IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 15-0239
Filed October 28, 2015
IN THE INTEREST OF O.P.,
Minor Child,
O.P., Minor Child,
Appellant.
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Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Rachel E. Seymour,
District Associate Judge.
A juvenile appeals the revocation of a consent decree resulting in her
adjudication for delinquent acts. AFFIRMED.
Christopher R. Kemp of Kemp & Sease, Des Moines, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Bruce Kempkes, Assistant Attorney
General, John P. Sarcone, County Attorney, and Christine Gonzalez, Assistant
County Attorney, for appellee.
Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vogel and Tabor, JJ.
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TABOR, Judge.
Fifteen-year-old O.P. appeals from the juvenile court’s revocation of her
consent decree and the resulting adjudication for the delinquent acts of operating
a motor vehicle without the owner’s consent and harassment in the third degree.
She contends requiring her participation in juvenile drug court was an appropriate
remedy short of the “lifelong consequences” of delinquency adjudication.
Because O.P. admittedly violated nearly all terms of the consent decree
and only started to comply with the juvenile court’s expectations after she was
placed in detention, we do not find an abuse of discretion in the court’s
revocation of the consent decree.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
On February 24, 2014, the State filed a delinquency petition against O.P.,
alleging she committed harassment in the first degree, in violation of Iowa Code
sections 708.7(1)(b) and 708.7(2) (2013). The petition accused then fourteen-
year-old O.P. of threatening to punch two teachers at Des Moines East High
School “until they could no longer breathe and watch them lay there and suffer.”
A separately filed petition alleged O.P. operated her mother’s car without consent
in violation of Iowa Code section 714.7
On April 7, 2014, O.P. admitted committing harassment in the third degree
and operating a motor vehicle without the owner’s consent. A predisposition
report by the Juvenile Court Officer (JCO) alleged O.P. had a “huge problem”
with school attendance and tested positive for marijuana use. The JCO
described O.P.’s behavior as “indicative of her attitude, her impulsiveness, her
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lack of respect for others and her dislike for rules.” Nevertheless, the JCO
“cautiously recommended” a consent decree under Iowa Code section 232.46.
On May 30, 2014, the juvenile court granted the consent decree, which
required O.P. to comply with the following terms and conditions:
Obey all municipal, state and federal laws;
Report to the JCO as required and abide by all conditions
set by the JCO;
Obey all rules of the parental or custodial home;
Attend school daily, including summer school, give best
efforts at school, and obey all rules;
Abstain from use of tobacco, alcohol, illegal drug, synthetic
drugs & drugs prescribed for other persons;
Provide drug screens upon request;
Refrain from the possession of firearms or
dangerous/offensive weapons;
Abide by a curfew as approved by Juvenile Court Services;
Complete substance abuse recommendations, including
aftercare;
Cooperate with tracking and monitoring at JCO discretion;
Participate in a pro-social activity while on probation.
The consent decree informed O.P. that violation of these conditions could result
in detention, revocation of the decree, and delinquency adjudication.
On September 19, 2014, the JCO filed an application to revoke the
consent decree, alleging O.P. had not been attending school regularly, had not
followed rules at home, had not met curfew, and had not complied with tracking
requirements. When O.P. failed to show up for the October 6 revocation hearing,
the court issued a bench warrant for her arrest. In an application for detention
filed on December 9, 2014, the State alleged that O.P. had been a “runaway from
her home since October 6, 2014” and had tested positive for illegal drugs.
On December 17, 2014, the State filed an application to revoke the
consent decree. The application alleged between October 6 and December 10,
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O.P. failed to maintain contact with the JCO, failed to attend school, used illegal
drugs, and failed to provide drug screens. The application also alleged that O.P.
had committed two additional delinquent acts—theft in the fifth degree and
providing false identification. The State’s application also noted that on
December 17 O.P. was accepted in juvenile drug court. An order entered on
December 19 provided for O.P.’s release from detention on December 22 and
commencement of day treatment at Cornerstone Recovery.
On January 23, 2015, the JCO filed an application seeking to rescind the
request for revocation. The application noted O.P. had been accepted into drug
court, which was “a very appropriate solution” and allowed her another
opportunity to complete the consent decree.
The county attorney asked the juvenile court to go forward with the
revocation, despite the JCO’s change of heart. At the January 23, 2015, hearing,
O.P. stipulated to her violation of the terms and conditions of the consent decree.
But her counsel argued she had “completely turned herself around in the last
month and a half.” Counsel argued that given her acceptance into drug court,
she should be “afforded the opportunity to prove that should she meet all these
expectations, she should be able to keep her consent decree.”
