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(Cite
as: 727 N.W.2d 144)
In
re Welfare of Children of S.W.
Minn.App., 2007.
Court
of Appeals of Minnesota.
In
the Matter of the WELFARE OF the CHILDREN OF S.W.,
M.M., and J.A., Parents.
No.
A06-1175.
Jan.
30, 2007.
Review
Denied March 28, 2007.
Michael
Kinney, Greta Smolnisky, Smolnisky & Kinney, P.C., Willmar, MN, for
appellant S.W.
William
J. Watson, Big Stone County Attorney, Ortonville, MN, for respondent
Big Stone County.
Jessica
L. Ryan, BlueDog, Paulson & Small, P.L.L.P., Minneapolis, MN, for
respondent Grand Portage Band of Chippewa.
Thomas
C. Mahlum, Marta M. Chou, George D. Carroll, Robins, Kaplan,
Miller & Ciresi L.L.P., Minneapolis, MN, for respondent guardian ad
litem.
Considered
and decided by KALITOWSKI, Presiding Judge;
WRIGHT,
Judge;
and
CRIPPEN, Judge.FN*
FN*
Retired
judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment
pursuant to Minn. Const. art.
VI, §
10.
*146
OPINION
KALITOWSKI,
Judge.
Appellant
S.W. challenges termination of her parental rights to her children,
T.W. and G.W., arguing that the district court erred by
(1) finding appellant palpably unfit;
(2)
finding that reasonable and active efforts to unify the family
had failed;
(3)
admitting expert testimony from an unqualified witness and giving that
testimony too much weight;
and
(4) denying a petition to invalidate the termination of parental
rights proceedings based on Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) violations
that occurred during earlier temporary foster placement proceedings.
FACTS
Appellant
S.W. is the mother of three children, two of whom,
T.W. and G.W., are involved in this case.
Because T.W.'s father is eligible for membership in the Grand
Portage Band of Chippewa Indians (respondent Band), nine-year-old T.W. is
also eligible.
Five-year-old G.W. is not eligible for membership nor a member
of any Indian tribe.
Neither child's father retains parental rights.
Appellant's
oldest child, T.W., was born in 1997.
In late 2001, appellant gave birth to twins, G.W. and
B.W. The twins were born prematurely and required extensive hospitalization.
During this period of hospitalization, health-care workers became concerned that
appellant was unable to care for herself and her children
and ultimately a child in need of protection (CHIPS) petition
was filed in Anoka County.
Pursuant
to the developed case plan, appellant:
participated
in Semi-Independent Living Skills programming to assist her with money
management and learning basic living tasks.
She was involved in family-based parenting skills therapy to assist
her in learning parenting techniques.
An Adult Disabilities social worker was assigned to support [appellant]
concerning her developmental disability.
A
psychological assessment revealed that appellant has a dual diagnosis of
mild mental retardation and borderline personality disorder with dependent and
paranoid features, as well as “additional
personality traits of impulsivity, developing unstable and intense interpersonal relationships,
marked reactivity of mood, pervasive mistrust and suspiciousness.”
Appellant's case plan was in effect for two-and-one-half years, during
which time appellant improved her parenting skills.
But social service professionals remained concerned because of what the
district court found to be appellant's “questionable
relationships with men reflecting impulsivity and lack of insight for
her personal safety and the safety of her children.”
The
twins continued to have medical problems and appellant voluntarily terminated
her parental rights to B.W. in January 2004.
Six months later, Anoka County closed the existing CHIPS case
as to all of appellant's children.
The district court found that “[i]t
was anticipated that after court supervision ended [appellant] would remain
in Anoka County and would voluntarily continue to receive self-sufficiency,
family based, and DD (developmental disability) services.”
Instead, appellant, pursuing a romantic relationship, relocated her family to
Big Stone County within two months of the Anoka County
case closure.
Big
Stone County (respondent County) social services became involved with appellant
on referral from Anoka County.
Appellant*147
initially refused services, but soon sought counseling for T.W.
Two months later, respondent County filed a CHIPS petition based
on allegations that appellant had hit T.W., causing a loose
tooth.
Respondent
Band participated in an April 2005 admit/deny hearing.
The parties agreed to continue the petition for dismissal if
appellant participated in a case plan and agreed not to
relocate until certain conditions were met.
The case plan required psychological and parental capacities evaluations, respite
care for the children, continued counseling for T.W., and parenting
training for appellant.
A month later, appellant began participating in adult mental health
services as well.
In
July 2005, appellant became suicidal and voluntarily placed the children
in foster care while she was hospitalized.
