IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 14-1419
Filed July 22, 2015
IN THE INTEREST OF C.Y.-E.,
Minor Child,
N.E., Intervenor,
Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dubuque County, Thomas J.
Straka, Associate Juvenile Judge.
Former spouse of a child’s biological father appeals following the
termination of the father’s parental rights, asserting the juvenile court erred in not
placing the child in her care, among other things. AFFIRMED.
Daniel McClean of McClean & Heavens Law Offices, Dyersville, for
appellant intervenor.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kathrine S. Miller-Todd, Assistant
Attorney General, Ralph Potter, County Attorney, and Joshua A. Vander Ploeg,
Assistant County Attorney, for appellee State.
Zeke R. McCartney of Reynolds & Kenline, L.L.P., Dubuque, attorney and
guardian ad litem for minor child.
Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Doyle, JJ.
2
DOYLE, J.
N.E., the former spouse of a child’s biological father, intervened in the
child-in-need-of-assistance proceedings. Following the juvenile court’s
termination of the father’s parental rights and various other rulings against N.E.,
N.E. appeals. She contends the court erred in (1) finding she was no longer the
child’s stepparent after she and the child’s biological father divorced; (2) failing to
place the child in her care; (3) denying her due process in the termination-of-
parental-rights proceedings in numerous respects; and (4) not recusing itself.
We affirm.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
The relevant facts are not disputed by the parties.1 C.E. is the father and
S.Y. is the mother of C.Y.-E., born in March 2012. At the time of the child’s birth,
the father was married to N.E., whom he married in 2007. The father and N.E.
had had marital problems for some time. In 2011, the couple’s biological child
tragically died in an accident.
C.Y.-E. tested positive for Oxycodone exposure at birth. Because the
child’s mother was scheduled to serve a jail sentence shortly after the child’s
birth, the mother arranged that the child be cared for by the father and N.E.
Thereafter, the couple sought assistance from the Iowa Department of Human
Services (DHS), and a voluntary case was opened and services offered to N.E.
and the father.
1
Other background facts may be found in our opinion filed today in the related
case In re C.Y.-E., No. 14-0981 (July 22, 2015), affirming the juvenile court’s ruling
terminating the father’s parental rights.
3
In February 2013, N.E. served the father divorce papers, and the father
“responded poorly to this and threatened to harm himself,” barricading himself in
the bathroom of he and N.E.’s home with a gun. After N.E. called 9-1-1, law
enforcement officials responded and entered the home. While looking for the
father in the home, methamphetamine precursors and drug paraphernalia were
discovered in the basement, leading to the father’s arrest for child endangerment
and possession of precursors.
Both the father and the child’s hair tested positive for methamphetamine
thereafter. N.E. denied knowledge of the precursors in their home and the child’s
exposure to methamphetamine, and she tested negative for illegal substances.
Despite the fact N.E. had been the child’s primary caregiver since the child’s
birth, the father requested the child be placed with his relatives because he was
angry with N.E. about her seeking a divorce. The child was so placed and has
remained in the relatives’ care since that time.
In March 2013, the State filed a petition asserting the child was a child in
need of assistance (CINA). Prior to the hearing on the State’s CINA petition, the
juvenile court on April 1, 2013, entered a pre-hearing order directing that the child
“be removed from parental custody and placed in the care, custody, and control
of [DHS] for appropriate . . . relative placement.” Additionally, the court granted
N.E.’s request to intervene in the proceedings, and it ordered visitation to include
N.E. Thereafter, N.E. had regular visitation with the child, and, by all accounts,
was an excellent caregiver to the child.
At the July 2013 disposition hearing, N.E. requested the child be placed
with her. DHS recommended leaving the child in the relatives’ care because the
4
child was “doing well, his needs [were] being met, and there [was] no reason to
remove him from this home.” The mother supported N.E.’s request; the State,
the GAL, and the father all supported DHS’s recommendation. The court agreed
with DHS and left the child in DHS’s custody for continued relative placement.
The court explained:
This is a very difficult and close call for the court. Both
homes have a significant history with the child. Both homes have
approved home studies, and both homes qualify as a placement
option. Iowa Code section 232.102(1)(a)(1) [(2013)] allows the
court to place the child with “a parent who does not have physical
care of the child, other relative, or other suitable person.” Although
[N.E.] is not a biological relative, she would qualify under the “other
suitable person” option. No statutory preference is given for any of
these options.
It is undisputed that removing a child and changing
placements is disruptive and confusing for a child and affects their
sense of security and stability. The court does not believe
removing [the child] from his current placement would be in his best
interests at this time. The current arrangement provides for [N.E.]
to have [the child] three nights per week. This arrangement allows
her to maintain her relationship with [the child] and also preserves
her ability to be a long-term placement option should reunification
not be successful.
