MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions
Decision: 2017 ME 212
Docket: Yor-17-211
Submitted
On Briefs: October 24, 2017
Decided: October 31, 2017
Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HUMPHREY, JJ.
IN RE TYREL L.
PER CURIAM
[¶1] The father of Tyrel L. appeals from a judgment of the District Court
(Biddeford, Janelle, J.) terminating his parental rights pursuant to 22 M.R.S.
§ 4055(1)(A)(1)(a) and (B)(2)(a), (b)(i)-(ii), (iv) (2016). He raises directly on
appeal an ineffective assistance of counsel claim and challenges the court’s
discretionary determination of the child’s best interest. Concluding that the
father failed to present a prima facie case of attorney ineffectiveness and that
the record evidence supports the court’s findings and best interest
determination, we affirm the judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶2] The Department of Health and Human Services initiated child
protection proceedings as to the child on May 21, 2014.1 The court
1 The court (Foster, J.) terminated the mother’s parental rights on April 27, 2016. The mother
does not appeal, and any facts relating to her will not be discussed in this decision.
2
(Douglas, J.) entered a preliminary protection order that day placing the child
in Department custody. After a contested hearing, by order dated
December 19, 2014, the court found jeopardy to the child based on neglect,
the child’s failure to thrive, the child’s significant developmental delays, and
the father’s failure to engage in services recommended by the Department.
The Department filed a petition to terminate the father’s parental rights on
December 14, 2015.
[¶3] The court (Janelle, J.) held a one-day contested hearing on the
Department’s petition to terminate the father’s parental rights on March 2,
2017. On that same date, the father’s counsel asserted that the father stated
that he wished to end the representation and filed a motion to withdraw,
which the court denied. The court terminated the father’s parental rights in a
judgment dated March 28, 2017. The court based its unfitness and best
interest determinations on the following findings of fact:
The Department . . . filed this protective case [based on a]
risk of immediate harm . . . premised on the parents’ high severity
neglect (substance abuse, mental health and cognitive impairment
issues) and [the child] being a “failure to thrive” child. . . .
. . . .
[The father] acknowledges that he suffers from a chronic
case of polysubstance abuse (alcohol, marijuana, cocaine and
3
other drugs) and that he also struggles with episodes of major
depression and anxiety. . . .
Following the Department’s intervention in this case and
[the child’s] placement in its custody the Department developed a
reunification plan and made reasonable and appropriate services
available to the family. [The father] alternatively chose not to
access most services and opportunities or, at other times, chose
not to invest himself in them. . . .
. . . .
[The father] acknowledges that he is not in a position, at
this time, to provide what [the child] needs. [The child] has been
in Departmental custody for the majority of his young life. His
mother’s rights have been terminated. [The father] admits that he
is not yet ready to take responsibility for [the child].
[The father] admits that he needs substance abuse
treatment. [He] acknowledges that what he really needs is not
outpatient treatment but inpatient treatment. [He] also believes
that he needs counseling . . . following substance abuse
rehabilitation to begin to get a handle on his “anger management”
issues. To date [the father] has not made arrangement[s] to enroll
in such counseling. . . .
. . . .
. . . Most recently, [the child] has been in foster care since
2014 and now it is 2017. [The child] is placed in a pre-adoptive
foster home. He has a bond with his foster parent . . . .
[¶4] The court further found that the child “has been diagnosed with
autism, ADHD and mild cognitive impairment” and that “in order to succeed,
[he] needs a great deal of attention, supervision, structure and patient, loving
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care.” The court found that the child’s foster parent “is familiar with [the
child’s] diagnoses and the care he requires and has been able to meet [his]
needs.” Considering the child’s “special needs” and because the child “has
spent more than half of his life in State custody and still there is no parent
who is really ready to take him,” the court found that the child “requires
permanency” through adoption.
[¶5] Based on these findings, the court found, by clear and convincing
evidence, that the father is unwilling or unable to protect the child from
jeopardy and that these circumstances are unlikely to change within a time
which is reasonably calculated to meet his needs; he is unwilling or unable to
take responsibility for the child within a time reasonably calculated to meet
his needs; and he has failed to make a good faith effort to rehabilitate and
reunify with the child.2 See 22 M.R.S. § 4055(1)(B)(2)(b)(i)-(ii), (iv); In re
Cameron B., 2017 ME 18, ¶ 10, 154 A.3d 1199. The court also found that
termination of the father’s parental rights is in the child’s best interest.