Respondent Band was not notified of or involved in the
placement.
Upon
appellant's release from an eight-day hospital stay, she demanded return
of her children.
But Big Stone County denied her request in order to
give her the weekend to get used to being out
of the hospital before the children returned home.
Two days later, appellant was rehospitalized for suicidal ideations.
After six days she checked herself out against medical advice.
Respondent
County brought a motion to revoke the continuance for dismissal.
Although respondent Band did not receive formal notice and did
not appear at this August 17 hearing, the record indicates
the Band received informal notice.
Appellant admitted that her mental health precluded her from caring
for her children at that time and they remained in
voluntary foster care.
Although the children had been placed outside the home for
more than six months, because appellant was actively pursuing mental
health services the district court extended the time limits for
permanency until February 2006.
At
a dispositional hearing held later that month, the district court
found that reasonable and active efforts had failed to prevent
foster placement due to appellant's acute mental health difficulties. Respondent
County took custody of the children for involuntary placement in
foster care.
No ICWA-qualified expert testified at this hearing.
A
case plan adopted at this hearing required appellant to complete
a six-month Dialectical Behavior Treatment (DBT) program, undergo a parental
capacities evaluation, and continue sessions with her individual therapist and
psychologist.
The record indicates that appellant did not complete DBT treatment.
From
August until November, appellant and her children continued to receive
services from respondent County.
Appellant received psychological counseling and extensive mental health services.
The district court noted that “[r]ecords
indicate that in the fall of 2005 very few days
went by when the mental health worker did not have
to render some sort of assistance to the mother, whether
it was arranging transportation, setting up appointments or just generally
allowing [her] to vent relating to her stresses and frustrations.”
Appellant refused to participate in developmental disability services, and although
family counseling was discontinued because the children were in foster
care, the children received foster support counseling.
The district court found these services both active, occurring sometimes
weekly, and reasonable, “particularly
because they encompassed virtually all services available in the area.”
The district court found that the efforts were only marginally
successful, due mostly to appellant's “limited
capacities to both understand and integrate parenting techniques *148
due to her limited intellectual capacities, her defensiveness and confrontive
nature occasioned by her personality disorder, and her continuing resentment
and distrust of social workers and child protection workers.”
During
this time, respondent County arranged for appellant to visit with
her children.
Some visits went well, others did not.
In November, her visits were increased to three times a
week for two hours each, with half of the visits
unsupervised.
The district court found that the erratic quality of the
visits continued:
“[appellant]
showed little ability to ‘multi-task’
or to effectively adapt to the [children's] ambivalence, boredom, or
misbehavior in any given situation.”
Appellant lacks an ability to think “outside
the box”
and cannot extend learned skills to new situations.
In
a dispositional review hearing held on November 9, 2005, the
district court ordered respondent County to make a decision within
30 days either to return the children to appellant or
to petition to terminate her parental rights.
By the end of the month, respondent County petitioned to
terminate appellant's parental rights.
Appellant
and her children continued to receive social services from respondent
County while the petition was pending.
Appellant restarted DBT treatment and parenting techniques training, and indicated
that she felt she would need parenting instruction to continue
until the children turned 18.
In
March 2006, respondent Band, alleging violations of ICWA during the
CHIPS proceedings, filed a petition to invalidate the placement and
the termination of parental rights (TPR) proceedings under ICWA, 25
U.S.C. §
1914
(2004).
The district court deferred its decision on the petition until
evidence could be heard at trial.
Following a six-day hearing that included testimony of two ICWA
experts, the district court denied respondent Band's petition to invalidate
and terminated appellant's parental rights on May 23, 2006.
ISSUES
1.
Did
the district court err by finding beyond a reasonable doubt
that appellant was palpably unfit to parent her children?
2.
Did
the district court err by finding that active and reasonable
efforts were made to reunify the family?
3.
Did
the district court err by admitting expert testimony from an
unqualified witness and giving that testimony too much weight?
4.
Did
the district court err by denying a petition to invalidate
the TPR proceedings on the ground that ICWA was not
followed during the CHIPS proceedings?
5.
Did
the district court err by rejecting respondent guardian ad litem's
arguments that ICWA did not apply in this case?
ANALYSIS
[1][2]
On
appeal from a decision terminating parental rights, “appellate
courts are limited to determining whether the findings address the
statutory criteria, whether those findings are supported by substantial evidence,
and whether they are clearly erroneous.”
