation
omitted). In our review, we determine whether the trial court exercised that
discretion ―within the range of permissible alternatives, based on all relevant
factors and no improper factor,‖ and supported its decision with ―substantial
reasoning drawn from a firm factual foundation in the record.‖ In re S.L.G. &
S.E.G., No. 14-FS-73, slip op. at 16 (D.C. March 5, 2015) (citations omitted).
B. Applicable Law
Generally, a trial court may not grant an adoption petition without the
consent of both biological parents. See D.C. Code § 16-304 (a)–(b) (2012 Repl.);
In re C.L.O., supra note 7, 41 A.3d at 510. Yet the trial court, in its discretion,
may grant an adoption petition without parental consent if, after a hearing, the
prospective adoptive parent meets the burden of showing by clear and convincing
evidence that the biological parents withheld their consent ―contrary to the best
interest of the child.‖ § 16-304 (e); see In re C.L.O., supra note 7, 41 A.3d at 510-
(. . . continued)
judge‘s final order or judgment be set aside except for legal error or abuse of
discretion.‖).
10
11 (citation omitted). In making a ―best interests‖ determination, the trial court
applies the same statutory factors that apply in a proceeding to terminate parental
rights, as outlined in D.C. Code § 16-2353 (b) (2012 Repl.). See In re D.H., 917
A.2d 112, 117 (D.C. 2007). Section 16-2353 (b) provides:
(b) In determining whether it is in the child‘s best
interests that the parent and child relationship be
terminated, a judge shall consider each of the following
factors:
(1) the child‘s need for continuity of care and caretakers
and for timely integration into a stable and permanent
home, taking into account the differences in the
development and the concept of time of children of
different ages;
(2) the physical, mental and emotional health of all
individuals involved to the degree that such affects the
welfare of the child, the decisive consideration being the
physical, mental and emotional needs of the child;
(3) the quality of the interaction and interrelationship of
the child with his or her parent, siblings, relative, and/or
caretakers, including the foster parent;
(4) to the extent feasible, the child‘s opinion of his or her
own best interests in the matter . . .9
D.C. Code § 16-2353 (b) (2012 Repl.).
9
Two additional factors, D.C. Code § 16-2353 (b)(3A) and (5), relate to
hospital abandonment and drug activity, respectively, and are not at issue here.
11
A trial court must apply these statutory factors with full appreciation of the
gravity of terminating parental rights, beginning with ―the presumption that the
child‘s best interest will be served by placing the child with his natural parent,
provided the parent has not been proven unfit.‖ In re C.L.O., supra note 7, 41
A.3d at 510 (citation omitted). This strong presumption ―reflects and reinforces
the fundamental and constitutionally protected liberty interest that natural parents
have in the care, custody, and management of their children.‖ See In re S.L.G. &
S.E.G., supra, No. 14-FS-73, slip op. at 19. The presumption may be rebutted
―only by a showing that the parent is either unfit or that exceptional circumstances
exist that would make the continued relationship detrimental to the child‘s best
interest.‖ Id. at 20 (quoting In re Rashawn H., 937 A.2d 177, 190 (Md. 2007)).
Accordingly, in In re S.L.G. & S.E.G. we held that it is incumbent on the trial court
to make ―express, specific, and well-reasoned findings,‖ based on the statutory
factors, as to whether the presumption has been rebutted, and that only through
such findings does a court strike the ―proper and harmonious balance‖ between
parental rights and the statutory basis for terminating these rights. Id. at 25-26
(quoting In re Rashawn H., supra, 937 A.2d at 192).
When the trial court‘s findings are deficient in this regard, this court may
determine that remand is appropriate. Id. at 27-28. (concluding that remand was
12
appropriate because ―the findings and conclusions of the trial court are incomplete:
For all the detailed and well-supported factual findings . . . the trial court decisions
fail to acknowledge the presumption in favor of a fit natural parent and explain
why that presumption either is inapplicable in this case or is overcome by clear and
convincing evidence of what [the child‘s] welfare requires despite parental
fitness‖). Yet the trial court may satisfy its responsibility, and thereby avoid
remand, without making an explicit ―fitness‖ finding if it makes ―equivalent
findings,‖ based on the evidence in the record, demonstrating that the parent ―lacks
the capacity or motivation to meet the child‘s needs or protect the child from
harm.‖ Id. at 27.
C. Discussion
Preliminarily, we note that the magistrate judge did not make an explicit
finding that T.R. and J.B. were ―unfit‖ to parent J.R. Even so, this does not
necessitate a remand where the trial court made ―equivalent findings‖ for each
parent, based on the evidence in the record. See In re S.L.G. & S.E.G., supra, No.