Neither of the parents nor N.E. appealed the dispositional order.
In the fall of 2013, N.E. and the father’s dissolution of marriage was
finalized. Around the same time, N.E. filed a motion in juvenile court, requesting,
among other things, the juvenile court grant concurrent jurisdiction to the district
court so she, as the child’s stepparent, could be reunited with the child. She also
requested the court halt any termination-of-parental-rights proceedings.
Following a hearing, the court denied N.E.’s motion for concurrent
jurisdiction, stating:
Although the court has authority to grant concurrent
jurisdiction, the juvenile court is only authorized to terminate a
5
dispositional order if the purposes of the dispositional order have
been accomplished and the child is no longer in need of
supervision, care, or treatment. In re K.N., 625 N.W.2d 731, 733
(Iowa 2001); Iowa Code § 232.103(4)(a).
If the court were to grant concurrent jurisdiction and allow
[N.E.] to pursue a guardianship in district court, the present
dispositional orders would essentially be rendered meaningless.
No doubt, this is [N.E.’s] intent and desired outcome, but would be
contrary to the code section cited above as the court is unable to
find the child is no longer in need of supervision, care, or treatment.
The child remains adjudicated a [CINA] and in the custody of
the [DHS], who is statutorily obligated to provide reunification
services to the biological parents if and when they are available. A
district court guardianship order would prevent the [DHS] from
providing those services.
. . . [T]he above matter is currently set for a permanency
hearing in February. [N.E.] will still have the ability to appear at the
permanency hearing to request consideration as a placement
option or request a separate placement hearing. The State and
guardian ad litem [(GAL)] supported the denial of [N.E.’s] request
for concurrent jurisdiction. [The child’s biological mother] supported
[N.E.’s] request. Counsel for [the child’s father] took no position.
Accordingly, the court finds it would be in the best interest of
[the child] for the court to deny the motion for concurrent
jurisdiction; continue the [CINA] proceedings; and continue to
exercise exclusive jurisdiction over the case.
The biological parents made little to no progress in the case. In January
2014, the State filed its petition seeking termination of the parents’ parental
rights, and a termination-of-parental-rights hearing was set for February 2014,
along with the permanency hearing. DHS, the child’s GAL, and the county foster
care review board all supported termination of parental rights.
More motions were filed thereafter. The mother sought a continuance
because she was to be released in a few months. The father also requested a
continuance, challenging his service of the termination-of-parental-rights petition.
N.E. requested dismissal of the termination-of-parental-rights petition for
numerous reasons, including that the State’s petition failed to comply with Iowa
6
Code section 232.111. She also asserted that termination of the parents’
parental rights was not warranted under section 232.116(3) because the child
was placed with relatives and termination of parental rights would be detrimental
to the child. At the February 2014 hearing, the juvenile court reluctantly granted
the father’s motion, though it did not believe further delay in the proceedings was
in the child’s best interests, and it continued the date of the termination-of-
parental-rights hearing to April 3, 2014.
More motions were filed. The State requested to amend its petition to
address N.E.’s alleged deficiencies in its original termination-of-parental-rights
petition. The mother filed a motion noting she had been released from prison
and was living with N.E. She requested that she be provided services by DHS
and that an immediate hearing be set. She also requested another continuance
so she could begin services and work toward reunification with the child. N.E.
filed a motion requesting clarification of whether she could supervise visits
between the mother and the child. She also filed a motion supporting the
mother’s motion to continue.
Following a hearing on the remaining motions, the juvenile court on March
19, 2014, entered its order granting N.E.’s request to supervise visits between
the child and the mother, as well as the State’s motion to amend the petition and
its oral request that the termination-of-parental-rights hearing be bifurcated from
any placement hearing, should the court grant its termination-of-parental-rights
petition. The court denied the remaining motions.
On April 1, 2014, N.E. filed an “Application for Permission to Appeal
Juvenile Court Ruling” before the Iowa Supreme Court. She also filed more
7
motions in juvenile court, including a request that the juvenile court stay the
termination-of-parental-rights proceedings pending a ruling on her application to
the supreme court. The juvenile court denied N.E.’s motions, but it rescheduled
the termination-of-parental-rights hearing to May 2014 due to emergency family
issues concerning one of the attorneys for the parties. The Iowa Supreme Court
subsequently denied N.E.’s application.
