RECORD IMPOUNDED
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2593-17T2
IN THE MATTER OF THE APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
ADOPTION OF A CHILD BY
April 28, 2020
C.J.
_________________________ APPELLATE DIVISION
Submitted March 18, 2020 – Decided April 28, 2020
Before Judges Koblitz, Whipple and Mawla.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
Chancery Division, Family Part, Gloucester County,
Docket No. FA-08-0012-17.
Reinherz & Reinherz, attorneys for appellant G.D.
(David Anthony Huber, on the brief).
Lynn Marie Castillo, attorney for respondent C.J.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KOBLITZ, P.J.A.D.
We write to emphasize that an attorney has an obligation to inform the
court if he or she is not able to handle an assigned matter professionally due to
a lack of expertise and inability to obtain sufficient knowledge to represent the
client effectively, and is also unable to retain a substitute attorney
knowledgeable in the area. We sua sponte determine that appellate counsel
was ineffective and new appellate counsel must be assigned in this contested
stepparent adoption matter. We therefore adjourn this appeal to appoint
substitute counsel. Additionally, an adjournment of this time-sensitive
contested adoption is necessary because a transcript of the trial court's opinion
was not provided, nor was the seeming lack of a decision mentioned by either
counsel in briefing.
The biological mother is appealing. She is entitled to counsel under the
Supreme Court case of In re Adoption of J.E.V., 226 N.J. 90, 94 (2016). She
was represented at trial by the Office of Parental Representation in the Office
of the Public Defender (OPD). The OPD determined that due to a lack of
specific statutory authority and insufficient resources, it would no longer
represent parents in contested adoptions. Our Clerk's Office assigned an
appellate attorney from the Madden1 list. The matter was also remanded to the
trial court to determine who would provide the transcripts. The trial judge
directed respondent to provide the transcript. Respondent ordered a transcript
of the three trial days, but not the judge's opinion, although respondent's
counsel was the trial attorney and was present for the decision on January 5,
2018.
1
Madden v. Delran, 126 N.J. 591, 605-06 (1992).
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2
After being informed by mail on three separate occasions of numerous
defects, counsel was permitted to submit his brief as is, more than a year after
the brief was originally due. In his appellate brief, counsel argued that
respondent had not demonstrated that the Division of Child Protection and
Permanency (DCPP) made reasonable efforts to reunite the biological mother
and her child. See N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a)(3). He did not mention the
controlling stepparent adoption statute. N.J.S.A. 9:3-46. When respondent's
brief pointed out the correct controlling statute, counsel did not submit a reply
brief. And finally, appellate counsel did not raise the issue that the record
contained no judicial findings.
The final day's trial transcript reveals that the judge informed the parties
he would "look to have [his] decision by . . . the 5th of January." Counsels'
"option would be to be present or to attend by phone or to just wait for the
signed order from the [c]ourt." The order of adoption was entered on January
5, 2018, the same date the judge placed his conclusions of fact and law on the
record.
Neither party sought appellate oral argument. When we reviewed the
briefs and transcripts we noticed that the crucial transcript of the January 5
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decision had not been ordered, and directed that it be ordered on an expedited
basis.
A parent who may lose his or her parental rights in a contested adoption
has the right to counsel. J.E.V., 226 N.J. at 94. In J.E.V. our Supreme Court
said:
The very reasons that call for a lawyer to be
appointed also favor the appointment of attorneys with
the experience to handle these matters. Contested
adoption proceedings raise important substantive
issues and can lead to complicated and involved
hearings. The Office of Parental Representation in the
[OPD] has developed expertise in this area from its
fine work in state-initiated termination of parental
rights cases. Without a funding source, we cannot
direct the office to take on an additional assignment
and handle contested cases under the Adoption Act.
See [Crist v. N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs., 135
N.J. Super. 573, 575-76 (App. Div. 1975)].
In the past, as we noted in Pasqua, "the
Legislature has acted responsibly" and provided
counsel for the poor when the Constitution so
requires. [Pasqua v. Council, 186 N.J. 127, 153
(2006).] For example, after Crist, the Legislature
enacted N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.4(a), which directs judges
to appoint the [OPD] to represent indigent parents
who ask for counsel in termination of parental rights
cases under Title 30. Once again, we trust that the
Legislature will act and address this issue.
In the interim, we have no choice but to turn to
private counsel for assistance. We invite volunteer
organizations to offer their services, as pro bono
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4
attorneys have done in other areas. See, e.g., In re Op.
No. 17-2012 of Advisory Comm. on Prof'l Ethics, 220
N.J. 468, 469 (2014). Until the Legislature acts, we
may need to assign counsel through the Madden list,
which is not an ideal solution.
[J.E.V., 226 N.J. at 113 (citations omitted).]
The right to counsel includes the right to appellate counsel. N.J. Dep't
of Children & Families v. L.O., 460 N.J. Super. 1, 19 (App. Div. 2019). All
New Jersey attorneys are required to provide pro bono representation. "New
Jersey's Rules of Professional Conduct specifically address pro bono service."
In re Op. No. 17-2012, 220 N.J. at 485. RPC 6.1 provides that "[e]very lawyer
has a professional responsibility to render public interest legal service." The
fair administration of justice as well as indigent litigants who are entitled to
counsel rely on the generous and diligent efforts of pro bono counsel, both
volunteer and assigned. Lawyers are ethically bound to provide representation
that is reasonably diligent and not grossly negligent. 2 RPC 1.1 (a); RPC 1.3.
