IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 16-0718
Filed December 21, 2016
IN THE INTEREST OF C.M.-G.,
Minor Child,
T.G., Father,
Petitioner-Appellee,
C.M., Mother,
Respondent-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Harrison County, Amy Zacharias,
District Associate Judge.
A mother appeals the termination of her parental rights to her seven-year-
old child under Iowa Code chapter 600A. AFFIRMED.
Maura C. Goaley, Council Bluffs, for appellant mother.
Jon J. Puk of Woodke & Gibbons, P.C., L.L.O., Omaha, Nebraska, for
appellee father.
Mandy L. Whiddon of Whiddon Law, Council Bluffs, guardian ad litem for
minor child.
Considered by Potterfield, P.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ.
2
TABOR, Judge.
A mother appeals the juvenile court’s order terminating her parental rights
to her seven-year-old son, C.M.-G. The mother contends she did not abandon
C.M.-G. within the meaning of Iowa Code section 600A.8(3) (2015) and she did
not fail to pay child support without good cause within the meaning of
section 600A.8(4). She also argues termination of her parental rights was not in
the best interests of C.M.-G. Because the evidence shows the mother failed to
maintain a place of importance in her son’s life, we affirm the juvenile court order.
I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
The mother and father have one child together, C.M.-G, who was born in
2009. The Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS) became involved with the
family in March 2011 due to allegations the mother was using illegal drugs with
her paramour, Beau, while C.M.-G and the mother’s daughter from another
relationship were in her care. The mother and father were not living together at
the time. The DHS removed the two children from the mother’s home and placed
them with the mother’s sister, Corri.
After several months, the court placed C.M.-G. with the father, largely due
to the mother’s renewed relationship with Beau, whom the court had ordered to
have no contact with C.M.-G.; her failure to consistently attend substance-abuse
treatment; and her refusal to participate in random urinalysis testing. Upon the
juvenile court’s authorization, the father initiated an action to establish paternity,
custody, visitation, and support, and on July 16, 2012, the court granted sole
legal and physical temporary custody to the father. The court ordered the mother
to pay $220 a month in child support and authorized supervised visitation through
3
Corri. Following the order, the mother participated in some visitation with
C.M.-G., but the relationship between the mother and Corri soured as a
termination-of-parental-rights proceeding under chapter 232 concerning the
mother’s daughter moved forward.1 Corri eventually obtained a no-contact order
against the mother, which prevented the mother from visiting C.M.-G. under the
supervision conditions set out in the court order.2 The mother has not spoken
with or seen C.M.-G. since the dispute arose at some point in 2013.
The mother waited until late 2014 to seek modification of the order and
request a change in the visitation supervisor. Before ruling on the modification
request, the district court ordered the mother to submit to a drug test. The
mother tested positive for marijuana and methamphetamine, but she falsified the
results to indicate a negative screen. After learning of the mother’s conduct, the
court issued an order on January 21, 2015, suspending visitation and requiring
the mother to complete four drug tests, at the father’s written request, before the
court would consider resuming visitation. The court required the mother to pay
for the drug testing and indicated if she failed to submit her samples within the
timeframe in the order, the results would be deemed positive.
The father first requested the mother to complete drug testing on
September 8, 2015. The mother did not do so. On October 19, the father
submitted another request. This time the mother complied, and the results were
positive for amphetamine, methamphetamine, and marijuana. The father again
1
The mother’s rights to her daughter were terminated in 2013, and the daughter
currently resides with Corri.
2
The juvenile court noted the parties did not ask it to take judicial notice of the file
containing the no-contact order, but the parties testified the order was in place.
4
requested drug testing in January 2016, but the mother declined to provide a
sample.3
In the midst of the modification proceedings, the father filed a petition to
terminate the mother’s parental rights on January 27, 2015. In an amended
petition filed March 3, 2016, the father alleged multiple grounds for termination,
including failure to pay child support and abandonment. The mother, father, and
guardian ad litem (GAL) testified at the April 1, 2016 termination hearing.
At the hearing, the mother denied she had the ability to pay child support.
Since the court ordered the mother to pay child support in July 2012, she made
only four of her forty-five court-ordered payments: October 2012, December
2012, May 2015, and March 2016—two weeks before the termination hearing.
The mother had been consistently working full-time at Wal-Mart and then at
Subway since the entry of the support order, making nine dollars an hour. She
estimated her monthly income at $1000 a month before taxes4 and claimed her
monthly house payment was $600, an amount she had to bear alone because
Beau, who also resided there, had been laid off. But the mother maintained she
would find a way to make the payments if the court did not terminate her parental
rights.
3
The father also submitted a request for drug testing on September 20, 2015, but the
parties stipulated the mother did not receive this request due to her attorney’s
hospitalization.