N.E. then filed another request that the juvenile court grant the district
court concurrent jurisdiction. Following that filing, the juvenile court entered its
ruling denying her request. Additionally, the court noted in its ruling that N.E.’s
motion went “way beyond the issues of concurrent jurisdiction,” and the court
went on to address a few claims it believed N.E. had either inaccurately or
misleadingly stated. The court specifically found it did “not believe [N.E.]
remain[ed] [the child’s] stepmother as statutorily defined. After the dissolution of
marriage was finalized, [N.E.’s] relationship through affinity terminated and she
became, in a purely legal sense, a ‘nonparent’ with regard to her rights to [the
child].” In response to N.E.’s argument the court “never addressed [her]
relationship to [the child],” the court directed her to its dispositional order which
found she was an “other suitable person” for placement purposes and did not
appeal that ruling. The court also took issue with N.E.’s
characterization of the history of this case. She state[d]: “The best
interests of [the child] dictates that he has returned to his home with
[N.E.] and his stepbrother. [N.E.] and stepbrother constitute the
family unit in this matter.” This language paints a picture which
does not reflect the reality of the family dynamics of the time of
removal. The “family unit” was in the process of being dissolved
through divorce proceedings. The reports clearly indicate [the
child] and his father were staying with [N.E.] on a temporary basis.
To characterize [N.E.’s home] as [the child’s] home under these
8
circumstances is inconsistent with the documented history of the
case. Therefore, the child cannot be “returned” to a home he was
never removed from.
The day before the termination-of-parental-rights hearing, N.E. filed three
motions, which included a motion to amend and enlarge the juvenile court’s prior
ruling and one requesting recusal. Her motion to recuse alleged the juvenile
court judge was clearly prejudicial and biased towards her because the judge
“refuse[d] to accept the fact that the Iowa case law states that the relationship
between [the child and N.E.] is one through affinity that has not been terminated
due to [N.E.] divorcing [the child’s] biological father.”
The next day, the termination-of-parental-rights hearing was held. Before
testimony was given, N.E. advised the court that several of her motions were still
pending. The court noted that N.E. did file several motions the day before which
it reviewed the morning of the hearing, but it found those motions did “not pertain
to the two issues before the court” in the termination-of-parental-rights
proceedings. It advised it intended to address those motions separately at a later
time, but N.E. requested the court rule upon its motion for the judge’s recusal.
N.E. again asserted the judge was
biased and basically giving [the court’s] May 9th order redacted as
almost a case plan for DHS and misrepresented the record as it
exists, [and N.E. did not] believe [her] interests [would] be served or
[the child’s] best interest be served if [the judge was] allowed to
hear the termination hearing.
The court denied N.E.’s recusal request, finding N.E. did not have standing at
that point to make such a motion.
Testimony in the case then began, and the court did not permit N.E.’s
counsel to examine the witnesses, the court again finding N.E. did “not have
9
standing in the termination phase of these hearings.” The court allowed N.E.’s
counsel to examine the State’s witnesses outside of its presence as an offer of
proof, but it did not allow her counsel to examine the mother’s witnesses or to call
her own witnesses. After testimony was concluded, N.E. made another offer of
proof outside the presence of the juvenile court, renewing her numerous
objections made at the hearing and in her prior motions. N.E. subsequently filed
a motion requesting the court admit all testimony given though offers of proof at
the termination-of-parental-rights hearing.
Following the hearing, the juvenile court entered its order terminating the
biological parents’ parental rights. The court in its written ruling acknowledged its
oral rulings at the hearing on N.E.’s motions; it did not make any other findings
concerning N.E. or her other pending motions. The court followed the required
three-step analysis concerning termination of the parents’ parental rights. See In
re D.W., 791 N.W.2d 703, 706 (Iowa 2010). As to the final step, considering “if
any statutory exceptions set out in section 232.116(3) should serve to preclude
termination of parental rights,” see id., the court’s ruling stated it found there were
“no consequential factors weighing against termination [of the parents’ parental
rights] that require[d] a different conclusion.” The court’s ruling set a placement
hearing for July 2014. The father filed a notice of appeal, and N.E. filed a notice
of cross-appeal in the matter.
On June 11, 2014 the juvenile court entered written rulings on N.E.’s
motions to admit the offer-of-proof testimony and her prior motion to amend and
enlarge filed May 9, 2014. The court denied the motion to amend and enlarge,
finding it had sufficiently and thoroughly addressed the issues raised by N.E. in
10
its prior order However, the court granted N.E.’s motion to admit the offer-of-
proof testimony to the extent it allowed her “to make her record for purposes of
appeal.”
