In re H.J.
In re H.J.
Opinion
The respondent, the father of H.J. (child), appeals an order of the Circuit Court ( Tenney , J.) terminating his parental rights. See RSA 170-C:5 (2014). He argues that the evidence does not support the circuit court's findings that: (1) he had abandoned the child; (2) he had not paid sufficient support; and (3) termination of his parental rights was in the child's best interest. We affirm.
The record supports the following facts. Approximately one month after the child was born, the father was incarcerated. After the father was released, the child lived with both parents. In February 2009, the mother moved out after an incident of domestic violence. From June 2009 through September 2010, a domestic violence order was in place against the father. In April 2009, the mother filed a parenting petition. The father did not appear at any of the hearings in the parenting case. In December 2009, the mother was granted sole legal and physical custody of H.J. The parenting plan granted the father supervised visitation once a week at his expense, but gave the mother discretion to refuse such visits. The plan stated that the father "may petition the court for further orders" at such time that "he believes that he can be a positive and consistent influence in [the child's] life."
The father visited H.J. twice at a visitation center in February and March of 2010. On March 20, 2010, he failed to appear for a scheduled visit. Around this time, he was incarcerated. When he was released in early 2011, he contacted the visitation center requesting to visit H.J. The mother exercised the discretion granted to her by the parenting plan and denied his request. She expressed concern that visitation would be emotionally disruptive to the child because the father's frequent incarcerations would not allow him to become a consistent part of the child's life. The father appears to have done nothing at this time to challenge the mother's decision. The father was re-incarcerated in 2012.
In 2013, while still incarcerated, the father filed petitions requesting a change to the parenting plan. The court denied the petitions, observing that the father was incarcerated and "not in a position to exercise his parenting time ... because of his circumstances." The court noted that "[a]t such time as he is released, [the father] can contact the [visitation center], who can then contact [the mother]."
The father was released from incarceration in January 2014. He testified at the hearing on the termination of his parental rights that he "probably" contacted the visitation center at that time, but did not "remember exactly." He also testified that he did not file any additional petitions with the court seeking visitation because he was "dealing with these legal issues," had limited transportation, and "had a lot on [his] plate." At some point in 2015 the father was re-incarcerated. In early 2016, he was released. Approximately a year later, in February of 2017, he was re-incarcerated.
In October of 2017, the mother filed a petition seeking termination of the father's parental rights on the grounds of abandonment and non-support. At the hearing on the petition, the mother requested that the court terminate the father's parental rights over H.J. so that her husband, who "has been an active and constant part of [H.J.'s] life since 2010," could adopt H.J. She testified that, since July 21, 2009, she has only received $458.70 in child support and that her child support case was closed in 2014. She acknowledged that the father has occasionally sent correspondence to H.J. including "a bunch of cards in 2010," a Toys"R"Us gift card, two letters in 2016, and a birthday card in 2017. She testified that she shared these communications with H.J. and has saved them.
The father testified that, although he has been in jail for four of the last eight years, he never intended to abandon the child. He also testified that he had "never been given the opportunity to be a father to [his child] ... and it hasn't been for a lack of trying."
The guardian ad litem (GAL) submitted a final report recommending that the court terminate the father's parental rights. At the hearing, the GAL testified that even though the father may not have desired to abandon the child, there has "been a substantial period of time since there has been any contact," and the father's "personal actions, his inability to stay out of criminal mischief ... effectuated the abandonment." The GAL further testified that termination was in the child's best interest because the mother's husband was the child's "father figure," provided "day-to-day support and emotional support," and wished to adopt H.J. The GAL recognized that the mother had exercised her right to deny visitation in 2011, which prevented the child from having contact with the father on that occasion, but concluded that the lack of a relationship between the child and the father was due to the father's consistent "renewal of [his] criminal activities."
In its termination order, the court found that the father had abandoned the child. See RSA 170-C:5, I. It also concluded that the father failed to provide adequate support. See RSA 170-C:5, II (stating that if "parents are financially able," but "have substantially and continuously neglected to provide the child with necessary subsistence, education or other care," then a statutory ground exists to terminate parental rights). The court also determined that termination of the father's parental rights was in the child's best interest. This appeal followed.
Parental rights are "natural, essential, and inherent" within the meaning of Part I, Article 2 of the New Hampshire Constitution.
In re Sophia-Marie H.
,
Before a court may order the termination of a parent's rights, the petitioning party must prove a statutory ground for termination beyond a reasonable doubt.
The father first argues that the trial court erred when it determined that the mother had proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the father abandoned his child. RSA 170-C:5, I, authorizes termination when:
The parent has abandoned the child. It shall be presumed that the parent intends to abandon the child ... who has been left by his parent in the care and custody of another without any provision for his support, or without communication from such parent for a period of 6 months. If in the opinion of the court the evidence indicates that such parent has made only minimal efforts to support or communicate with the child, the court may declare the child to be abandoned.
RSA 170-C:5, I. "Abandonment is a factual issue to be determined by the [circuit] court, and we will not disturb that determination unless it is unsupported by the evidence or plainly erroneous as a matter of law."
In re Shannon M.
,
At the termination hearing, the father's counsel acknowledged that there were periods during which the father left H.J. in the mother's care and custody without communication for at least six months. Therefore, the statutory presumption is triggered. On appeal, the father argues he rebutted the presumption, contending that he did not intend to abandon H.J. He asserts that "it was the mother's refusal to permit or facilitate visits or contact that were the major barrier to a relationship between the father and [H.J.]." He further contends that the trial court erred because it failed to properly consider the "totality of the evidence," and "events that occurred before, during and after the triggering period."
