IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 15-1156
Filed September 10, 2015
IN THE INTEREST OF M.M.,
Minor Child,
R.M., Father,
Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Joseph W. Seidlin,
District Associate Judge.
A father appeals from the order terminating his parental rights.
AFFIRMED.
Bryan Webber of Carr & Wright, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant father.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Janet L. Hoffman, Assistant Attorney
General, John P. Sarcone, County Attorney, and Amanda Johnson, Assistant
County Attorney, for appellee State.
Paul White, Des Moines, for minor child.
Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vogel and Tabor, JJ.
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DANILSON, C.J.
A father appeals from the order terminating his parental rights to his child,
contending the juvenile court erred in finding the child could not be returned to
him at the present time and termination was in the child’s best interest. In the
alternative, he argues the court should have placed the child with his sister rather
than in foster care. Because our findings align with those of the juvenile court,
we affirm.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
M.M., born in February 2010, came to the attention of the department of
human services (DHS) in April 2011 based upon the biological mother’s (K.H.)
arrest for child endangerment due to her being intoxicated while caring for the
child. Initially the case was treated as an eligible-services case, and the child
was placed with the father (R.M.) pursuant to a DHS safety plan. After a series
of incidents—including the child’s elder half-sibling reporting the mother’s
ongoing alcohol abuse to DHS—a child-in-need-of-assistance (CINA) petition
was filed on May 24, 2012.
M.M. was adjudicated a CINA on July 17, 2012. Placement with the father
was confirmed, and the goal of the juvenile proceeding was reunification with the
mother. The mother was to seek out help regarding her substance abuse and
mental health issues. However, due to ongoing concerns that the father was
allowing the mother access to the child and failing to ensure the child regularly
attended therapy, M.M. was removed from the father’s care on August 13, 2013,
and placed in the home of her half-sibling’s father. The mother was not
addressing her substance abuse issues or her mental health issues and was
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found to be too dangerous to have contact with M.M. The juvenile court found
the new permanency goal was reunification with the father and the efforts to
reunify with the mother would cease.
On September 18, 2013, the child was placed with a paternal aunt, S.W.,
under DHS supervision. On November 25, 2013, a termination proceeding as to
the mother was held, and the court subsequently terminated the rights of the
mother to M.M.
On April 11, 2014, the juvenile court entered an order placing the child
back with the father. That placement was confirmed at the hearing held on
April 29, 2014, and the case was scheduled to auto-close on July 29, 2014.
However, in late July 2014, DHS informed the court that family members had
reported the father and child were spending a great deal of time at K.H.’s home
and K.H. was caring for the child unsupervised. In early August 2014, when DHS
confirmed the father had been lying to DHS about the extent of his and the child’s
contact with K.H., the child was once again removed from the father’s care and
placed in a foster home.
In its September 30, 2014 order, the juvenile court adopted a revised case
permanency plan for the continued permanency goal of reunification with father,
which included that the family participate in family safety, risk, and permanency
(FSRP) services; family interactions be at the discretion of DHS; the child
continue to participate in individual therapy; the father participate in the child’s
therapy at the recommendation of the therapist to understand the impact of his
behaviors and actions on the well-being of the child; the father not allow the child
to have any contact with K.H. without the specific approval of the child’s
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therapist, and then only under circumstances and conditions recommended by
the child’s therapist; the father reengage in individual therapy to gain insight into
his relationship with K.H., how his behaviors and actions impact his family, and
establishing healthy boundaries in his life.
Unfortunately, the father did not follow the plan.
A petition to terminate the father’s parental rights was filed on March 20,
2015, and a hearing was held on May 14, 2015. The father testified he was
ready to care for the child. He acknowledged K.H. should not have contact with
the child “[b]ecause [K.H.] needs to address issues and conquer her demons.”