In
re Welfare of D.D.G.,
558 N.W.2d 481, 484 (Minn.1997).
“Considerable
deference is due to the district court's decision because a
district court is in a superior position to assess the
credibility of witnesses.”
In
re Welfare of L.A.F.,
554 N.W.2d 393, 396 (Minn.1996).
[3]
District
courts may order termination of parental rights on the basis
of one or more of the nine criteria listed in
Minn.Stat. §
260C.301,
subd. 1(b) (2004).
*149
But because a child's best interests are a paramount consideration
in TPR proceedings, the district court must also find that
termination of parental rights is in the child's best interests.
Minn.Stat.
§
260C.301,
subd. 7. In addition, here, the district court must find
that “reasonable”
and “active”
efforts failed to reunite the family.
25
U.S.C. §
1912(d)
(2004);
Minn.Stat.
§
260C.301,
subd. 1(b)(5)(iv).
The district court's findings must conform to the statutory requirements.
In
re Welfare of Chosa,
290 N.W.2d 766, 769 (Minn.1980).
I.
Appellant
asserts that the district court erred by finding that she
is palpably unfit to parent her children because it relied
on speculative expectations in making its determination.
We disagree.
[4]
Minnesota
law supports the district court's decision.
A
parent's rights may be terminated upon a showing that he
or she is “palpably
unfit”
in that he or she demonstrates “a
consistent pattern of specific conduct before the child or ...
specific conditions directly relating to the parent and child relationship”
of a duration or nature rendering the parent unfit to
parent for the foreseeable future.
In
re Welfare of A.V.,
593 N.W.2d 720, 721 (Minn.App.1999) (citing and quoting Minn.Stat. §
260.221,
subd. 1(b)(4), review
denied
(Minn. Aug. 25, 1999));
see
also In
re Welfare of S.Z.,
547 N.W.2d 886, 892 (Minn.1996).
[5]
Here,
the district court considered testimony from several social services and
health-care providers who expressed serious doubt as to appellant's future
ability to parent her children.
Appellant herself stated that she would need parenting instructions for
more than 10 years, or until the children reached adulthood.
The district court found, beyond a reasonable doubt and based
on evidence including testimony of qualified expert witnesses, that the
continued custody of the children by appellant would likely result
in serious emotional damage to the children.
See
25 U.S.C. §
1912(f).
Because
the district court found that appellant's capability to care for
her children is unlikely to improve in the foreseeable future,
the court appropriately decided to terminate appellant's parental rights.
In
re Welfare of A.V.,
593 N.W.2d at 722 (upholding termination of parental rights where
parents' mental illnesses and disabilities precluded them from improving their
parenting skills);
In
re Welfare of T.M.D.,
374 N.W.2d 206, 212 (Minn.App.1985) (affirming termination of parental rights
where there was ample evidence of appellant's long history of
extreme psychological and behavioral problems and strong expert testimony that
her improper behavior would continue into the future), review
denied
(Minn. Nov. 25, 1985).
We
conclude that the district court did not err in finding
appellant palpably unfit to parent T.W. and G.W.
II.
[6]
Appellant
argues that respondent County's efforts to reunify the family were
not reasonable, as required by Minn.Stat. §
260C.301,
subd. 1(b)(5)(iv).
In determining whether reasonable efforts were made, a district court
should consider whether they were:
(1)
relevant
to the safety and protection of the child;
(2)
adequate
to meet the needs of the child and family;
(3)
culturally
appropriate;
(4)
available
and accessible;
(5)
consistent
and timely;
and
(6)
realistic
under the circumstances.
*150
Minn.Stat. §
260.012(h)
(2006).
“Reasonable
efforts”
at rehabilitation are services that “go
beyond mere matters of form so as to include real,
genuine assistance.”
In
re Welfare of H.K.,
455 N.W.2d 529, 532 (Minn.App.1990), review
denied
(Minn. July 6, 1990).
The quality and quantity of efforts to rehabilitate and reunify
the family impact the reasonableness of those efforts.
In
re Welfare of A.H.,
402 N.W.2d 598, 604 (Minn.App.1987) (finding provision of homemaker visits,
parenting skill instruction, day-care for children, special attention to children's
developmental needs, and transportation to therapy sessions sufficient to establish
reasonable efforts).
Appellant
also argues that respondent County's efforts were not active as
required by ICWA. 25 U.S.C. §
1912(d)
(2004).