N.E. subsequently filed more motions in juvenile court. She requested the
juvenile court reconsider its termination-of-parental-rights ruling and that the
court “address the [o]ffer of [p]roof by adding it to the record for the May 20,
2014, hearing.” She also filed a motion to continue and another motion for
recusal. The recusal motion requested the judge recuse “himself from any
further proceeding in this matter as a clear prejudice and bias exists towards
[N.E.].” The motion also requested recusal “on the basis that [the judge] failed to
address [N.E.’s motions filed May 19, 2014].” N.E. further alleged the court
denied her due process by not permitting her to participate fully in the
termination-of-parental-rights hearing. N.E. filed a motion requesting the court
stay the proceedings because she and the father were appealing the termination-
of-parental-rights ruling. The court subsequently granted the motion to continue
the placement hearing, but entered rulings denying the remaining motions.
N.E. then filed a motion with the Iowa Supreme Court to stay the
underlying termination-of-parental-rights proceedings. The State resisted her
request for a stay, and it also filed a motion to dismiss her cross-appeal.
While the appeals and other appellate matters were pending, the
permanency-placement proceedings moved forward. Prior to the July 2014
hearing, the child’s GAL filed its report recommending the child continue living
with and be adopted by the father’s relatives. Though the GAL found both N.E.
and the father’s relatives to be viable permanent placement options, the GAL
11
believed the relatives were a slightly better option because the relatives
presented no concerns regarding their care of the child and already viewed the
child as part of their family. The GAL noted the child had been in their care at
that time for sixteen months and was bonded with the father’s relatives and the
relatives’ children.
On July 28, 2014, the Iowa Supreme Court entered an order concerning
the State’s motion to dismiss and N.E.’s request for stay. The court determined
N.E.’s cross-appeal challenging the termination-of-parental-rights ruling was
“interlocutory on the basis that the placement hearing ha[d] not yet taken place,”
and the court denied the request for a stay. N.E. then filed a motion for
reconsideration.
A permanency placement hearing was held on July 31, 2014. N.E.
advised the juvenile court the father’s appeal and its motion for reconsideration
were still pending in appellate court, and she requested the permanency hearing
be stayed until her motion and the father’s appeal were ruled upon. The State
and the GAL resisted. The court denied N.E.’s request, finding that if the father’s
appeal was granted, it would not matter who the court placed the child with at the
present hearing, as the CINA case would reopen with reunification services.
N.E. renewed her motion for recusal, which the court denied. N.E. then
proceeded to call several witnesses, all generally agreeing the child would do
well in either N.E.’s or the father’s relatives’ home.
Following the hearing, the juvenile court entered its ruling placing the child
in the guardianship of DHS pursuant to Iowa Code section 232.117(3), to move
forward with establishing a stable placement for the child by adoption or other
12
permanent placement. The next day, the Iowa Supreme Court entered its order
denying N.E.’s motion for reconsideration.
N.E. now appeals.2 She contends the juvenile court erred in “not
reunifying the minor child with [her] and [his] stepbrother following removal from
the family home” and in “not concluding [N.E.] remains the minor child’s
stepmother through affinity.” She also asserts she was denied due process
when the juvenile court disallowed her participation in the termination-of-parental-
rights proceedings, denied her motions for concurrent jurisdiction, and denied her
“the right to continue contact with the minor child following the permanency
hearing.” Finally, she maintains the juvenile court judge erred in not recusing
himself from the matter because he was “clearl[ly] bias[ed]” against N.E. and her
counsel.
II. Scope and Standards of Review.
We ordinarily review CINA and termination-of-parental-rights proceedings
de novo. See In re J.C., 857 N.W.2d 495, 500 (Iowa 2014). This requires that
we “review both the facts and the law, and we adjudicate rights anew.” Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted). However, to the extent the issue requires
statutory interpretation, our review is for correction of errors at law. See id. “We
review a court’s decision to recuse or not to recuse itself for an abuse of
2
We note that on June 23, 2015, the Iowa Supreme Court filed an order
concerning this case, N.E.’s interlocutory appeal numbered 14-0554, and the father’s
appeal of the termination of his parental rights numbered 14-0981, explaining this case
and the father’s appeal were delayed after the clerk of the supreme court issued
procedendo in N.E.’s interlocutory appeal in 14-0554 and the entire file was inadvertently
closed. The supreme court ordered the “appeal shall be transferred immediately to the
court of appeals for disposition,” and this case was transferred to this court the same
day.
13
discretion.” Taylor v. State, 632 N.W.2d 891, 893 (Iowa 2001). “As always, our
fundamental concern is the child’s best interests.” J.C., 857 N.W.2d at 500.
III. Discussion.
A. Stepparent Status.
First and foremost, the question before us is whether N.E.’s relationship
with the child is equal to that of a parent, given that she was the child’s primary
caregiver for the first year of his life and was married to, but has since divorced,
the child’s biological father. Her status determines the services required to be
offered to her for reunification, if any, as well as her due process rights in the
case.
