The summaries of the Colorado Court of Appeals published opinions
constitute no part of the opinion of the division but have been prepared by
the division for the convenience of the reader. The summaries may not be
cited or relied upon as they are not the official language of the division.
Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opinion
should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion.
SUMMARY
January 23, 2020
2020COA13
No. 19CA0760, People in Interest of M.B. — Juvenile Court —
Dependency and Neglect — Termination of the Parent-Child
Legal Relationship — Uniform Parentage Act — Pretrial
Proceedings
In this termination of parental rights case, a division of the
court of appeals affirms the paternity determination in favor of the
biological father as to the child. In doing so, the division addresses
whether, in a dependency and neglect proceeding, paternity must
be resolved “as soon as practicable” — the standard under the
Uniform Parentage Act, sections 19-4-101 to -130, C.R.S. 2019.
The division also declines to review unpreserved due process and
equal protection contentions under the plain error doctrine, but
does so for a miscarriage of justice.
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2020COA13
Court of Appeals No. 19CA0760
Arapahoe County District Court No. 18JV43
Honorable Natalie T. Chase, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Appellee,
In the Interest of M.B., a Child,
and Concerning B.B.,
Appellant.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
Division A
Opinion by JUDGE WEBB
Bernard, C.J., and Casebolt*, J., concur
Announced January 23, 2020
Ron Carl, County Attorney, Linda Arnold, Assistant County Attorney, Aurora,
Colorado, for Appellee
Brittany Radic, Guardian Ad Litem
Debra W. Dodd, Office of Respondent Parents’ Counsel, Berthoud, Colorado, for
Appellant
*Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art.
VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2019.
¶1 In this termination of parental rights case as to M.B. (the
child), the juvenile court’s paternity determination raises a novel
question about whether, in a dependency and neglect proceeding,
paternity must be resolved “as soon as practicable” — the standard
under the Uniform Parentage Act, sections 19-4-101 to -130, C.R.S.
2019 (UPA). B.B., whom the juvenile court found to be a
presumptive father of the child, appeals the court’s order that J.G.
(biological father) — another presumptive father — is the child’s
legal father. According to B.B., the court erred in two ways. First,
by not resolving the child’s paternity until more than one year into
the proceeding, the court violated the UPA, resulting in a denial of
due process. Second, by adjudicating the child as to biological
father but not as to B.B., and then providing only biological father
with a dispositional hearing and a treatment plan, the juvenile
court subjected B.B. to disparate treatment that denied him equal
protection.
¶2 The Arapahoe County Department of Human Services (the
Department) disputes preservation of the due process and equal
protection contentions. We agree that these contentions were
unpreserved. Further, we decline B.B.’s invitation to extend the
1
plain error doctrine into dependency and neglect proceedings. And
so, we refuse to address these contentions because B.B.’s due
process argument does not implicate a miscarriage of justice, and
because the record is inadequate to address equal protection as
applied. Finally, turning to the merits, we reject B.B.’s statutory
untimeliness argument and affirm the paternity determination in
favor of biological father.
I. Background
¶3 In January 2018, the Department filed a petition in
dependency and neglect concerning the child and two other
children, both of whom were B.B.’s biological children. Before filing
the petition, the Department knew that although B.B. was not the
child’s biological father, he had signed the child’s birth certificate.
The petition identified B.B. as the child’s “presumed father” and
named John Doe as the “alleged father.” A month later, the
Department amended the petition to name biological father as the
alleged father.
¶4 When the petition was filed, all of the children, their mother,
and B.B. lived together. After the juvenile court ordered mother to
leave the family home because of domestic violence, the children
2
remained with B.B. Then in February 2018, the children were
removed and later placed in foster care. Biological father was never
involved with the child, nor did he seek to become involved after
being named in this action.
¶5 During a February 2018 hearing, B.B.’s counsel acknowledged
receipt of a treatment plan for him, but the court deferred action on
it. At the adjudicatory and dispositional hearing on March 2, 2018,
only the other two children were adjudicated as to B.B. He agreed
to a treatment plan that was then presented to and approved by the
court. The signature page component of the family services plan
confirms that B.B. received a copy. But because the treatment plan
is not in the record, we must infer its contents from other
documents.