Although ICWA does not define active efforts, the Minnesota Tribal/State
Indian Child Welfare Agreement does:
“Active
[e]fforts”
means active, thorough, careful, and culturally appropriate efforts by the
LSSA to fulfill its obligations under [Indian Child Welfare Act],
[Minnesota Indian Family Protection Act], and the [Department of Human
Services] Social Services Manual to prevent placement of an Indian
child and at the earliest possible time to return the
child to the child's family once placement has occurred.
Minn.
Tribal/State Indian Child Welfare Agreement at 5, Minn. Dep't of
Human Servs.
Bulletin #
99-68-11
(Aug. 25, 1999) (hereinafter Tribal/State Agreement).
[7]
Here,
the record supports the district court's findings that respondent County
provided counseling for T.W., DBT therapy, supervised and unsupervised visitations
with the children, psychological and parental capacities evaluations, sessions with
an individual therapist and psychologist, parenting technique instructions, and foster
support counseling for the children.
Moreover, the district court extended the time required for permanency
determinations due to appellant's participation in her case plans, and
appellant's visitation schedule was increased to three visits a week
for two hours each, half of which were unsupervised.
And pending the termination procedure, respondent County continued to provide
services.
The
record indicates that respondent County provided frequent and varied services
over a period of several years.
Despite these services, several social services and healthcare providers concluded
that appellant would not be able to care for her
children in the foreseeable future.
We conclude that the district court did not err by
finding that active and reasonable efforts failed to reunite the
family.
III.
Appellant
argues that the district court erred both by accepting Lillian
Reese as an expert witness under ICWA and by giving
her testimony too much weight.
Because appellant did not make these objections to Reese's testimony
to the district court, they are not properly before us.
Sauter
v. Wasemiller,
389 N.W.2d 200, 202 (Minn.1986).
But even if we address these arguments, they fail.
[8]
“Generally,
whether a witness qualifies as an expert is an issue
within the discretion of the district court.”
In
re Welfare of Children of J.B.,
698 N.W.2d 160, 166 (Minn.App.2005), review
dismissed
(Minn. May 3, 2005).
But in ICWA cases, designation as an expert is controlled
in large part by the Minnesota Tribal/State Agreement on Indian
Child Welfare.
Id.;
see
also
Tribal/State Agreement at 9. According to the agreement, an expert
is someone who is:
*151
a.
a
member of the Indian child's tribe, who is recognized by
the tribal community as knowledgeable in tribal customs as they
pertain to family organization and child rearing practices;
b.
a
lay expert witness who has substantial experience in the delivery
of child and family services to Indians and extensive knowledge
of prevailing social and cultural standards;
or
c.
a
professional person who has substantial education and experience in the
area of his/her specialty and substantial knowledge of prevailing social
and cultural standards and child rearing practices within the Indian
community.
Tribal/State
Agreement at 9.
[9]
Although
the challenged expert, Ms. Reese, is not a member of
T.W.'s tribe, she is a member of the larger tribal
consortium that includes T.W.'s tribe.
And the record indicates that Ms. Reese has more than
20 years experience in providing social services, with 14 of
those as social services director for the Leech Lake Reservation,
supervising mental health, family services, and chemical dependency programs.
She also has experience in an Indian Child Welfare Program
and has child-rearing practice and was involved in the adoption
of the Minnesota Tribal/State Agreement on Indian Child Welfare.
We conclude that because Ms. Reese could qualify as an
expert witness under either section b or c of the
definition, the district court did not err by finding that
Ms. Reese is an ICWA-qualified expert.
[10]
We
reject appellant's argument that the district court gave too much
weight to Ms. Reese's testimony.
The district court was in the best position to judge
witness credibility.
Minn.
R. Civ. P. 52.01 (“[D]ue
regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial
court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.”).
“The
weight to be given any testimony, including expert testimony, is
ultimately the province of the fact-finder.”
In
re Welfare of Children of J.B.,
698 N.W.2d at 167.
Other than stating that Ms. Reese is not as qualified
as the ICWA-qualified expert who represented respondent Band, appellant presents
no argument.
Because we defer to the credibility determinations of the district
court, we conclude that the district court did not err
in determining the weight to be given the testimony.
IV.
[11]
Appellant
claims that respondent County and the district court violated ICWA
when it:
(1)
placed appellant's children in foster care when
appellant was hospitalized without a recorded consent form or notice
to the Band;
(2)
did not immediately return appellant's children to her care upon
her release from the hospital;
(3)
failed to give proper notice for the August 17, 2005
admit/deny hearing;
and
(4) failed to present expert testimony at the August 22,
2005 dispositional hearing.
Based on these alleged ICWA violations that occurred during the
CHIPS proceedings, appellant asks that the TPR proceedings be invalidated.