14-FS-73, slip op. at 27. Our scope of review encompasses the findings and
conclusions of the trial court, including the magistrate judge in the first instance
and the reviewing associate judge, and we conclude that ―equivalent findings‖ are
13
readily apparent here. See id. at 16-17, 27 (quoting In re C.L.O., supra note 7, 41
A.3d at 510). In contrast to In re S.L.G. & S.E.G., here, the reviewing associate
judge relied upon the magistrate judge‘s comprehensive findings of fact to
determined that T.R. suffers from various ―physical, emotional, and mental health
impairments that would prevent her from parenting [J.R.],‖ and that the parental
presumption in favor of J.B. was rebutted by his ―fail[ure] to grasp his opportunity
interest upon his release from incarceration.‖ See In re S.L.G. & S.E.G., supra,
No. 14-FS-73, slip op. at 28. These ―equivalent findings‖ rebut the presumption in
favor of placing J.R. with her natural parents, see id. at 20 (quoting In re Rashawn
H., 937 A.2d 177, 190 (Md. 2007)). We now turn to T.R.‘s arguments on appeal
and the trial court‘s conclusions with regard to each factor outlined in § 16-2353
(b) to determine whether T.R. waived her consent to adoption against J.R.‘s ―best
interest.‖
1. The child’s need for continuity of care and caretakers and for timely
integration into a stable and permanent home, taking into account the
differences in the development and the concept of time of children of
different ages
T.R. broadly claims that the trial court erred by making a direct comparison
of her abilities and means with those of J.J. See In re A.W.K., supra, 778 A.2d at
326 (citation omitted). T.R. contends the facts in the record demonstrate her
14
ability to provide a stable home for J.R., and that because she is J.R.‘s biological
mother, our review should weigh this fact heavily. She explains that she has a
room, clothes, and toys for J.R. in the apartment that she shares with her fiancé and
their two children. She explains that the burn J.R. suffered in her care was ―a wake
up call for being a parent,‖ and that she is a better parent because of it. If J.R. were
entrusted to her care, she contends that she has a transition plan that includes a
period of contact with J.J. J.R. also states that she serves as the ―neighborhood
mother‖ to the children in her apartment complex and reports that she has
completed court-ordered parenting classes.
The trial court‘s role in making a determination of whether to terminate
parental rights is not to inquire ―whether the adoption petitioners would be better
parents, or would provide a better home[,]‖ but rather, whether the drastic measure
of terminating rights ―is necessary in order to protect the best interests of the
child.‖ In re J.L., supra, 884 A.2d at 1077 (citation omitted). The trial court did
not misunderstand this role. In weighing this factor in favor of adoption, the trial
court determined that T.R. has made many questionable parenting decisions during
supervised and unsupervised visits with J.R. We also note that T.R. testified at the
adoption hearing about her involvement in incidents of domestic violence and
stated that she was unemployed at the time of the hearing, after quitting two jobs.
15
T.R.‘s efforts to better herself and to learn from her mistakes are commendable,
but do not overcome the evidence undermining her ability to provide a stable home
environment. That J.J.‘s stable employment and home environment draw a glaring
contrast is not the result of erroneous analysis or direct comparison. J.J. has
provided continuous care for all but eight months of J.R.‘s seven-year life, and Dr.
King testified that removing J.R. from this environment could be ―potentially
devastating.‖ See In re J.L., supra, 884 A.2d at 1078 (weighing a child‘s need for
a stable and permanent home in favor of adoption where children had lived with a
stable caretaker for four years and the biological parent was ―unable to offer such
an environment either at this time or in the near future‖). The trial court did not
abuse its discretion in concluding that clear and convincing evidence in support of
this statutory factor weighs in favor of waiving parental consent to adoption.
2. The physical, mental and emotional health of all individuals involved to
the degree that such affects the welfare of the child, the decisive
consideration being the physical, mental and emotional needs of the
child
T.R. argues that this factor should weigh in her favor for multiple reasons.
First, she has raised two additional children since J.R., neither of whom was
removed from her care, in spite of an investigation request submitted by one of
J.R.‘s social workers. Second, she has grown as a parent because of J.R.‘s burn
16
incident. Third, she explains that her visits with J.R. have been limited because
she uses public transit to get to work and the agency has not accommodated her
request for weekend visits. Fourth, she argues that she no longer needs therapy
and that there is no indication that living without therapy has impacted her ability
to parent J.R. or her other children.
The trial court considered the health of all individuals involved in weighing
this factor in favor of adoption, and did not abuse its discretion in concluding that
T.R.‘s impairments ―prevent her from parenting T.R.‖ In particular, T.R. has a
history of personal trauma and mental health treatment, has made several
questionable parenting choices, and refused to engage in individual or joint therapy
with J.R. In Dr. King‘s individual evaluation, T.R. mentioned trauma in her past
and symptoms throughout her life, but did not see any need for additional therapy,
nor did she seem to have insight into the need to be compliant with treatment. On
the other hand, Dr. King‘s evaluation of J.J. showed that she is emotionally stable
and a role model, in whose care J.R. has flourished, through J.J.‘s active
participation in J.R.‘s education, medical care, and activities such as dance and
music classes. See In re Petition of W.D., 988 A.2d 456, 461-62 (D.C. 2010)
(weighing the second statutory factor in favor of an adoption petitioner who had a
strong bond with the child and provided for medical and educational needs, over a
17
mother who failed to avail herself of ―recommended services, including therapy‖).