See 22 M.R.S. § 4055 (1)(B)(2)(a); In re Robert S., 2009 ME 18, ¶ 15, 966 A.2d
894. The father appeals.
2 The court initially made findings and determined the child’s best interest from the bench at the
end of the termination hearing. The court then asked the Department to submit a draft
incorporating the findings made and then signed an order terminating the father’s parental rights
on March 28, 2017, which was entered on April 3, 2017.
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II. DISCUSSION
[¶6] In his appeal, the father directly raises a claim that his counsel for
the termination proceeding was ineffective.3 Because we have not “frequently
addressed issues of ineffective assistance of counsel in cases of termination of
parental rights,” In re Evelyn A., 2017 ME 182, ¶ 38, --- A.3d --- (Alexander, J.,
dissenting), we first write to address the father’s ineffective assistance claim
and reiterate “the strict procedural requirements applicable to a direct
appeal.” In re Aliyah M., 2016 ME 106, ¶ 10, 144 A.3d 50.
[¶7] “We have held that there are two ways a parent can raise a claim of
ineffective representation in a termination case.” Id. ¶ 6; In re M.P., 2015 ME
138, ¶ 27, 126 A.3d 718. “First, if there are no new facts that the parent seeks
to offer in support of the claim, the parent may make an ineffectiveness claim
in a direct appeal from a termination order.” In re Aliyah M., 2016 ME 106,
¶ 6, 144 A.3d 50 (quotation marks omitted). Second, if the existing record
does not clearly provide the “basis for the parent’s ineffectiveness challenge”
and the claim “would require a court to consider extrinsic evidence, the
parent must promptly move for relief from a judgment terminating his or her
3 The court (Janelle, J.) granted the father’s counsel’s motion to withdraw on March 16, 2017.
The court (Foster, J.) then entered an order substituting counsel on March 24, 2017.
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parental rights pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6).” Id. (quotation marks
omitted).
[¶8] Regardless of how the parent seeks to present the claim, the
parent “must execute and file an affidavit stating, with specificity, the basis for
the claim.” Id. ¶ 7 (quotation marks omitted). “[I]f a parent fails to submit a
signed and sworn affidavit, the ineffectiveness claim . . . must be denied.” Id.
¶ 9 (quotation marks omitted). An affidavit filed on direct appeal “must not
contain information that is extrinsic to the existing record.” Id. ¶ 7. When a
parent properly submits the required signed and sworn affidavit on direct
appeal:
we will review the existing record to determine whether the
evidence in that record creates a prima facie showing of
ineffectiveness. This consists of a prima facie case that
(1) counsel’s performance was deficient, i.e., that there has been
serious incompetency, inefficiency, or inattention of counsel
amounting to performance below what might be expected from an
ordinary fallible attorney; and (2) the deficient performance
prejudiced the parent’s interests at stake in the termination
proceeding to the extent that the trial cannot be relied on as
having produced a just result. If a parent makes a prima facie
showing of both elements of an ineffectiveness claim based on the
record on appeal, we will remand the case to the trial court so that
the court can adjudicate the full merits of [the ineffectiveness]
claim.
Id. ¶ 12 (quotation marks omitted).
7
[¶9] Here, the father pursues the first of these procedural mechanisms;
he filed a signed document with his appeal stating why he believed his counsel
at the termination hearing was deficient. See id. ¶ 6. The father claims that his
counsel was deficient because his counsel (1) did not help him prepare for the
hearing, (2) did not call any witnesses or introduce any exhibits, (3) “did not
try very hard” or cross-examine any witnesses effectively, and that, because of
these failures, the father did not understand what was happening and could
not show the court how he could be responsible for parenting the child.
[¶10] The father’s ineffectiveness claim is deficient in three respects.
First, the statement he submitted, although signed, is not an affidavit because
it bears no jurat. The father’s purported affidavit is signed, but not sworn, in
violation of an express requirement that a parent raising an ineffective
assistance of counsel claim directly on appeal “must submit a signed and
sworn affidavit stating, with specificity, the basis for the claim.” In re M.P.,
2015 ME 138, ¶ 21, 126 A.3d 718 (emphasis added). The strict procedural
requirements for ineffective assistance claims we first articulated in In re M.P.
“are designed to balance the parent’s due process interests against the State’s
interests in providing stability and permanency for the child” and therefore it
is imperative that parents—and their counsel—ensure full compliance with
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these requirements. In re Aliyah M., 2016 ME 106, ¶ 9, 144 A.3d 50. Thus,
because the father’s statement does not comply with this procedural
requirement, that alone is a sufficient basis for us to decline to remand the
ineffectiveness claim to the trial court. See id.
