Greene Cnty. Juvenile Office v. S.L.E. (In re Interest of K.A.S.E.)
Greene Cnty. Juvenile Office v. S.L.E. (In re Interest of K.A.S.E.)
Concurring Opinion
I concur in the result here, but write separately for the reason that it is troubling to see that counsel is permitted to withdraw on the day of a termination hearing, without prior notice to his client, followed by a termination hearing where the client was not present and was unrepresented. Given the serious nature of termination proceedings, this procedure is difficult to justify.
Opinion of the Court
S.L.E. ("Appellant") appeals from the termination of her parental rights to K.A.S.E. ("Child") on the basis that:
• she qualified for an attorney pursuant to section 211.462,
• she requested an attorney,
• an attorney was appointed for her,
• a date was set for a hearing,
• the hearing was moved to a date three months earlier by the court's own motion,
• one day before the hearing her court-appointed attorney filed a motion to withdraw, admitting that he had mailed the notice to his client and she probably had not received it,
• the court granted the motion to withdraw leaving Appellant unrepresented at the hearing,
• the court proceeded on that day to terminate Appellant's parental rights,
• Appellant appeared at the juvenile court that same day after the hearing and was told the hearing was completed. She requested and received another appointment of counsel a week later.
We agree with Appellant that the court abused its discretion in granting Appellant's attorney's Motion to Withdraw prior to trial because the action deprived Appellant of her right to counsel and due process of law.
A review of the docket sheet reveals:
• On May 16, 2017, a termination hearing was set for June 20, 2017. On that same date the hearing was reset *401on the court's own motion to October 3, 2017.
• On June 23, 2017, a judge was assigned and the "hearing remain[ed] set" for October 3, 2017.
• On July 7, 2017, the court, on its own motion, rescheduled the hearing for twelve days later.
• On July 18, 2017, Appellant's attorney filed a motion to withdraw and noticed it up for the next day at the termination hearing.
• On July 19, 2017, the motion to withdraw was sustained and the termination trial proceeded.
• On July 31, 2017, Appellant's application for legal assistance was granted "for appeal purposes only."
Meanwhile, trial counsel for Appellant
The circumstances of each particular case determines whether a parent who is unable to employ counsel was denied unjustly the right to counsel in a termination of parental rights case. In re J.S.W. ,
Respondent points to no cases that are factually close to the case before us. We find In re P.D. ,
The circumstances in this case indicate less egregious facts than in P.D. Here, there is no evidence of repeated failures to cooperate with representation. The only evidence before the court at the hearing when it granted the motion to withdraw was that counsel attempted to contact Appellant, Appellant called counsel back after the initial contact by her counsel, and there was no further contact. Supreme Court Rule 4-1.16(d) provides that an attorney shall take steps, such as giving reasonable notice to the client, to the extent reasonably practicable to protect a client's interest to allow time for employment of other counsel. P.D. ,
Despite the fact that Respondent concedes that Appellant requested counsel, and that she was indigent and without the ability to pay counsel, the case was advanced for trial by three months by the trial court on the trial court's own motion. The only evidence before the court at the time of the termination hearing was that Appellant had last heard the hearing was set three months later in October. The trial court sustained trial counsel's motion to withdraw on the day of the trial and proceeded to trial without giving Appellant an opportunity to obtain counsel. It was error to do so. The appropriate remedy here is not outright reversal, but rather reversal of all termination of parental rights findings and conclusions pertaining to Appellant, and remand for a new trial on all issues pertaining to Appellant in the termination of parental rights petition. In re Adoption of C.M.B.R. ,
Daniel E. Scott, J.-Concurs In Result Only In Separate Opinion
William W. Francis, Jr., J.-Concurs In Result Only In Separate Opinion
We make our decision based on the procedural posture of this case and make no findings or conclusions on the merits of the case.
Appellate counsel is not the same attorney as the trial attorney.
Respondent asks us to acknowledge "evidence" from two people who were in the courtroom on the date of the hearing that Appellant did know about the hearing on July 19th. One of the people indicated she was the child's grandmother and the other the child's uncle. Neither of the people were sworn as witnesses, nor were they subject to any cross-examination. As such, we disregard their statements. State v. Ward ,
Furthermore, there was not any evidence presented at the hearing that Appellant was aware that the termination hearing had been moved up from October to July. Such a quickening of the hearing date might be important when seeking contact with counsel.
The judgment terminated unknown biological Father's parental rights. There was no appeal from that part of the judgment.
Concurring Opinion
I concur in our decision to reverse and remand as to Appellant. There are few hard-and-fast rules on the issues before us. The reported decisions are notoriously fact specific. Our Eastern District stated it well:
"The circumstances of a particular case hold great weight in determining whether an indigent parent was unjustly denied the right to counsel in termination of parental rights proceedings." [citations omitted] Even the Supreme Court of the United States has acknowledged that TPR cases present facts and circumstances "susceptible of almost infinite variation," and therefore "[i]t is neither possible nor prudent to attempt to formulate a precise and detailed set of *403guidelines to be followed in determining when the providing of counsel is necessary to meet the applicable due process requirements." [citations omitted]
In re J.S.W. ,
With this in mind, a confluence of factors (the first of which arguably affecting the rest) leads me to conclude there was a failure of due process here:
• a termination hearing held 11 weeks earlier than originally scheduled, with only 12 days prior notice to anyone,
• Appellant's counsel seeking and being allowed to withdraw without prior notice to Appellant, immediately followed by
• an essentially default termination of Appellant's parental rights, and
• my inability to glean from the sparse record that Appellant, by her actions, clearly and affirmatively rejected or waived her court-appointed counsel.1
Because courts exercise "awesome power" in terminating parental rights ( J.S.W. ,
Despite this process concern, I acknowledge counsel's dilemma and hesitate to fault him for seeking to withdraw. Just 12 days earlier, the court on its own motion had eliminated 86% of available time for counsel, who had not represented Appellant in the prior abuse/neglect proceedings, to prepare for a TPR trial or even to make contact with Appellant, which never happened despite seemingly reasonable efforts. Could counsel have effectively, and thus ethically, represented Appellant under such circumstances? Recall the next appointed attorney's initial difficulties contacting Appellant (note 1 supra ).
At least in this case, any advantage of moving a TPR hearing date up so far and so fast seems far outweighed by the resulting risks and difficulties.
That said, I note that Appellant's next appointed attorney soon also moved the trial court for leave to withdraw, citing his inability to contact Appellant despite repeated attempts. The record suggests they did make contact shortly thereafter, such that new counsel's motion was passed and never ruled.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.