However, he asserted he was able to protect the child from K.H. as he planned to
move away where K.H. would not know where they were and, because K.H. did
not have a car, could not get to the child. He asked the court that if the child was
not returned to him that she should be placed with his sister.
On June 22, the juvenile court issued extensive findings and conclusions,
including:
[The father] proclaimed that [the child] has had “zero
contact” with [K.H.] since August 2014. While this may be true,
[The father] cannot take the credit for it. His own contact with [the
child] has been limited since that time, and has remained
supervised. The record in the drawn-out CINA proceeding
overwhelmingly demonstrates that every time [the father] has had
the opportunity, he allows the child’s manipulative, dangerous
mother right back into a prominent role in her life, and attempts to
hide that contact from the professionals involved in [the child]’s
case.
[The father] is able to attend to and provide for [the child]’s
basic needs. He shares a close, loving relationship with her. They
are bonded. The bond is not, however, entirely healthy, as [the
father] has employed the child in his ongoing attempts to deceive
the Court and the professionals in the CINA proceeding about his
and the child’s relationship with [K.H.].
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At the time of the termination hearing, [the child] was five
years and three months old. She has now been under DHS
supervision for four years, over three quarters of her life. During this
time, and because of the actions of her mother and father, this child
has lived with her mother, her father while at his mother’s home,
her father in his own home, her sister’s father, her aunt, her father
again, and two different foster homes. She has suffered anxiety
and confusion as a result of this instability. Her father, sometimes
with the help of his family, has allowed the child’s manipulative,
dangerous mother to continue to play a prominent role in her life all
along the way, and involved the child in the ongoing deception
regarding that role. This has exacerbated the child’s anxiety and
confusion. The instability, anxiety and confusion for this child
needed to end a long time ago.
The court terminated the father’s parental rights pursuant to Iowa Code
section 232.116(1)(d) and (f) (2015). The court determined placement with the
father’s sister, E.A., was not in the child’s best interests. The father appeals.
II. Scope and Standard of Review.
We conduct a de novo review of termination of parental rights
proceedings. In re H.S., 805 N.W.2d 737, 745 (Iowa 2011). Although we are not
bound by the juvenile court’s findings of fact, we do give them weight, especially
in assessing the credibility of witnesses. In re D.W., 791 N.W.2d 703, 706 (Iowa
2010). An order terminating parental rights will be upheld if there is clear and
convincing evidence of grounds for termination under section 232.116. Id.
Evidence is considered “clear and convincing” when there are no serious or
substantial doubts as to the correctness of conclusions of law drawn from the
evidence. Id.
III. Analysis.
Iowa Code chapter 232 termination of parental rights follows a three-step
analysis. In re P.L., 778 N.W.2d 33, 39 (Iowa 2010). The court must initially
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determine whether a ground for termination under section 232.116(1) is
established. Id. If a ground for termination is established, the court must next
apply the best-interest framework set out in section 232.116(2) to decide if the
grounds for termination should result in a termination of parental rights. Id. If the
statutory best-interest framework supports termination of parental rights, the
court must finally consider if any statutory exceptions or factors set out in section
232.116(3) weigh against termination of parental rights. Id. In the case before
us, the second and third factors are intertwined and will be addressed together.
A. Grounds for Termination. When the juvenile court terminates
parental rights on more than one statutory ground, we may affirm the juvenile
court’s order on any ground we find supported by the record. D.W., 791 N.W.2d
at 707. Section 232.116(1)(f) provides that termination may be ordered when
there is clear and convincing evidence a child over the age of four who has been
adjudicated a CINA and removed from the parent’s care for at least twelve of the
last eighteen months cannot be returned to the parent’s custody at the time of the
termination hearing. Iowa Code § 232.116(1)(f).
The child is over five years of age, has been adjudicated a CINA, and has
been removed from the father’s home for fourteen of the last eighteen months.
