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THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
___________________________
10th Circuit Court-Brentwood Family Division
No. 2016-0160
IN RE S.T.
Argued: October 6, 2016
Opinion Issued: November 29, 2016
Joseph A. Foster, attorney general (Elizabeth A. Lahey, assistant attorney
general, on the brief and orally), for the petitioner.
Fitzgerald-Boyd Law PLLC, of Plaistow (Jacqueline C. Fitzgerald-Boyd on
the brief and orally), for the respondent.
LYNN, J. The respondent, the mother of a minor child, appeals the order
of the Circuit Court (Weaver, J.) terminating her parental rights over the child.
See RSA ch. 170-C (2014 & Supp. 2015). On appeal, the mother argues that
the trial court erred by: (1) granting the petition brought by the petitioner, the
New Hampshire Division of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF), to terminate
her parental rights while the direct appeal of her underlying criminal conviction
was pending; and (2) finding that termination of her parental rights was in the
best interest of the child. We reverse and remand.
I
The relevant facts follow. The child was born on September 17, 2013, to
the mother and her boyfriend, the child’s natural father (the father). A court
order prohibited the father from having any unsupervised contact with the
child and the mother’s two other children.
On October 21, DCYF received a report that the mother had brought the
child to a doctor with concerns about “red eyes.” The doctor determined that
the child was suffering from bilateral conjunctival hemorrhages, and reported
that the mother had expressed concern that the father might be hurting the
child. The doctor reported that the injuries appeared to be suspicious in
nature and referred the child to the emergency room for further examination.
On October 22, DCYF was informed that a skeletal survey of the child had
indicated multiple fractures of varying ages that were consistent with non-
accidental trauma. DCYF brought an ex parte petition seeking removal of the
child from the parents’ care on grounds that the child “is in imminent danger
based on the injuries that she has sustained, the inability of [the father] and
[the mother] to follow the existing court orders and the fact that the injuries
were consistent with non-accidental trauma.” The petition was granted, and
the child was placed in a foster home.
On October 24, DCYF filed petitions, based upon the child’s injuries,
alleging abuse and neglect of the child by the father, and neglect by the
mother. See RSA 169-C:3, II(b), (d), XIX(b) (Supp. 2015). On December 11,
DCYF amended the abuse and neglect petitions to allege an incident involving
the child in which the father “had the baby wrapped up against his body and
[the mother] grabbed the child’s legs and pulled and he twisted to pull the baby
away.” According to the doctor who examined the child, it was possible that
some of the child’s injuries that she had identified on October 22 “could be
consistent with the description of the tugging that occurred between the
parents.”
Also on December 11, the father and mother were arrested and charged
with second degree assault of the child based upon the October incident. The
mother was granted bail. The father subsequently pleaded guilty to eight
counts of second degree assault and received an eight-to-sixteen-year sentence.
Following a hearing on December 18, the trial court found that the father
had abused and neglected the child in that he “admitted to the police and
[DCYF] that he had a tug of war with the infant which resulted in at least some
of her many fractures. Additionally, [he] had the opportunity to cause further
injuries by having unsupervised time with [the child] in violation of this court’s
order.” The court found that the mother had neglected the child because she
continued to minimize the risk that [the father] posed to her
children. On several occasions, she allowed [the father] to care for
[the child] unsupervised in violation of this Court’s order, which
placed the child at risk of serious harm. Additionally, [the mother]
engaged in reckless conduct by tugging on [the child’s] legs in an
2
effort to get the [child] away from [the father]; their [actions] very
likely resulting in serious harm to [the child].
The court awarded legal custody of the child to DCYF because the mother “does
not recognize the potential risk to [the child], as demonstrated by repeated
violations of court orders related to [the father] having contact with the kids.
[The mother’s] minimization of the risk to [the child] coupled with her
inappropriate handling of the child place [the child] at continued risk of harm
in her care.”