¶6 The family services plan presented at the March 29, 2019,
hearing identifies three objectives for B.B.: parenting time,
caseworker contact, and a drug/alcohol evaluation. The start date
for the first and second objectives was January 31, 2018. The start
date for the third objective was March 2, 2018. The last date is
corroborated by discussion of substance abuse at the adjudicatory
and dispositional hearing on March 2. Importantly, the purpose of
3
the parenting time objective is “[t]o assist [the child] in developing
and maintaining a positive and appropriate relationship with
[B.B.].”
¶7 In June 2018, genetic testing established that biological father
was the child’s biological father. The following month, the court
adjudicated the child as to biological father, although it had not yet
determined that he was the child’s legal father. 1 Then the
Department proposed a treatment plan for him. Later, the
Department moved to terminate biological father’s parental rights,
but it did not address those of B.B. at that time.
¶8 During a November 2018 hearing, B.B. asked the court, “Am I
able to get involved with that myself so I can take custody of [the
child]?” At a January 2019 hearing, the Department’s counsel told
the court that biological father “does not wish to be involved [with
the child].” Then B.B. said that he was “asserting status as a
psychological or any parentage toward [the child].”
¶9 Up to this point in the proceeding, neither the Department nor
B.B. had requested a paternity hearing. Nor had the court
1 We express no opinion on the propriety of this action.
4
determined paternity. When the Department requested a paternity
determination, the court set a hearing for February 2, 2019. After
the hearing was continued, the court discussed with the parties
doing the paternity hearing and the termination hearing on the
same day, with the termination hearing to follow the paternity
determination.
¶ 10 After the court scheduled the hearings together, the
Department filed an amended motion to terminate parental rights in
the child, adding B.B. The combined hearings occurred on March
29, 2019. The Department told the court that biological father
would confess the termination motion. Neither mother nor B.B.
appeared. The court refused their counsels’ request to participate
by telephone.
¶ 11 The court took up paternity first. It heard testimony from the
caseworker that B.B. had not seen the child since his removal from
the family home; B.B. had not pursued visitation; neither B.B. nor
biological father had “acted as a parent” to the child; both B.B.’s
and biological father’s treatment plans had been unsuccessful; and
naming biological father as the child’s father would be in the child’s
5
best interests because if the child inquired, biological father could
provide information about the child’s biological roots.
¶ 12 The court treated paternity as a contest between two
presumed fathers, found that biological father was the child’s legal
father, and excused counsel to B.B. from the hearing. The court
explained that knowing who his biological parents were for medical
purposes and family history would be in the child’s best interests.
It pointed out that at the start of the case, B.B. had told the
Department that he did not want to pursue a relationship with the
child; since the child was removed, he had not provided support for
the child; he had not seen the child for over a year; and despite his
November inquiry concerning a relationship with the child, he had
not done anything to seek visitation.
II. Preservation
¶ 13 B.B. was represented by counsel throughout the dependency
and neglect proceedings. His counsel never raised the due process
or equal protection issues that B.B. now argues on appeal.
¶ 14 An action to terminate the parent-child legal relationship is a
civil action. See People in Interest of C.G., 885 P.2d 355, 357 (Colo.
App. 1994). And so, like other civil actions, dependency and neglect
6
proceedings are subject to the limitation that except where
jurisdiction is implicated, generally appellate courts review only
issues presented to and ruled on by the lower court. See, e.g.,
People in Interest of T.E.R., 2013 COA 73, ¶ 26 (“[T]o the extent that
[mother] now argues an evidentiary hearing was required before the
juvenile court could rule, she has waived this argument.”); People in
Interest of A.L.B., 994 P.2d 476, 480 (Colo. App. 1999) (“[T]hat
contention was not argued to the trial court at the conclusion of the
evidentiary hearing. Hence, we decline to address it for the first
time on appeal.”); People in Interest of V.W., 958 P.2d 1132, 1134
(Colo. App. 1998) (“[F]ather contends that the petition in
dependency or neglect was insufficient because it did not allege
abandonment as a potential ground for termination. Because the
issue was not raised in the trial court, we decline to address it on
appeal.”); People in Interest of T.S., 781 P.2d 130, 132 (Colo. App.
1989) (“Because mother failed to object in the trial court on the
grounds now asserted, she is deemed to have waived any objection
and cannot raise it on appeal.”).