[¶11] Second, the father “draws on information that goes beyond the
record” in presenting his claim, which constitutes a second ground for
denying the father a remedy on this argument. Id. ¶ 10. For instance, the
father claims that his attorney “did not contact me to help prepare for the
hearing,” that the attorney “only sent me notice of the hearing three weeks
before, even though his letter was dated much earlier,” and that “I was not
prepared because I had not had a chance to meet with my lawyer to talk about
the case.” The father also states that he “wanted [the attorney] to call
witnesses to testify about many things” and that his attorney should have
introduced “exhibits on my behalf to show what the doctor(s) had found or to
show the services that I had engaged in.” This information is extrinsic to the
existing record from the trial court and we, therefore, do not consider it
further. See id. ¶ 13.
[¶12] Third, even if we considered the father’s “affidavit” and other
extrinsic information, along with the other assertions by the father, the father
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has failed to present a prima facie showing of “serious incompetency,
inefficiency, or inattention [by the father’s] counsel amounting to
performance below what might be expected from an ordinary fallible
attorney.” In re M.P., 2015 ME 138, ¶ 27, 126 A.3d 718 (alterations omitted)
(quotation marks omitted). During the hearing, counsel objected to each of
the Department’s exhibits, cross-examined four out of the five witnesses, and
requested a recess to discuss with the father whether he wanted to take the
stand. In short, counsel’s performance did not reflect serious incompetence,
inefficiency, or inattention. In addition, we need not reach the “question of
whether [the father’s] contentions arguably constitute deficient
representation, [because] they do not rise to the level of a prima facie showing
of prejudice.” In re Aliyah M., 2016 ME 106, ¶ 15, 144 A.3d 50.
[¶13] Viewed in its entirety, “the record does not support a genuine
claim that the [father] was prejudiced by counsel’s alleged failure[s].” Id. ¶ 17.
The father claims that his counsel “did not try very hard to present [his] side
of the case” and that his counsel’s deficient performance prevented the court
from seeing “how [he] could be responsible for parenting [the child].”
Contrary to the father’s contentions, he had ample opportunities during the
hearing to tell the court his “side of the case.” The guardian ad litem asked the
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father about the personal services he had completed and was currently
seeking, and the father’s counsel asked him how his progress with substance
abuse treatment was going. Furthermore, during a lengthy discussion with
the court, the court asked the father, “[W]hat do you think should happen [to
the child] and explain to me what your plan would be to make that happen?”
The court also asked the father, “[I]s there anything else you wanted to tell me
before you step down?” The father, therefore, had ample opportunity to
present his version of events and attempt to persuade the court of his
parenting ability.
[¶14] The father also claims that his counsel’s ineffectiveness
prevented the court from having “sufficient evidence before it to adequately
assess the best interest of [the child] and the efforts of [the father] to reunify.”
To the contrary, the court heard testimony regarding the child’s current
placement, special needs, and the father’s ability to meet those needs from the
child’s foster care supervisor, family visitation supervisor, Department
caseworker, guardian ad litem, and the father himself. In light of the father’s
admissions and the other competent record evidence of the child’s best
interest, the additional information provided by the father in his brief and
signed document is insufficient “to raise a tenable claim that the trial failed to
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produce a just result.” Id. ¶ 21. We therefore conclude that the father’s
ineffective assistance of counsel claim fails as a matter of law because he has
failed to present “a prima facie case that [he] was prejudiced by any
deficiencies in trial counsel’s representation.” Id. ¶ 22.
[¶15] The father also challenges the court’s determination that
termination is in the best interest of the child. During the hearing, the father
admitted that he is incapable of taking responsibility for the child at this time;
that he needs inpatient treatment for his ongoing substance abuse issues; and
that after treatment, he still needs counseling “to begin to get a handle on his
anger management issues.”4 The child has spent more than half of his young
life—most recently, three consecutive years—in Department custody and has
a bond with his current foster mother, who plans to become a permanent
placement for him. Contrary to the father’s contentions, the court’s findings
are supported by competent evidence in the record and the court did not err
or abuse its discretion in determining that termination of the father’s parental
rights, with a permanency plan of adoption, is in the child’s best interest.
See In re Thomas H., 2005 ME 123, ¶¶ 16-17, 889 A.2d 297.
4 The father also concedes that the record evidence is sufficient to support the court’s finding of
at least one ground of parental unfitness and does not challenge the court’s determination of
unfitness on appeal.
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The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Valerie A. Randall, Esq., Rioux, Donahue, Chmelecki & Peltier LLC, Portland, for
appellant father
Janet T. Mills, Attorney General, and Meghan Szylvian, Asst. Atty. Gen., Office of
the Attorney General, Augusta, for appellee Department of Health and Human
Services
Biddeford District Court docket number PC-2014-22
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY