In re Adoption Wendall
In re Adoption Wendall
Opinion of the Court
The father appeals from a decree of the Juvenile Court finding him unfit and terminating his parental rights to his son, Wendall, rejecting the father's proposed guardianship plan, and declining to order posttermination visitation. We affirm.
Discussion. "We give substantial deference to a judge's decision ... and reverse only where the findings of fact are clearly erroneous or where there is a clear error of law or abuse of discretion." Adoption of Ilona,
1. Dictation notes. The father first argues that the judge erred by admitting notes of three Department of Children and Families (DCF) social workers without their testimony. "The general admissibility of case work documents and court investigator reports is no longer seriously in question." Adoption of Iris,
In this case, there were three sets of dictation notes whose authors were not present at trial to testify. Upon the father's objection, the judge explicitly limited the admission of the dictation notes to direct observations by the social workers and to party admissions made to the social workers. The father contends that the dictation notes constituted improper hearsay and were erroneously admitted for more than primary facts.
The judge properly relied on the dictation notes only for statements of "primary fact." See Adoption of George,
On appeal, the father argues that he did not have the opportunity to cross-examine the authors of the dictation notes.
Even if it were error to admit the notes for primary facts and party admissions, it was not prejudicial. The notes supported only sixteen out of the total 229 findings of fact. Moreover, thirteen of those sixteen findings pertained to the father's fitness before he stipulated to his unfitness on November 17, 2015. The three remaining facts were favorable to the father and not critical to the judge's conclusion. Thus, even if the sixteen findings were struck, the judge's ultimate conclusion is still supported by clear and convincing evidence.
2. Assessment of competing placement plans. The father next argues that the judge applied the wrong legal standard when comparing the father's guardianship plan to the plan of DCF. In the case of a proposed adoption plan, "[t]he judge's obligation to 'consider' a plan involves much more than simply examining it. The judge must perform a 'careful evaluation of the suitability' of the plan and must 'meaningfully ... evaluate' what is proposed to be done for the child." Adoption of Dora,
In this case, the father's proposed plan was for a guardianship with the child's paternal grandmother and paternal aunt, without termination of the father's rights. The proposed guardians filed a guardianship petition in the Juvenile Court, and both were present at the care and protection proceeding and the guardianship hearing.
On appeal, the father contends that the judge abused his discretion by starting from the premise that DCF's plan was in the child's best interests, and thus, the judge improperly placed the burden on the father to prove that his plan was in the child's best interests. The father relies on three statements made by the judge to support his contention.
First, the father points to two statements in the judge's order: (1) "[The paternal aunt] was willing to defer her own personal goals, such as attending college, if necessary to care for all three children.[
3. Visitation order. Posttermination and postadoption visitation orders must be "grounded in the over-all best interests of the child, based on emotional bonding and other circumstances of the actual personal relationship of the child and the biological parent." Adoption of Vito,
Decree affirmed.
The father argues that the dictation notes are inadmissible hearsay, in part, because DCF regulations then applicable did not require social workers to maintain the notes offered in this case. We disagree. Section 5.13(2)(b)(12) of 102 Code Mass. Regs. required case workers to maintain "case notes documenting contacts and services set forth in 102 [Code Mass. Regs. §§] 5.05(1) and (3), 5.06, and 5.07" for each child. After trial, 102 Code Mass. Regs. § 5.13(2) was superseded by 606 Code Mass. Regs. § 5.12(2) (2018).
The father, DCF, and the child all cite to Adoption of George,
At trial, the father's counsel objected to admitting the dictation notes on hearsay grounds. DCF argues that because the father did not object anew following the judge's decision to admit the records for limited purposes, the father should be precluded from raising this argument on appeal, as the failure to object deprived the judge of the opportunity to remedy the alleged evidentiary issue. The father's counsel's objection was sufficient to preserve the hearsay issue for appeal; thus, we consider it on the merits.
The father also argues that the dictation notes contain the transcript of a voicemail message from the child's attorney. However, the admitted notes were limited to direct observations and party admissions, so the voicemail message was not admitted and there is no finding of fact based on it.
Counsel for DCF represented that the three social workers no longer worked for DCF and that counsel had no way of contacting them.
The judge excused the guardianship petitioners for a portion of the care and protection proceeding, but he invited the paternal grandmother back into the court room to observe the testimony of a clinical social worker and early childhood developmental specialist, Shelia Corey, and provided the paternal grandmother, who appeared pro se, with the opportunity to ask questions. The paternal grandmother declined to ask any questions.
The child supported DCF's adoption plan.
In his brief, the father only identifies two statements, but we will consider the third statement, as it was offered by counsel at oral argument.
The father has three children, all of whom have been the subjects of care and protection proceedings. The paternal aunt and paternal grandmother have a guardianship over the eldest child. Wendall, the middle child, is the subject of this case and, at the time of trial, the youngest child was the subject of a separate, open care and protection case.
In his conclusions of law, the judge stated, "A 'judge also must consider parental nominations of caretakers and then determine which placement will serve the best interests of the child. ... In so doing, the judge is not to afford any particular weight to either the parents' or [DCF's] plan .... In cases where the parents have offered a competing plan, the judge must assess the alternatives and, if both pass muster, choose which plan is in the child's best interests.' Adoption of Dora,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.