¶ 15 B.B. does not challenge the juvenile court’s jurisdiction to
determine paternity in a dependency and neglect proceeding. Nor
7
could he. See People in Interest of J.G.C., 2013 COA 171, ¶ 10
(“[W]e conclude that a paternity action may be joined with a
dependency and neglect proceeding.”).
¶ 16 Instead, B.B.’s reply brief responds to the Department’s
preservation challenge concerning due process that because, as a
presumed father, he had a statutory right to a paternity
determination, and his mere failure to request a paternity hearing
cannot be deemed a waiver of his right to a prompt paternity
determination. The reply brief does not explain his failure to have
preserved the equal protection argument.
¶ 17 Even accepting B.B.’s position on waiver, two questions
remain unanswered. First, why would disregard of a statutory
timeliness requirement allow B.B. to raise a previously
unarticulated due process claim? And, second, why should B.B. be
allowed to assert an as-applied equal protection violation for the
first time on appeal?
A. Review of Unpreserved Errors
¶ 18 B.B. requests plain error review of both his due process and
equal protection claims. But plain error derives from Crim. P. 52(b),
which governs criminal cases: “Plain errors or defects affecting
8
substantial rights may be noticed although they were not brought
to the attention of the court.” 2
¶ 19 By contrast, “[t]here is no civil rule analogue” to Crim. P. 52(b).
Wycoff v. Grace Cmty. Church of Assemblies of God, 251 P.3d 1260,
1269 (Colo. App. 2010). So, appellate courts apply plain error only
in the “‘rare’ civil case, involving ‘unusual or special’ circumstances
— and even then, only ‘when necessary to avert unequivocal and
manifest injustice.’” Id. (quoting Harris Grp., Inc. v. Robinson, 209
P.3d 1188, 1195 (Colo. App. 2009)).
¶ 20 In Colorado, manifest injustice has never been applied to
address an unpreserved issue in a dependency and neglect
proceeding. However, such issues have been reviewed to prevent a
miscarriage of justice. In re R.G.B., 98 P.3d 958, 959 (Colo. App.
2004) (“Where an error of the trial court is considered fundamental
or involves a miscarriage of justice, we may consider the issue for
the first time on appeal.”); People in Interest of A.E., 914 P.2d 534,
2Under this rule, appellate courts apply a three-part plain error
analysis. See, e.g., Deleon v. People, 2019 CO 85, ¶ 38 (“Plain error
occurs if there is (1) an error, (2) that is obvious, and (3) that so
undermined the fundamental fairness of the trial itself as to cast
serious doubt on the reliability of the judgment of conviction.”).
9
539 (Colo. App. 1996) (“This case presents one of those limited
situations in which an error by the trial court, not otherwise
properly preserved for appeal, should be characterized as
fundamental or one causing a miscarriage of justice . . . .”); People
in Interest of T.A.F. v. B.F., 624 P.2d 349, 353 (Colo. App. 1980)
(citing C.A.R. 1(d)). But these cases do not mention plain error. 3
Nor do they cite Crim. P. 52(b).4
¶ 21 Of course, “we are not bound to follow decisions of other
divisions of this court.” Roque v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2012 COA 10,
¶ 20. Still, given the constitutional nature of parental rights, we
will recognize a miscarriage of justice exception for review of
unpreserved errors. See, e.g., People in Interest of C.G., 2015 COA
3 In People in Interest of M.B. v. J.B., 188 Colo. 370, 376, 535 P.2d
192, 196 (1975), the supreme court said, without analysis, “[w]here
the object of the amended petition was to terminate parental rights,
it was plain error to proceed to the dispositional hearing in the
absence of counsel for the children.”
4 The lack of reference to Crim. P. 52(b) is unsurprising because
following that path to discern a miscarriage of justice would first
require deciding if review is a matter of grace or right. See People v.
Butcher, 2018 COA 54M, ¶ 26 (“Following Olano, we conclude that
relief under Crim. P. 52(b) is a matter of discretion, not of right.”)
(cert. granted Apr. 22, 2019). If review is a matter of right, the
reviewing court would then have to consider obviousness and
resolve whether undermining fundamental fairness is a different
standard than miscarriage of justice.