On June 12, 2014, DCYF moved to modify the outstanding dispositional
orders to: (1) “reunify the child with” the mother; (2) “remove the child from
DCYF’s legal custody and instead vest DCYF with legal supervision”; and (3)
“modify the permanency plan from ‘reunification’ to ‘maintain in the home.’” In
support, DCYF stated that the mother had “made significant progress in
attending to and managing the needs of her children,” had “continued to
actively engage in services and ha[d] successfully completed case plan goals,”
and had “increased frequent and liberal parenting time with [the child], even
extended unsupervised parenting time encompassing the majority of each of
several weeks, and ha[d] demonstrated her ability to safely parent her.” The
trial court granted the motion.
On July 10, DCYF moved ex parte to withdraw its June 12 motion,
stating that the mother had been charged with shoplifting which, in turn, had
caused the State to move to revoke her bail, and that “[t]hese factors have
caused a significant increase in stress” for the mother, thereby “adversely
impact[ing] her ability to consistently parent.” In addition, as a result of the
mother’s increased stress being conveyed to her children, her son had become
“increasingly volatile, acting out aggressively, mostly toward [the child],” and,
because of the son’s behavior, DCYF was “not satisfied that [the child] can be
safe in the care of her mother.” The trial court granted the motion, and the
child was placed in a foster home.
On October 7, the child was again reunified with her mother until
January 30, 2015, when the mother was convicted by a jury of second degree
assault based upon the October 2013 “tug of war” incident and incarcerated.
See RSA 631:2 (2016). At that time, the child was placed in the care of her
maternal grandparents. At a review hearing on February 6, the trial court
found that DCYF “has provided services to [the mother] throughout this case
which enabled her to safely reunify with her daughter. The current removal is
outside of the Division’s control and not related to any current child safety
concern other th[a]n the mother’s incarceration.” The court also found that the
mother was “in substantial compliance” with the case plan wherein she had
“attended parenting classes and engaged in mental health treatment,” and the
court recommended that she continue with those services. The court ordered
3
that DCYF have legal supervision of the child, and that physical custody
remain with the child’s maternal grandparents.
The mother was subsequently sentenced on the second degree assault
conviction to serve 10 to 20 years, with three years suspended for good
behavior. DCYF thereafter sought a permanency order allowing it to place the
child in foster care with the goal of adoption. After a review hearing on April
14, 2015, the trial court awarded legal custody of the child to DCYF, with
placement to continue with the child’s maternal grandparents. The court noted
that “[a]lthough the mother and DCYF had hoped that a short prison sentence
would be imposed, . . . [a]s a result of the incarceration of both the mother and
the father, the reunification of the child with her parents is in doubt.”
On May 19, the trial court held a permanency hearing. See RSA 169-
C:24-b (2014). The court found that twelve or more months had passed since
the finding of abuse and neglect in December 2013, and that the child had
been in out-of-home placement for a minimum of twelve months since October
21, 2013. See RSA 169-C:24-a, I(a) (2014). The trial court also found that
DCYF had made “reasonable efforts to finalize the permanency plan of
reunification” between the child and her mother. Although the mother was
found to be “in substantial compliance” with the outstanding dispositional
orders because she had “participated in parenting classes, and engaged in
mental health treatment,” and had “actively worked with DCYF and services in
order to correct conditions that led to [the child] being injured,” the court
concluded that the conditions leading to the child’s removal had not been
corrected because “her current incarceration prevents her from reunifying with
[the child] within a reasonable time frame.”
The trial court found that the mother could not demonstrate that, if
returned home, the child would not be endangered in the manner adjudicated
on the initial neglect petition because:
[The mother] was convicted on second degree assault charges
against [the child]. She is currently serving a ten to twenty year
prison sentence with three years suspended from the minimum
sentence. Through her criminal case she is ordered to complete
parenting classes and . . . an anger management program during
her incarceration. She is also receiving mental health treatment.
However, due to the length of her sentence, [the mother] will not be
able to demonstrate within the recommended permanency time
frame that she has successfully addressed parenting and mental
health issues, including anger management so that [the child]
would not be endangered in the manner adjudicated on the
original petition.
4
The court ordered DCYF to file a termination of parental rights (TPR) petition
against the mother within 30 days. It also ordered that “DCYF is no longer
required to provide reasonable efforts to facilitate reunification between” the
child and the mother, and that DCYF explore adoptive home placements. Legal
custody was awarded to DCYF, and the court ordered that the child remain in
her maternal grandparents’ care.
On July 10, DCYF petitioned for termination of the mother’s parental
rights pursuant to RSA 170-C:5, on the grounds that she was incarcerated for
a felony and had been found, pursuant to RSA chapter 169-C, to have abused
and neglected her child, see RSA 170-C:5, VI, and that she was convicted of a
felony assault under RSA 631:2 which resulted in injury to the child, see RSA
170-C:5, VII(d). In support, the petition alleged that “[t]he nature of the
conviction and the length of incarceration will deprive [the child] of proper
parental care and leave her in an impermanent environment for a longer period
of time than would be prudent.”
Prior to the final hearing on the termination petition initially scheduled
for December 15, DCYF filed a motion to continue the hearing on grounds that
the mother “has appealed her criminal convictions to the NH Supreme Court”
and that “[a]lthough the State is prepared to proceed to termination, a
continuance of 60 days may provide finality to the criminal process.” DCYF
noted that it was proceeding with the permanency plan for the child, that the
child had visited with a foster family that was prepared to adopt her should she
be freed for adoption, and that because it was in the process of transitioning
the child from her grandparents’ care to the foster home, “[a] brief continuance
will not adversely impact [the child].”
The trial court held the final hearing on the TPR petition on February 9,
2016, and found that DCYF had met its burden and granted the petition. The
court found that “there is no question but that the statutory grounds have
been established beyond a reasonable doubt.” The court concluded that
because the mother had been convicted of a felony assault against the child
that had resulted in serious injuries to the child, the requirements of RSA 170-
C:5, VII(d) had been met. The court rejected the mother’s argument that the
conviction was not final because it was on appeal, reasoning that “[t]o hold
otherwise would leave the child in legal limbo while her mother makes her way
through the appellate process. That process can take years, and therefore, the
Court finds the conviction in this case meets the statutory test even though it
is still subject to appellate review.” The court also found that DCYF had met
its burden under RSA 170-C:5, VI “as the evidence established beyond a
reasonable doubt that [the mother], as a result of her current incarceration for
7 to 20 years, is unable to perform her parental responsibilities to [the child]
and she has been found to have neglected [the child].” The court reasoned that
the mother’s “incarceration is of a long enough period that if her rights are not
5
terminated, [the child] will be deprived of proper parental care and protection
and left in an unstable and impermanent situation.”
On March 8, we issued an order reversing and remanding the mother’s
conviction. We concluded that the trial court erred by excluding evidence that
the child’s father had threatened the mother’s only witness prior to the
witness’s first interview at the Child Advocacy Center. We also concluded that
the mother was prejudiced by the exclusion of that evidence “because it
precluded her from rehabilitating her only witness, who was also the only
witness to the ‘tug-of-war’” incident that resulted in the assault charge. As we
explained,
A police officer testified to [the mother’s] various accounts of the
“tug-of-war.” He described [the mother] as saying that the father
was holding [the child] and she grabbed [the child’s] legs and
“yanked” them for about five minutes “with everything she had.”
However, the witness’s testimony gave a different character to [the
mother’s] participation in the “tug-of-war.” The witness testified
that [the mother] tried to get [the child] away from the father, who
was angry, to comfort [the child] and that the father “started to
yank [the child] away from” [the mother]. Furthermore, the
witness described [the mother’s] actions in caring for [the child]
and the father’s mistreatment of [the child] on other occasions.