Importantly, J.J. also took an active role when J.R. was burned in T.R.‘s care,
whereas T.R. did not.
The ―decisive consideration‖ for this statutory factor is J.R.‘s physical,
mental, and emotional needs. Particularly relevant to this consideration is Dr.
King‘s conclusion that removing J.R. from J.J.‘s care would be ―potentially
devastating‖ and could impact J.R.‘s development. It is concerning, then, that T.R.
agrees that therapy between J.R. and J.J. would be helpful to ease a transition, but
that she would not participate in similar therapy with J.R. Bearing this
consideration in mind, and weighing heavily the trial court‘s conclusion that T.R.‘s
impairments ―would prevent her from parenting ―[J.R.],‖ we discern no abuse of
discretion in the trial courts determination to weigh this statutory factor in favor of
waiving parental consent to adoption.
3. The quality of the interaction and interrelationship of the child with his
or her parent, siblings, relative, and/or caretakers, including the foster
parent
In challenging the trial court‘s determination on this factor, T.R. explains
that her work schedule interfered with her ability to visit J.R., that the foster
18
agency was unwilling to provide weekend visits, and that she was forced into the
quandary of providing for her other children or visiting with J.R.
While we are cognizant of the impact that public transportation, work
schedule, and other parenting duties have had on T.R.‘s missed visitation, we see
no abuse of discretion in the weight that the trial court accorded this statutory
factor. Visitation is T.R.‘s primary opportunity to interact with and develop a
relationship with J.R., and T.R.‘s visits became quite sporadic after February 2012.
Moreover, after Dr. King evaluated T.R.‘s interaction with J.R., he determined that
J.R. does not respond to T.R. as a primary caregiver and that T.R. seemed to focus
on her own needs when interacting with J.R. J.J., on the other hand, has served as
J.R.‘s primary caregiver for most of J.R.‘s life, and Dr. King‘s evaluation led him
to conclude that J.R. regards J.J. as her ―psychological parent‖ and ―mother figure‖
and calls her ―mommy.‖ Their interaction is natural and bidirectional. Further,
J.R. is close to J.J.‘s family and refers to them by family names. See In re Petition
of W.D., supra, 988 A.2d at 463 (concluding that ―extensive evidence of [the
child‘s] bond with the [adoptive parent] and [the child‘s] limited interaction with
her mother supports the trial court‘s determination‖ to weigh the third statutory
factor in favor of adoption). Given these findings, the trial court did not abuse its
19
discretion in finding clear and convincing evidence that this statutory factor should
weigh in favor of waiving parental consent to adoption.
4. To the extent feasible, the child’s opinion of his or her own best
interests in the matter
T.R. merely argues that this factor ―cannot be properly weighed‖ because of
J.R.‘s age and because J.R. refers to both T.R. and J.J. as ―mommy.‖
A trial court is not required to elicit a child‘s opinion regarding her own best
interests from direct testimony, and the absence of such direct testimony does not
prevent the trial court from determining the child‘s preference. See In re T.W.M.,
18 A.3d 815, 822 (D.C. 2011) (ruling that a court has no duty to rely on direct
testimony and that ―in many cases the most probative evidence of the child‘s
opinion may lie in statements the child has made to others such as psychologists or
in the child‘s past behavior . . .‖). J.R. was four years old at the time of the
adoption hearing, and the magistrate judge inferred her preference to remain with
J.J. from witness testimony regarding their level of comfort and familiarity. Dr.
King‘s interaction evaluations and the testimony of J.R.‘s social workers indicate
that J.R. has a strong bond with J.J. that is not present with T.R. Therefore,
evidence that J.R. has referred to T.R. and J.J. as ―mommy‖ is not dispositive and,
20
in any event, the record also indicates that J.R. has asked for ―mommy‖ in the
presence of T.R. On these facts, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
weighing the clear and convincing evidence of J.R.‘s behavior in favor of waiving
parental consent to adoption.
III. CONCLUSION
While the magistrate judge did not make an express finding of parental
unfitness to rebut the presumption in favor of placing J.R. with her natural parents,
we do not discern any deficiency necessitating a remand under our holding in In re
S.L.G. & S.E.G., supra, No. 14-FS-73, slip op. at 20. In so holding, we emphasize
that the magistrate judge‘s comprehensive factual findings, and the associate
judge‘s thorough review of those findings and her conclusions with regard to
parental fitness, place this case in a different posture than In re S.L.G. & S.E.G.
Here, the trial court‘s detailed factual findings and determination that T.R.‘s
impairments prevented her from parenting J.R. constitute ―equivalent findings‖ of
unfitness, as contemplated by the court in In re S.L.G. & S.E.G., to rebut the
parental presumption and avoid remand. See id. at 27. Nor do we discern any
abuse of discretion in the trial court‘s determination to waive parental consent to
adoption. Accordingly, the petition on appeal is hereby affirmed.
21
So ordered.