10
106, ¶ 44 (“Moreover, the issue of what efforts due diligence
requires before a parent may be served by publication under section
19-3-503(8)(b) affects parental rights of constitutional magnitude.”).
¶ 22 The parties do not cite, nor have we found, a Colorado case
defining “miscarriage of justice.” And we have not found an
out-of-state case doing so in the context of terminating parental
rights.
¶ 23 Criminal cases in other jurisdictions have defined this phrase
narrowly. See, e.g., Calderon v. Thompson, 523 U.S. 538, 559
(1998) (“‘[T]he miscarriage of justice exception is concerned with
actual as compared to legal innocence.’ We have often emphasized
‘the narrow scope’ of the exception.” (quoting Sawyer v. Whitley,
505 U.S. 333, 339, 340 (1992))); Trenkler v. United States, 536 F.3d
85, 99 (1st Cir. 2008) (“The Supreme Court has defined the term
‘miscarriage of justice’ as encompassing only those ‘extraordinary
instances when a constitutional violation probably has caused the
conviction of one innocent of the crime.’” (quoting McCleskey v.
Zant, 499 U.S. 467, 494 (1991))); Jeremias v. State, 412 P.3d 43, 49
(Nev. 2018) (miscarriage of justice “defined as a ‘grossly unfair’
outcome”).
11
¶ 24 The comparatively fewer civil cases applying this test also take
a narrow view. See, e.g., Huffman v. Interstate Brands Corp., 17
Cal. Rptr. 3d 397, 407 (Ct. App. 2d Dist. 2004) (“In civil cases, a
miscarriage of justice should be declared only when the reviewing
court, after an examination of the entire cause, including the
evidence, is of the opinion that it is reasonably probable that a
result more favorable to the appealing party would have been
reached in the absence of the error.”); Risko v. Thompson Muller
Auto. Grp., Inc., 20 A.3d 1123, 1133 (N.J. 2011) (A “miscarriage of
justice” has been described as a “pervading sense of ‘wrongness’
needed to justify [an] appellate or trial judge undoing of a jury
verdict . . . [which] can arise . . . from manifest lack of inherently
credible evidence to support the finding, obvious overlooking or
undervaluation of crucial evidence, [or] a clearly unjust result . . . .”
(quoting Lindenmuth v. Holden, 685 A.2d 1351, 1354 (N.J. Super.
Ct. App. Div. 1996))); see also Black’s Law Dictionary 1195 (11th
ed. 2019) (miscarriage of justice means “[a] grossly unfair outcome
in a judicial proceeding”).
¶ 25 But because B.B.’s due process argument would not get over
even a much lower bar, we need not decide whether the bar is so
12
high in a dependency and neglect case. And the equal protection
argument suffers from a fatally inadequate record, independent of
lack of preservation.
B. Due Process
¶ 26 Even if we accept everything that B.B. says about
nonwaiveability of his statutory right to a prompt paternity hearing
and the necessity to resolve paternity before parental rights can be
terminated, he fails to explain how mere delay in determining
paternity deprived him of due process. Cf. People in Interest of J.W.
v. C.O., 2017 CO 105, ¶ 35 (“[T]he trial court’s failure to enter a
written adjudication order confirming the children’s status prior to
terminating the parent-child legal relationship did not impair the
fundamental fairness of the proceedings or deprive Mother of due
process.”). After all, the juvenile court held a hearing on B.B.’s
status as a presumed father, just not as quickly as he now wishes it
had. And other than timeliness, B.B. does not identify any UPA
procedure that he was denied.
¶ 27 Instead, B.B. points out that he did not receive a treatment
plan, assistance from the Department, an adjudication, or a
dispositional hearing. But even assuming that he was entitled to
13
these statutory procedures, he cites no authority supporting his
characterization of the failure to receive a treatment plan or
assistance from the Department as a due process issue. See
§ 19-3-507(1)(b), C.R.S. 2019 (services); § 19-3-508(1)(e)(I), C.R.S.
2019 (treatment plan). Nor does he cite any authority that entitles
a presumed father to either a treatment plan or departmental
assistance, much less to an adjudicatory or a dispositional hearing.
See § 19-3-505(2), C.R.S. 2019 (adjudicatory hearing);
§ 19-3-507(1)(b) (dispositional hearing).