This testimony was critical to the defense’s argument regarding the
father’s mistreatment of [the child].
The State’s cross-examination of the witness regarding her
prior inconsistent statements created the impression that the
witness had fabricated her testimony to benefit [the mother].
Explaining these statements as having been the result of a threat
could have rehabilitated the witness.
(Brackets omitted.)
Following our decision, the mother requested that the trial court
reconsider its order granting the TPR petition. The trial court noted that it had
previously considered the possibility of a reversal on appeal, but concluded
that the mother’s “continued incarceration, which is not over given that the
case has been remanded for a new trial, places her daughter in an unstable
and impermanent environment for a longer period than would be prudent,
given the history of this case, leaving [the child] without proper parental care.”
Given the fact of the mother’s incarceration, “and the prior conviction and
finding of neglect,” the trial court denied the motion. This appeal followed.
6
II
On appeal, the mother argues that the trial court erred in terminating
her parental rights “without knowing the outcome of the criminal conviction
appeal and finding that the statutory ground had been met beyond a
reasonable doubt.” (Bolding and underlining omitted.) She asserts that
because the statutory basis for the TPR petition was that she was convicted of
and incarcerated for a felony assault, and because the effect of our reversal of
her conviction “vacates the ‘guilty’ finding[,] she is now in the same place as
she was prior to the conviction. She is facing charges but she is not
‘convicted.’” Thus, she argues that terminating “a natural, essential and
inherent parental right” of a parent whose conviction has been vacated when
that conviction was the basis of the petition, “is unjust and denies [her] her
fundamental liberty interest.” She also argues that the trial court erred in
determining that terminating her parental rights was in the best interest of the
child.
DCYF counters that based upon “the plain language, policy, and[ ]
legislative history of RSA 170-C:5, VI and VII(d),” the trial court could, as a
matter of law, terminate the mother’s parental rights while the direct appeal of
her criminal conviction was pending. DCYF argues that these statutory
provisions “require only that the State prove that the parent at issue has been
convicted of a felony at the time of the termination hearing, not that the parent
has been convicted and that all relevant appellate periods have expired.” To
conclude otherwise, DCYF argues, “would require children . . . to remain in
legal limbo, languishing in the foster system for years while their parents
exhaust all direct and collateral appeals related to their convictions,” a result
that would be “at direct odds” with the purposes of RSA chapter 170-C, “which
are to make foster care temporary and provide timely, permanent placements
for children.” DCYF also asserts that the trial court properly ruled that
termination was in the child’s best interest. Because we conclude that it was
error to terminate the mother’s parental rights before the resolution of the
direct appeal of her conviction, we need not address whether the termination
was in the best interest of the child.
III
Before a court may order the termination of parental rights, the
petitioning party must prove a statutory ground for termination beyond a
reasonable doubt. In re C.M., 166 N.H. 764, 773 (2014). Once a statutory
ground is established, the court must then consider whether termination is in
the child’s best interest. Id. The trial court’s ruling should not be disturbed
unless it is unsupported by the evidence or plainly erroneous as a matter of
law. In re Zachary G., 159 N.H. 146, 153 (2009).
7
In matters of statutory interpretation, we are the final arbiter of the
intent of the legislature as expressed in the words of the statute considered as
a whole. In re C.M., 166 N.H. at 774 (quotation omitted). We first look to the
language of the statute itself, and, if possible, construe that language according
to its plain and ordinary meaning. Id. (quotation omitted). We interpret
legislative intent from the statute as written and will not consider what the
legislature might have said or add language that the legislature did not see fit
to include. Id. (quotation omitted). We construe all parts of a statute together
to effectuate its overall purpose and avoid an absurd or unjust result. Id.
(quotation omitted). We employ a de novo standard of review. Id.