This is true whether counsel is financially compensated or is providing pro
bono representation. "The Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics has
described RPC 1.1 as the 'cornerstone for the rest of the rules .' Advisory
2
By determining counsel was ineffective we render no opinion as to whether
the representation provided constitutes gross negligence. See RPC 1.1(a).
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Comm. Op. 671 (Apr. 5, 1993). In that opinion, the Committee concluded that
the duty of competence was 'fully applicable' to a pro bono representation."
Kevin H. Michels, New Jersey Attorney Ethics, ch. 14.2-1(b) (2020).
We understand that most lawyers are not appellate experts. Few lawyers
have experience in contested adoptions. We have adjudicated fewer than a
dozen contested adoption appeals statewide since J.E.V. was decided in 2016.
Nonetheless, assigned counsel was obligated to educate himself as to the law.
See State v. Finneman, 458 N.J. Super. 383, 388 (App. Div. 2019). The
"Resources" section of the Judiciary website's "Attorneys" page has a "Pro
Bono" link to educational material for pro bono assignments defending
domestic violence contempt cases, appealing municipal court convictions,
representing defendants at parole revocation hearings and representing birth
parents in private contested adoption cases.3
In 1992 when establishing the Madden list for municipal court
assignments, our Supreme Court said:
We leave it to the municipal court judges to direct
counsel, who will usually inform them of their
concerns, if any, about their competency, to provide
substitute counsel when appropriate, a system
3
The "Pro Bono" link also leads to the statement that the trial courts do not
appoint trial counsel from the Madden list in private contested adoption cases.
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explicitly recognized under the old Rules. Ultimately,
however, if the municipal court judge concludes that
defendant will not receive effective assistance of
counsel, the judge's obligation will be to select other
counsel. No such selection shall occur, however, until
the court concludes that that counsel is unable to
obtain a substitute. In almost all cases that will
depend upon his or her financial ability to do so.
[Madden, 126 N.J. at 608.]
It was appellate counsel's obligation to review the New Jersey Courts
website material concerning contested adoptions and Part II of the Court Rules
covering appeals. Alternatively, counsel could have retained substitute
counsel with expertise in this area. See ibid. If counsel is unable to obtain
sufficient knowledge or retain counsel with expertise, counsel has the ethical
obligation to inform the appointing court of his or her inability to handle the
case assigned. See ibid.
Competent counsel is particularly crucial when a parent's "invaluable
right to raise a child" is at stake due to the extreme importance of the
litigation. J.E.V., 226 N.J. at 94. We have an obligation to ensure that the
welfare of the child is protected by way of a fair process with competent
counsel. As our Supreme Court stated in J.E.V., a self-represented parent is
not able to litigate as well as a lawyer. Id. at 109-10. But that assumes
counsel is not ineffective. Because the parent is extremely unlikely to be in a
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position to gage the effectiveness of appellate counsel, we must intercede
when appellate counsel's efforts are clearly substandard.
Our Supreme Court has "explained that [Rule] 2:10-5 'allow[s an]
appellate court to exercise original jurisdiction to eliminate unnecessary
further litigation, but discourage[s] its use if factfinding is involved.'" Price v.
Himeji, LLC, 214 N.J. 263, 294 (2013) (alterations in original) (quoting State
v. Santos, 210 N.J. 129, 142 (2012)). Exercising original jurisdiction to avoid
further delay, we sua sponte determine that appellant's counsel is ineffective.
Generally, a litigant in a termination of parental rights case must
demonstrate that "(1) counsel's performance must be objectively deficient—
i.e., it must fall outside the broad range of professionally acceptable
performance; and (2) counsel's deficient performance must prejudice the
defense." N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. B.R., 192 N.J. 301, 307
(2007) (adopting standard for ineffective representation set forth in Strickland
v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 694 (1984), and adopted in State v. Fritz, 105
N.J. 42, 58 (1987)). The same standard applies to appellate counsel. See N.J.
Div. of Child Prot. & Permanency v. R.L.M. (In re R.A.J.), 236 N.J. 123, 153
n.3. If, as here, appellate counsel's representation is severely lacking, it is
comparable to a total lack of representation: a structural failure in the process
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where the litigant need not demonstrate prejudice. Similarly, "[d]eprivation of
counsel of choice is considered a 'structural error' not subject to harmless error
analysis because the consequences of deprivation are 'necessarily
unquantifiable and indeterminate.'" State v. Kates, 426 N.J. Super. 32, 44
(App. Div. 2012) (quoting United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez, 548 U.S. 140, 150
(2006)).
In a five-page brief, relying on the inapplicable statute N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
15.1, appellate counsel argued that DCPP had not provided "reasonable
efforts," to reunify his client and her daughter. He cited to no cases in his
brief. He also did not exercise his client's right to reply to respondent's brief,
which pointed out that the matter involved the best interests of the child under
the contested private adoption statute rather than the incorrect statute relied on
by appellate counsel, which controls the termination of parental rights when
instigated by the State. Appellate counsel also did not question the lack of
judicial findings in the transcripts supplied. This level of representation is
tantamount to a total lack of appellate counsel, a structural defect. We adjourn
this matter to appoint new appellate counsel, and also to ensure that the parties
have an opportunity to review the transcript of the trial court's findings and
submit new briefs.
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Adjourned. The clerk will set a new expedited scheduling order.
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