¶ 28 In any event, statutorily created rights are not constitutional
rights and are not necessarily fundamental rights. See, e.g., People
v. Owen, 122 P.3d 1006, 1009 (Colo. App. 2005) (“A violation of a
statutory right to speedy trial does not create a fundamental,
constitutional bar to the court’s power to enter a conviction and
sentence.”); People v. Martinez, 83 P.3d 1174, 1181 (Colo. App.
2003) (“[T]he right of allocution is a statutory right, not a
constitutional one . . . .”).
¶ 29 True, in dependency and neglect proceedings, some statutory
rights are fundamental. For example, “the statutory right to
counsel in a termination of parental rights proceeding” has been
14
held to ensure “that respondent parents receive fundamentally fair
procedures.” People in Interest of A.R., 2018 COA 176, ¶ 10 (cert.
granted Mar. 4, 2019). But along the continuum from
constitutional to fundamental to mere statutory rights, B.B.’s
argument that the court should have resolved paternity more
quickly does not elevate this statutory right to a fundamental or
constitutional right. See Owen, 122 P.3d at 1009.
¶ 30 By contrast, in dependency and neglect actions, “[p]rocedural
due process requires that a parent be given notice of the
proceedings, an opportunity to be heard, and the assistance of legal
counsel. These rights are satisfied if the parent appears through
counsel and is given the opportunity to present evidence and cross-
examine witnesses.” People in Interest of A.E.L., 181 P.3d 1186,
1192 (Colo. App. 2008).
¶ 31 When the juvenile court held a paternity hearing, albeit later
than B.B. belatedly asserts it should have, B.B. enjoyed all of these
opportunities. B.B. received ample prior notice of the hearing date,
but for reasons known only to him did not appear.
15
¶ 32 Still, his counsel participated. Counsel could have called
witnesses, but chose not to do so. And counsel made a closing
argument. Due process requires no more.
¶ 33 For these reasons, we need not take up the unpreserved due
process argument to prevent a “miscarriage of justice.” 5
C. Equal Protection
¶ 34 Divisions of this court are divided on taking up unpreserved
equal protection arguments in dependency and neglect cases.
Compare In re M.G., 58 P.3d 1145, 1147 (Colo. App. 2002)
(“Petitioner also asserts that [section] 19-1-117[, C.R.S. 2001,]
violates her right to equal protection under the United States
Constitution. However, that argument is raised for the first time on
appeal, and we will not consider it.”), and People in Interest of J.L.P.,
870 P.2d 1252, 1259 (Colo. App. 1994) (“The [guardian ad litem
(GAL)] also argues that the application of the BIA Guidelines
without consideration of the best interests of the child violates the
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Colo.
5 In saying this much, we take care to point out that we do not
foreclose the possibility of a due process violation producing a
miscarriage of justice.
16
Const., Art. II, § 25. However, we do not address this issue because
it was raised for the first time in the reply brief.”), with People in
Interest of C.E., 923 P.2d 383, 384-85 (Colo. App. 1996) (The
division entertained maternal aunt’s unpreserved argument that
“extended family members have a fundamental liberty interest in
the society and custody of kindred children,” because “the issues
here [including equal protection] concern alleged fundamental
constitutional rights and have been fully briefed by the parties.”).
¶ 35 On this record, we need neither pick a side nor factor
miscarriage of justice into the calculus. B.B. does not assert facial
unconstitutionality, so his equal protection argument must be
considered as applied. In re Estate of Becker, 32 P.3d 557, 561
(Colo. App. 2000), aff’d, 54 P.3d 849 (Colo. 2002). But because the
juvenile court made no findings concerning the alleged disparity in
treatment plans and other procedures as between B.B. and
biological father, “[i]nadequacy of the record also disfavors
addressing an as-applied challenge for the first time on appeal.”
People v. Mountjoy, 2016 COA 86, ¶ 37 (collecting cases), aff’d on
other grounds, 2018 CO 92M.
17
¶ 36 For example, the court could have addressed the reasons for
and significance of any differences between B.B.’s treatment plan,
apparently for all three children, and biological father’s treatment
plan for the child. At the August 2018 hearing, the court told B.B.,
“I would really expect that you were further along with your
treatment plan.” But no one gave the court any reason to
undertake a comparative analysis of biological father’s treatment
plan.