IV
The provisions of RSA chapter 169-C, the Child Protection Act, and RSA
chapter 170-C, the Termination of Parental Rights statute, together set forth
the procedures that apply to adjudicating petitions alleging abuse and/or
neglect, and petitions to terminate the parent-child relationship. The question
before us is whether the terms “convicted” and “conviction” as used in these
statutes mean convicted in the trial court after a finding of guilt or whether
they mean a determination of guilt after a direct appeal to this court.
The purposes of the Child Protection Act include: “[p]rotect[ing] the
safety of the child”; “[p]reserv[ing] the unity of the family whenever possible”;
“[p]rovid[ing] assistance to parents to deal with and correct problems in order
to avoid removal of children from the family”; and “[t]ak[ing] such action as
may be necessary to prevent abuse or neglect of children.” RSA 169-C:2, I
(2014). The chapter “shall be liberally construed to the end that its purpose
may be carried out, to wit, . . . whenever possible,” to keep a child in a family
environment “by preserving the unity of the family and separating the child
from his parents only when the safety of the child is in danger or when it is
clearly necessary for his welfare,” and “[t]o provide effective judicial procedures
through which the provisions of this chapter are executed and enforced and
which recognize and enforce the constitutional and other rights of the parties
and assures them a fair hearing.” RSA 169-C:2, II(b), (c) (2014).
DCYF is required to file a TPR petition when “a child has been in an out-
of-home placement pursuant to a finding of child neglect or abuse, under the
responsibility of the state, for 12 of the most recent 22 months” or when “a
court of competent jurisdiction” has determined that “the parent has been
convicted of a felony assault under RSA . . . 631:2 . . . that resulted in injury to
the child.” RSA 169-C:24-a, I(a), (c)(4) (2014). The statute does not define the
term “convicted.” See RSA 169-C:3 (2014 & Supp. 2015).
8
The purpose of the Termination of Parental Rights statute is
to provide for the involuntary termination of the parent-child
relationship by a judicial process which will safeguard the rights
and interests of all parties concerned and when it is in the best
interest of the child. Implicit in this chapter is the philosophy that
whenever possible family life should be strengthened and
preserved, and that the parent-child relationship is to be
terminated only when the adoption of that child may be
contemplated.
RSA 170-C:1 (2014). RSA chapter 170-C “imports the procedural safeguards
and substantive requirements of RSA 169-C.” In re Zachary G., 159 N.H. at
153.
The statute sets out seven grounds for termination of the parent-child
relationship. See RSA 170-C:5, I-VII (2014). In the case before us, DCYF
sought to terminate the mother’s parental rights based upon RSA 170-C:5, VI
and VII(d). RSA 170-C:5, VII was added to the statute in 1999, when the
statute was amended “to initiate New Hampshire’s compliance with the federal
Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997” (ASFA). Laws 1999, 133:1, :4. The
ASFA “is designed and intended to reform parts of the current child welfare
system and to promote the safety, permanency, and well being of children in
out-of-home placements.” Laws 1999, 133:1.
RSA 170-C:5, VI provides:
If the parent . . . is, as a result of incarceration for a felony offense,
unable to discharge [her] responsibilities to and for the child and,
in addition, has been found pursuant to RSA 169-C to have
abused or neglected [her] child or children, the court may review
the conviction of the parent . . . to determine whether the felony
offense is of such a nature, and the period of incarceration
imposed of such duration, that the child would be deprived of
proper parental care and protection and left in an unstable or
impermanent environment for a longer period of time than would
be prudent. Placement of the child in foster care shall not be
considered proper parental care and protection for purposes of this
paragraph. Incarceration in and of itself shall not be grounds for
termination of parental rights.
Under RSA 170-C:5, VII, termination may be ordered when “[t]he parent has
been convicted of . . . [a] felony assault under RSA . . . 631:2 . . . which
resulted in injury to the child.” RSA 170-C:5, VII(d). The statute does not
define the terms “conviction” or “convicted.” See RSA 170-C:2 (2014).