The juvenile court highlighted its involvement with O.P.’s case since
February 2014. The court noted the JCO had “cautiously” recommended the
consent decree. But by September 2014, O.P. “had violated most of the Court’s
expectations.” By October 2014, it was “clear that [O.P.] had also engaged in
ongoing criminal activity” including illegal drug use and theft. The court
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summarized: “In essence for the last three to four weeks [O.P.] has been
compliant with expectations, while she failed to comply with the Court’s
expectations for the prior ten months.” The court also noted O.P.’s demeanor
during the January 2015 hearing: “There were times when the officer was
testifying and the child was smirking—seemed to find that some of his testimony
was amusing or funny.” The court concluded “due to the numerous violations of
her consent decree, the nature of those violations which included new charges
and absconding from her home for several months, and her demeanor during the
proceedings, her prior Consent Decree should be revoked.”
The court adjudicated O.P. as delinquent for the acts to which she
previously admitted. She was ordered to continue on probation on terms as
established by the juvenile drug court. O.P. now appeals.
II. Standard of Review
Our review of juvenile court’s decisions regarding consent decrees is de
novo, but only to the extent of examining all the evidence to determine whether
the juvenile court abused its discretion. See In Interest of J.J.A., 580 N.W.2d
731, 737 (Iowa 1998). We will find an abuse of discretion only if the juvenile
court’s decision rests on clearly untenable or unreasonable grounds. In re B.A.,
737 N.W.2d 665, 667-68 (Iowa Ct. App. 2007).
III. Analysis of Revocation Decision
On appeal, O.P. asks us to reverse the juvenile court’s revocation of the
consent decree because the adjudication for her delinquent acts does not
promise to reform her behavior and carries long-term consequences. O.P.
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contends requiring her participation in drug court was an appropriate remedy for
her noncompliance with the consent decree.
The State counters that the juvenile court was reasonable in its conclusion
that O.P.’s short period of improved behavior did not outweigh her entire history
of defiance against the terms of the consent decree.
Consent decrees are governed by Iowa Code section 232.46(1), which
provides:
At any time after the filing of a petition and prior to entry of an order
of adjudication pursuant to section 232.47, the court may suspend
the proceedings on motion of the county attorney or the child’s
counsel, enter a consent decree, and continue the case under
terms and conditions established by the court.
A child’s failure to comply with the terms and conditions may result in the child
being “held accountable as if the consent decree had never been entered.” Iowa
Code § 232.46(5). Consent decrees in juvenile court are similar to deferred
judgments in the criminal context. See State v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 828 N.W.2d 607,
630 (Iowa 2013) (Appel, J., dissenting). As with deferred judgments and
suspended sentences, the granting of a consent decree is a “matter of grace,
favor, or forbearance” not a matter of right. Cf. State v. Noonan, 246 N.W.2d
236, 237 (Iowa 1976).
The juvenile court provided O.P. with the opportunity to avoid delinquency
adjudication by entering into a consent decree. Instead of taking advantage of
that opportunity extended to her and avoiding the long-term consequences
discussed by her attorney, O.P. violated almost all of the terms and conditions of
the decree, including committing additional delinquent acts. After committing
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those acts, she failed to appear for the scheduled revocation hearing and was
“on the run” for two months.
At the January 2015 hearing, the juvenile court considered the JCO’s
recommendation that O.P. be given more time to meet the conditions of the
consent agreement under the more intensive supervision required by juvenile
drug court. But the JCO also testified O.P.’s participation in drug court did not
prevent her from having the consent decree revoked.
The juvenile court reached the following conclusion:
[O.P.] has violated virtually every single term and condition
set by this Court, and she has done it throughout her time while she
had that consent decree. The Court agrees she has some
consequences by being placed in the drug court program, but, quite
frankly, those are less significant than she would have faced if she
would have remained under this Court’s jurisdiction because I
would have revoked her and sent her to placement.
After examining all of the evidence in the juvenile court record, we cannot
conclude the juvenile court’s decision to revoke the consent decree constituted
an abuse of discretion. The juvenile court gave sound reasons for holding O.P.
accountable for her protracted defiance of the terms of the consent decree. The
juvenile court was justified in questioning the sincerity of O.P.’s brief compliance
after she was placed in detention, especially given her disrespectful demeanor
observed by the court at the January hearing. Going forward with the
delinquency adjudication was reasonable on this record.
AFFIRMED.