¶ 37 True, only the other two children, but not M.B., were
adjudicated as to B.B. in March 2018. The court did not explain
this anomaly. Still, at the May 2018 permanency planning hearing,
the court proceeded as if all three children had been adjudicated
when it “adopt[ed] trifecta goals of return home, APR, and adoption”
for all of them as to B.B.
¶ 38 For these reasons, we also decline to take up the equal
protection argument. But B.B.’s statutory argument remains to be
addressed.
18
III. Paternity Determination
A. Standard of Review and Law
¶ 39 The parties agree that a paternity determination is subject to
the clearly erroneous standard of review under C.R.C.P. 52. See
People in Interest of A.A.T., 191 Colo. 494, 497, 554 P.2d 302, 305
(1976) (“[T]here was sufficient evidence to support a finding of
paternity. Findings of the trial court will not be disturbed on
review, unless they are clearly erroneous. C.R.C.P. 52.”).
¶ 40 Interpretation of the UPA, like that of any statute, is de novo.
See L.A.N. v. L.M.B., 2013 CO 6, ¶ 13 (“We first review . . . the
dependency and neglect provisions of the Children’s Code, sections
19-3-100.5 to 19-3-703, C.R.S. (2012), de novo . . . .”).
¶ 41 Because the juvenile court held a paternity hearing, the only
procedural question is the timeliness of that hearing. Even in the
face of a statutory limit on timing, trial courts enjoy some
discretion. In re H & R Block, 159 S.W.3d 127, 130 (Tex. App. 2004)
(“‘[A]s soon as practicable’ indicates a discretionary authority in the
trial court to determine the appropriate time for ruling on a
motion . . . .”). “A court abuses its discretion when its ruling is
19
manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair.” People in Interest of
T.M.S., 2019 COA 136, ¶ 43.
¶ 42 Under the UPA, a paternity action can be commenced by “a
county department of human or social services” as well as by a
presumed father, among others. § 19-4-107(1), C.R.S. 2019. A
man is presumed to be the natural father of a child if, as relevant
here, “[h]e acknowledges his paternity of the child in a writing filed
with the court or registrar of vital statistics” or genetic testing
establishes “that the probability of his parentage is ninety-seven
percent or higher.” § 19-4-105(1)(e), (f), C.R.S. 2019.6
¶ 43 Where two or more conflicting presumptions of paternity arise
and no presumption has been rebutted by clear and convincing
evidence, “the presumption which on the facts is founded on the
weightier considerations of policy and logic controls.”
§ 19-4-105(2)(a). In balancing these considerations, “the judge or
magistrate shall consider all pertinent factors, including but not
limited to” eight factors listed in the statute. Id. Then, “[t]he result
6 A presumption of paternity may arise under a variety of
circumstances as provided by section 19-4-105(1)(a)-(f), C.R.S.
2019.
20
of a final determination of paternity is to render one presumptive
father the child’s parent. The other presumptive father becomes a
nonparent who does not have rights to visit a child or to make any
decisions about the child’s education, health, or upbringing.”
People in Interest of C.L.S., 313 P.3d 662, 667 (Colo. App. 2011).
¶ 44 The UPA requires that “an informal hearing” be held “[a]s soon
as practicable after an action to declare the existence or
nonexistence of the father-child relationship has been brought” if
the court determines holding a hearing to be “in the child’s best
interest.” § 19-4-111(1), C.R.S. 2019. Unsurprisingly, parentage
disputes are usually resolved on that basis. See, e.g., N.A.H. v.
S.L.S., 9 P.3d 354, 358 (Colo. 2000) (“The magistrate held a hearing
on the issue . . . .”); C.L.S., 313 P.3d at 664 (“After a hearing, the
magistrate entered a series of findings.”).
¶ 45 B.B. does not cite, nor have we found, a Colorado case holding
that where a paternity question arises in an ongoing dependency
and neglect proceeding, the “as soon as practicable” requirement
applies.
21
B. Application
1. B.B. Was a Presumed Father
¶ 46 The Department named B.B. as the child’s presumed father in
its initial dependency and neglect petition and referred to him as
the child’s “adoptive father” in several family services plans. At the
first hearing in January 2018, the GAL told the juvenile court that
B.B. “is on [the child]’s birth certificate.” Although the birth
certificate is not in the record, in opening statement at the paternity
hearing, the Department told the court, “We have a situation of
[B.B.] being on the birth certificate.” Several witnesses testified that
B.B. was on the birth certificate.