9
The meaning of the terms “conviction” and “convicted” in the context of
petitions to terminate parental rights raises a question of first impression.
Other jurisdictions that have been presented with this question have reached
contrasting conclusions. For example, in People in Interest of T.T., 845 P.2d
539 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992), the court held that under its termination statute, the
term “conviction” means “convicted upon trial.” Interest of T.T., 845 P.2d at
541 (quotation omitted). The mother had been convicted of, among other
things, murder and reckless child abuse and sentenced to life imprisonment
plus 32 years. Id. at 539-40. The Department of Social Services sought to
terminate the mother’s parental rights based upon a statutory provision that
allows termination upon a finding of “[l]ong-term confinement of the parent of
such duration that he is not eligible for parole for at least six years from the
date the child was adjudicated dependent or neglected.” Id. at 540. The trial
court took judicial notice of the mother’s conviction and her sentence, and
terminated her parental rights. Id.
On appeal, the mother argued that “the six-year period should not be
computed until all appeals as of right from a trial court conviction and
sentence have been exhausted.” Id. In determining the meaning of the term
“conviction” in the context of the termination of parental rights, the appellate
court looked to the policies set forth in the termination statute. Id. at 540-41.
These include that the court is to “place paramount emphasis on the best
interests of the child,” and that the provisions of the statute are “designed to
render a particular parent fit to provide adequate parenting to a child within a
‘reasonable’ time.” Id. at 541. Construing the statute in light of those policies,
the court concluded that it was “apparent that the [legislature] intended
‘conviction’ to mean convicted upon trial” where the accused “has had a
complete and full opportunity to be heard on the charges against her and a
final judgment against her has been entered.” Id. The court reasoned that
[t]o hold otherwise would be to violate the important policies of [the
statute] which seek to assure a child of some degree of permanency
in long-term planning and to assure the child of a stable and
secure environment as soon as possible. If a termination
proceeding were required to be stayed until a parent’s appellate
rights are exhausted, a child would have to spend an
indeterminate time, perhaps a great portion of his youth, in foster
or other temporary care at a time when the child needs stability
and bonding in his relationships.
Id. (citation omitted); see also Varnadore v. Dept. of Human Resources, 543 So.
2d 1194, 1196 (Ala. App. 1989) (rejecting, as being based upon “mere
speculation,” mother’s argument that the termination was premature because
her criminal conviction will be overturned); Matter of Juvenile Severance
Action, 785 P.2d 56, 58 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1989) (explaining that nothing in the
TPR statute suggests that the juvenile court must wait for the parent convicted
10
of a crime “to exhaust all avenues of appeal before the court may proceed with
a severance hearing” because doing so would “indefinitely delay determinations
regarding children whose best interests are at risk and require expedient
consideration”).
By contrast, in In Interest of Kody D.V., 548 N.W.2d 837 (Wis. Ct. App.
1996), the court held that under its termination statute, the term “conviction”
means “conviction after the appeal as of right has been exhausted.” Kody D.V.,
548 N.W.2d at 843. The mother had been convicted of recklessly causing great
bodily harm to her child and sentenced to five years’ imprisonment. Id. at 839.
The County petitioned to terminate the mother’s parental rights on the
statutory ground that she had been convicted of a felony. Id. The County
argued that the term “conviction” as used in the statute “means a conviction at
the trial level and that it is irrelevant whether an appeal is pending or, by
implication, what the decision of the appellate court is.” Id. The mother
argued that “conviction means a final conviction after an appeal.” Id.
The court found both meanings of the term “conviction” as set forth by
the parties to be reasonable in the context of the statute. Id. at 640. As the
court reasoned, a judgment of conviction is entered by the trial court after a
verdict of guilty by the jury or a finding of guilty by the court and, therefore, it
is reasonable to interpret the term “conviction” as used in the statute “as the
judgment of conviction entered by the trial court.” Id. at 840-41. “On the
other hand,” the court reasoned that “an appeal is an integral part in our
judicial system for a final adjudication of guilt or innocence and serves to
protect a defendant against errors in the criminal proceedings,” that “[a]
defendant has both a statutory and a constitutional right to an appeal,” and
that therefore it is reasonable to interpret the statute to mean “a conviction
after the completion of the appeal as of right.” Id. at 841.