See
In re Jessie E.
,
"Strictly speaking, there is no abandonment by a parent where the separation of parent and child is caused solely by the other parent or a third party and because of no fault on the part of the parent whose rights are sought to be terminated."
In re Shannon M.
,
To the extent that the father is also arguing that the trial court erred because it "could not consider his contact or lack of contact during [the] time he was prohibited by restraining order from contacting or supporting [the] child," we disagree. We
have previously held that "a finding of abandonment is not precluded merely because the initial separation of the [parent] and child resulted from a court order and against the will of the [parent]."
In re Sheena B.
,
We also reject the father's assertion that the trial court should have given more weight to his attempts to communicate with the child before and after the triggering period. At the termination hearing, the father testified that he e-mailed the mother "over the years ... at least a dozen times," and the mother acknowledged that the father has occasionally sent correspondence to H.J. The trial court concluded that these "other contacts ... are minimal and not substantial."
See
In re Jessie E.
,
A termination of parental rights "petition may be granted where the court finds that
one
or more" of the listed statutory grounds exist. RSA 170-C:5 (emphasis added). Therefore, we need not analyze the father's argument that the trial court erred in determining that the father had not "paid sufficient support" because, even if true, it would provide no basis for reversal.
See, e.g.
,
In re G. B.
,
Having concluded that a statutory ground exists for termination, we now consider the father's argument that the trial court erred in ruling that termination was in the best interest of the child. The trial court reasoned that the child is "happy, living with the only family [the child] knows, cared for by the only parent ... that has ever cared for [H.J.], and [a] stepfather, who now seeks to adopt [H.J.] and give [the child] a greater security in their relationship." The court also reasoned that "loss of contact with [the] birth father ... is not a significant loss to this child, since [H.J.] does not even know him." It concluded that "termination is necessary in order to facilitate an adoption of [H.J.] by [the] stepfather ... which is desired by the child."
The father argues that the trial court's best interest ruling is erroneous because the trial court gave "insufficient weight ... to the fact that the mother admitted an unwillingness to facilitate visits between the father and [H.J.]." Although the father recognizes that the mother had a parenting plan that afforded her the discretion to deny visits, he argues that she "abused that authority by prohibiting contact between the father and [H.J.]." We disagree.
We recognize, as we have previously, that "[i]t cannot be assumed that termination is in the best interest of a child where the child's lack of knowledge of the
parent whose rights are being terminated is due, in part, to the other parent's efforts to thwart attempts made to establish a relationship with the child."
In re Sophia-Marie H.
,
Here, the father's efforts to establish a relationship with his child have been minimal. Unlike in Sophia-Marie H. , the father chose not to contact or visit his child for long periods of time, even when he was not incarcerated. When the father petitioned to modify the parenting plan in 2013, the court concluded that he was "not in a position to exercise his parenting time" because he was incarcerated, and instructed the father to contact the visitation center upon his release. The record does not demonstrate that he subsequently contacted the center. Nor has the father ever sought to modify the original parenting plan to lessen the mother's ability to control visitation.
Here, also unlike in Sophia-Marie H. , the mother's "interference" with the father's ability to build a relationship with H.J. has been minimal. Although she denied the father a single visit in 2011, as was allowed by the parenting plan, the mother has not kept the father's identity a secret from the child and she has given the child letters sent from the father. Therefore, the record supports the trial court's conclusion that the lack of a relationship between the father and H.J. is directly attributable to the father's failure to attempt to establish such a relationship, not the mother's purported attempt to thwart it.
The father also argues that the trial court erred in terminating his parental rights because the "mother admitted she did not do anything to facilitate a relationship between the father and his [child]." He cites
In re William A.
,
In re William A.
involved a father's petition to terminate a mother's parental rights on the grounds of abandonment and non-support.
In re William A.
,
Here, however, unlike in In re William A. , the record does not reflect that the father has taken meaningful steps to build a relationship with H.J. or improve his ability to become a positive and supportive figure in the child's life. The GAL observes that, although H.J. knows that the father occasionally writes or sends gifts, the child has "no real memory of him or of his direct presence," "8-years have passed since there have been visits," and the father has made "no effort ... to avoid new or ongoing criminal activities." On this basis, the GAL concluded that termination was in the child's best interest. The trial court similarly concluded that despite the father's assertions that he loves his child and wants to be a part of H.J.'s life, "the reality of this situation is that he has led a life over the past eight years full of criminal activity, most of it of a serious nature, which has resulted in numerous incarcerations." The trial court reasoned that the father "seems to accept little to any responsibility for the effect these actions have had on his ability and availability for parenting," and observed that "[i]n the meantime, [H.J.] has moved on ... and has done very well through the efforts of [the child's] mother and [the] stepfather."
"Implicit in [RSA chapter 170-C] is the philosophy that whenever possible family life should be strengthened and preserved." RSA 170-C:1.
However, for the last eight years - because of his own actions and choices - H.J.'s biological father has not been a part of the child's family life. Instead, as the trial court observed, H.J. is "happy, living with the only family [the child] knows, cared for by the only parent ... that has ever cared for [H.J.], and [a] stepfather, who now seeks to adopt [H.J.] and give [the child] a greater security in their relationship." Based upon this evidence, we conclude that the
trial court's ruling that termination is in the child's best interest is supported by the evidence and not plainly erroneous as a matter of law.
See
In re Sophia-Marie H.
,
Affirmed .
LYNN, C.J., and HICKS, HANTZ MARCONI, and DONOVAN, JJ., concurred.
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