N.E. states that “[t]he Iowa Supreme Court recognizes affinity remains
intact despite divorce,” citing Farnsworth v. Iowa State Tax Commission, 132
N.W.2d 477 (Iowa 1965). In that case, the Iowa Supreme Court was faced with
the questions: “‘[O]nce a daughter-in-law, always a daughter-in-law?’ May an
individual have as many mothers-in-law as the exigencies of death or divorce
permit him marriages?” Id. at 478. Though the latter includes the word “divorce,”
the facts in Farnsworth only concerned the death of a former spouse. See id.
Specifically, in Farnsworth, Thelma Farnsworth was formerly married to
Elizabeth Probert’s son, John. Id. John died, leaving Thelma a widow. Id.
Thelma remarried a year later. Id. Not quite ten years after John’s death, John’s
mother Elizabeth died, leaving assets of $19,879.85 she held in joint tenancy
with Thelma. Id. There was no question that Thelma would inherit the property;
the issue was at what rate her inheritance would be taxed—five percent as
Elizabeth’s daughter-in-law or ten percent as a non-relative. Id. (citing Iowa
14
Code § 450.3 (1965), which sets forth rates of taxation on inheritance for certain
classes of people and businesses). The court noted if it found the taxation
statute to be ambiguous, it was required to strictly construe the statute “against
the taxing authorities.” See id. With that backdrop, the court cited a prior case,
wherein it concluded that a stepfather “is a relative by affinity, and the
relationship continues after the death of the wife, on whom the relationship
depends.” Id. at 480 (citing Simcoke v. Grand Lodge A.O.U.W. of Iowa, 51 N.W.
8, 9 (Iowa 1892)). In Simcoke, the court, quoting another court, further stated:
By the marriage, one party thereto holds by affinity
the same relation to the kindred of the other that the
latter holds by consanguinity, and no rule is known to
us under which the relation by affinity is lost on a
dissolution of the marriage, more than that by blood is
lost by the death of those through whom it is derived.
The dissolution of a marriage, once lawful, by death
or divorce, has no effect upon the issue; and, it is
apprehended, it can have no greater operation to
annul the relation of affinity, which it produced.
There is nothing in the spirit or purpose of the law that indicates to
us that relatives by affinity are not within the legislative intent.
51 N.W. at 9-10 (quoting Spear v. Robinson, 29 Me. 531, 545 (1849)). In
Farnsworth, the court did not overrule Simcoke, stating
Spear v. Robinson . . . has been said to represent a minority rule,
and it has also been urged that the quoted language [in Simcoke]
was dictum. However, that may be, we have approved it and it
forms a part of our decision in the Simcoke case.
This case has never been overruled, and still represents the
law in Iowa. If the relationship by affinity between a stepfather and
stepson continues after the death of the wife and mother upon
whom it depends, we see no reason for saying that the relation of
mother-in-law and daughter-in-law does not also continue after the
death of the son and husband, or indeed upon a remarriage. We
are not here dealing with the term ‘wife of a son’, or ‘widow of a
son’, which have been before the courts in other jurisdictions.
There might be more reason for construing statutes which use
15
these words as ending with a remarriage; but we are unable to
distinguish the Simcoke case, on principle and reason, from the
one now before us. After a remarriage, the party may have two
mothers-in-law, but the former relation is not ended.
132 N.W.2d at 480. It is the language from the Simcoke case upon which N.E.
asserts she is still the child’s stepmother by affinity.
Arguably, the only part of Simcoke that remains good law is the part that
related directly to the court’s decision: the status of affinity after the death of a
spouse.3 See id. In any event, even assuming without deciding that the portions
of Simcoke and Farnsworth stating the relationship by affinity survives divorce,
we find that of no help to N.E. under the relevant CINA statutes.
Although the Iowa “legislature has specifically directed courts to liberally
construe Iowa Code chapter 232 to achieve ‘the care, guidance and control that
will best serve the child’s welfare and the best interest of the state,’” the Iowa
Supreme Court has determined the “legislature crafted a narrow and specific
definition of ‘parent’ under chapter 232,” which unambiguously defines a “parent”
as either the “‘biological or adoptive mother or father.’” J.C., 857 N.W.2d at 501,
3
Even in Farnsworth the court noted that its prior holding in Simcoke was a
minority opinion and left room for reinterpretation of the issue under different facts. See
Farnsworth, 132 N.W.2d at 480. Since that time, the court, in other circumstances, has
found that “a stepparent cannot be considered a natural parent against the stepparent’s
will and cannot be required to pay child support. The logical extension of our case law is
that a stepparent is not treated as a natural parent and is, therefore, not entitled to
visitation.” In re Ash, 507 N.W.2d 400, 404 (Iowa 1993) (internal citations omitted); see
also 41 Am. Jur. 2d Husband and Wife § 4 (2014) (and cases cited therein for the
proposition that “[a]ffinity relationships arise out of marriage and are always terminated
by divorce”). Nevertheless, as one commenter noted, Simcoke is “still considered as a
leading authority,” see 13 Julie L. Pulkrabeka & Gary J. Schmita, Iowa Practice
Series: Probate § 14:47, n.4 (2014), and we are bound by our supreme court’s
pronouncements. See State v. Hughes, 457 N.W.2d 25, 28 (Iowa Ct. App. 1990) (citing
State v. Eichler, 83 N.W.2d 576, 578 (1957) (“If our previous holdings are to be
overruled, we should ordinarily prefer to do it ourselves.”)); State v. Hastings, 466
N.W.2d 697, 700 (Iowa Ct. App. 1990) (“We are not at liberty to overturn Iowa Supreme
Court precedent.”).