ICWA
applies to certain child custody proceedings involving Indian children, including
foster care placement, termination of parental rights, preadoptive placement, and
adoptive placement.
25
U.S.C. §
1911
(2004).
State court proceedings subject to ICWA have more requirements than
non-ICWA-covered proceedings:
the
petitioning County must give notice to the child's tribe, the
district court must generally make findings by either clear and
convincing evidence (foster placement) or evidence beyond a reasonable doubt
(termination of parental rights), and, for involuntary proceedings, ICWA-qualified experts
must testify at the hearing.
25
U.S.C. §
1912(a),
(e)-(f).
*152
In addition, there is a provision whereby an ICWA-covered state-court
proceeding can be invalidated:
Any
Indian child who is the subject of any action for
foster care placement or termination of parental rights under State
law, any parent or Indian custodian from whose custody such
child was removed, and the Indian child's tribe may petition
any court of competent jurisdiction to invalidate such action upon
a showing that such action violated any provision of sections
1911, 1912, and 1913 of this title.
25
U.S.C. §
1914
(2004).
In
March 2006, respondent Band filed a petition to invalidate the
placement and TPR proceedings pursuant to section 1914 of ICWA.
The district court deferred its decision on the petition until
evidence was received at the TPR hearing.
Appellant argues that refusal to invalidate the TPR proceeding is
error.
While
no Minnesota case has addressed invalidation of a termination based
on earlier ICWA violations, in In
the Interest of J.W.,
the Iowa Court of Appeals considered a similar issue.
In
the Interest
of J.W.,
528 N.W.2d 657 (Iowa Ct.App.1995).
There, a parent requested invalidation of termination proceedings because the
district court allegedly violated section 1912(e) of ICWA by placing
the children in foster care and continuing the placement without
testimony of qualified expert witnesses.
Id.
at 661.
The Iowa court held that “[s]ection
1914 ...
‘does
not provide for invalidation of a valid separate action because
of an invalid prior one.’
”
Id.
(quoting In
re M.E.M.,
209 Mont. 192, 679 P.2d 1241, 1243 (1984) and citing
D.E.D.
v. State,
704 P.2d 774, 782 (Alaska 1985)).
It therefore declined to invalidate the termination proceedings.
Id.
The court noted that although the district court took judicial
notice of the earlier proceedings, it
did
not rely exclusively on its earlier findings to reach its
conclusion to terminate [mother's] parental rights.
It made specific findings based on testimony of three qualified
ICWA experts at the termination hearing.
These witnesses each concluded the children were likely to suffer
serious physical or emotional harm if returned to their parent's
custody.
Id.
The
facts here are similar.
Based on four alleged ICWA violations that occurred during the
CHIPS proceedings, appellant requests invalidation of the later TPR proceedings,
which were conducted in accordance with ICWA. The record here
indicates that two ICWA-qualified experts testified at the TPR proceedings
and the district court determined, based on this and the
testimony of other social services providers at the TPR hearing,
that termination of appellant's parental rights was in the best
interest of the children.
We
agree with the reasoning of the Iowa Court of Appeals
and we decline to extend the language of section 1914
to provide the remedy appellant seeks.
On this record, the alleged ICWA violations that occurred during
the temporary foster care placements do not, as a matter
of law, require that the district court invalidate the subsequent
termination of parental rights proceedings.
Thus, we conclude that the district court did not err
by denying appellant's petition to invalidate the TPR proceedings.
V.
[12]
In
its appellate brief, respondent guardian ad litem argues that ICWA
should not be applied in this case because:
(1)
T.W. is not being removed from an existing Indian family
and (2) application of ICWA would violate equal protection *153
principles, due process principles, and the Tenth Amendment.
The district court concluded that these arguments were without merit.
Because respondent failed to file a notice of review challenging
the district court's decision on these issues, they are not
properly before us and we decline to address them.
See
Sauter,
389 N.W.2d at 202.
DECISION
We
conclude that on this record the district court did not
err by (1) finding beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant
is palpably unfit to parent her children;
(2)
finding that active and reasonable efforts failed to reunify the
family;
(3)
finding that Ms. Reese is an ICWA-qualified expert and crediting
her testimony as it did;
or
(4) denying a petition to invalidate termination of parental rights
proceedings based solely on alleged Indian Child Welfare Act violations
that occurred during earlier temporary foster placement proceedings.
Affirmed.
Minn.App.,2007.
In
re Welfare of Children of S.W.
727
N.W.2d 144
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