¶ 47 At the conclusion of the paternity hearing, the court noted
that B.B. “has raised the presumption of being on [the child]’s birth
certificate, essentially holding [the child] out [as] his own in that
regards.” Then the court turned to “weighing and determining a
legal father between two competing presumptions of paternity.”
Under these circumstances, the absence of more particularized
findings, such as whether mother was notified of B.B.’s paternity
acknowledgment and whether she disputed it under section
19-4-105(1)(e), is understandable.
22
¶ 48 For the first time on appeal, the Department argues that B.B.
was not a presumed father. We conclude that the Department is
judicially estopped from taking a position contrary to the position it
took before the juvenile court, and which the court adopted, that
B.B. was a presumed father. See 23 LTD v. Herman, 2019 COA
113, ¶ 65.
2. The Juvenile Court Held a Timely Hearing to Determine Whether
B.B. Was the Child’s Legal Father
¶ 49 During the January 22, 2019, hearing, immediately after B.B.
told the court for the first time that he was asserting psychological
parent status, the Department responded that it would need to
amend the termination motion. Then the court said, “[W]e need to
hold a paternity hearing.” The court set the hearing for February 2
and told B.B. “I need you to be present on the phone for me to make
those paternity findings.”
¶ 50 When B.B. failed to appear, the court concluded, “I think we
need notice just so our record’s clear.” Based on the court’s
schedule and counsel’s availability, the paternity hearing was reset
to March 29 (the same date as the termination hearing). It occurred
on that date.
23
¶ 51 B.B. argues that this date was not “as soon as practicable”
because the original petition named him as a presumed father and
as of June 2018, genetic testing established biological father’s
status as another presumed father. So, he continues, the court was
aware of competing presumptions that needed resolution before the
dependency and neglect case could meaningfully proceed.
¶ 52 The phrase “as soon as practicable” has never been interpreted
for purposes of section 19-4-111(1). Numerous Colorado cases
have addressed the phrase in other contexts. For example, where
the phrase appears in an insurance policy, it “means that notice
must be given within a reasonable length of time under the
circumstances.” Clementi v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 16 P.3d
223, 226 (Colo. 2001).
¶ 53 Even assuming that the “as soon as practicable” requirement
applies in a dependency and neglect proceeding, under the UPA, the
temporal mandate applies only after “an action to declare the
existence or nonexistence of the father-child relationship has been
brought.” § 19-4-111(1). To be sure, a paternity action can be
joined with other proceedings. § 19-4-109(1), C.R.S. 2019. For
purposes of starting the clock, a dependency and neglect proceeding
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is not such an action. And without a discrete starting event, this
standard cannot be meaningfully applied to test the court’s exercise
of its discretion.
¶ 54 Despite the difference between a dependency and neglect
proceeding and “an action to declare the existence or nonexistence
of the father-child relationship,” B.B. argues that the juvenile court
did not act “as soon as practicable” because the GAL’s statements
at the January 2018 hearing that “there are competing
presumptions of paternity” teed up the paternity issue. But the
GAL went on to request genetic testing. As indicated, the court did
not receive the results until June 2018.
¶ 55 As for the six-month period from July 2018 until the January
22, 2019, hearing, B.B. asserts that because he was “left merely a
presumed parent,” he was not provided with either “a treatment
plan to reunite with [the child]” or “any services from the
Department, to reunite with [the child].” B.B.’s assertions miss the
mark in two ways.
¶ 56 First, B.B. fails to address whether this six-month delay was
“reasonable . . . under the circumstances,” even if the clock had
begun running, which we have concluded it had not. B.B. and his
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counsel had ample opportunities to expedite the process by
requesting a paternity hearing at the July or August hearings, but
did not do so. Indeed, at the November 2018 hearing, B.B. raised
his becoming involved with the child, but again said nothing about
a paternity determination.