16
504 (quoting Iowa Code § 232.1, .2(39)). N.E. is neither in relation to the child.
See id. (holding an established father, wherein the child was born during the
marriage but a paternity test determined the father was not the child’s biological
parent, was not a “parent” under the definition of “parent” in section 232.2(39)
and that it would “not expand or extend these statutes to include established
fathers when the text of the statutes demonstrates the legislature’s intent not to
do so”). The legislature could have easily included “stepparent” within the
definition of “parent,” and it chose not to. See id. Particularly telling is the fact
the term “stepparent” is used in the same section under the definition of
“custodian,” which is defined as “a stepparent or a relative within the fourth
degree of consanguinity to a child who has assumed responsibility for that child.”
Iowa Code § 232.2(11)(a). That same section sets out the rights of a custodian
and specifically states “[a]ll rights and duties of a custodian shall be subject to
any residual rights and duties remaining in a parent or guardian.” See id.
§ 232.2(11)(b), (c). Consequently, it is clear that the rights of a “stepparent” are
not equal to that of a parent. See id. Thus, even if N.E. remained the child’s
stepparent, her rights were not elevated to those of a parent. See id.
“The juvenile court has exclusive jurisdiction over CINA proceedings,” and
such “proceedings may not take place without the presence of statutorily
identified necessary parties.” J.C., 857 N.W.2d at 501 (citing Iowa Code
§ 232.61(1)). The necessary parties under Iowa Code section 232.91(1) include
“the child’s parent, guardian, custodian, or [GAL].” Though N.E. cites the
definition of “custodian” in her brief, she does not assert she is the child’s
guardian, custodian, or GAL. Rather, she only contends she is the child’s parent
17
because she was his stepparent by affinity. “Juvenile courts clearly have the
authority to make the factual determination of whether a person qualifies as a
necessary party, which inherently requires them to determine whether a person
qualifies as a child’s biological parent.” J.C., 857 N.W.2d at 506. Here, N.E. was
not the child’s biological parent nor his adoptive parent. As our supreme court
explained in J.C.:
Efficient and timely resolution of juvenile proceedings serves the
interests of the child and the state. Our statutes and court rules
reflect this proposition. “It is the public policy of the state of Iowa
that proceedings involving . . . [CINA] be concluded at the earliest
possible time consistent with a fair hearing to all parties.” Iowa Ct.
R. 8.7. An adjudicatory hearing on a CINA petition must “be held
within 60 days of the filing of said petition unless good cause to the
contrary is shown.” Id. r. 8.11. A permanency hearing “for a child
subject to out-of-home placement” must “be held within twelve
months of the date the child was removed from the home.” Iowa
Code § 232.104(1)(a)(1); see also id. § 232.104(1)(a)(2) (requiring
a permanency hearing within thirty days if “the court has waived
reasonable efforts requirements under section 232.102”). Our
statutes and court rules reflect the understanding that promptly
resolved juvenile proceedings best serve children’s interests.
Courts are obliged to move urgently to achieve the ends that
will best serve the child’s interests because childhood does not
“await the wanderings of judicial process.” In re A.C., 415 N.W.2d
609, 613 (Iowa 1987). By narrowly defining “parent” under chapter
232, and thereby narrowing the scope of necessary parties under
Iowa Code section 232.91(1), the legislature gave courts another
tool to resolve juvenile proceedings in a timely fashion. Were we to
expand on the express language of the two statutes, we would
impede the legislature’s worthy objective. . . . [I]t is good policy to
narrow the number of necessary parties to avoid superfluous
litigation that will bog down timely decision making for children in
need of assistance and distract the court from the core issue of the
child’s best interest. The express language of the statutes at issue
in this case serves the best interests of the child.
Id. at 502-03 (internal block quote omitted).