The court thus turned to a consideration of “the nature of TPR
proceedings, including the constitutional implications,” to determine which of
the meanings the legislature intended. Id. at 840-41. The court took into
consideration that “[a] parent’s interest in his or her child is a fundamental
liberty interest that is protected by the Due Process Clause of . . . the United
States Constitution.” Id. at 841. The court also considered the purposes of
TPR proceedings as set forth in the statute, which included: providing
procedures “through which children and other interested parties are assured of
a fair hearing and of the protection of their constitutional rights while
protecting the public safety”; preserving the unity of the family whenever
possible; providing children with permanent and stable relationships;
promoting the adoption of children into stable families “rather than allowing
them to remain in the impermanence of foster care”; and allowing the
termination of parental rights “at the earliest possible time after rehabilitation
and reunification efforts are discontinued.” Id. at 841-42.
11
Recognizing that “[t]he balancing of the child’s interest and the parent’s
interest in a TPR proceeding is difficult,” the court reasoned that
[t]he consequences of adopting [the County’s] interpretation of
conviction in this context [are] troubling. If an appeal of a
judgment of conviction is pending when the termination of parental
rights occurs, there is the chance the judgment may be reversed.
There may be a new trial, which could result in either a guilty
verdict or an acquittal. If the reversal is due to the insufficiency of
the evidence, the defendant cannot be retried. Meanwhile, the
parent’s rights would have been terminated and the child possibly
already adopted.
The lack of finality of a conviction that is being appealed
raises the question as to whether that conviction is clear and
convincing evidence of parental unfitness. That lack of finality also
does not ultimately promote permanency and stability for the
child. Until the right to appeal has been exhausted, there is no
certainty that the supposedly permanent arrangements made for
the child will not be disrupted after a successful appeal.
Id. at 842-43 (citations omitted). Therefore, the court concluded that “the
correct interpretation of ‘conviction’ in [the statute] is a conviction after the
appeal as of right has been exhausted.” Id. at 843.
The court subsequently clarified its holding as being limited to direct
appeals that raise issues of guilt or innocence, rather than, for example, an
appeal raising “only a sentencing issue that will in no way affect the
determination of guilt.” In re Reynaldo F., 681 N.W.2d 289, 293 (Wis. Ct. App.
2004); see also In re Sonia G., 158 Cal. App. 3d 18 (Ct. App. 1984) (reasoning
that “[a] judgment which is not yet final and may be reversed on appeal falls far
short of the requirement of proof by clear and convincing evidence necessary to
permanently sever a parental relationship,” and expressing concern that “[i]f
the term ‘conviction’ were to mean a mere finding of guilt, regardless of the
outcome of an appeal, a child could be declared free from parental control,
adopted, and then later claimed by the natural parent again after a ruling of
reversal on said parent’s criminal appeal”); Matter of D.D.F., 801 P.2d 703, 708
(Okla. 1990) (determining that because father’s criminal convictions were
pending on appeal, the convictions “are not final, and thus cannot be the basis
for the termination of parental rights” under the statute); In re HC, 983 P.2d
1205, 1212 (Wyo. 1999) (explaining that because the mother’s felony conviction
was central to one of the grounds for termination, until the appeal of right was
resolved, the conviction could not qualify under the termination statute as a
“conviction”).
12
Almost forty years ago, we recognized that “[t]he role of parents in the life
of a family has attained the status of a fundamental human right and liberty.”
State v. Robert H., 118 N.H. 713, 715 (1978), overruled in part on other
grounds by In re Craig T., 147 N.H. 739, 744-45 (2002). We also recognized
that it is “firmly established that freedom of personal choice in the matters of
family life is one of the liberties protected by the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment,” and that “[th]e family and the rights of parents over it
are held to be natural, essential, and inherent rights within the meaning of the
New Hampshire Constitution, part I, article 2.” Id. at 715-16 (quotation and
ellipses omitted). Given that “[t]he permanent termination of the rights of
parents over their children is even more final than involuntary commitment or
delinquency proceedings,” we held that “the government must prove its case
under chapter 170-C beyond a reasonable doubt before the permanent
termination of liberty and natural rights of parents . . . can occur.” Id.; see In
re Sophia-Marie H., 165 N.H. 332, 335 (2013).
We agree with the observation of the court in Kody D.V. that the
consequences of interpreting the termination statute to permit termination of
the parent-child relationship while an appeal of the underlying judgment of
conviction is pending are “troubling.” Kody D.V., 548 N.W.2d at 842. The lack
of finality of a conviction that is being appealed raises the question whether
DCYF has satisfied the heightened requirement of proving the grounds for
termination beyond a reasonable doubt. See In re C.M., 166 N.H. at 773. In
addition, although the judgment may be reversed on appeal and the parent
subsequently acquitted, the child may already have been adopted. See RSA
170-C:15 (2014) (an appeal “shall not suspend the order of the court regarding
the child”); see also RSA 169-C:24-a, II (2014) (concurrent with the filing of a
TPR petition, DCYF “shall seek to identify, recruit, and approve a qualified
family for adoption in accordance with the provisions of RSA 170-B, and in
accordance with the principle that the health and safety of the child shall be
the paramount concern”); RSA 170-B:21, II (2014) (“upon the expiration of one
year after a final adoption decree is issued, the decree cannot be challenged by
any person . . . in any manner upon any ground”).
The stated purpose of RSA chapter 169-C includes providing “effective
judicial procedures” that “recognize and enforce the constitutional and other
rights of the parties.” RSA 169-C:2, II(c). The stated purposes of RSA chapter
170-C include “strengthen[ing] and preserv[ing]” family life “whenever possible,”
and providing “a judicial process which will safeguard the rights of all parties
concerned.” RSA 170-C:1 (emphasis added). We acknowledge the State’s
interest in timely adoptions “in those cases in which reunification of parent and
child is not possible—the goal being to provide the child with stable and
permanent living arrangements as soon as reasonably possible.” In re C.M.,
166 N.H. at 775. However, “termination of a parent’s legal bond to a child is a
solemn and irreversible event.” In re William A., 142 N.H. 598, 602 (1998).
Taking into consideration the interests of both parents and children that are at
13
stake in termination proceedings, and the heightened standards we apply to
such proceedings, we conclude that the legislature intended the terms
“convicted” and “conviction” as used in RSA 169-C:24-a, I, and RSA 170-C:5,
VI and VII, to mean an affirmance of guilt following a direct appeal as of right to
this court that raises an issue of innocence or guilt. Of course, if the
legislature disagrees with our construction of the statutory scheme, it is free to
amend the statutes. See In the Matter of Fulton & Fulton, 154 N.H. 264, 268
(2006).
Thus, when a TPR petition is based only upon the parent’s conviction of
one of the crimes specified in the termination statute, or incarceration resulting
therefrom, and the parent timely exercises his or her right to a direct appeal of
that conviction, and therein raises an issue of innocence or guilt, the parent-
child relationship may not be terminated until the resolution of that appeal.
Cf. In re C.M., 166 N.H. at 774 (explaining that we construe all parts of the
statute together to effectuate its overall purpose and avoid an absurd or unjust
result). Accordingly, we hold that the trial court erred as a matter of law when
it terminated the mother’s parental rights while her direct appeal of the
conviction that formed the statutory ground for the termination was pending.
Reversed and remanded.
DALIANIS, C.J., and HICKS and BASSETT, JJ., concurred.
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