The father challenges the finding that the child cannot be returned to him at
present. However, we specifically adopt the juvenile court’s findings in this
regard:
[The child] has suffered anxiety and confusion as a direct result of
her father facilitating the ongoing relationship with her mother, and
involving the child in the ongoing deception regarding that contact.
[The father] shows no insight into the damage that he has caused
to the child, and no inclination to stop his, and therefore the child’s,
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relationship with the mother. This is in spite of his recognition that
his relationship with the mother is extremely unhealthy, that the
mother’s problems are still unresolved, that it is not in [the child]’s
best interest to have contact with her, and that leaving the child
alone with the mother would be a risk to the child’s safety. [The
father] wants the Court to trust him regarding drawing appropriate
boundaries between [the child] and her mother. Yet his actions
over the past four years and even since the child was last removed
from his care in August 2014 demonstrate that he cannot be trusted
to have the child placed back in his care at this time.
Whether due to unwillingness or inability, when visitation was not supervised, the
father simply has been unable to avoid the child’s contact with the biological
mother, whom the father acknowledges is dangerous and unbalanced. The
contact was frequent and occurred over the course of many months. The child’s
safety simply cannot be assured in the father’s care.
B. Best Interests of the Child. “Even after we have determined that
statutory grounds for termination exist, we must still determine whether
termination is in the children’s best interests.” In re A.B., 815 N.W.2d 764, 776
(Iowa 2012); accord Iowa Code § 232.116(2). We “give primary consideration to
the child’s safety, to the best placement for furthering the long-term nurturing and
growth of the child, and to the physical, mental, and emotional condition and
needs of the child.” Iowa Code § 232.116(2); accord P.L., 778 N.W.2d at 40.
1. Parent-child bond. The father contends that termination was not in
the child’s best interests due to the strong bond between the child and him.
Section 232.116(3)(c) provides that “[t]he court need not terminate the
relationship between the parent and child if the court finds . . . clear and
convincing evidence that the termination would be detrimental to the child at the
time due to the closeness of the parent-child relationship.” “A finding under
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subsection 3 allows the court not to terminate.” A.M., 843 N.W.2d at 113. But
the “‘factors weighing against termination in section 232.116(3) are permissive,
not mandatory,’ and the court may use its discretion, ‘based on the unique
circumstances of each case and the best interests of the child, whether to apply
the factors in this section to save the parent-child relationship.’” Id. (quoting In re
D.S., 806 N.W.2d 458, 474–75 (Iowa Ct. App. 2011)). This is not such a case
because the father has shown he will not protect the child from K.H., whose
parental rights were terminated quite some time ago, despite knowing she
continues to have unresolved substance abuse and mental health issues. The
father’s own appellate brief acknowledges:
[T]he reality of the situation as to the mother is that based upon the
mother’s criminal history and alleged criminal associates, it appears
likely that she will continue to search for and engage with the minor
child of the parties regardless of whomever placement may be with
and regardless of the orders of the Court.
In light of the father’s refusal to cease his relationship with K.H., this
acknowledgment does not inspire confidence in his ability to protect the child.
See In re D.C., 436 N.W.2d 644, 645 (Iowa Ct. App. 1988) (noting a parent’s past
conduct is a good indication of how the parent will behave in the future).
2. Placement with paternal aunt. The father also argues the juvenile
court erred in declining to place the child with his sister, E.A. But we again find
the court’s reasoning on this matter persuasive. The court observed that placing
the child with the father’s sister “will likely result in a repeat of the cycle that has
plagued this child throughout the past four years.” The sister testified she
believed the father should remain in the child’s life and that he could be trusted to
keep proper boundaries between the child and K.H. Cf. id. We agree with the
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trial court, “This child needs a permanent custodian. The court simply cannot
trust that placement with [the sister] will not result in the child being subjected to
the same harms inflicted through a continuing relationship with her father and
mother.”
Because grounds for termination exist and termination will allow the child
the permanence she needs, we affirm the termination of the father’s parental
rights.
AFFIRMED.