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Because we agree with the juvenile court’s ultimate conclusion that N.E.
was not a parent within the statutory definition of “parent,” we affirm on that
issue.
B. Due Process.
Having found N.E. was not a “parent” within the definition of chapter 232,
we turn to the question of whether her due process rights were violated when the
juvenile court disallowed her participation in the termination-of-parental-rights
proceedings, denied her motions for concurrent jurisdiction, and denied her “the
right to continue contact with the minor child following the permanency hearing.”
The United States Constitution and the Iowa Constitution both prohibit
persons being deprived of “life, liberty, or property, without due process of law,”
U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1; Iowa Const. art. I, § 9, and “[d]ue process must be
afforded when an individual is threatened by state action which will deprive the
individual of a protected liberty or property interest.” Callender v. Skiles, 591
N.W.2d 182, 189 (Iowa 1999). Thus, due process concerns protected liberties
and interests. See id. The protected liberties concerning children arise by way
of a biological or adoptive link. See id. at 190. “Thus, we have a strong history
of providing due process protection to parents.” Id. We have already determined
N.E. is not a parent within the definition of chapter 232.
1. Termination-of-Parental-Rights Hearing.
Here, N.E. was permitted to intervene as soon as her then husband
denied her visitation with the child, which was before the child was even
adjudicated a CINA. The court considered her at the dispositional phase as a
placement option, but it declined to place the child with her. She made no
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argument then as to her rights as a “stepparent,” nor did she appeal the
dispositional order, challenging the court’s placement determination. She cannot
challenge that determination here. See In re Marriage of Guyer, 522 N.W.2d
818, 822 (Iowa 1994) (noting that principles of res judicata preclude a court from
relitigating an issue that has previously been decided); In re J.B., 584 N.W.2d
577, 581 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998) (finding mother’s failure to appeal from any of the
CINA proceedings waived deficiencies in those proceedings).
The court also allowed N.E. to participate in the termination-of-parental-
rights case, though it specifically disallowed her participation in the termination-
of-parental-rights hearing. Because N.E. was not the child’s parent, N.E. was not
a necessary party to the termination-of-parental hearing. Though arguably N.E.
may have been a person standing in the place of the biological parents of the
child when the case began, see Iowa Code § 232.111(4)(b)(6), it was the child’s
biological father who requested the child be placed with his relatives. After the
CINA proceedings were initiated, the child’s placement with the relatives
continued and was again reaffirmed by the court’s disposition order, which N.E.
did not appeal. By the time the biological parents took interest in the case, which
was after termination of parental rights was recommended, the child had been in
the relatives’ care for at least nine months, almost as long as the child had been
in N.E.’s care as an infant. By the time of the termination-of-parental-rights
hearing in May 2014, the child had been in the care of the father’s relatives for
sixteen months of his young life. Though we have no question of N.E.’s love for
the child, we do not find error with the juvenile court’s decision disallowing N.E. to
participate further in the termination-of-parental-rights hearing or in denying her
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motions for concurrent jurisdiction because she was not the child’s parent. See
J.C., 857 N.W.2d at 505. Nevertheless, even if we were to conclude the juvenile
court erred in denying N.E. the right to participate in the termination-of-parental-
rights hearing, it permitted N.E. to make offers of proof in the matter, and we find
she was therefore not prejudiced by the court’s restriction of her right to
participate in that hearing.
2. Permanency Hearing Following Termination of Parental Rights.
She also asserts her due process rights were violated when the juvenile
court at the permanency hearing continued the child’s custody with DHS. She
maintains:
During the pendency of this action, instead of acting in the minor
child’s best interests, DHS and the juvenile court [have] consistently
attempted to find ways to exclude [N.E.] from guardianship of the
minor child or in the alternative, adoption of the minor child. [On
appeal, this court] should find that the juvenile court violated
[N.E.’s] procedural due process rights . . . and find that a
guardianship should be established between [N.E.] and minor child
or in the alternative remove DHS from this matter so that [N.E.] may
be given a fair opportunity to be considered for placement.
However, having found N.E. is not a parent within the definition of Iowa Code
chapter 232, we cannot say that the juvenile court’s rulings placing the child in
the guardianship and custody of DHS in any way violates N.E.’s due process
rights.
N.E., as a “suitable person,” had a right to intervene and participate in the
proceedings subsequent to termination of the parents’ parental rights. See Iowa
Code § 232.117(3); J.C., 857 N.W.2d at 507-08. The juvenile court allowed her
to do so. She participated in the placement hearing after the parents’ parental
rights were terminated. It does not necessarily follow that because the court did
21
not grant her request for placement that it violated her due process rights. The
court considered both homes and chose the fathers’ relatives as the home that
should continue to care for the child. Upon our de novo review of the record, we
do not find any reason to disturb the juvenile court’s ruling, nor do we find it
violated N.E.’s due process rights. We therefore affirm on this issue.
