B.M. v. Department of Children & Families
B.M. v. Department of Children & Families
Opinion of the Court
B.M., the legal guardian of two minor children, appeals from a final order of dependency. We affirm all issues, commenting only on the contention that the trial judge erred by not informing B.M. of available services as required by section 39.502(15), Florida Statutes (2000).
B.M. is the legal guardian of D.M. and N.M. As such she is not a party as defined in section 39.01(51), but a participant as defined in section 39.01(50). It does not appear the legislature has extended the notice requirement of section 39.502(15) to participants such as B.M. Were we to massage other provisions of chapter 39, such as sections 39.01(33) and (49), to suggest that participants should have been included in section 39.502(15) and, therefore, were intended to be included, we would still find no reversible error.
This issue was not presented to the trial judge and, therefore, was not preserved for appellate review. As B.D. is not a parent of these children, there is no fundamental liberty interest of a parent involved in these proceedings. Even if it were determined that appellant is entitled to review on this issue, and that the trial judge should have advised appellant of available advocacy services, such omission would be harmless in this case. The court appointed counsel for appellant. She was under psychiatric care. She had been hospitalized under the Baker Act. She was found physically unable to care for the children. Appellant’s custodial rights were not terminated, but were suspended for a period of time during which she is to undertake a plan which would restore the children to her custodial care.
AFFIRMED.
Concurring in Part
concurring and dissenting.
I concur with all aspects of the majority’s opinion except that which affirms the trial court’s failure to inform B.M., a person identified as having a mental illness, of available advocacy services as required by section 39.502(15), Florida Statutes (2000). As to it, I would reverse the dependency
Section 39.502(15) provides:
A party who is identified as a person with mental illness or with a developmental disability must be informed by the court of the availability of advocacy services through the department, the Association for Retarded Citizens, or other appropriate mental health or developmental disability advocacy groups and encouraged to seek such services.
The record is clear that B.M. was not advised of her advocacy rights, despite the fact that the Department of Children and Families, appellee, had alleged in its dependency petition that B.M. “suffers from depression.” Appellee, however, replies that B.M., as the children’s legal guardian, is not a “party,” which is defined in section 39.01(51), Florida Statutes (2000), as “the parent or parents of the child, the petitioner, the department, the guardian ad litem or the representative of the guardian ad litem program ... and the child.” The Department points out that a legal custodian, such as B.M., is included in the definition of “participant” under section 39.01(50), and is thereby specifically excluded from party status. Thus, from an examination of only subsections (50) and (51), section 39.502(15) does not appear to obligate a trial court to inform a legal custodian defending a dependency petition of available advocacy services. I would decline, however, the Department’s invitation to read chapter 39 so narrowly.
I note that other provisions of the chapter, notably subsections 39.01(33) and 39.01(49), which define “legal custody” and “parent,” respectively, make the following identical statement:
For purposes of this chapter only, when the phrase “parent or legal custodian” is used, it refers to rights or responsibilities of the parent and, only if there is no living parent with intact parental rights, to the rights or responsibilities of the legal custodian who has assumed the role of parent.
Accordingly, the above statutes clearly imply that a legal custodian stands in the shoes of the parent if no parent is involved.
My conclusion in this regard is reinforced by numerous references in the statutes to the terms “parent or legal custodian” in the specific context of dependency proceedings. See § 39.401(1)(b)(2) & (3), Fla. Stat. (2000). Additionally, section 39.01(14), Florida Statutes (2000), defines a “child who has been found to be dependent” as one who has been abandoned, abused or neglected by its “parent or parents or legal guardian.” In my judgment, it is apparent from my review of the pertinent statutes and the Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure
In this case there is no living parent having intact parental rights, because the mother, although alive, surrendered legal custody to B.M. in 1991, and does not have contact with the children.
. See, e.g., Fla. R. Juv. P. 8.245(b)(1) (granting discovery rights to legal custodians when the child has no living parent with intact parental rights).
. The children’s biological father is deceased.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.