¶ 57 Second, B.B. would have been entitled to a treatment plan and
services only after he was determined to be the legal father. See In
re Marriage of Ohr, 97 P.3d 354, 357 (Colo. App. 2004) (“Intervenor’s
status as a presumptive father was extinguished when the court
determined that, for all legal purposes, husband was the child’s
father.”). But because the court ultimately ruled against B.B. and
in favor of biological father on paternity, we need not undertake a
retrospective analysis of alleged denial of the statutory rights that
B.B. would have enjoyed, had he been held the child’s legal father.
¶ 58 Even so, B.B. asserts that he would have been named the legal
father, “had a timely paternity determination been made at the
beginning of the case.” But he does not explain why a different
outcome might have resulted from an earlier paternity hearing. To
the contrary, the record shows that from the onset of the case, the
court was aware of another potential father and the need for the
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genetic testing that was completed by June. Had B.B. desired to
bolster his claim to becoming the child’s legal father, he could have
requested visitation during February, March, April, and May. He
did not. Instead, according to the family services plan introduced at
the paternity hearing, as of May 14, 2018, B.B. “had stated that he
was not [the child’s] biological father and had no interest in
pursuing a relationship with him, so a parenting time-referral was
not requested.”
¶ 59 Finally, turning to the period between January 22 and March
29, 2019, B.B. does not discuss, nor can we discern, why a delay
from February 2 to March 29 would not be “reasonable . . . under
the circumstances.” After all, one of the reasons was B.B.’s failure
to appear or call in on February 2 and the purpose of the
continuance was to ensure that he could not dispute the parentage
determination for lack of notice.
¶ 60 Despite all of this, B.B. asserts multiple abuses of discretion,
including the following: by leaving the two presumed fathers “in
legal limbo for over a year,” both of them were denied “the
constitutional protections afforded by law”; the court adjudicated
the child as to one of the presumed fathers, but never as to a legal
27
father; the Department failed to provide B.B. with “an adjudication,
dispositional hearing, and treatment plan”; by determining
paternity on the day of the termination hearing, the court accepted
“an invalid confession [from biological father] which was premised
on an invalid adjudication of a presumed father”; and even
assuming that after “a timely paternity hearing was held the court
found biological father was the legal father, [B.B.] could have
immediately appealed that order to receive meaningful appellate
review.”
¶ 61 This somewhat overlapping parade of horribles suffers from
three flaws. First, most of them assume rights and procedures to
which B.B. would have been entitled only after having been
determined to be the child’s legal father. Second, some of them
raise issues involving biological father, whose rights B.B. lacks
standing to assert. See, e.g., People in Interest of J.A.S., 160 P.3d
257, 261 (Colo. App. 2007) (one parent does not have standing to
raise issues regarding the propriety of termination of the other
parent’s rights); People in Interest of J.M.B., 60 P.3d 790, 792 (Colo.
App. 2002) (father lacked standing to challenge the appropriateness
of mother’s treatment plan). Third, B.B. does not explain how his
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appeal is less “meaningful” than it would have been following a
paternity determination as of mid-2018. See Sinclair Transp. Co. v.
Sandberg, 2014 COA 75M, ¶ 14 n.1 (declining to address an
assertion “presented without any developed argument”); Barnett v.
Elite Props. of Am., Inc., 252 P.3d 14, 19 (Colo. App. 2010) (“We will
not consider a bald legal proposition presented without argument or
development.”).
¶ 62 In the end, the juvenile court acted within its discretion in
holding the paternity hearing on March 29, 2019.
C. The Juvenile Court Acted Within Its Discretion in Finding
Biological Father to Be the Child’s Legal Father
¶ 63 According to the opening brief, B.B. “appeals the court’s order
that he was not the legal father of [the child].” Similarly, the reply
brief asks us to “reverse the trial court’s paternity ruling.” In
support of this relief, B.B. makes three developed arguments: denial
of his statutory right to a speedy paternity determination, denial of
due process, and denial of equal protection. But the record shows
that the due process and equal protection arguments were
unpreserved; we have declined to exercise our discretion to
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entertain either of them. Next, we have addressed and rejected his
statutory untimeliness argument.
¶ 64 Apart from these three assertions, B.B. has failed to develop
any argument that the record did not support the finding that
biological father was the child’s legal father. Therefore, we decline
to revisit that finding.
IV. Conclusion
¶ 65 The order determining biological father to be the child’s legal
father is affirmed.
CHIEF JUDGE BERNARD and JUDGE CASEBOLT concur.
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