4
The juvenile court doubted the accuracy of the mother’s estimation of her income and
cited the following exchange between the father’s attorney and the mother:
Q. As far as child support, I want to make sure you understand
your—you have been with Walmart full-time at [nine dollars] an hour and
immediately went to Subway, [nine dollars] an hour. We talked about
[forty] hours a week. So I calculated that at $1560 gross per month. And
based on that income . . . you are still saying you don’t have sufficient
money to support your child, [C.M.-G]? A. I have bills and stuff to pay.
5
The mother acknowledged her struggle with drug abuse but insisted she
no longer used illicit substances. She stated she did not complete drug testing in
September or January because she could not afford it. And although she
admitted to a relapse in the fall of 2015 around the time of her positive drug test
in October, the mother insisted she was drug free at the April 2016 hearing.
The mother blamed her lack of contact with C.M.-G. on the father. She
testified that after the court granted him custody of C.M.-G., she contacted the
father every day regarding C.M.-G. She produced a series of almost daily text
messages from January to April 2014 in which she asked to speak with C.M.-G.
She claimed the father would not allow her to see or speak with the child. The
father disputed the mother’s claim he had prevented contact. He claimed that
after her dispute with Corri, the mother did not contact him about visitation until
the text messages in 2014. He insisted he called in response to the text
messages but the mother never answered.
The GAL recommended termination based on concerns about the
mother’s continued drug use, her failure to pay child support, and the length of
time since the mother’s last contact with C.M.-G. The GAL added: “[W]hen I
interviewed [C.M.-G.], in his mind, his step-mom, Jessica, is his mom.”
In a detailed and thorough opinion, the juvenile court considered the
credibility of the parties. The court was skeptical of the mother’s estimation of
her finances and her claim she could not afford the child support payments,
noting:
[The mother] recently made a child support payment. She did not
testify that as a result of that payment she was unable to pay her
other bills or make her house payment as she claimed would
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happen if she paid child support. The most recent child support
payment appears to be a weak attempt to convince the Court she
has changed and is willing to make child support payments in the
future.
Similarly, the court considered the credibility of the mother and father related to
the mother’s claims the father had prevented her from contacting C.M.-G. and
found the father’s testimony more credible. The juvenile court terminated the
mother’s parental rights on the grounds of abandonment and failure to pay child
support. The mother now appeals.
II. Standard of Review
We review termination-of-parental-rights proceedings under chapter 600A
de novo. In re R.K.B., 572 N.W.2d 600, 601 (Iowa 1998). We give weight to the
juvenile court’s fact findings, particularly concerning witness credibility, but we
are not bound by those findings. See id. The petitioning party must prove the
statutory grounds for termination with clear and convincing evidence. See In re
E.K., 568 N.W.2d 829, 831 (Iowa Ct. App. 1997). Although the best interests of
the child are “paramount” in our analysis, we also give “due consideration” to the
interests of the parents. See Iowa Code § 600A.1.
III. Analysis
The juvenile court cited two grounds for termination: failure to contribute to
the child’s support (section 600A.8(4)) and abandonment (section 600A.8(3)(b)).
When a juvenile court terminates parental rights on more than one ground, we
may affirm the order on any of those grounds. See In re D.W., 791 N.W.2d 703,
707 (Iowa 2010). Upon our de novo review, we find clear and convincing
evidence the mother abandoned C.M.-G. under section 600A.8(3)(b).
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Abandonment. The mother argues she did not abandon C.M.-G.
because: (1) she provided support to C.M.-G. to the extent of her ability to pay
and (2) the father prevented her from all contact with C.M.-G.
The Iowa Code defines “to abandon a minor child” as a parent “reject[ing]
the duties imposed by the parent-child relationship . . . which may be evinced by
the person, while being able to do so, making no provision or making only a
marginal effort to provide the support of the child or to communicate with the
child.” See Iowa Code § 600A.2(19). We consider the parent of a child who is
six months or older to have abandoned the child unless the parent maintains
“substantial and continuous or repeated contact with the child as demonstrated
by contribution toward support of the child of a reasonable amount, according to
the parent’s means,” and—if the parent has not lived with the child in the year
before the termination hearing—by (1) visits with the child at least once a month
when physically and financially able and when not prevented by the child’s
custodian or (2) regular communication with the child or their custodian when
physically and financially unable to visit or when visits are prevented by the
child’s custodian. See id. § 600A.8(3)(b).
First, we consider the mother’s economic contributions to the support of
C.M.-G. The threshold language of Iowa Code section 600A.8(3)(b) requires a
parent to contribute a reasonable amount to the support of the child to prevent a
finding of abandonment, regardless of whether the court has ordered the parent
to pay support. See In re W.W., 826 N.W.2d 706, 710–11 (Iowa Ct. App. 2012).
Reasonable support is not limited to support ordered by the court. See id. at
710; see also In re T.K., No. 16-0029, 2016 WL 4384869, at *2–3 (Iowa Ct. App.
8
Aug. 17, 2016) (finding father, who consistently paid court-ordered child support
of ten dollars a month, did not contribute reasonable support). In the nearly four
years between the entry of the child-support order and the termination hearing,
the mother maintained steady employment, yet she made only four payments
towards C.M.-G.’s support. And she made no payments in either 2013 or 2014.
Like the juvenile court, we are not convinced by the mother’s testimony she was
unable to provide additional support in any amount. Nor do we find the mother’s
support of Beau—who was unemployed and continued to live with the mother
despite the court order prohibiting his contact with C.M.-G.—to be a valid excuse
for her failure to provide funds for her child. The mother’s sporadic payments fell
well short of a reasonable contribution to the support of C.M.-G. Accordingly, we
find the mother has abandoned C.M.-G. under the predicate language of section
600A.8(3)(b). See W.W., 826 N.W.2d at 710.
Even assuming the mother’s failure to provide financial support does not
resolve the matter, we would still find the mother abandoned the child under
sections 600A.2(19) and 600A.8(3)(b)(1) for failing to visit C.M.-G. since 2013.5
In July 2012, the district court granted the mother visitation under Corri’s
supervision. After Corri’s no-contact order prevented the mother from continuing
this plan, the mother did not seek modification of the court’s visitation order for
several months, and as indicated by the test results following her request to
5
The mother does not argue she was physically or financially unable to visit C.M.-G.
She argues that the father prevented her from communicating with or visiting C.M.-G.
Because we find the father did not prevent visitation, it is not necessary to reach the
mother’s argument under section 600A.8(3)(b)(2) that she attempted regular
communication with C.M.-G. See In re G.A., 826 N.W.2d 125, 130 (Iowa Ct. App. 2012)
(construing section 600A.8(3)(b)(1)–(2) to provide that only when a parent is “physically
and financially unable to visit or when the child’s custodian prevents visitation” does
section 600A.8(3)(b)(2) apply).
9
modify, the mother continued to abuse illegal substances—the same behavior
that prompted C.M.-G.’s removal in 2011.
The mother’s only other demonstrated efforts to contact C.M.-G. were text
messages sent to the father in early 2014. In those messages, the mother did
express a desire to speak with C.M.-G, but she neither requested visitation nor
suggested an alternate person to supervise visitation. The messages signaled
an ongoing interest in the child but were not focused attempts to re-establish
visitation. To the extent the messages could be considered requests for
visitation, we defer to the juvenile court’s finding crediting the father’s testimony
he responded by phone and the mother did not return his calls. Accordingly, the
record does not support the mother’s argument the father prevented her from
visiting C.M.-G. Rather, the mother’s own inaction—failing to take meaningful
steps to re-establish visitation or address her substance abuse—kept her from
visiting her child. See id. at 708, 711 (finding mother abandoned children when
she waited two years after the parties moved to Iowa “to obtain a modification of
the visitation portion of [a Texas] divorce decree” to allow Iowa organizations to
serve as visitation supervisors and took no additional action to re-establish
visitation when it became clear the Iowa supervisors were not suitable).
Best Interests. Finally, the mother argues the juvenile court wrongly
decided termination of her parental rights was in C.M.-G.’s best interests
because “there was no evidence presented to indicate how the child would be
affected” by the termination. We disagree. Under Iowa Code section 600A.1,
“[t]he best interest of a child requires that each biological parent affirmatively
assume the duties encompassed by the role of being a parent.” In making this
10
determination, we consider: “the fulfillment of financial obligations, demonstration
of continued interest in the child, demonstration of a genuine effort to maintain
communication with the child, and demonstration of the establishment and
maintenance of a place of importance in the child’s life.” See Iowa Code §
600A.1.
Ample evidence points to the diminished relationship between C.M.-G.
and the mother. By the time of the April 2016 termination hearing, the mother
had not seen or spoken with C.M.-G. since 2013. The GAL testified C.M.-G.
viewed his step-mother as his mother. Further, the mother persisted in the
behavior that necessitated C.M.-G.’s removal from her care in 2011. She
continued to reside with Beau and planned to maintain that relationship if her
parental rights were not terminated. Like the juvenile court, we find it “deeply
concerning” that the mother would prioritize her relationship with Beau over her
relationship with C.M.-G. And as demonstrated by her failed drug tests, the
mother continued to struggle with substance abuse. Taken as a whole, this
evidence leads us to the conclude termination of the mother’s parental rights is in
C.M.-G.’s best interests.
Accordingly, we affirm the juvenile court’s termination of the mother’s
parental rights.
AFFIRMED.