C. Child’s Best Interests.
N.E. challenges the juvenile court’s best interests determinations. She
maintains her home is the only home the child has ever known, and “she can
best provide for the minor child’s needs.” She further argues it is not in the
child’s best interests to be separated from his stepsibling—N.E.’s child that is
unrelated to the child in interest by blood. She asserts she should have been
reunified with the child and granted concurrent jurisdiction to pursue a
guardianship. We disagree.
Though there is no question that N.E.’s home was the child’s home for the
first year of his life, it has not been his home since the father requested the child
be placed in the care of the father’s relatives. While N.E. implies DHS’s
placement of the child with the father’s relatives was done for nefarious reasons,
the record evidences DHS’s case worker and service provider were against the
father’s request for the child to be placed with the father’s relatives, since the
father was only doing it to hurt N.E. But the DHS case worker reasoned the
father’s parental rights trumped those of his soon to be ex-wife N.E. who was not
the child’s biological parent. It is unfortunate that the father used his status as
the child’s parent to hurt N.E., but that is what happened here.
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Thereafter, the district court determined the child should continue in the
care of the relatives at disposition, and N.E. did not appeal that determination.
Fortunately for the child, the child was able to remain in contact with N.E. and
stepsibling while in the good care of relatives. As noted above, the child’s best
interests are our paramount concern. See J.C., 857 N.W.2d at 500. Though the
child may share a bond with N.E. and N.E.’s biological child, the child is also
bonded with the fathers’ relatives and their children and is arguably more related
to those relatives than to N.E. and her child. By the time of the termination-of-
parental-rights hearing, the child had been with the fathers’ relatives longer than
he had been with N.E. The juvenile court found it was in the child’s best interests
to continue in juvenile court rather than grant concurrent jurisdiction to the district
court because the child was still a CINA. Given N.E.’s lack of status as a parent,
along with her impending divorce from the child’s biological father and his
request to have the child placed with relatives, we do not find the juvenile court
erred in finding it was not in the child’s best interests to set reunification with N.E.
as the goal in the case or to grant her requests for concurrent jurisdiction to
pursue a guardianship.
D. Recusal.
Finally, N.E. argues the juvenile court erred in not recusing itself from the
case. Though we question whether she even had standing to assert this
argument, at least at the termination-of-parental-rights hearing, we choose to
address her argument, finding it to be without merit.
“The burden of showing grounds for recusal is on the party seeking
recusal.” In re S.D., 671 N.W.2d 522, 528 (Iowa Ct. App. 2003). This is a
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substantial burden and requires a finding that the trial judge’s decision was an
abuse of discretion, which will only be found if the trial court clearly acted
unreasonably or exercised its discretion on untenable grounds. See id.; see also
In re Marriage of Wagner, 604 N.W.2d 605, 608 (Iowa 2000). Moreover, the
appearance of impropriety is not sufficient; “[a]ctual prejudice must be shown.” In
re C.W., 522 N.W.2d 113, 117 (Iowa Ct. App. 1994). Pursuant to Iowa Code
section 602.1606(a), “[a] judicial officer is disqualified from acting in a
proceeding . . . if . . . [t]he judicial officer has a personal bias or prejudice
concerning a party, or personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts
concerning the proceeding.”
Here, N.E. alleges the juvenile court was clearly biased because it ruled
against her. Additionally, N.E.’s counsel asserts the juvenile court judge was
biased against him personally because that judge “failed to appoint him as a
[GAL] for at least seven years.” Having reviewed the record de novo, we find no
evidence of bias on the juvenile court judge’s part in this case. Moreover, we find
N.E. has failed to establish any actual prejudice against her. The court’s rulings
are well-reasoned, and we affirm them here. Though we believe N.E.’s counsel
was representing N.E. zealously, the multiplicious motions filed by N.E. in this
case, particularly after the termination-of-parental-rights petition was filed, seem
a little over the top. No doubt the juvenile court was frustrated with addressing
issues it had already ruled upon and addressed in prior motions and hearings.
Nevertheless, we do not find this frustration, if any, evidenced any actual bias or
prejudice on the part of the juvenile court judge. The judge permitted N.E. to
participate in most of the proceedings and entertained her motions in a timely
24
manner. The juvenile court judge simply had no obligation to recuse himself
under the facts of this case. We therefore conclude the juvenile court did not
abuse its discretion in not recusing itself from the juvenile court proceedings.
IV. Conclusion.
For all of these reasons, we affirm the juvenile court’s rulings with respect
to N.E.
AFFIRMED.